Legal Methods Digest Full
Legal Methods Digest Full
Legal Methods Digest Full
ROUND 1
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
2
People of the Philippines v. Hon. Judge Palma and Romulo Intia y Morada
Case No. 219
G.R. No. L-44113 (March 31, 1977)
Chapter I, Page 2, Footnote No.3
FACTS:
Private Respondent Romulo, 17 years of age, was charged with vagrancy.
Respondent Judge dismissed the case on the ground that her court has no
jurisdiction to take further cognizance of this case without prejudice to the re-
filing
thereof in the Juvenile Court, because he believed that jurisdiction over 16 yea
rs olds
up to under 21 was transferred to the Juvenile Court by the issuance of PD 603 o
r the
Child and Youth Welfare Code, which defines youthful offenders as those over 9
years of age but under 21 at the time of the commission of the offense.
ISSUE:
W/N the issuance of PD 603 transferred the case of the accused from the
regular courts to the Juvenile Court.
HELD:
The Juvenile and Domestic Relations Court expressly confers upon it a special
and limited jurisdiction over criminal cases wherein the accused is under 16 year
s of
age at the time of the filing of the case . The subsequent issuance of PD 603 know
n
as the Child and Youth Welfare Code and defines a youth offender as one who is
over 9 years of age but under 21 at the time of the commission of the offense did
not by such definition transfer jurisdiction over criminal cases involving accus
ed who
are 16 and under 21 years of age from the regular courts to the Juvenile Court.
LATIN MAXIM:
35
Primicias v. Municipality of Urdaneta
Case No. 244
G.R. No. L-26702 (October 18, 1979)
Chapter I, Page 4, Footnote No.14
FACTS:
Petitioner, while driving his car in the jurisdiction of Urdaneta, was charged
with violation of Ordinance No. 3, Series of 1964, particularly, for overtaking a
truck .
Petitioner initiated an action for annulment of said ordinance and prayed for th
e
issuance of preliminary injunction for restraining Respondent from enforcing the
said
ordinance.
ISSUE:
W/N Ordinance No. 3, Series of 1964, by the Municipality of Urdaneta,
Pangasinan is valid.
HELD:
No. Ordinance No. 3 is said to be patterned after and based on Section 53 of
Act No. 3992. However, Act No. 3992 has been explicitly repealed by RA No. 4136
(The Land and Transportation Code). By this express repeal, the general rule is
that a
later law prevails over an earlier law. Also, an essential requisite for a valid
ordinance
is that it must not contravene the statute for it is fundamental principle that
municipal ordinances are inferior in status and subordinate to the laws of the s
tate.
LATIN MAXIM:
4, 6c, 49
3
LATIN MAXIM:
37, 38a
11
Tañada v. Tuvera
Case No. 287
G.R. No. L-63915 (December 29, 1986)
Chapter I, Page 37, Footnote No.159
FACTS:
Due process was invoked by the Petitioners in demanding the disclosure of a
number of Presidential Decrees which they claimed had not been published as
required by law. The government argued that while publication was necessary as a
rule, it was not so when it was otherwise provided as when the decrees themselves
declared that they were to become effective immediately upon their approval.
ISSUE:
W/N the clause otherwise provided in Article 2 of Civil Code pertains to the
necessity of publication.
HELD:
No, the clause otherwise provided refers to the date of effectivity and not
to the requirement of publication per se, which cannot in any event be omitted.
Publication in full should be indispensable. Without such notice or publication,
there would be no basis for the application of the maxim ignorantia Legis non
excusat . The court, therefore, declares that presidential issuances of general
application which have not been published shall have no force and effect, and th
e
court ordered that the unpublished decrees be published in the Official Gazette
immediately.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 9a
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Gutierrez v. Carpio
Case No. 55
G.R. No. 31025 (August 15, 1929)
FACTS:
The Litigants here compromised a civil case on July 13, 1928, agreeing that if
within a month from the date thereof the Plaintiffs failed to repurchase a certa
in
land, the ownership would vest in the Defendants. But when the Plaintiffs duly
tendered the amount, the Defendants appealed that by that time, August 13, 1928,
the time when the Plaintiffs tendered it, the stipulated or fixed period had alr
eady
elapsed.
ISSUE:
W/N the stipulated period elapsed on the time of tendering.
HELD:
No. The repurchase of the land was made within the stipulated period. The
above issue depends upon the kind of month agreed upon by the parties, and on
the day from which it should be counted. Article 7 of the Civil Code had been
modified by Sec. 13 of the Administrative Code, according to which month now
means the civil month and not the regular-30-day month. In computing any fixed
period of time, with reference to the performance of an act required by law or
contract to be done within a certain limit of time, the day from which the time
is
reckoned is to be excluded and the date of performance included, unless otherwis
e
provided. There is nothing in the agreement providing otherwise.
LATIN MAXIM:
2a, 39a
17
Guzman v. Lichauco
Case No. 56
G.R. No. L-17986 (October 21, 1921)
FACTS:
Plaintiff filed two actions of unlawful detainer to recover possession of certai
n
properties in Manila. The trial court decided in favor of the Plaintiff. The uns
uccessful
Defendants having appealed in both cases on Dec. 9, 1920 to the Court of First
Instance of Manila, it is their duty to conform with the provisions of Sec. 88 o
f the CCP,
as amended by Act No. 2588, in case they desire to avoid the immediate execution
of the judgment pending the appeal, to pay the Plaintiff, or to deposit in court
, on or
before the TENTH day of each Calendar month , the sums of money fixed by the
Justice of the Peace as the reasonable value of the use and occupation of the
property held by them. The Defendants made such dilatory payments however they
failed to make such payments on or before the tenth day of the month. As a resul
t,
the Plaintiff moved the court to execute the judgments. The court ordered the
immediate execution of the judgment.
ISSUE:
W/N the payments were made on or before the Tenth day of each month.
HELD:
The payment made on August 11, 1921 was one day late. The term month
must now be understood to refer to calendar month, inasmuch as Sec 13 of the
Administrative Code has modified Art. 7 of the civil code in so far as the latte
r fixes
the length of a month at thirty days.
LATIN MAXIM:
25a, 25c
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
U.S. v. Paniaga
Case No. 161
G.R. No. 8223 (March 4, 1914)
FACTS:
This is an appeal by the government from an order of the court, setting aside
the forfeiture of a bail bond. Judgment was rendered against the principal on
February 7, and the sureties were notified on the same day to produce the thereo
f
their principal. On Feb 28, the court ordered that the Defendant s bond be forfeit
ed
and the execution issued against the principal and the sureties for the amount
thereof, and that an alias warrant be issued for the arrest of the Defendant. By
various orders of the court, the sale was postponed from time to time, and final
ly
occurred on July 8, 1912, with government as the purchaser. On July 10, 1912, th
e
principal was arrested. On July 13, 1912, the court, on application of the suret
ies, set
aside the order of forfeiting the bond, and ordered the sheriff to annul the sal
e.
ISSUE:
W/N the execution sale occurred on the date directed by the court.
HELD:
Sec. 4 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides: unless otherwise specially
provided, the time within which an act is required by law to be done shall be
computed by excluding the first day and including the last; if the last be a Sun
day or
a legal holiday, it shall be excluded. This section is only applicable if there i
s a
computation needed to be done. However, in this case, there is no necessity for
such
computation for the date is fixed for when the act be performed. It is also dire
cted
that the sale should take place on a named future date. The sale here of the
property must stand.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c
18
PNB v. CA
Case No. 238
G.R. No. 98382 (May 17, 1993)
Chapter I, Page 47, Footnote No.195
FACTS:
To secure payments of his loans, Private Respondent mortgages two lots to
Petitioner bank. For failure to pay the obligation, Petitioner bank extrajudicia
lly
foreclosed the mortgaged property and won the highest bidder at the auction sale
.
Then, a final deed of sale was registered in the Buacan Registry of Property in
favor of
the Petitioner bank and later sold the said lots to a third party.
The notices of sale of Appellant s foreclosed properties were published on
March 28, April 11 and April 12, 1969 issues of the newspaper Daily Record . The d
ate
March 28, 1969 falls on a Friday, while the dates April 11 and 12 fall on a Frid
ay and
Saturday, respectively. Section 3 of Act No. 3135 requires that the notice of au
ction
sale shall be published once a week for at least three consecutive weeks .
ISSUE:
W/N the Petitioner bank complied with the requirements of weekly
publication of notice of extrajudicial foreclosure of mortgages.
HELD:
It must be conceded that that Article 13 is completely silent as to the
definition of what is week . In Concepcion v. Andueta, the term week was
interpreted to mean as a period of time consisting of seven consecutive days. Th
e
Defendant-Appellee bank failed to comply with the legal requirement of publicati
on.
LATIN MAXIM:
1, 9a, 9b
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Hidalgo v. Hidalgo
Case No. 124
G.R. No. L-25326 (May 29, 1970) and G.R. No. L-25327 (May 29, 1970)
Chapter II, Page 52, Footnote No.19
FACTS:
Petitioners pray to Agrarian Court to be entitled as share tenants to redeem
parcel of land they are working from the purchasers where no notice was previous
ly
given to them by the vendor of the latter s intention to sell the property and whe
re
the vendor did not execute the affidavit required by Sec. 13 of the Agricultural
Land
Reform Code before the registration of the deed of sale. Agrarian Court dismisse
d
petitions, stating that the right of redemption granted by Sec. 12 of the same c
ode is
only for leasehold tenants and not for share tenants, claiming that share tenanc
y and
leasehold tenancy are within the jurisdiction of the code that the code expressl
y
grants said right to leaseholders only and nobody else. Moreover, the court held
that
if the intention of Congress was to extend the right of redemption to share tena
nts
through judicial legislation, the section would have expressly said so.
ISSUE:
W/N not the right of redemption granted by Sec. 12 of the Agrarian Reform
Code addresses only leaseholders and not share tenants.
HELD:
Agrarian Court fell into several erroneous assumptions and premises, reducing
agricultural lessee to only leasehold tenants . The purpose of the Agricultural
Land Reform Code is the abolition of agricultural share tenancy. The policy of t
he
State is to establish owner cultivatorship. Adherence to the letter would result
in
absurdity, injustice and contradictions and would defeat the plain and vital pur
pose
of the statute.
LATIN MAXIM:
9a, 9c, 11a, 12a, 36a, 37, 40a
Maxims invoked by lower court: 6c, 30b, 43
19
U.S. v. Navarro
Case No. 300
G.R. No. 6160 (March 21, 1911)
Chapter II, Page 52, Footnote No.20
FACTS:
They made an oath before an election officer in the municipality of Piddig (in
proceedings in connection with the general election held on Nov. 2, 1909) that t
hey
owned real property with the value of P500. Evidence showed that the Appellants,
except for Daniel Navarro and Genaro Calixtro, did not own property of the asses
sed
value of P500.
ISSUE:
W/N the said statute s true test of property qualification to vote is the
actual/market value of the property owned or the assessed value thereof.
HELD:
It was the intention of the legislator as proved from an examination of the
immediate context of provisions of the statute defining property qualifications of
a
voter, and of the statute as a whole. In the statute, property qualification is
an
alternative to qualification based upon an annual payment. Both qualifications a
re
under a single head, suggesting an intimate relation between the two in the mind
of
the legislator. Another section of the statute disqualifies people who are delin
quent in
the payment of public taxes assessed since Aug. 13, 1898, from voting. This prov
ision
was directed to the case of delinquency in the payment of land taxes as well as
all
other taxes. The statute as a whole (as an election law) is intended to secure p
urity of
the ballot box. If the property qualification is actual/market value, it would b
e highly
improbable to enforce the statute within a reasonable time because it will be di
fficult
to determine.
LATIN MAXIM:
10, 11a, 12a, 28, 36a, 37
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Litex Employees Association v. Eduvala
Case No. 149
G.R. No. L-41106 (September 22, 1977)
Chapter II, Page 53, Footnote No.22
FACTS:
Respondent, Officer-in-Charge of Bureau of Labor Relations, required
referendum election among Petitioners to ascertain their wishes as to their affi
liation
with Federation of Free Workers. Petitioners contended that there was no statuto
ry
authorization for the Respondent to require referendum election and that
Respondent and the Bureau were beyond jurisdiction.
ISSUE:
W/N there is a statute authorizing Respondents and giving them jurisdiction.
HELD:
Article 226 of the Labor Code addresses this. Respondent and the Bureau
were within jurisdiction. Petition denied. Article 226 of Labor Code is very cle
ar
concerning executive department s original and exclusive authority to act .
LATIN MAXIM:
9a, 9c, 20a, 24a
20
Regalado v. Yulo
Case No. 255
G.R. No. L-42293 (February 13, 1935)
Chapter II, Page 55, Footnote No.25
FACTS:
Petitioner was Justice of Peace of Malinao, Albay. On November 16, 1931,
Act No. 3899 which provided for the age retirement among justices was approved.
A
few years later, Petitioner became 65 years of age (age retirement as provided b
y
Sec. 203 of the Administrative Code, amended further by Act. No. 3899). Shortly
thereafter, Esteban T. Villar was appointed as Justice of Peace to take the plac
e of
Petitioner. On December 17, 1934, Villar assumed office.
ISSUE:
W/N under the provisions of Section 203 of the Administrative Code, as further
amended by Act No. 3899, the Justices of Peace and auxiliary justices appointed
prior to the approval of the Act shall cease to hold office upon reaching the ag
e of
65.
HELD:
Justices appointed prior to the approval of the Act will not be affected by
said amendment (Act No. 3899).
LATIN MAXIM:
1, 46a
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
B.E. San Diego Inc. v. CA
Case No. 26
G.R. No. 80223 (February 5, 1993)
Chapter II, Page 56, Footnote No. 27
FACTS:
On March 3, 1986, Petitioner instituted an action in the RTC of Valenzuela
against Private Respondent De Jesus for recovery of possession of a parcel of la
nd in
said area. In her defense, De Jesus argued that the land in question was covered
by
PD 2016 (a complementary provision of PD 1517, which aims to protect tenants fro
m
unjust eviction.)
ISSUE:
W/N PD 2016 is a valid defense of De Jesus in upholding her rights as a lessee.
HELD:
PD 2016 is a valid ground for De Jesus in invoking her rights as a tenant. While
it may depart from its source, PD 1517, said provision still aims to protect the
tenants
from unscrupulous landowners from demanding a steep price for the land, as well
as
unjust eviction.
LATIN MAXIM:
12a, 25a
21
Araneta v. Dinglasan
Case No. 84
G.R. No. L-2044 (August 26, 1949)
Chapter II, Page 56, Footnote No. 29
FACTS:
Executive Orders, in pursuance of Commonwealth Act No. 671 (Emergency
Powers Act), were questioned for its validity until the National Assembly Conven
tion
of 1942
ISSUE:
W/N the proclamations are valid.
HELD:
These Executive Orders are valid because they have been enacted during
the time of the inability of the Congress to function. That when Congress conven
ed
again on Jan. 1, 1942, said proclamations were also terminated.
LATIN MAXIM:
2a, 9a
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Endencia and Jugo v. David
Case No. 98
G.R. No. L-6355-56 (August 31, 1953)
Chapter II, Page 56, Footnote No.33
FACTS:
RA 590 declares that no salary received by a public officer shall be
considered exempt from income tax, payment of which is hereby declared not to be
a diminution of his compensation fixed by law. While Art. 8, Sec. 9 of the Const
itution
states that judges shall receive compensation as fixed by law, which shall not b
e
diminished during their continuance in office. Petitioners question the legality
of RA
590.
ISSUE:
W/N RA 590 unconstitutional.
HELD:
No. Saying that the taxing of the salary of a judicial officer is not a decrease
in
compensation is a clear interpretation of Which shall not be diminished during th
eir
continuance in office , by the Legislature. Through the separation of powers, such
a
task must be done by the Judiciary. Judicial officers are exempt from taxes on h
is
salary not for his own benefit but for the public, to secure and preserve his
independence of judicial thought and action.
LATIN MAXIM:
1, 6c, 7a, 24a
22
HELD:
No. Under section 1683 of the Revised Administrative Code, the provincial
fiscal shall represent the province and any municipality or municipal thereof in
any
court. Furthermore, under section 3 of the Local Autonomy Act, the municipal
attorney shall act as legal counsel for the municipality and perform such duties
and
exercise such powers as may be assigned to them by the council. The municipality s
interest would be best protected if the municipal attorney handles its litigatio
n. These
laws are implemented as well so as not to burden the municipality with the expen
se
of hiring a private lawyer.
LATIN MAXIM:
7a
26
Co v. CA
Case No. 65
G.R. No. 100776 (October 28, 1993)
Chapter II, Page 69, Footnote No.91
FACTS:
Petitioner delivered to the salvaging firm on September 1, 1983 a check
drawn against the Associated Citizens Bank, postdated November 30, 1983. The
check was deposited on January 3, 1984. It was dishonored two days later, the
tersely-stated reason given by the bank being: CLOSED ACCOUNT. A criminal
complaint for violation of Batas Pambansa Bilang 22 was filed by the salvage
company against Petitioner. At the time of the issuance of the check, the delive
ry of
a rubber or bouncing check as a guarantee for an obligation was not
considered a punishable offense, an official promulgation made in a Circular of
the
Ministry of Justice.
ISSUE:
W/N Petitioner is criminally liable.
HELD:
No. According to them, Que v. People should not be applied retroactively in
accordance with the prospectivity principle of judicial rulings and the operativ
e fact
doctrine. The decision in Que should not be given retroactive effect to the prej
udice
of Co and others similarly situated who relied on the opinion of the Secretary o
f
Justice.
LATIN MAXIM:
1, 2a, 46a
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Sy Kiong v. Sarmiento
Case No. 150
G.R. No. L-2934 (November 29, 1951)
FACTS:
Petitioner is the owner of a duly licensed grocery store located in the City of
Manila and an importer of flour who sells either to bakeries or to retail dealer
s for
purposes of retail. Sometime in September 1948, the Treasurer of the City of Man
ila
assessed against him the sum of 566.50php which represents the alleged deficienc
y
municipal license tax due from him on his gross sales of flour to bakeries after
deducting the sales made to retail dealers for purposes of resale.
ISSUE:
W/N the sales of flour made by the Petitioner to bakeries to be manufactured
into bread are retail or wholesale.
HELD:
The sale of flour to bakeries to be manufactured into bread and to be resold
to the public, in the absence of any express provision of law on the matter, sho
uld be
treated as a sale at retail and should subject the vendor to the retail tax law.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 7a, 24a, 37, 43
30
Eugenio v. Drilon
Case No. 104
G.R. No. 109404 (January 22, 1996)
Chapter III, Page 81, Footnote No.20
FACTS:
Private Respondent purchased on installment basis from Petitioner, two lots.
Private respondent suspended payment of his amortizations because of nondevelopm
ent
on the property. Petitioner then sold one of the two lots to spouses
Relevo and the title was registered under their name. Respondent prayed for
annulment of sale and reconveyance of the lot to him. Applying P.D. 957 The
Subdivision and Condominium Buyers Protective Decree , the Human Settlements
Regulatory Commission ordered Petitioner to complete the development, reinstate
Private Respondent s purchase contract over one lot and immediately refund him of
the payment (including interest) he made for the lot sold to the spouses. Petiti
oner
claims that the Exec. Sec. erred in applying P.D. 957 saying it should have not
been
given retroactive effect and that non-development does not justify the non-payme
nt
of the amortizations.
ISSUE:
W/N the Executive Secretary acted with grave abuse of discretion when he
decided P.D. 957 will be given retroactive effect.
HELD:
No. Respondent Executive Secretary did not act with grave abuse of
discretion and P.D. 957 is to given retroactive effect so as to cover even those
contracts executed prior to its enactment in 1976. P.D. 957 did not expressly pr
ovide
for retroactivity in its entirety, but such can be plainly inferred from the unm
istakable
intent of the law. The intent of the statute is the law.
LATIN MAXIM:
9a
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
People of the Philippines v. Purisima
Case No. 221
G.R. Nos. L-42050-66 (November 20, 1978)
Chapter III, Page 76, Footnote No.16
FACTS:
Twenty-six petitions for review were filed charging the respective Defendant
with illegal possession of deadly weapon in violation of Presidential Decree No. 9
.
An order quashed the information because it did not allege facts which constitut
e
the offense penalized by P.D. No. 9. It failed to state one essential element of
the
crime, viz.: that the carrying outside of the residence of the accused of a blad
ed,
pointed, or blunt weapon is in furtherance or on the occasion of, connected with
or
related to subversion, insurrection, or rebellion, organized lawlessness or publ
ic
disorder. Petitioners argued that a perusal of P.D. No. 9 shows that the prohibi
ted acts
need not be related to subversive activities and that they are essentially malum
prohibitum penalized for reasons of public policy.
ISSUE:
W/N P.D. No. 9 shows that the prohibited acts need not be related to
subversive activities.
HELD:
The primary rule in the construction and interpretation of a legislative measure
is to search for and determine the intent and spirit of the law. Legislative int
ent is the
controlling factor. Because of the problem of determining what acts fall under P
.D. 9,
it becomes necessary to inquire into the intent and spirit of the decree and thi
s can
be found among others in the preamble or whereas clauses which enumerate the
facts or events which justify the promulgation of the decree and the stiff sanct
ions
stated therein.
LATIN MAXIM:
9a, b2
32
US. v. Hart
Case No. 159
G.R. No. L-8327 (March 28, 1913)
FACTS:
Respondent was caught in a gambling house and was penalized under Act
No. 519 which punishes every person found loitering about saloons or dram shops o
r
gambling houses, or tramping or straying through the country without visible mea
ns
of support . The said portion of the law is divided into two parts, separated by t
he
comma, separating those caught in gambling houses and those straying through the
country without means of support. Though it was proven that Hart and the other
Defendants had visible means of support , it was under the first part of the portio
n of
law for which they were charged with. The prosecution persisted that the phrase
without visible means of support was in connection to the second part of the said
portion of Act No. 519, therefore was not a viable defense.
ISSUE:
How should the provision be interpreted?
HELD:
The construction of a statute should be based upon something more
substantial than mere punctuation. If the punctuation gives it a meaning which i
s
reasonable and is in apparent accord with legislative will, it may be as an addi
tional
argument for adopting the literal meaning of the words in the statute as thus
punctuated. An argument based on punctuations alone is not conclusive and the
court will not hesitate to change the punctuation when necessary to give the act
the
effect intended by the legislature, disregarding superfluous and incorrect
punctuation marks, or inserting others when necessary. Inasmuch as defendant had
,
visible means of support and that the absence of such was necessary for the
conviction for gambling and loitering in saloons and gambling houses, defendants
are acquitted.
LATIN MAXIM:
11e, 33
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
In re: Estate of Johnson
Case No. 131
G.R. No. 12767 (November 16, 1918)
Chapter III, Page 86, Footnote No.38
FACTS:
Petitioner was a native of Sweden and a naturalized citizen of the United
States but died and left a will in Manila. Sec. 636 of the Code of the Civil Pro
cedure
states Will made here by an alien will made within the Philippine Islands by a citi
zen
or subject of another state or country, which is executed in accordance with the
law
of the state or country of which he is a citizen or subject, and which might be
proved,
allowed by the law of his own state or country, may be proved, allowed and
recorded in the Philippine Islands and shall have the same effect as if executed
according to the laws of these Islands. The will of Johnson was probated and
allowed in the lower court, but Petitioner contends that Sec. 636 is applicable
only to
wills of aliens; and in this connection, attention is directed to the fact that
the
epigraph of this section speaks only of the will made here by an alien and to fu
rther
fact that the word state in the body of the section is not capitalized.
ISSUE:
W/N the will of Petitioner, a citizen of the U.S and therefore an alien, is
covered by Sec. 636.
HELD:
The fact that the words state and country are not capitalized does not
mean that the United States is excluded from the phrase another state or country .
It
is a rule of hermeneutics that punctuation and capitalization are aids of low de
gree
in interpreting the language of a statute and can never control against the inte
lligible
meaning of the written words. The epigraph, or heading, of a section being nothi
ng
more than a convenient index to the contents of the provision, cannot have the
effect of limiting the operative words contained in the body of the text. Petiti
oner,
being a US citizen, thus an alien, is covered by Sec. 636. The will duly probate
d.
LATIN MAXIM:
24a, 25a, 26, 37, 42a, 48
35
LATIN MAXIM:
9a, 9c, 36a, 37
41
US v. De Guzman
Case No. 297
G.R. No. L-9144 (March 27, 1915)
Chapter III, Page 94, Footnote No.95
FACTS:
Defendant, along with Pedro and Serapio Macarling, was convicted of
asesinato (murder) and sentenced to life imprisonment. Defendant was discharged
before he pleaded on the condition that he promised to appear and testify as a
witness for the Government against his co-accused. Upon reaching the witness
stand, Defendant denied all knowledge of the murder. He denied ever saying
anything that implicated his co-accused and swore that statements made by him
were made in fear of the police officers. The Solicitor-General asks for the dis
charge
of the Respondent though it may result in a palpable miscarriage of justice,
nevertheless, the law provides for his dismissal and expressly bars a future pro
secution.
ISSUE:
W/N Defendant should be discharged.
HELD:
Sec. 19 and 20 are constitutional. There is no provision for perjury should the
Defendant fail to comply with the agreement with the State. However, looking at
the
legislative history of the statute, it can be gleaned that faithful performance
is
necessary to avail of the bar to criminal prosecution. Failure of the Defendant
in the
case at bar to faithfully and honestly carry out his undertaking to appear as wi
tness
and to tell the truth at the trial of his co-accused deprived him of the right t
o plead
his formal dismissal as a bar to his prosecution. Finally, discharge cannot be a
n
acquittal since it was made prior to his trial.
LATIN MAXIM:
9a, 22a, b2
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Basiana v. Luna
Case no. 31
G.R. Nos. L-34135-36 (February 24, 1981)
Chapter III, Page 95, Footnote No.102
FACTS:
Petitioner entered into a private agreement with Cipriano Luna to prospect
with Luna getting 60% and Petitioner receiving the rest. Petitioner prospected 1
83
claims, 93 were recorded for him with the rest going to Luna, a clear disregard
of their
agreement. Realizing that there was something wrong with the declaration of
location records, Luna amended the declarations with the intention of clearing c
laim
names and tie points; Petitioner however, disclaimed such consent. Consequently,
Luna cancelled the registration and created their own groups of claims overlappi
ng
Petitioner s claims. Petitioner alleges that his claims were valid, and were merel
y
abandoned for failure to pay occupation fees.
ISSUE:
W/N Petitioner s mining claims are valid.
HELD:
Sec. 47 par. 2 of the Mining Law (C.A. No. 137) provides: For the purpose of
this section, a permanent and prominent object used as a tie point MAY be an
intersection of known roads; a junction of known rivers or creeks, a known publi
c or
private structure; a corner of approved public, private or mineral land survey;
a
kilometer post of public road; or location monument or triangulation station
established by the Bureau of Lands, Bureau of Mines, Army Corps of engineers,
Bureau of Cost and Geodetic Survey, or other government agencies. An initial post
is not enumerated as a valid tie point. Petitioner s contention that the word MAY
suggests non-exclusivity is untenable since it goes against the legislator s inten
t to
eliminate claim jumping and overlapping claims.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 30a, 33, 36b
Baga v. PNB
Case No. 27
G.R. No. L-9695 (September 10, 1956)
Chapter III, Page 95, Footnote No.103
FACTS:
Petitioner was the recipient of benefits with Respondent as the guardian
under RA 390 or the Uniform Veterans Guardianship Act which was passed with the
intention of being modeled after the US version. RA 390 provides that a guardian
ship
can only be terminated upon reaching the age of majority. Petitioner alleges tha
t
she has married and has become emancipated under Art. 399 of the New Civil Code
thus terminating the guardianship.
ISSUE:
W/N Art. 399 of the Civil Code shall prevail over RA 390.
HELD:
No. The Civil Code does not prevail. It was the clear intent of the legislator t
o
create a uniform law for material aid. Inserting provisions of the Civil Code wo
uld
result in discordance with intent. RA 390 is a special law and thus must be take
n to
constitute an exception to the general law which is the Civil Code. RA 390 Sec.
23
applies notwithstanding any other provisions of law relating to judicial restora
tion and
discharge of guardians.
LATIN MAXIM:
9a, 50, b2
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
De Villa v. CA
Case No. 88
G.R. No. 87416 (April 8, 1991)
Chapter III, Page 96, Footnote No.110
FACTS:
Petitioner was charged with a violation of BP 22 (Bouncing Checks Law) for
issuing a worthless check. However, he contends that the check was drawn against
a
dollar account with a foreign bank, and is therefore, not covered by the said la
w.
ISSUE:
W/N the Makati Regional Trial Court has jurisdiction over the case in question.
HELD:
The Makati Regional Trial Court has jurisdiction. The determinative factor (in
determining venue) is the place of the issuance of the check. The offense was
committed in Makati and therefore, the same is controlling and sufficient to ves
t
jurisdiction in the Makati Regional Trial Court. The Court acquires jurisdiction
over the
case and over the person of the accused upon the filing of a complaint or
information in court which initiates a criminal action. With regard to Petitione
r s
allegation that the check is not covered by BP 22, it will be noted that the law
does
not distinguish the currency involved in the case. Thus, the Court revealed that
the
records of Batasan, Vol. III unmistakably show that the intention of the lawmake
rs is to
apply the law to whatever currency may be the subject thereof.
LATIN MAXIM:
9a, 17, 24b, 26, 43, b2
43
Mariano Zamora and his deceased sister Felicidad Zamora, bought a piece
of land located in Manila on May 16, 1944, for P132,000.00 and sold it for P75,0
00.00
on March 5, 1951. They also purchased a lot located in Q.C. for P68,959.00 on
January 19, 1944 which they sold for P94,000.00 on Feb. 9, 1951. The CTA ordered
the
estate of the late Felicidad Zamora, to pay the sum of P235.00, representing all
eged
deficiency income tax and surcharge due from said estate. Esperanza Zamora
appealed and alleged that the CTA erred.
ISSUE:
W/N the CTA erred in computing the taxes due for payment by Mariano
Zamora.
HELD:
No. The appraisal is correct and the court found no plausible reason to disturb
the same.
LATIN MAXIM:
b2
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Tamayo v. Gsell
Case No. 282
G. R. No 10765 (December 22, 1916)
Chapter III, Page 106, Footnote No.149
FACTS:
This is an action for damages against the Defendant for personal injuries
suffered by Braulio Tamayo, 11-year old son of the Plaintiff. The injury was att
ributed to
the boy s inexperience in the work which he had been assigned for the first time a
nd
without prior instruction.
ISSUE:
W/N the plaintiff is entitled to recover damages under the Employer s Liability
Act.
HELD:
Yes. The Legislature intended that the measure of damages in personal injury
cases brought under the Employer s Liability Act to be the same as that in the
country from which the Act was taken, being of American origin.
LATIN MAXIM:
b2
48
Ossorio v. Posadas
Case No. 93
G.R. No. L-31088 (December 3, 1929)
FACTS:
Plaintiff and appellant filed for the recovery from the Defendant Collector of
Internal Revenue the sum of P56,246.72, which the Defendant, according to the
complaint, collected from the Plaintiff in excess of what he should have collect
ed by
way of income tax.
ISSUE:
W/N the paraphernal property of the Plaintiff s wife constitutes her separate
estate within the scope and meaning of this phrase for the purposes of the
additional income tax.
HELD:
Yes. It is ordered that the Defendant make two separate assessments of the
additional income tax, one against the Plaintiff, and the other against his wife
on her
paraphernal property, returning the sum of P56,203.59 to said plaintiff, without
prejudice to his levying against and collecting from said Plaintiff s wife upon he
r own
separate individual declaration, in accordance with law, the additional income t
ax
for the income from her paraphernal property.
LATIN MAXIM:
b2
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Campos Rueda Corp. v. Sta. Cruz Timber Co. and Felix
Case No. 17
G.R. No. L-6884 (March 21, 1956)
FACTS:
The Court of First Instance of Manila dismissed the case of Petitioner against
Respondent to recover the value of two promissory notes for the amounts of P1,12
5
and P1,075, for lack of jurisdiction; holding that the two notes constitute two
separate
causes of action involving less than P2,000. The Municipal Court likewise dismis
sed the
case of Petitioner Corporation against Respondents for collection of the same
promissory notes object of the former action, on the ground that the amount of t
wo
notes, which Petitioner now consolidated under a single cause of action, was in
excess of its jurisdiction.
ISSUE:
W/N the Municipal Court of Manila has jurisdiction over the subject matter of
appellant s complaint.
HELD:
No. The jurisdiction of a court depends, not upon the value or demand in
each single case of action contained in the complaint, but upon the totality of
the
demand in all the causes of action.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 7a
49
Ang Giok Chio vs. Springfield Fire & Marine Insurance Co.
Case No. 8
G.R. No. 33637 (December 31, 1931)
FACTS:
Petitioner s warehouse was destroyed by fire while the policy taken out with
Respondent for the amount of P10,000 was in force. The Respondent Company has
appealed claiming that Petitioner violated a rider on the insurance contract.
ISSUE:
W/N a rider as forming part of the contract of insurance is null and void
because it does not comply with the Philippine Insurance Act.
HELD:
Yes. A rider attached to the face of the insurance policy and referred to in
the contract of insurance, is valid and sufficient under Sec. 65 of the Philippi
ne
Insurance Act as it was taken verbatim from Sec. 2605 of the Civil Code of Calif
ornia
which states, The section as it now reads is in harmony with the rule that a warr
anty
may be contained in another instrument than the policy when expressly referred t
o in
the policy as forming a part thereof.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 7a, b2
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Pando v. Kette and Sellner
Case No. 99
G.R. No. 32124 (March 27, 1930)
FACTS:
This is a foreclosure of mortgage. In pursuant thereof, the sheriff on January 3
0,
1929, posted notices of the sale of the land in said writ in 3 public places, to
wit, upon
the land itself, at the market, and on the municipal building of Pasay. Notice o
f the
sale was sent to the newspaper La Opinion for publication, and the editor certif
ied
that he published it once a week for 3 consecutive weeks, more particularly on t
he
2nd, 9th, and 15th of February, 1929 and the sale took place on February 19, 192
9.
ISSUE:
W/N the posted notices of the sale in 3 public places and publication in La
Opinion once a week for 3 consecutive weeks satisfied the requirements of the la
w
regarding the notice of the sale in question.
HELD:
Yes. The Provision of our Code of Civil Procedure having been adopted from
Sec. 692 of the California Code, the requirements of the law regarding the notic
e of
the sale in question have been substantially complied with.
LATIN MAXIM:
b2
Reyes v. Wells
Case No. 135
G.R. No. 30587 (December 4, 1929)
FACTS:
Defendants offered to sell to Plaintiffs an installed maguey stripping machine
and an International truck in a shed lot for P23,000. However, Plaintiff Guerrer
o said
that he could not do so for the lack of money to operate the machine. Respondent
Rader promised to furnish said Plaintiff with the amount he would need. Plaintif
f
would just have to make out two promissory notes in favour of the mortgage.
Defendant Rader and Plaintiff Guerrero went to J. Northcott, and on June 29, 192
2,
the former endorsed the mortgage deed. However, neither the said amount nor any
part thereof was delivered to Plaintiff Guerrero, or to any of his co-Plaintiffs
. Due to
the failure of J. E. Rader and J. Northcott to pay said amount of P12,000, the P
laintiff
sustained damages for default in the payment of the instalments due.
ISSUE:
W/N the promissory notes in question which have not been paid, are not
supported by the evidence in relation to the competence of the testimony of
Guerrero.
HELD:
There was evidence on the part of the promissory notes in question. These are
also in line with Sec. 4604 of the Code of Iowa. The prohibition contained in sa
id law
against a witness testifying upon any transaction or communication between himsel
f
and a deceased person, is substantially the same as that contained in Sec. 383(7
) of
our Code of Civil Procedure, as amended by Act No. 2252. Therefore, we believe
that the construction placed upon it by the court in the cases cited is applicab
le to
the case at bar.
LATIN MAXIM:
1, b2
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Phil. Educ. Co. v. Soriano
Case No. 235
G.R. No. L-22405 (June 30, 1971)
Chapter III, Page 107, Footnote No.156
FACTS:
Montinola sought to purchase money orders from Manila Post Office. He
managed to leave the building without knowledge of the teller. Palomar received
one money order as part of their sales receipt and subsequently deposited it in
the
Bank of America. Respondent, Chief of the Money Order Division of the Manila Pos
t
Office notified the Bank of irregularity, and deducted from the bank s clearing
account the said amount, in the same way the bank of America debited Petitioner s
account with the same amount. Petitioner requested to reconsider the action but
was denied.
ISSUE:
W/N the postal money order in question is a negotiable instrument.
HELD:
Postal statutes are patterned after similar statutes enforced in the US. These
are generally constructed and construed in accordance with construction of US s
own postal statutes, in the absence of any special reason justifying departure f
rom
the policy or practice. US held that postal money orders are not negotiable
instruments.
LATIN MAXIM:
2b, 9a, b2
51
Cruz v. Pahati
Case No. 28
G.R. No. L-8257 (April 13, 1956)
FACTS:
Defendant bought an automobile from Bulahan, for P4,900 which he paid in
check. He cancelled the sale and stopped the payment of the check upon
impoundment and as a result, he returned the automobile to Bulahan who in then
surrendered the check for cancellation. He set up a counterclaim for attorney's
fees.
Bulahan claims that he bought the automobile from Belizo without having any
knowledge of any defect in the title. It was found out that Belizo falsified a l
etter that
enabled him to sell the car of Bulahan for profit. The court rendered judgment
declaring Defendant Bulahan entitled to the automobile in question and ordered t
he
Plaintiff to return it to said Defendant and, upon his failure to do so, to pay
him the
sum of P4,900, with legal interest from the date of the decision. The claim for
damages and attorney's fees of Bulahan was denied. Defendant Belizo was however
ordered to indemnify the Plaintiff in the amount of P4,900 and pay the sum of P5
,000
as moral damages. The counterclaim of Defendant was denied for lack of evidence.
ISSUE:
Who has a better right of the two over the car.
HELD:
Plaintiff has a better right to the car than Bulahan and therefore can recover
the said car. It was clear that the Plaintiff was unlawfully deprived because of
the
scheme of Belizo even if both the Plaintiff and Bulahan acted in good faith.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 7a
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Republic v. Workmen s Compensation Commission
Case No. 132
G.R. No. L-29019 (May 18, 1972)
FACTS:
Petitioners seek full compensation of P6,000.00 plus attorney s fee of P600.00
under the WCC, without deducting the P3,000.00 as death benefit which they had
been previously paid by virtue of the provisions of RA 610.
ISSUE:
W/N the beneficiaries of military personnel who have received the death
gratuity under RA 610 should still be paid the death compensation under the WCC.
HELD:
The resolution of the WCC is modified; the P3,000.00 received under RA 610
should be deducted from the full grant received under the WCC. It is difficult t
o
construe that the legislature intended to double the compensations received,
considering that at the times said laws were approved the finances of the
government could not have conceivably permitted the outlays needed for the
purpose. Furthermore, Sec. 9 of RA 610 and Sec. 5 of WCC bar payment under other
laws. It was also contended that the phrase or any other law granting similar
benefits to officers or employees, generally, of the national, provincial or mun
icipal
government in Sec. 9 is highly indicative of the legislative intent to prevent fu
rther
recovery of compensation benefits under other laws.
LATIN MAXIM:
17, 19b, 29, 38b, 39, 40b
Garcia et al. v. Hipolito et al.
Case NO. 53
G.R. No. L-1449 (November 30, 1903)
FACTS:
Judgment was rendered for the Defendants on May 1, 1903. The Plaintiffs
were notified thereof on May 21. Two days after, they excepted to the judgment
and presented a motion for a new trial, which was denied on July 23. On July 28,
the
Plaintiffs presented their proposed bill of exceptions, which on August 5 was al
lowed
and signed by the court. The term of the court in which the case was tried expir
ed on
May 30.
ISSUE:
W/N Sec. 143 of the Code of Civil Procedure allows the parties to consent to
or for the judge to order an extension of the 10-day period.
HELD:
The period of 10 days and the subsequent period of 5 days have to do with
the mechanical part of the appeal the preparation of the papers for transmission t
o
the Supreme Court. The right of the parties to the appeal was already fixed by t
he
notice of the intention to prepare a bill of exceptions entered of record in the
clerk s
office. If the period corresponds to the appeal or for suing out a writ of error
found in
most other laws of American origin, it cannot be extended. But that period is en
tirely
different from the 10 days for allowing the preparation of papers, after the rig
ht to
remove the case has been secured. Therefore, it cannot be said that an extension
of
this time is an extension of the time to appeal. Moreover, considering when the
law
was adopted, it seems impossible that the Commission intended to deprive the cou
rt
and the parties of the power to extend the term, given the physical impossibilit
y to
comply with it in many cases.
LATIN MAXIM:
11a, 19b, 27, 48
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
ESSO Standard Eastern Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue
Case No. 41
G.R. No. 70037 (July 7, 1989)
FACTS:
The case is an appeal on the decision of the Court of Tax Appeals denying
the Petitioner s claims for refund of the margin fees P102,246.00 for 1959 and
P434,234.92 for 1960.
ISSUE:
W/N RA 2609, entitled An Act to Authorize the Central Bank of the Philippines
to Establish a Margin over Banks Selling Rates of Foreign Exchange , is a police
measure or a revenue measure.
HELD:
RA 2609 is a police measure as it is applied in order to strengthen our country s
international reserve. Petitioner contended that margin fees are taxes and cited
the
background and the legislative history of the Margin Fee Law showing that RA 260
9
was nothing less than a revival of the 17% excise tax on foreign exchange impose
d
by RA 601. This was a revenue measure formally proposed by President Carlos P.
Garcia to Congress as part of, and in order to balance, the budget for 1959-1960
.
The CTA stated that it is a well-settled jurisprudence that only in extremely
doubtful matters of interpretation does the legislative history of an act of Con
gress
become important. As a matter of fact, there may be no resort to the legislative
history of the enactment of a statute, the language of which is plain and
unambiguous, since such legislative history may only be resorted to for the purp
ose of
solving doubt, not for the purpose of creating it. Moreover, at least two cases
had
been decided in which it was held that margin fee is not a tax.
LATIN MAXIM:
1, 7a
53
Orencia v. Enrile
Case No. 92
G.R. No. L-28997 (February 22, 1974)
FACTS:
Petitioner is alleging that he is the deputy clerk of court of the Clerks of Cou
rt
Division of the Land Registration Commission, and he has been performing functio
ns
of Assistant Chief of said division and has been considered and recognized as su
ch
until RA 4040, increasing the salaries of Assistant Chiefs of Divisions, among o
thers, was
implemented where he was left out while co-assistant chief of the nine other div
isions
of the Land Registration Commission were so recognized and extended increased
compensation. Respondents filed their answer, and after usual admissions and
denials, interposed a defense that Petitioner is unqualified for the position of
Assistant
Chief, and being a new position created under RA 4040, the same can only be file
d
by a qualified person; that Respondent, being a lawyer, is more qualified than
Petitioner, who is only a high school graduate with second grade civil service
eligibility, and praying that the petition be dismissed
ISSUE:
W/N the Petitioner should be recognized as the deputy clerk of court of the
Clerks of Court Division of the Land Registration Commission.
HELD:
For Respondent officials, the answer was not in doubt. Since there was a new
legal provision to be construed, one which admittedly, to follow the approach of
counsel for Petitioner, has an ambiguous aspect, they chose to follow the princi
ple
that a public office is a public trust. Certainly, such a contemporaneous constr
uction,
one moreover dictated by the soundest constitutional postulate, is entitled to t
he
highest respect from the judiciary.
LATIN MAXIM:
2a
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
m i k iPeople of the Philippines v. Hernandez
Case No. 107
G.R. Nos. L-39840 and L-39841 (December 23, 1933)
FACTS:
Respondent ran for governor in Camarines Norte and assumed office on
October 16, 1931. At this time, he was a delinquent in the payment of P2,000 for
land
taxes to the government. Two or three days before Respondent assumed office, the
municipal treasurer demanded him to pay said taxes but he failed to do so. The
Insular Auditor permitted Respondent to receive his salary as governor, on the
condition that it would be used to pay off the delinquent taxes. The Chief of
Executive Bureau and Attorney General agreed with Insular Auditor. By September,
1932, taxes had been paid for. However, in April 1932, he was charged for violat
ing
Sec. 2659 of the Administrative code and was found guilty and was deprived the
right to suffrage and public office.
ISSUE:
W/N Sec. 2659 can be applied to refrain Respondent from taking office as
Governor in Camarines Norte.
HELD:
No. Sec. 2659 refers to a person who assumes office to which he had been
elected without possessing the necessary qualifications to hold public office as
provided by law. Delinquency of payment of taxes is no longer a disqualification
for
assuming a public office. Hence, even though Respondent did not pay his land
taxes, this does not incapacitate him from assuming office. Under these
circumstances, we should follow the doctrine laid down in the cases of Molina vs
.
Rafferty: long continued administrative interpretation of a tax law, while not
conclusive, should be followed unless clearly erroneous. And in this case, it wa
s not.
LATIN MAXIM:
2a, 32, 42b
55
Salaria v. Buenviaje
Case No. 267
G.R. No. L-45642 (February 28, 1978)
Chapter III, Page 115, Footnote No.193
FACTS:
Petitioner has been staying on the land of Cailao when the latter sold the said
land to Private Respondent Mendiola. A formal letter of demand to vacate the
premises was sent by Respondent Mendiola to Petitioner. A complaint for unlawful
detainer was filed by Mendiola against Petitioner Salaria. After the trial, the
City Court
ordered Petitioner to vacate the leased premises. On appeal, the CFI through
Respondent Judge Buenviaje affirmed the decision of the inferior court. Thus, a
petition for review on Certiorari was filed with the Supreme Court.
ISSUE:
W/N Respondent can eject Petitioner from the lot.
HELD:
No. Memorandum Circular No. 970 was issued by the President stating that
except for the causes for judicial ejectment of lessees bona fide tenants of
dwelling places covered by said decree are not subject to eviction, particularly
if the
only cause of action thereon is personal use of the property by the owners or th
eir
families. Construction by Executive Branch of Government of a particular law
although not binding upon courts must be given weight as the construction comes
from that branch called upon to implement the law. The ground relied upon by the
lessor in this case, namely, personal use of property by the owner or lessors or
their
families is not one of the causes for judicial ejectment of lessees.
LATIN MAXIM:
2a, 30a, 38b
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
University of the Philippines v. CA
Case No. 305
G.R. No. L-28153 (January 28, 1971)
Chapter III, Page 115, Footnote No.195
FACTS:
With the filing of Petition for injunction in the Court of First Instance of Man
ila,
Petitioners in the original case sought to restrain herein Respondent from dismi
ssing
them and to declare as a matter of legal right that they should not be dismissed
from
the Philippine General Hospital by herein Respondent but by the Civil Service
Commissioner.
ISSUE:
W/N the dismissal of original Petitioners in the case by the Board of Regents is
final, or requires further action by the Civil Service Commission.
HELD:
The management of Philippine General hospital was initially under the Office
of the President of the Philippines. Under RA 51 and E.O. 94, the President tran
sferred
them under herein Respondent. Thus, the Supreme Court ruled that the President a
nd
Board of Regents of the U.P. possess full and final authority in disciplining, s
uspension,
and removal of the civil service employees of the University, including those of
the
Philippine General Hospital, independently of the Commissioner of the Civil Serv
ice
and the Civil Service Board of Appeals.
LATIN MAXIM:
2a, 6c, 9b, 20c, 38b
59
ISSUE:
W/N the case falls under the exception of P.D. 1123.
HELD:
No. There was no formal agreement on April 2, 1977 regarding the increase.
Moreover, the opinion of the Undersecretary of Labor was based on a wrong premis
e
and misinterpretation by PAI Management. It was unlawful and beyond the scope of
law.
LATIN MAXIM:
2a
61
Tañada v. Cuenco, et al
Case No. 286
G.R. No. L-10016 (February 28, 1957)
Chapter XI, Page No. 451, Footnote No.55
FACTS:
The Senate upon nomination of the Nacionalista Party chose Senator Laurel,
Lopez, and Primicias, as members of the Senate Electoral Tribunal (SET). Upon
nomination of the Citizens Party, Petitioner was next chosen by the Senate as
member of SET. Then, the Senate chose Respondents as members of the same SET.
Petitioners maintain that after the nomination and election of Senator Laurel, L
opez,
and Primicias of the Nacionalista Party as members of the SET, the other Senator
s
must be nominated by the Citizens Party. Respondents alleged, however, that six
members of the Electoral Tribunal shall be members of the Senate or the House of
Representatives , is mandatory. The word shall is imperative in nature relative to t
he
number of members of the Electoral Tribunal and this is borne in the opinion of
the
Secretary of Justice.
ISSUE:
W/N the election of Respondents as members of the Electoral Tribunal was
valid or lawful.
HELD:
No. The application of the doctrine of contemporaneous construction is
more restricted except as to matters committed by the Constitution itself to the
discretion of some other department, contemporary or practical construction is n
ot
necessarily binding upon the courts, even in a doubtful case. Hence, if the
judgment of the court, such construction is erroneous and its further applicatio
n is not
made imperative by any paramount considerations of public policy, it may be
rejected.
LATIN MAXIM:
2a, 6b, 9b, 11a
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Aratuc v. COMELEC
Case No. 19
G.R. No. L-49705-09 (February 8, 1979)
Chapter XI, Page 452, Footnote No.62
FACTS:
Two petitions were filed against the Respondent claiming that it failed to
address irregularities in the Central Mindanao elections for the Interim Batasan
g
Pambansa.
ISSUE:
W/N the Supreme Court has the power to review decisions made by the
Respondent in handling the pre-proclamation controversies cited by the Petitione
rs.
HELD:
No. The Supreme Court may only review actions carried out with grave abuse
of discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction. The Supreme Court cit
ed
differences in the 1935 and 1973 Constitutions with regard to the Supreme Court s
power over COMELEC decisions in 1935, the Supreme Court may review
Respondents decisions on either review or certiorari; 1973, Respondent s decisions
may only be brought up on ground of certiorari alone. This highlights the 1973
Constitution s intent to strengthen Respondent s independence. Consequently, errors
of judgment that were based on substantial evidence are not reviewable in
certiorari.
LATIN MAXIM:
6a, 9a, 25a
In Re: Appointment of Valenzuela and Vallarta
Case No. 59
A.M. No. 98-5-01-SC (November 9, 1998)
FACTS:
Judges were appointed to the RTC by the President on May 12 1998, within 2
months before the election. There are two conflicting provisions in the 1987
Constitution, the former validating this action and the latter proscribing it. O
n the one
hand, Art. 8, Sec. 4 requires that all vacancies in the judiciary be filled with
in 90 days
of such vacancy. On the other hand, Art. 7, Sec. 15 prohibits the President from
making any appointments two months before Presidential elections, except for
temporary appointments to executive positions when public interest is at stake.
ISSUE:
W/N the appointments were valid.
HELD:
No, the appointments were void. The general rule is that the President must fill
in vacancies in the Judiciary within 90 days, but this does not apply in the spe
cial
circumstance of Presidential elections, which occurs only once every six years.
Temporary appointments to executive positions are the only exception. The
prohibition is for public policy purposes, to prevent midnight appointments which
is more compelling than temporary vacancies in the judiciary.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 9a, 35, 36b, 38a, 50, b
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Magtoto v. Manguera
Case No. 159
G.R. Nos. L-37201-02 (March 3, 1975)
Chapter XI, Page 457, Footnote No.79
FACTS:
The present cases involve the interpretation of Sec. 20 Art. 4 of the New
Constitution which took effect on Jan. 17, 1973. The provision reads: Any person
under investigation shall have the right to remain silent and to counsel, and to b
e
informed of such right . Any confession obtained in violation of this section shal
l be
inadmissible. Petitioner was accused in two criminal cases of murder in two
informations both dated Feb. 23, 1973. During the trial, his extrajudicial confe
ssion
dated Nov. 15, 1972 was admitted in evidence over the objection that it was take
n
while the accused was in the preventive custody of the PC without his having bee
n
informed of his right to remain silent and to counsel.
ISSUE:
1. W/N the Petitioner s extra-judicial confession dated on Nov. 15, 1972 is
admissible as evidence.
2. W/N Sec. 20, Art. 4 of the New Constitution can be applied retroactively.
HELD:
1. Yes. Petitioner s confession is admissible. The court ruled that a confession
obtained from a person under investigation, who has not been informed of his rig
ht to
counsel, is admissible in evidence if the same had been obtained before the
effectivity of the New Constitution, since no law gave the accused the right to
be so
informed before that date. Conversely, such confession is inadmissible if the sa
me
had been obtained after the effectivity of the New Constitution.
2. No. The constitutional guarantee of right to counsel only has prospective
effect. Giving such provision a retroactive effect would invite unwarranted hard
ship
on the part of the prosecutor.
LATIN MAXIM:
12a, 46a
72
Filoteo v. Sandiganbayan
Case No. 106
G.R. No. 79543 (October 16, 1996)
Chapter XI, Page 457, Footnote No.80
FACTS:
Petitioners were held guilty by Respondent Court for the crime of robbery of a
postal delivery van. Upon the capture of his co-accused, he was pointed out as t
he
mastermind. When Petitioner was captured, he admitted involvement in the crime
and pointed his other confederates. On May 30, 1982, Petitioner executed sworn
statements (confessing what had happened), without the presence of a counsel. Th
e
1987 Constitution provides that the right to counsel of the accused cannot be
waived except in writing and in the presence of a counsel. Petitioner claims tha
t such
proscription against an uncounselled waiver is applicable to him retroactively,
even
though his custodial investigation took place in 1983.
ISSUE:
1. W/N the Petitioner s extra-judicial confession is admissible even without the
presence of a counsel.
2. W/N the said provisions of 1987 Constitution can be applied retroactively.
HELD:
1. Yes, it is admissible under the 1973 Constitution. Accordingly, waivers of th
e
right to counsel during custodial investigation without the benefit of counsel d
uring
the effectivity of the 1973 Constitution should, by such argumentation, be admis
sible.
2. No. The specific provision of the 1987 Constitution requiring that a waiver b
y
an accused of his right to counsel during custodial investigation must be made w
ith
the assistance of a counsel may not be applied to him retroactively or in cases
where
the extrajudicial confession was made prior to the effectivity of the said const
itution.
LATIN MAXIM:
1, 5a, 46a
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Co v. Electoral Tribunal, House of Representatives
Case No. 66
G.R. Nos. 92191-92 and 92202-03 (July 30, 1991)
Chapter XI, Page 457, Footnote No.82
FACTS:
Respondents declared Jose Ong Jr., elected representative of Northern
Samar, as a natural born Filipino citizen. Petitioners contend that based on the
1987
Constitution, Jose Ong, Jr. who was born on June 19, 1948 (during which the 1935
Constitution was operative), is not a natural born Filipino citizen having been
born to
a Chinese father, Jose Ong Chuan and a Filipina mother Agrifina Lao.
ISSUE:
1. W/N people who have elected Philippine citizenship under the 1935
Constitution are to be considered natural born Filipino citizens.
2. W/N this provision should be applied retroactively.
HELD:
Yes. Under of Art. 4 Sec. 1 par. 3 of the Constitution, children born of Filipin
o
mothers before January 17, 1973 shall be accorded natural born status if they el
ect
Philippine citizenship upon reaching the age of majority. They need not perform
any
act of election granted that his father was naturalized and declared a Filipino
citizen by 1957, when he was only 9 years old. The provision in question must be
applied retroactively since it seeks to remedy the inequitable situation under t
he 1935
Constitution wherein people born of Filipino fathers and alien mothers were
considered natural born while children born of Filipino mothers and alien father
s were
not.
LATIN MAXIM:
8a, 9a, 42a
73
Sarmiento v. Mison
Case No. 277
G.R. Nos. 80519-21 (December 17, 1987)
Chapter XI, Page 458, Footnote No.84
FACTS:
Petitioners question the validity of appointment of Respondent as
Commissioner of the Bureau of Customs on the ground that it was not confirmed by
the Commission on Appointments. The Court favored the Respondent based on
express provisions of the 1987 Constitution.
ISSUE:
W/N Sec. 16, Art. 7 provides for officers other than the first group to be
appointed with the consent of the Commission on Appointments.
HELD:
No. Sec. 16 Art. 7 only provides for the appointment, by the President of
heads of executive departments, ambassadors, other public ministers and consuls,
officers of the armed forces from the rank of colonel or naval captain, and othe
r
officers whose appointments are vested in him in this Constitution with the
requirement of CA approval. Deliberations of the Constitutional Commission revea
l
that the framers of the 1987 Constitution deliberately excluded the position head
s of
bureaus from CA confirmation with the intent of reconciling the 1935 Constitution
which turned the Commission into a venue for horse-trading , and that of the 1973
Constitution which placed absolute power of appointment in the President. The wo
rd
also in the second sentence of Sec. 16 Art. 7 must not be construed as to suppose
that officers in the second sentence shall be appointed in a like manner as that o
f
the first group.
LATIN MAXIM:
9a, 24b, 32, 39a, b
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Domingo v. Commission on Audit
Case No. 37
G.R. No. 112371 (October 7, 1998)
FACTS:
Petitioner was endorsed with several government vehicles for the use of the
personnel of the entire Region V of DSWD. Respondent sent a communication to the
Petitioner informing her that post-audit reports on the DSWD disbursement accoun
ts
showed that officials provided with government vehicles were still collecting
transportation allowances when they should not be. Petitioner asserted that even
if
she was assigned a government vehicle, she was entitled to transportation
allowance on the days she did not use a government vehicle.
ISSUE:
W/N a commutable transportation allowance may still be claimed by a
government official provided with a government vehicle, for the days the officia
l did
not actually use the vehicle.
HELD:
The General Appropriations Act of 1988, 1990 and 1991 clearly provides that
transportation allowance will not be granted to officials who are assigned a
government vehicles except as approved by the President.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 7a, 24a
Globe-Mackay v. NLRC and Salazar
Case No. 112
G.R. No. 82511 (March 3, 1992)
Chapter IV, Page 124, Footnote No.3
FACTS:
Petitioner placed Respondent Salazar under preventive suspension because it
appeared that she had full knowledge of the loss and whereabouts of an air
conditioner that Delfin Saldivar had stolen from the company but failed to infor
m her
employer. Respondent Salazar filed a complaint for illegal suspension and for ot
her
damages. On appeal, the Respondent Court affirmed the decision of the Labor
Arbiter with respect to the reinstatement of Private Respondent but limited back
wages to 2 years and deleted award for moral damages.
ISSUE:
1. W/N the Labor Tribunal committed grave abuse of discretion in ordering the
reinstatement of Respondent Salazar.
2. W/N there existed independent legal grounds to hold Respondent Salazar
answerable as well and, thereby, justify her dismissal.
HELD:
The Labor Code clearly provides that an employee who is unjustly dismissed
from work shall be entitled to reinstatement and to his full back wages. An exce
ption
to this is when the reinstatement may be inadmissible due to strained relations
between the employer and the employee. The position of Private Respondent as
systems analyst is not one that may be characterized as such. Moreover, Petition
er
merely insinuated that since Respondent Salazar had a special relationship with
Saldivar, she might have had direct knowledge of Saldivar s questionable activitie
s.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Luzon Brokerage Co v. Public Service Commission
Case No. 76
G.R. No. L-37661 (November 16, 1932)
FACTS:
Petitioner has been operating a fleet of trucks utilized exclusively for the
carriage of goods or cargo of its particular customers. On May 9, 1932, Responde
nt
required the Petitioner to file with the commission within a period of thirty da
ys an
application for a certificate of public convenience for the operation of his tru
cks
since they were said to be devoted to the transportation of cargo with
compensation as provided in Sec. 13 of the Public Service Law.
ISSUE:
W/N the amendments introduced into Sec. 13 of Act No. 3108 by Act No.
3316 conferred jurisdiction on the Respondents over the Petitioner s business,
although it is not a common carrier.
HELD:
The omission from Sec. 13 of the phrase for public use in the definition of a
public service does not mean that the Legislature meant to extend the jurisdicti
on of
the PSC to private enterprises not devoted to public use. Public service is a se
rvice for
public use. The insertion of the phrase for hire or compensation does not show the
intent either. This is a stock phrase found in most definitions of a common carr
ier and
a public utility. Also, notwithstanding the changes in the wording of the defini
tion of
the term public service introduced by Act No. 3316, there were no alterations
made in the basic provisions of the other sections. Respondent has no jurisdicti
on
over Petitioner.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 36b
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
75
ROUND 2
76
Baranda v. Gustillo
Case No. 30
G.R. No. L-81163 (September 26, 1988)
Chapter IV, Page 125, Footnote No.5
FACTS:
Both parties claim that they own a parcel of land, Lot No. 4517. The Court,
after discovering that private respondent s TCT was fraudulently acquired, ordered
a
writ of possession against them and issued a resolution denying with finality a
motion
for reconsideration filed by Private Respondents. Another group filed a separate
civil
case against Petitioners and applied for lis pendens on the TCT of said lot, whi
ch the
court found out to be privies of the Private Respondents tasked to delay the
implementation of the final decisions of the Court.
ISSUE:
1.
W/N the pendency of the appeal in subsequent civil case with the Court of
Appeals prevents the court from canceling the notice of lis pendens in the
certificate of titles of petitioners which were earlier declared valid and
subsisting by this Court.
2.
What is the nature of the duty of the Register of Deeds to annotate or annul
the notice of lis pendens in a Torrens Certificate of Title?
HELD:
1.
Respondent Judge abused his discretion in sustaining the Acting Register of
Deed s stand. He forgot the 1st par of Sec. 77 of P.D. 1529 which provides:
Cancellation of lis pendens Before the final judgment, a notice of lis
pendens may be cancelled upon order of the Court after proper showing
that it is necessary to protect the rights of those who caused it to be
registered.
2.
Sec 10 of PD 1529 states that, It shall be the duty of the Register of Deeds to
immediately register an instrument presented for registration . If the
instrument cannot be registered, he shall forthwith deny registration thereof
and inform the presenter of such denial in writing, stating the ground
therefore, and advising him of his rights to appeal by consulta.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Basbacio v. Office of the Secretary, Dept. of Justice
Case No.
G.R. No. 109445 (November 7, 1994)
FACTS:
RA 7309, among other things, provides for compensation of persons unjustly
accused, convicted, and imprisoned. Petitioner and his son-in-law Balderrama wer
e
charged with murder and frustrated murder for killing Boyon and wounding his wif
e
and son, due to a land dispute and thus imprisoned. However, on appeal to the CA
,
Petitioner was acquitted on the ground that conspiracy between him and his son-i
nlaw
was not proven. What was proven was that he was at the scene of the crime
with Petitioner when the shooting happened and left the place with his son-in-la
w.
Petitioner claims he was unjustly accused and is entitled to compensation.
ISSUE:
W/N Petitioner is entitled to compensation pursuant to RA 7309.
HELD:
No, he is not. For one to be unjustly accused one must be wrongly accused
from the very beginning, unjustly convicted (when a judge knowingly and
deliberately rendered an unjust judgment, whimsical and capricious devoid of any
basis for judgment) and imprisoned. In the case at bar, Petitioner was acquitted
because the prosecution was unable to prove beyond reasonable doubt that
Petitioner was guilty. Thus, he does not fall under RA 7309.
LATIN MAXIM:
9a, 11a, 25a
78
Segovia v. Sandiganbayan
Case No.
G.R. No. 124067 (March 27, 1998)
FACTS:
Petitioners were designated as members of the Contracts Committee for
NPC s Mindanao project. The lowest bidder, Joint Venture was disqualified after th
e
PCAB verified that Joint Venture as well as the 2nd lowest bidder, Urban Consoli
dated
Constructors, were downgraded thereby ineligible as bidders. Since all other bids
exceeded the allowable government estimate on the project, the committee
declared a failure of bidding and directed a re-bidding. NPC Board approved, but
for reasons not on record. The project was eventually cancelled. Petitioners wer
e
charged under RA 3019 for in one way or the other, extending undue advantage to
Joint Venture through manifest partiality, evident bad faith and gross inexcusab
le
negligence. For this, petitioners were suspended from office.
ISSUE:
W/N it is mandatory or discretionary for Sandiganbayan to place under
preventive suspension public officers who stand accused before it.
HELD:
Yes, it is mandatory. Under the act, one accused of any offense involving
fraud upon government public funds or property whether the crime is simple or
complex, regardless of stage of execution and mode of participation, shall be
suspended from office. Jurisprudence is clear that upon determination of the val
idity
of the information, a court must issue a suspension order as held in Gonzaga v.
Sandiganbayan, Luciano, et al. v. Mariano, Socrates v. Sandiganbayan.
LATIN MAXIM:
1, 5a, 7a
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Tanada v. Yulo
Case No. 288
No. 43575 (May 31, 1935)
Chapter IV, Page 127, Footnote No.11
FACTS:
Petitioner is a Justice of Peace appointed by the Gov. Gen. with the consent
by the Philippine Commission, assigned to Alabat, Tayabas. Later in his service,
he
was transferred to Perez, Tayabas. He reached his 65th birthday on October 35, 1
934,
subsequent to the approval of Act No. 3899 which makes mandatory the retirement
of all justices who have reached 65 years of age at the time said Act takes effe
ct on
January 1, 1933. The judge of First instance, acting upon the directive of the S
ecretary
of Respondent Justice, directed Petitioner to cease holding office pursuant to A
ct
No. 3899.
ISSUE:
1.
W/N Petitioner should cease to hold office.
2.
W/N his transfer is considered a new transfer and requires confirmation by
the Philippine Commission.
HELD:
No, Petitioner should not cease to hold office as Act No. 3899 clearly states
that those who will cease to hold office are those 65 yrs of age at the time the
Act
takes effect, not thereafter. Therefore, Petitioner shall be a Justice of Peace
for life as
long as he stays in good behavior or does not become incapacitated.
No, his transfer is not a new appointment. Hence, no confirmation is required
as it is just an enlargement of the jurisdiction grounded on original appointmen
t.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 7a
79
FACTS:
Accused was found guilty of the crime of illegal possession of firearms and
sentenced to an indeterminate penalty from one year and one day to two years,
and to pay the costs.
ISSUE:
W/N the appointment of the Appellant as a special agent of the CIS, which
apparently authorizes him to carry and possess firearms, exempts him from securi
ng a
license or permit corresponding thereto.
HELD:
Yes. At the time of appellant s apprehension, the doctrine then prevailing was
enunciated in the case of People vs. Macarandang wherein it was held that the
appointment of a civilian as secret agent to assist in the maintenance of peace a
nd
order campaigns and detection of crimes sufficiently puts him within the categor
y of
a peace officer equivalent even to a member of the municipal police expressly
covered by Section 879 .
LATIN MAXIM:
46a
82
Villanueva v. COMELEC
Case No. 170
No. L 54718 (December 4, 1986)
FACTS:
On January 25, 1980, Petitioner filed a certificate of candidacy for Vice Mayor
of Dolores for the January 30 elections in substitution for his companion Mendoz
a
who withdrew candidacy without oath upon filing on January 4. Petitioner won in
the
election but Respondent Board disregarded all his votes and proclaimed Responden
t
Candidate as the winner on the presumption that Petitioner s candidacy was not
duly approved by Respondent. Petitioner filed a petition for the annulment of th
e
proclamation but was dismissed by Respondent Commission on the grounds that
Mendoza s unsworn withdrawal had no legal effect, and that assuming it was
effective, Petitioner s candidacy was not valid since Mendoza did not withdraw aft
er
January 4.
ISSUE:
W/N Petitioner should be disqualified on the ground of formal or technical
defects.
HELD:
No. The fact that Mendoza s withdrawal was not sworn is a technicality, which
should not be used to frustrate the people s will in favor of Petitioner as the su
bstitute
candidate. Also, his withdrawal right on the very same day that he filed his
candidacy should be considered as having been made substantially and in truth
after the last day, even going by the literal reading of the provision by Respon
dent
Commission. The spirit of the law rather than its literal reading should have gu
ided
Respondent Commission in resolving the issue of last-minute withdrawal and
substitution of other persons as candidates.
LATIN MAXIM:
1, 9a, 39c
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Mario R. Melchor v. Commission on Audit
Case No. 177
G.R. No. 95398 (August 16, 1991)
Chapter IV. Page 133, Footnote No.35
FACTS:
On July 15, 1983, Petitioner, as school administrator of Alangalang Agro-Industr
ial
School of Leyte, entered into a contract with Cebu Diamond Construction for the
construction of one of the school buildings. The school accountant issued a
certificate of availability of funds to cover the construction cost but failed t
o sign as a
witness to the contract, which was approved by the Minister of Education. During
construction, the contractor sought additional charges due to labor cost increas
e,
but eventually gave up the project to save itself from losses. Consequently, the
matter was referred to Respondent Commission who disallowed the payment in post-
audit on the ground that the contract was null and void for lack of signature of
the
chief accountant of the school as witness to it. For this reason the petitioner
was
made personally liable for the amount paid to the contractor.
ISSUE:
1. W/N the contract was null and void.
2. W/N the petitioner should be held personally liable for the amount paid to th
e
contractor.
HELD:
No. The chief accountant s issuance of a certificate of fund availability served
as substantial compliance with the requirements of LOI 968 in the execution of t
he
contract. The contract was also valid and enforceable because it already bore th
e
approval of the Minister of Education. Also, it was highly inequitable for the C
ourt to
compel the Petitioner, who had substantially complied with the mandate of LOI 96
8,
to shoulder the construction cost of the building, which was being utilized by t
he
school when he was not reaping benefits from it.
LATIN MAXIM:
8a, 9a, 12a
Mateo Casela v. Court of Appeals, and Exequiel Magsaysay
Case No. 50
G.R. No. L 26754 (October 16, 1970)
Chapter IV, Page 134, Footnote No.38
FACTS:
Petitioner was ordered, on Oct. 26, 1956, to vacate the premises and remove his
house. Petitioner refused to comply. Thus, the Court issued two more writs on Ma
y 6,
1958 and April 14, 1959. Instead of obeying the writs, the Petitioner filed a ca
se before
the Court of First Instance of Zambales, asking Private Respondent to pay him th
e
value of his house in addition to damages. He also filed a motion for suspension
of
the implementation of the writ of execution. The Court granted the motion for
suspension but the civil case was dismissed when it reached Respondent Court. Fo
r
this reason, Magsaysay filed a motion for execution of the writ dated Dec. 6, 19
63
and another on Feb. 11, 1964. CAR denied the motion holding that its decision da
ted
Oct. 26, 1956 could no longer be executed on mere motion for the reason that a
period of five years has already elapsed from the said date.
ISSUE:
W/N the motion for execution which was filed beyond the reglementary
period was time-barred.
HELD:
No. From Dec. 17, 1956 when the decision in question became final and
executory, to Dec. 11, 1963, the date when Private Respondent s motion for
execution was filed, a period of 6 years, 11 months and 24 days elapsed. From th
is
period, the time during which the writs of execution could not be served, or a p
eriod
of 3 years, 9 months and 25 days must be subtracted. Consequently, only 3 years,
1
month and 29 days can be charged against the reglementary period. Hence Private
Respondent s motion for execution was not time-barred.
LATIN MAXIM:
8a, 9c, 11a, 11d, 11e
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
De Jesus v. City of Manila
Case No. 86
G.R. No. L-9337 (December 24, 1914)
Chapter IV, Page 134, Footnote No.41
FACTS:
In 1907, Petitioner bought from an original owner a piece of land in Manila
which was under the Torrens system. Apparently, the original owner incorrectly
declared the size of the land. So, from 1901 1907, the original owner was paying
lesser taxes than he should have and same for Petitioner from 1907 1910. Upon
finding out that he was not paying the correct amount of taxes, Petitioner paid
the
taxes, fees, and interest of P2, 096.49 for the unpaid balance of the years 1901
-1910.
Soon after, he protested and filed an action to recover the same amount.
Petitioner was awarded P1, 649.82.
Petitioner contends that the supposed taxes from before 1910 were not
actually taxes because they had not yet been assessed. Taxes may not be due and
payable until they are assessed.
ISSUE:
W/N Petitioner should still pay the taxes which were not assessed before.
HELD:
Petitioner should only pay the taxes when he was the owner of the property.
LATIN MAXIM:
6, 9a, 38b, 43, 50
85
Lamb v. Phipps
Case No. 143
G.R. No. L-7806 (July 12, 1912)
Chapter 4, Page 144, Footnote No.78
FACTS:
Petitioner contends that he had rendered a proper account of all the funds
of the government which came to his possession as a superintendent of the Iwahig
Penal Colony and that all of his accounts are balanced. Petitioner thus filed an
action for mandamus to compel the acting auditor of the Philippines to issue a
clearance. However, it was contended that the action for mandamus cannot
prosper since there is no showing that, as provided by law, there is no plain, sp
eedy
and adequate remedy in the ordinary courts of law.
ISSUE:
W/N the legislature intended to limit the jurisdiction to cases where there is n
o
other adequate and speedy remedy in the ordinary courts of law.
HELD:
There appears to be a typographical error in the wording of Sec. 222 of Act
No. 190 which reads in part: When the complaint in an action in a court of First
Instance alleges that any inferior tribunal, it may if there is no other plain,
speedy
and adequate remedy in the ordinary courts of law.
The phrase courts of law should read as course of law . Copied verbatim
from the Code of Civil Procedure of California, the said section in the Californ
ia Code
reads course of law instead of courts of law . Spanish translation of said Sec. 222
more clearly indicates what the legislature intended. In Spanish, the other reme
dy is
not limited to the ordinary courts of law . On its face, this evident typographical
error, which, if uncorrected, would render the law nonsensical. It is therefore
the duty
of the court to give the statute a sensible construction, such as will effectuat
e the
legislative intent and to avoid injustice or an absurd conclusion.
LATIN MAXIM:
9c, 9d, 11a, 11d, 12a, 36a, 36b, 36d, 36f, 37
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Com. of Internal Revenue v. ESSO
Case No. 27
G.R. No. L-28502-03 (April 18, 1989)
FACTS:
Respondent overpaid its 1959 income tax. It was accordingly granted a tax
credit by Petitioner on August 5, 1964. However, Respondent s payment for 1960 was
found to be short. Thus, Petitioner demanded payment of the deficiency tax toget
her
with interest for the period of April 18, 1961 to April 18, 1964. On August 10,
1964,
Respondent paid under protest the amount alleged to be due. It protested the
computation of interest, arguing that it was more than what was properly due,
claiming that it should only be required to pay interest for the amount of the
difference between the deficiency tax and Respondent s overpayment.
ISSUE:
1. W/N Respondent shall pay the deficiency tax of P367, 994 with interest.
2. W/N Respondent is entitled to a refund.
HELD:
The government already had in its hands the sum of P221, 033 representing
the excess payment of Respondent. Having been paid and received by mistake, the
sum belonged to Respondent and the government had the obligation to return such
amount, which arises from the moment that payment is made, and not from the time
that the payee admits the obligation to reimburse. Since the amount of P221, 033
was already in the hands of the government as of July, 1960, whatever obligation
Respondent might subsequently incur in favor of the government would have to be
reduced by that sum, in respect of which no interest could be charged.
It is well established that to interpret words of the statute in such a manner a
s
to subvert these truisms simply cannot and should not be countenanced. Nothing i
s
better settled than the rule that courts are not to give words a meaning which w
ould
lead to absurd and unreasonable consequences. Moreover, a literal interpretation
is
to be rejected if it would be unjust or lead to absurd results. Statutes should
receive a
sensible construction, such as will give effect to the legislative intention and
so as to
avoid an unjust or absurd conclusion.
LATIN MAXIM:
8a, 8b, 11a, 11d, 11e, 12a, 12b
People v. Villanueva
Case No. 116
G. R. L-15014 (April 29, 1961)
FACTS:
Defendant was accused of crime of serious and less serious physical injuries
with damage to property in amount of P2,362 through reckless imprudence in the
Justice of the Peace Court of Batangas. The case was considered beyond the
court s jurisdiction because of the fine imposable upon the accused. The case was
forwarded to the Court of First Instance, which also declared itself without jur
isdiction
because the penalty for the more serious offense of physical injuries through re
ckless
imprudence is only arresto mayor in its minimum and medium periods, and even
applied to its maximum degree. It should remain within the jurisdiction of the J
ustice
of Peace.
ISSUE:
Whether or not the Court of First Instance has jurisdiction.
HELD:
Yes. Angeles et al vs. Jose, a similar case, held that jurisdiction was with the
Court of First Instance and not the municipal court. Also, since the Court of Fi
rst
Instance would have jurisdiction if the only offense were the damage of property
, it
would be absurd to say that the graver offense of serious and less serious physi
cal
injuries combined with damage to property through reckless imprudence is in
jurisdiction of the Justice of Peace.
Moreover, there is the possibility that the prosecution will fail to prove the
physical injuries aspect of the case and establish only the damage to property.
The
Justice of Peace, if given jurisdiction, would find itself without jurisdiction
to impose
the P2,636 fine for the damage to property committed, since such fine cannot be
less
than the amount of the damage.
LATIN MAXIM:
5, 11
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
People v. Duque
Case No. 106
G. R. 100285 (August 13, 1992)
Chapter IV, Page 149, Footnote No.97
FACTS:
Accused was charged with illegal recruitment because he was not licensed
nor authorized by the proper government agency, POEA. The Labor Code provides
that the offense shall prescribe in 3 years but does not contain any provision o
f how
to compute it. Sec. 2 of Act No. 3326 provides that prescription shall begin to r
un
from the day of the commission of the violation of the law, and if the same be n
ot
known at the time, from the discovery thereof and institution of judicial procee
dings
for its investigation and punishment . According to Accused, a literal reading
suggests that the prescriptive period would never begin to run.
ISSUE:
What is the prescription of the criminal offense of the Accused?
HELD:
Prescription began from the time the activities of the Accused were
ascertained by the complainants and by the POEA to have been carried out without
any license or authority from the government. There is absurdity in Sec. 2 but
Accused does not benefit from a literal reading. It must be construed in such a
way
as to give effect to the intention and avoid absurd results. Institution of judic
ial
proceedings for its investigation and punishment may be either disregarded as
surplusage or should be deemed preceded by the word until .
LATIN MAXIM:
9, 11a, 11d, 12, 15, 38
92
Sec. 14. Any person who is found guilty of carnapping shall, irrespective of
the value of the motor vehicle taken, be punished by imprisonment for not
less than seventeen years and four months and not more than thirty years,
when the carnapping is committed by means of violence or in intimidation of
persons or force upon things; and the penalty of reclusion perpetua to death,
when the owner, driver, or occupant is killed or raped in the course of the
commission of the carnapping or on the occasion thereof.
ISSUE:
1.
W/N the phrase is killed covers both homicide and murder.
2.
If the crime was frustrated murder, would the penalty be life imprisonment or
reclusion perpetua to death?
3.
W/N frustrated homicide would be treated as a separate offense.
HELD:
The words is killed make no distinction between homicide and murder.
Whether it is one or the other which is committed in the course of carnapping or
on
the occasion thereof makes no difference in so far as the penalty is concerned. T
he
killing, whether it is homicide or murder, cannot be treated as a separate offen
se and
only serves to qualify the carnapping.
The phrase is killed refers only to consummated murder, and not frustrated
murder.
Frustrated homicide (or murder) is not treated as a separate offense as it is
deemed to fall under the clause of Sec. 14 by means of violence or in intimidatio
n of
persons .
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 7a, 26, 38a, 43, 48
96
Sec. 2. Coverage. This Act shall cover all appointive officials and employees
of the National Government. The benefits authorized under this Act shall
apply to all regular, temporary, casual and emergency employees, regardless
of age, who have rendered at least a total of two (2) consecutive years of
government service as of the date of separation
Petitioner Lydia Chua, believing that she is qualified to avail of the benefits
of
the program, filed an application on January 30, 1989 with Respondent
Administration, which, however, denied the same. Recourse by the petitioner to
Respondent Commission yielded the same result.
ISSUE:
W/N Petitioner s status as a co-terminus employee is excluded from the
benefits of RA 6683 (Early Retirement Law).
HELD:
The petition is granted. The Early Retirement Law would violate the equal
protection clause of the constitution if the Supreme Court were to sustain
Respondent s submission that the benefits of said law are to be denied a class of
government employees who are similarly situated as those covered by the said law
.
The court applied the doctrine of necessary implication in deciding this case.
LATIN MAXIM:
2a, 11e, 12a, 20a, 20b, 37
97
Alfon v. Republic
Case No. 6
G.R. No. L-51201 (May 29, 1980)
FACTS:
Petitioner files a petition to have her named changed from Maria Estrella
Veronica Primitiva Duterte to Estrella Alfon.
The reasons she gave on why she was petitioning to have her name changed are the
following:
1.
She has been using the name Estrella Alfon from infancy.
2.
She has been enrolled from Grade school to College in the same name.
3.
All acquaintances know her as Estrella Alfon.
4.
She exercised her right to suffrage under the same name.
ISSUE:
W/N legitimate and legitimated children are required to use the
surname of their father.
HELD:
No. The word "principally" as used in Article 364 is not equivalent to
"exclusively" so that there is no legal obstacle if a legitimate or legitimated
child
should choose to use the surname of its mother to which he or she is equally ent
itled.
Petitioner is therefore allowed to change her name from Maria Estrella Veronica
Primitiva Alfon Duterte to Estrella Alfon
LATIN MAXIM:
1, 17, 42a
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Espino v. Cleofe
Case No. 102
G.R. No. L-33410 (July 13, 1973)
Chapter V, Page 182, Footnote No.25
FACTS:
Petitioners appeal a decision involving a petition for declaratory relief filed
by
18 Respondents for a judicial declaration of their rights under RA 1862 as amend
ed
by RA 4902 in the matter of conversion lump sum gratuity to annual retirement
pension.
ISSUE:
W/N the provision applies to military personnel who retire even after its June
17, 1967.
HELD:
No. Looking at the legislative intent through the explanatory note the persons
referred to are those who had retired and received the gratuity in lump sum afte
r
June 22, 1957 but prior to the approval of the act on June 17, 1967.
A contrary interpretation which would allow or authorize retired military
personnel present or future to convert lump sum gratuity to annual pension would
virtually abolish the essential distinction between the two types of retirement
benefits
and render the option under the law meaningless and nugatory.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 7a, 9a, 25a
Republic Flour Mills, Inc v. Commissioner of Customs
Case No: 258
G. R. No. L-28463 (May 31, 1971)
Chapter V, Page 184, Footnote No.39
FACTS:
This is a petition for review of the decision of the Court of Tax Appeals in whi
ch
they found in Sec. 2802 of the Tariff and Customs Code.
Petitioner was assessed wharfage dues for the exportation of bran (ipa) and
pollard (darak) under Sec. 2802 of the Tariff and Customs Code which states:
There shall be levied collected and paid on products of the
Philippines exported from the Philippines, a charge of 2 pesos per
gross metric ton as a fee for wharfage
ISSUE:
W/N the words products of the Philippines excludes bran and pollard on the
ground that they are from wheat grain, which is imported into the Philippines.
HELD:
No. Even without undue scrutiny it does appear quite obvious that as long as
the goods are produced in the country, they fall within the terms of the above
section. The law is clear; it must be obeyed. The Term product of the Philippines
should be taken in its usual signification to mean any product produced in the
country; hence, bran(ipa) and pollard(darak) produced from wheat imported into
the country are products of the Philippines.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 6d, 7a, 24a, 24b
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Asiatic Petroleum Co. v. Collector of Internal Revenue
Case No. 10
G.R. No. 12687 (August 27, 1918)
Chapter V, Page 187, Footnote No.47
FACTS:
The Defendant, under threat of penalty, compelled the Plaintiff to pay the
Internal Revenue Tax provided for under Sec. 17 of Act No. 2432 upon all such oi
ls
which the plaintiff had on hand on the 1st day of January, 1915. The tax was pai
d
under protest. The Plaintiff contends that the tax collected was illegal. Sec. 1
7 Par 72a
of Act No. 2432 provides that no tax (imposed by this law) shall be collected on
such
articles which, before the taking effect of this Act, shall have been disposed o
f to
consumers or persons other than manufacturers or wholesale dealers. Said Act took
effect upon the 1st day of January, 1915.
ISSUE:
W/N a dealer is required to pay the Internal Revenue Tax, provided for under
Sec. 17 Par 72a of Act No. 2432, upon mineral oils, composed of kerosene and
gasoline which had been sold, but not delivered, prior to the 1st day of January
1915.
HELD:
No. The Legislature evidently intended, by said phrase, to mean that
merchandise dispose of had been sold. The Legislature, by Act No. 2445, fully
recognized that the phrase disposed of meant nothing more or less than a
contract whereby the vendor was bound to furnish an article, because in said Act
it
provided that the purchaser, and not the vendor, was subject to pay such tax in
the
absence of stipulations to the contrary. The phrase disposed of as used in Sec. 17
of
Act No. 2432, should be given its commercial sense and not a technical
interpretation.
LATIN MAXIM:
3, 6c, 25a, 43
102
Rura v. Lopena
Case No. 139
G. R. No. L-69810-14 (June 19, 1985)
Chapter 5, Page 189, Footnote No.53
FACTS:
Petitioner was accused, tried and convicted of five (5) counts of estafa
committed on different dates. The counts were consolidated and tried jointly. On
ly a
single decision was rendered. The Petitioner then applied for probation but was
denied by the fiscal on the ground that he had been previously convicted by fina
l
judgment of an offense. The fiscal invoked Sec. 9 of the Probation Law, which
disqualifies persons who have previously been convicted by final judgment from
applying for probation. The trial court denied his application on the belief tha
t since
the crimes were committed on different dates, he was guilty on each of those dat
es.
Petitioner however contends that since there is only one decision, he has not ye
t
been previously convicted.
ISSUE:
How should the word previously be construed?
HELD:
The word previously refers to the date of the conviction and not to the
dates of the crimes involved. Although he was guilty of five counts of estafa, t
hey
were tried jointly and only one decision was handed down. Hence, when Petitioner
applied for Probation he had not yet had a final judgment of conviction on his
record. He is eligible for probation under such circumstances.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 7a, 48
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Krivenko v. Register of Deeds
Case No. 139
G.R. No. L-360 (November 15, 1947)
Chapter 5, Page 190, Footnote No.60
FACTS:
Petitioner, an alien, bought a residential lot but its registration was interrup
ted
by the war. In 1945, he sought to accomplish the registration but was denied by
the
register of deeds of Manila on the ground that he cannot acquire land in this
jurisdiction. Petitioner brought the case to the Court of First Instance of Mani
la which
ruled in favor of sustaining the refusal of the register of deeds.
ISSUE:
W/N residential land falls under the phrase agricultural lands as stated in Article
XIII of the 1935 Constitution.
HELD:
Under the Constitution, aliens may not acquire private or public agricultural
lands, which includes residential lands. It may safely be presumed that what the
members of the Constitutional Convention had in mind when they drafted the
Constitution was this well-known classification and its technical meaning then
prevailing. Soon after, the National Assembly revised the Public Land Law and pa
ssed
C.A. No. 141 which permits the sale of residential lots to Filipino citizens or
to
corporations controlled by such citizens. Such revision is equivalent to a decla
ration
that residential lots are considered as agricultural lands, for under the Consti
tution,
only agricultural lands may be alienated. In addition, the interpretation given
by the
Secretary of Justice (1939) also supports the claim that residential land is part
of
public agricultural lands .
It is clear that the three branches of the Government have always maintained tha
t
residential lots are included in agricultural lands . If the term "private agricultur
al
lands" is to be construed as not including lands not strictly agricultural, the
result
would not be in line with the conservative spirit of the Constitution.
LATIN MAXIM:
1, 2a, 5a, 9a, 25a, 30a, b
105
People v. Evangelista
Case No. 106
G.R. No. 84332-33 (May 8, 1996)
FACTS:
Private Respondent was charged and convicted of frustrated homicide.
Private Respondent filed a petition for probation. However, Chief Probation and
Parole Officer recommended denial of Private respondent s application for
probation on the ground that by appealing the sentence of the trial, he had alre
ady
waived his right to make his application for probation. The RTC set aside the
Probation Officer s recommendation and granted Private Respondent s application
on April 23, 1993.
ISSUE:
W/N the Respondent Judge committed a grave abuse of discretion by
granting private respondent s application for probation.
HELD:
Yes. Private Respondent filed his application for probation on December 28,
1992, after PD 1990 had taken effect. It is thus covered by the prohibition that
no
application for probation shall be entertained or granted if the defendant has
perfected the appeal from the judgment of conviction and that the filing of the
application shall be deemed a waiver of the right to appeal. Having appealed from
the judgment of the trial court and applied for probation only after the Court o
f
Appeals had affirmed his conviction, Private Respondent was clearly precluded fr
om
the benefits of probation.
LATIN MAXIM:
6, 26, 49
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Banco de Oro Savings and Mortgage Bank v. Equitable Banking Corporation
Case No. 12
G.R. No. 74917 (January 20, 1988)
FACTS:
Respondent Bank filed a case against Petitioner Bank for reimbursement of
P45,982.23 as a consequence of six crossed Manager s checks which turned out to
have forged and/or unauthorized endorsements appearing at the back of each
check. Philippine Clearing House Corp. (PCHC) ordered Petitioner Bank to pay the
said amount. Petitioner Bank appealed saying that PCHC had no jurisdiction
because the checks involved were non-negotiable checks.
ISSUE:
W/N PCHC had jurisdiction over checks which are non-negotiable.
HELD:
Yes. As provided in the articles of incorporation of PCHC, its operation extends
to clearing checks and other clearing items. Clearly, the term checks refer to
checks in general use in commercial and business activities, including nonnegoti
able
checks. No doubt non-negotiable checks are within the ambit of PCHC s
jurisdiction.
There should be no distinction in the application of a statute where none is
indicated for courts are not authorized to distinguish where the law makes no
distinction. They should instead administer the law not as they think it ought t
o be but
as they find it and without regard to consequences.
LATIN MAXIM:
24a, 24b, 25a, 25b, 26
108
LATIN MAXIM:
24a, 26
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Velasco v. Lopez
Case No. 308
G.R. No. 905 (February 12, 1903)
FACTS:
Santiago Velasco died in Namacpacan, La Union on December 4, 1895,
leaving a last will and testament. The Plaintiff seeks to declare such will void
on
several grounds, most importantly that the hour is not stated.
ISSUE:
W/N the will of Santiago Velasco is void because the hour of its execution is
not stated.
HELD:
Yes. Book III, Title II, Chapter I, Article 695 and 687 of the civil Code explic
itly
states that said wills without necessary formalities will be void:
The testator shall express his last will to the notary and to the witnesses. Afte
r the
testament has been drafted in accordance with the same, stating the place, year,
month, day and hour of its execution its shall be read aloud, (art 695)
Any will, in the execution of which the formalities respectively established in
this chapter have not been observed, shall be void. (art 687)
The law explicitly defines what shall consist in open wills (art 695) and what t
he
sanctions shall be if such formalities aren t met. (art 687)
It was stated that if the decision would be in favor of the Defendant
(overlooking the absence of the hour) the Court may disregard one formality afte
r
another until eventually they had to repeal the entire system established by the
code.
LATIN MAXIM:
6d, 7a
109
LATIN MAXIM:
26, 2b, 3a, 38b
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Philippine British Assurance v. Intermediate Appelate Court
Case No. 234
G.R. No. L-72005 (May 29, 1987)
Chapter 5, Page 200, Footnote No.99
FACTS:
Sycwin Coating& Wires Inc, filed a complaint for a collection of money
against Varian Industrial Corporation. During the pendency, Respondent attached
some of the properties of Varian Industrial Corp upon the posting of a supersede
s
bond. The latter in turn posted a counter bond through Petitioner so the attache
d
properties were released. Sycwin filed a petition for execution pending appeal
against the properties of Varian, which was granted. However, the writ of execut
ion
was returned unsatisfied as Varian failed to deliver the previously attached per
sonal
properties upon demand. Sycwin prayed that Petitioner Corporation be ordered to
pay the value of its bond which was granted.
ISSUE:
W/N the counter bond issued was valid.
HELD:
The counter bond was issued in accordance with Sec. 5, Rule 57 of the Rules
of Court. Neither the rules nor provisions of the counter bond limited its appli
cation to
a final and executory judgment. It appllies to the payment of any judgment that
may
be recovered by Plaintiff. The only logical conclusion is that an execution of a
ny
judgment including one pending appeal if returned unsatisfied may be charged
against such counter bond. The rule therefore, is that the counter bond to life
attachment shall be charged with the payment of any judgment that is returned
unsatisfied. It covers not only a final and executory judgment but also the exec
ution
of a judgment of pending appeal.
LATIN MAXIM:
24a, 26, 36a
111
Sanciangco v. Roño
Case No. 273
G. R. No. 68709 (July 19, 1985)
Chapter 5, Page 203 , Footnote No.106
FACTS:
Petitioner was elected as Barangay Captain. Later, he was elected President
of the Association of Barangay Councils (ABC) of Ozamiz City by the Board of
Directors of the said Association. Petitioner then Petitioner then filed his Cer
tificate of
Candidacy for the May 14, 1984 elections for Misamis Occidental under the banner
of the Mindanao alliance. He was not successful in the said elections.
ISSUE:
W/N an appointive member of the Sangguniang Panglungsod, who ran for
the position of Mambabatas Pambansa in the elections of May 14, 1984, should be
considered as resigned or on forced leave of absence upon filing of his certific
ate of
candidacy.
HELD:
The legislative intent of Sec. 13(2) of BP 697 is clear that even appointive
Barangay officials are deemed also covered by the said provision. Since he is
unquestionably an appointive member, he is deemed to have ipso facto ceased to
be such member when he filed his certificate of candidacy for the May 1984 Batas
an
elections.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 7a, 9c, 28, 36b
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Eastern Shipping Lines, Inc. v. Court of Appeals
Case No. 38
G. R. No. 116356 (June 29, 1998)
FACTS:
Davao Pilots Association elevated a complaint against Petitioner for a sum of
money and attorney s fees alleging that DPA had rendered the pilotage services to
Petitioner between January 14, 1987 to July 22, 1989 with total unpaid fees of
P703,290.18. Despite repeated demands, Petitioner failed to pay and prays that t
he
latter be directed to pay the amount with legal rate of interest from the filing
of the
complaint; attorney s fees equivalent to 25% of the principal obligation.
ISSUE:
W/N EO 1088 is unconstitutional.
HELD:
No. In Philippine Interisland Shipping Association of the Philippines v. Court o
f
Appeals, the court upheld the validity of EO 1088 and it shall not depart from t
his
ruling. The Court s holding clearly debunks Petitioner s insistence on paying the
pilotage fees based on the memorandum circulars issued by the PPA. Administrativ
e
or Executive Acts, Orders and Regulations shall be valid only when they are not
contrary to the laws or the Constitution.
LATIN MAXIM:
1, 5a, 9a, 37 49
113
Castillo-Co v. Barbers
Case No.
G.R. No. 129952 (June 16, 1998)
FACTS:
Congressman Junie Cua filed a complaint before the Office of the
Ombudsman against Governor Castillo-Co and Provincial Engineer Virgilio Ringor
alleging irregularities in the purchase of heavy equipment by the Governor and
Provincial Engineer. The items purchased were reconditioned instead of brand new
and included other irregularities. Emilio A. Gonzales III, Director, and Jesus G
uerrero,
Deputy Ombudsman for Luzon, placed the Petitioners under preventive suspension
for 6 months. Petitioners contest that the Deputy Ombudsman has no power to sign
the order of preventive suspension.
ISSUE:
W/N the deputy Ombudsman possessed the authority to sign the order for
preventive suspension.
HELD:
Yes. The deputy Ombudsman possessed the authority to preventively suspend
the Petitioners. There is nothing in RA 7975 which may suggest that the Ombudsma
n
and only the Ombudsman may sign an order preventively suspending officials
occupying positions classified as grade 27 or above. The word or is clearly
disjunctive in this case signifying dissociation from one thing from the other.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 7a
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
People v. Martin
Case No. 214
G.R. No. L-33487 (May 31, 1971)
Chapter 5, Page 204, Footnote No.110
FACTS:
Respondents were charged with violating Sec. 46 of C.A. No. 613 or the
Philippine Immigration Act by the Court of First Instance of La Union, specifica
lly in the
act of bringing in and landing. The Court dismissed the charges on the ground of
it
being a continuous offense with Criminal Case 6258-M filed in Bulacan against ot
her
Respondents who were concealing and harboring the same Chinese Immigrants who
were brought in therefore they had no jurisdiction.
ISSUE:
W/N the act of bringing in and landing constitute a continuous offense with
concealing and harboring.
HELD:
No. They are two separate offenses.
C.A. No. 613 clearly provides that the four acts are in fact four separate acts.
Each act possesses its own distinctive, different, and disparate meaning. The wo
rd OR
in C.A. No. 613 cannot be given a non-disjunctive meaning signifying the separat
ion
of one act from the other. The words in the information suggesting conspiracy ar
e
considered a mere surplusage.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 7a, 37, 15b
114
Lerum v. Cruz
Case No. 146
G. R. No. L-2783 (November 29, 1950)
Chapter V, Page 225, Footnote No. 192
FACTS:
This is an appeal for a petition for declaratory relief. Attys. Lerum and
Fernando filed for this petition in order to test the sufficiency and probative
value of a
testimony in a bigamy case by (former) Judge Cruz regarding the issuance of a
divorce decree.
ISSUE:
Can the attorneys file a petition for declaratory relief regarding the sufficien
cy
and probative value of (former) Judge Cruz s testimony?
HELD:
No, the petition for declaratory relief cannot be granted. Under Sec 1, Rule 66
of the Rules of Court, declaratory relief may only be granted to a person whose
rights
are affected by a statute or ordinance, or who is interested under a deed, will,
contract or other written instrument. The sufficiency and probative value of a
testimony, which is the subject matter for declaratory relief in the instant cas
e, is not
included in the enumeration. Thus, the assailed order is affirmed.
LATIN MAXIM:
30a
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Central Barrio v. City Treasurer of Davao
Case No. 55
G.R. No. L-25811 (April 3, 1968)
Chapter V, Page 225, Footnote No. 193
FACTS:
On August 29, 1962, the City of Davao passed Resolution No. 732, pursuant to
RA 2370, declaring as officially and legally existing several barrios of the cit
y. Among
these were barrios Agdao, Bucana and Poblacion. Subsequently, barrio Poblacion,
also called barrio Central, asked for its alleged 10% share in taxes collected o
n real
property located within the barrio, as provided in Sec. 3 of RA 3590. Respondent
refused to release the share on the ground that the amount pertaining to the sai
d
barrio, in relation to barrios Agdao and Bucana, cannot be determined because th
e
respective boundaries of said barrios were not yet fixed as required by law. The
Petitioner thus filed a case against Davao City s Treasurer, Council, Auditor and
Mayor with the Court of First Instance (CFI) of Davao, which dismissed the case
on
the ground that the issue had been rendered academic by the passage of RA 4354,
amending the charter of Davao City.
ISSUE:
W/N the dismissal order was correct.
HELD:
The dismissal was affirmed. Sec. 2 of RA 4354 enumerated the barrios
comprising the City of Davao, which did not include the Petitioner. Thus, there
prima
facie arises the conclusion that said law abolished Barrio Central as part of Da
vao
City. A non-existent barrio or a barrio not situated in Davao City cannot presen
t a
claim against it or its officials for a share in taxes under RA 3590.
LATIN MAXIM:
30
124
Vera v. Fernandez
Case No. 55
G.R. No.L-31364 (March 30, 1979)
Chapter V, Page 225, Footnote No. 193
FACTS:
This case is an appeal with regard to two orders promulgated by the CFI of
Negros Occidental, Branch V in relation to the intestate estate of Luis D. Tongo
y. The
cases were for the claim and payment of deficiency income taxes in the total sum
of
P3,254.80 with 5% surcharge and 1% monthly interest, as provided in the Tax Code
.
The Petitioners were denied the said claim and payment as they were barred under
Sec. 5, Rule 86 of the Rules of Court.
ISSUE:
W/N the statute of non-claims under Sec. 5, Rule 86 of the New Rules of Court
bars claim of the government for unpaid taxes.
HELD:
The order appealed from is reversed. A perusal of the aforequoted provision
shows that it makes no mention of claims for monetary obligations of the deceden
t
created by law, such as taxes which is entirely different from the claims enumer
ated
therein. Par. 315 of the Tax Code states that payment of income tax shall be a l
ien in
favor of the government from the time the assessment was made by the
Commissioner of Internal Revenue until paid with interests, penalties, etc. Thus
, before
the inheritance has been passed to the heirs, the unpaid taxes due the decedent
may be collected, even without its having been presented under Sec. 2 of Rule 36
of
the Rules of Court.
LATIN MAXIM:
27, 30, 44
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Villanueva v. City of Iloilo
Case No. 312
G.R. No. L-26521 (December 28, 1968)
Chapter V, Page 226, Footnote No. 197
FACTS:
The case is an appeal questioning the lower court s judgment declaring
Ordinance No. 11 as illegal. The Petitioners, Eusebio and Remedios Villanueva, a
re
owners of 5 tenement houses containing 43 apartments. By virtue of the ordinance
,
the city was able to collect P5,824 from the spouses for the years 1960-1964.
ISSUE:
1.
Is Ordinace 11 illegal because it imposes double taxation?
2.
Is the City of Iloilo empowered by the Local Autonomy Act to impose tenement
taxes?
3.
Is it oppressive and unreasonable because it carries a penal clause?
4.
Does it violate the uniformity of taxation?
HELD:
The judgment is reversed; the ordinance is valid.
1.
No. The same tax may be imposed by the national government as well as by the
local government.
2.
Yes. RA 2264 confers on local governments broad taxing authority. It is clear tha
t
the intention of the ordinance is to impose a tenement or apartment tax, which i
s
not among the exceptions listed in Sec. 2 of the Local Autonomy Act.
3.
No. The lower court had in mind the constitutional provision that no person shall
be imprisoned for a debt or non-payment of a poll tax , which should not apply;
the tax in question is neither a debt nor a poll tax.
4.
No. Taxes are uniform and equal when imposed upon all property of the same
class or character within the taxing authority.
LATIN MAXIM:
7a, 20c, 30, 35, 42
Santo To v. Cruz-Paño
Case No. 275
G.R. No. L-55130 (January 17, 1983)
Chapter V, Page 226, Footnote No. 199
FACTS:
Petitioner Santo To was convicted of estafa for a bouncing check and was
sentenced with a penalty of prision mayor. He appealed to the Court of Appeals,
which reduced his sentence to the penalty of prision correctional. He then filed
a
petition for probation but was denied by the Respondent judge, Hon. Cruz-Paño,
despite the favorable recommendation of the Probation Office, on the ground that
granting it would depreciate the seriousness of the offense, and that Santo To w
as
not a penitent offender. In a motion for reconsideration, the Solicitor General
recommended the grant because the Petitioner was not among the offenders
disqualified to avail probation, as enumerated in the probation law (P.D. 968) S
ec. 9.
ISSUE:
Can Petitioner To avail himself of probation?
HELD:
Yes. The law gives more importance to the offender than the crime. He is a
first-time offender and his offense has relative lightness. In addition, the Res
pondent
judge cannot assume that To had not shown repentance. Besides, where the
Probation Law expressly enumerates the persons disqualified to avail of its bene
fits,
the clear intent is to allow the benefits of probation to those not included in
the
enumeration.
LATIN MAXIM:
9a, 36b
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Samson v. Court of Appeals
Case No. 270
G.R. No. L-43182 (November 25, 1986)
Chapter V, Page 226, Footnote No. 200
FACTS:
Petitioner Samson, the mayor of Caloocan, terminated the services of
Respondent, Mr. Talens, as Assistant Secretary, through Administrative Order No.
3,
because of lack and loss of confidence, and appointed Mr. Liwag, co-Petitioner,
to
said position. RA 2260 (Civil Service Act of 1959) Sec 5(f) declares that the po
sition of
secretaries to city mayors as non-competitive. Talens asserts his position was n
ot
covered by the said act and, being permanently appointed, he can only be
removed for a cause and after due process. The Court of First Instance ruled in
favor
of Talens, declaring the order null and void. The Court of Appeals also affirmed
said
decision.
ISSUE:
Was the termination of Talens illegal?
HELD:
Yes, Talens termination was illegal; his position is not among those expressly
declared by law as highly confidential. The nature of functions attached to a po
sition
determines whether such position is highly confidential. Where the law provides
that
positions in the government belong to the competitive service, except those
declared by law to be in the noncompetitive service and those which are policy-
determining, primarily confidential or highly technical in nature, the legislatu
re is
presumed to have intended to exclude those not enumerated, for otherwise, it wou
ld
have included them in the enumeration.
LATIN MAXIM:
9a, 30
126
LATIN MAXIM:
9a, 38b
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Primero v. CA
Case No. 126
G.R. Nos. 48468-69. November 22, 1989
FACTS:
Petitioner carried a bladed weapon outside of his residence while PD 9, the
prohibition against fan knives, balisong or clubs was in effect which thereafter
resulted in his arrest.
Petitioner answers in his defense that a bayonet, the bladed weapon he was
carrying, was neither a blunt nor bladed weapon enumerated in PD 9 and therefore
he was not guilty of violating the law against bladed or blunt weapons.
ISSUE:
W/N a bayonet is not a bladed or blunt weapon that falls under the purview
of PD 9.
HELD:
No, the bayonet is a bladed weapon that falls under PD 9. Petitioners defense
of expressio unius est exclusio alterius is weak and incomplete. It would make n
o
sense if possession of a fan knife, which is less lethal than a bayonet, would b
e
punishable while possession of a bayonet would not.
LATIN MAXIM:
9a, 30a
129
Cuevas. The court also compelled the counsel of the accused to present evidence
and their witnesses and ordered to arrest the accused. Respondents then institut
ed a
certiorari proceeding in the Court of Appeals against the Petitioner, impugning
the
decision of the judge for proceeding with the case in the absence of Cuevas. The
CA then issued a writ of preliminary injunction ordering Judge Roldan from conti
nuing
with the trial.
ISSUE:
W/N the CA has jurisdiction over the case.
HELD:
No. The CA resolutions denying the motions of the Solicitor-General rely
principally upon the decision rendered in the case of Mujer vs. CFI of Laguna, w
hich
held that the phrase in aid of its appellate jurisdiction only refers to its proxi
mate
antecedent and to all other auxiliary writs and process. This ruling is in conjunc
tion
with the rule of interpretation that a qualifying phrase should be understood as
referring to the nearest antecedent. Moreover, the rule in the interpretation ap
plied is
in fact the general rule in the interpretation of qualifying or conditional phra
ses found
in a law, but this rule is subject to the exception that where the intention of
the law is
to apply the phrase to all the antecedents embraced in the provision, the same
should be made extensive to the whole.
LATIN MAXIM:
1, 6d, 9c, 33, 36b, b2
130
ALU-TUCP v. NLRC
Case No. 2
G.R. No. 109328 (August 16, 1994)
Chapter V, Page 240, Footnote No. 250
FACTS:
Petitioners were employed by the National Steel Corporation for their five year
expansion program. The workers contend that they should be considered regular
workers as opposed to project workers, as the NSC and NLRC ruled. ALU-TUCP claim
s
that they have been working in NSC for more than 6 years and that their work is
necessary for the business, and that would have been more than enough to conside
r
them as regular employees. Petitioners contentions stemmed from Art. 280 of the
Labor Code.
ISSUE:
W/N Petitioners should be considered regular employees.
HELD:
No. The provision calls for casual employees. Since Petitioners were
considered project employees, this provision does not apply to them. Moreover, t
he
fact that they have been working in NSC for more than a year does not mean they
are automatically converted into regular employees. (They were hired as project
employees for the 5-year expansion program. Once that project is done, their
services will no longer be needed.) In Mercado, Sr. vs. NLRC, the proviso in par
. 2 of
Art.280 relates only to casual employees and is not applicable to those who do n
ot
qualify under the definition of such workers in par. 1. The proviso is to be con
strued
with reference to the immediately preceding part of the provision to which it is
attached, and not to other sections thereof.
LATIN MAXIM:
1, 6, 33
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Arenas v. City of San Carlos, Pangasinan
Case No. 20
G.R. No. L-34024 (April 5, 1978)
Chapter V, Page 240, Footnote No. 251
FACTS:
RA 5967 provides that second and third class judges would receive an annual
salary of P18,000. Arenas was receiving a monthly salary of P1000.00, P350 of wh
ich
was from the national government and the remaining P650 comes from the city
government. Petitioner had repeatedly requested the city to enact the said RA bu
t
the Respondent City refused.
ISSUE:
W/N Judge Arenas should be granted the increase in his salary from P12,000
to P18,000.
HELD:
Looking at the Senate deliberations, the intention in enacting the RA was that
the salary of a city judge should not be higher than the salary of the city mayo
r.
Moreover, exceptions, as a general rule, should be strictly but reasonably const
rued;
they extend only so far as their language fairly warrants, and all doubts should
be
resolved in favor of the general provisions rather than the exception. In case t
here is
repugnancy between the proviso and the main provision, the latter provision,
whether a proviso or not, is given preference because it is the latest expressio
n of the
intent of the legislation, but more so because provisos are negatively written a
nd
gives off a more mandatory tone.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 33, 43,48, b2
133
Ocampo v. Buenaventura
Case No. 88
G.R. No. L-32293 (January 24, 1974)
FACTS:
On September 11, 1966 the Cebu Police Department arrested and detained
Edgardo Ocampo and other minors for an alleged violation of Ordinance No. 228
which fixed curfew hours. The minors were then convicted for violation of said
ordinance. On appeal, the minors were acquitted since the reason they violated t
he
ordinance was to attend a birthday, which is considered as a wholesome
assemblage, and therefore falls under the exception to the curfew rule. Roberto
Ocampo filed a complaint against the Respondents for serious misconduct, grave
abuse of authority, and commission of a felony. The Mayor issued an ordinance
exonerating the policemen. On March 17, 1969 a complaint was lodged with the
Police Commission for the same grounds.
ISSUE:
W/N the Mayor can decide or investigate on administrative cases involving
police service and personnel.
HELD:
The Respondents argument is devoid of merit. The power of local officials to
investigate and decide administrative cases involving police service and personn
el
has been transferred to the POLCOM under RA 4864. According to Commission v.
Hon. Bello, Sec. 26 of the Police Act is a mere saving clause and refers only to
administrative cases involving police personnel and service pending at the time
of
the effectivity of the Act (September 8, 1969). Sec. 26 may not be interpreted t
o
mean that the Board of Investigators and Police Commission could not legally
function to carry into effect the purpose of the Act until after the lapse of th
e 100
days.
LATIN MAXIM:
1, 6c, 6d
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Aisporna v. Court of Appeals and People
Case No. 6
G.R. No. L-39419 (April 12, 1982)
Chapter VI, Page 248, Footnote No. 8
FACTS:
Petitioner Mrs. Aisporna was charged with violation of Sec. 189 of the
Insurance Act for allegedly acting as an insurance agent without first securing
a
certificate of authority to act as such from the office of the Insurance Commiss
ioner.
Mrs. Aisporna, however, maintained that she was not liable because she only assi
sted
her husband, and that she did not receive any compensation.
ISSUE:
W/N the receipt of compensation is an essential element for violation of Sec.
189.
HELD:
Receipt of compensation is essential to be considered an insurance agent.
Every part of a statute must be considered together with the other parts, a kept
subservient to the general intent of the enactment, and not separately and
independently. The term agent used in par. 1 of Sec. 189 is defined in par. 2 of t
he
same section. Applying the definition of an insurance agent in par. 2 to the age
nt in
par. 1 would give harmony to the aforementioned 3 paragraphs of Sec. 189. A
statute must be construed so as to harmonize and give effect to all its provisio
ns
wherever possible. Every part of the statute must be considered together with th
e
other parts and kept subservient to the general intent of the whole enactment.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 9c, 28, 36b, 36c, 36d, 37
135
Araneta v. Concepcion
Case No. 17
G.R. No. L-9667, (July 31, 1956)
Chapter VI, Page 252, Footnote No. 24
FACTS:
The husband filed a case for legal separation against his wife on the ground
of adultery. After the issues were joined, Defendant therein filed an omnibus pe
tition
to secure the custody of their three minor children, a monthly support of P5,000
for
herself and said children, and the return of her passport; to enjoin Plaintiff f
rom
ordering his hirelings from harassing and molesting her; and to have Plaintiff t
herein
pay for the fees of her attorney in the action. The judge rendered his decision
regarding the omnibus petition and granted the custody of the children to
Defendant, a monthly allowance of P2,300 for support for her and the children, P
300
for a house, and P2,000 as attorney s fees. The judge refused to reconsider the or
der.
ISSUE:
W/N the parties are required to submit evidence before deciding the
omnibus petition.
HELD:
No. If the parties are allowed to present evidences regarding the omnibus
petition, it would violate the intent of the law regarding the 6-month cooling p
eriod
contained in Art. 103 of the Civil Code. A recital of grievances in court may fa
n their
grievances against one another; the legislature s intent is to give them opportuni
ty for
dispassionate reflection. Note, however, that the case was filed after 6 months
of the
filing of the legal separation case. As such, the determination of the custody a
nd
alimony must have been given force and effect, provided it did not go to the ext
ent
of violating the policy of the cooling off period.
LATIN MAXIM:
9a, 27, 36a, 36c, 36d, 37
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Lichauco vs. Apostol
Case No. 147
G.R. No. L-19628 (December 4, 1922)
Chapter VI, Page 252, Footnote No. 23
FACTS:
Petitioner is a corporation engaged in the business of importing carabao and
other draft animals. It now desires to import from Pnom-Pehn a shipment of draft
cattle and bovine cattle for the manufacture of serum. However, the Director of
Agriculture refuses to admit said cattle, except upon the condition stated in
Administrative Order No. 21 of the Bureau of Agriculture that said cattle shall
have
been immunized from rinderpest before embarkation at Pnom-Pehn.
Legislations involved in the case:
Sec. 1762 of the Administrative Code prohibition against bringing of animals fro
m
infected foreign country
Sec. 1770 of the Administrative Code Bringing of diseased animal into islands
forbidden
Sec. 1762 of the Administrative Code as amended by Act No. 3052 Bringing of
animals imported from foreign countries into the Philippine Islands
ISSUE:
W/N Sec. 1762 of the Administrative Code, as amended by Act No. 3052, has
been repealed by the implication in Sec. 1770.
HELD:
No. Sec. 1762, as amended, is of a general nature, while Sec. 1770 deals with
a particular contingency not made the subject of legislation in Sec. 1762. Sec.
1770
therefore is not considered as inconsistent with Sec. 1762 and it must be consid
ered
as a special qualification of Sec. 1762. Sec. 1770 of the Administrative Code re
mains
in full force and effect, being a special law having special contingency not dea
lt
within Sec. 1762, which extends merely to the importation of draft animals for
purposes of manufacturing serum.
LATIN MAXIM:
2a, 36a, 38b, 50
138
Javellana v. Kintanar
Case No. 138
G.R. No. L-33169 July 30, 1982
Chapter VI, Page 262, Footnote No.55
FACTS:
Petitioner is the owner of a market (building and lot) in Crossing Bago, Bago
City, which consists of store spaces and of permanent and movable stalls leased
to
vendors. Said market has served the general population of the City of Bago for m
ore
than twenty (20) years already when it was denied the payment of Petitioner for
a
municipal license for the 3rd quarter of 1968 on the ground that Ordinance No. 1
50
had been enacted prohibiting the establishment, maintenance or operation of a
public market in the City of Bago by any person, entity, or corporation other th
an the
local government. Appellant claims that a public market is one that is not owned
privately; whereas the appellees say that is one that serves the general public.
ISSUE:
W/N the marketplace owned by Petitioner is a public market.
HELD:
The test of a public market is its dedication to the service of the general
public and not its ownership. A scrutiny of the charter provision will readily s
how that
by public market, it is meant one that is intended to serve the general public.
The
Petitioner himself so declared when he testified that his market is engaged in
servicing the public, not only in Bago City, but also those coming from other
municipalities.
LATIN MAXIM:
1, 2a, 6d, 40c
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Niere v. CFI of Negros Occidental, Branch II
Case No. 188
G.R. No. L-30324 November 29, 1973
Chapter VI, Page 262, Footnote No.60
FACTS:
Petitioner is a Civil Service eligible and was appointed city engineer of La
Carlota City by the City Mayor pursuant to the provisions of Sec. 21 of RA 4858
(the
City Charter). After the enactment of the Decentralization Act, Private Responde
nt
was appointed by the President of the Philippines as city engineer of La Carlota
City.
Petitioner refused to turn over office and claimed that he was the one legally
appointed as city engineer under RA 4858. House Bill No. 9711, which became RA
4585, originally expressly included city engineer as one of those whom the city
mayor
can appoint under Sec. 21 of said RA, but during the period of amendment in the
Senate, the position of said engineer was deleted in the final draft of Sec. 21.
ISSUE:
1. W/N deletion of the position of city engineer in Sec. 21 of RA 4585 an amendm
ent
purely of form only or not.
2. W/N appointing authority for the post of city engineer belongs to the city Ma
yor or
not.
HELD:
1. NO, it is a substantial amendment. Nothing could be more substantial than the
vesting of a power to appoint such an important city official as the city engine
er. If
Congress wanted to authorize the city mayor to appoint all heads and employees o
f
city department, it could have easily re-phrased Sec. 21 of the City Charter to
that
effect. Such section expressly limits the appointing authority of the mayor.
2. NO. Since the city mayor under Sec. 21 is without authority to appoint the ci
ty
engineer, this prerogative can only be exercised by the President of the Philipp
ines,
who, under Sec. 10(3) of Article VII of the 1935 Constitution, shall nominate wi
th the
consent of the Commission on Appointments all other officers of the government
whose appointments are not herein otherwise provided for
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 29, 30a, 32, 38b, b2
142
Almeda v. Florentino
Case No. 10
G.R. No.L-23800 (December 21, 1965)
Chapter VI, Page 265, Footnote No. 67
FACTS:
RA183, the charter of Pasay City (enacted June 21, 1947), provides in its Sec. 1
4
that the Board shall have a secretary who shall be appointed by it to serve durin
g the
term of office of the members thereof On June 18, 1960, RA 2709 amended Sec. 12
of RA 183. On the strength of Par. 2 of Sec. 12 of the Pasay City Charter, as am
ended,
the Vice-Mayor of Pasay City appointed Petitioner Almeda as secretary of the
Municipal Board of said City. The very next day, the Board refused to recognize
Petitioner as its secretary and, in turn, appointed Respondent Florentino to the
position,
purportedly under Sec. 14 of the City Charter.
ISSUE:
Which law applies on the matter of the appointment of the Secretary of the
Municipal Board of Pasay City?
HELD:
The petition was dismissed. There is nothing in RA 2709 that indicates any
intention on the part of the Legislature to repeal, alter, or modify in any way
the
provisions of Sec. 14 of R.A 183. Repeals by implication are not favored, unless
it is
manifested that the legislature so intended.
LATIN MAXIM:
9c, 37, 49, 50
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Abellana v. Marave
Case No. 3
G.R. No.L-27760 (May 29, 1974)
Chapter VI, Page 266, Footnote No. 71
FACTS:
Petitioner was prosecuted of the crime of physical injuries through reckless
imprudence. The criminal case was filed with the city court of Ozamis City, whic
h
found Petitioner guilty as charged. Petitioner appealed such decision to the CFI
. At
this stage, the Private Respondents as the offended parties filed with another b
ranch
of the CFI of Misamis Occidental presided by Respondent Judge, a separate and
independent civil action for damages. Petitioner sought for the dismissal of suc
h
action principally on the ground that there was no reservation for the filing th
ereof in
the City Court of Ozamis Respondent Judge was not persuaded and issued the order
to deny Petitioners motion to dismiss.
ISSUE:
W/N the order was issued with grave abuse of discretion.
HELD:
Petition for certiorari is dismissed. Petitioner s literal reading of the Sec. 1 o
f Rule
111 of the Rules of Court ignores the de novo aspect of appealed cases from city
courts as provided in Sec. 7 of Rule 123. Such interpretation, does likewise, gi
ve rise to
a constitutional question that may trench on a substantive right in accordance t
o Art.
33 of the Civil Code.2 As stated in Art. X, Sec. 5, par.5 of the 1973 Constituti
on, the
grant of power to this Court does not extend to any diminution, increase or
modification of substantive rights. Thus, it is a well-settled doctrine that a c
ourt is to
avoid construing a statute or legal norm in such a manner as would give rise to
a
constitutional doubt. Lastly, in the case at bar, literal construction of the la
w is not
favored. The law as an instrument of social control will fail in its function if
through an
ingenious construction sought to be fastened on a legal norm, particularly a
procedural rule, there is placed an impediment to a litigant being given an
opportunity of vindicating an alleged right.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 12a, 37
Yu Cong Eng v. Trinidad
Case No. 317
G.R. No. L-20479 (February 6, 1925)
Chapter VI, Page 267, Footnote No. 78
FACTS:
Act 2972 prohibited record books of Merchants from being written in a
language other than English, Spanish, or a local dialect. Yu Cong Eng, a Chinese
merchant, was penalized for keeping books written in Chinese. He and other Chine
se
merchants challenged the constitutionality of the law.
ISSUE:
Is Act 2972 constitutional?
HELD:
It is constitutional. The purpose of the Act is to prevent fraud in book keeping
and evasion of taxes for the protection of the public good. This decision is con
sistent
with the ruling in Kwong Sing v. City of Manila, where laundrymen were prohibite
d
from issuing receipts written in Chinese. Class legislation is thus allowed if i
t is for the
public good. Instead of interpreting the Act as a blanket prohibition against ke
eping
books in Chinese, it may be interpreted as a directory measure that records
pertaining to taxes must be written or annotated in English, Spanish, or a local
dialect,
or have a duplicate in any of these languages. This liberal interpretation is re
asonable
and it upholds constitutionality.
LATIN MAXIM:
1a, 6d, 9c, 11e, 37
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
City of Naga v. Agna
Case No. 63
G.R. No. L-36049 (May 31, 1976)
Chapter VI, Page 268, Footnote No. 83
FACTS:
The City of Naga changed its tax system from graduated tax to percentage
tax. Respondent taxpayers insisted on paying the new taxes the following year,
pursuant to the Revised Administrative Code (Sec. 2309). It stated that tax
enactments changing the current system prior to December 15 should take effect
the following year. The Naga City government, on the other hand, claimed that
under the Local Autonomy Act (RA 2264), tax ordinances take effect 15 days after
publication; this allegedly impliedly repealed Sec. 2309 of the Admin Code.
ISSUE:
Did RA 2264 repeal Sec. 2309 of the Revised Administrative Code?
HELD:
No, it did not. There is a presumption against implied repeal; a subsequent
provision only repeals a prior provision clearly contradictory to it. If two law
s can be
harmonized, then the Courts shall do so. Sec. 2309 of the Revised Admin Code
applies in this case because the new tax changed a prior tax system. RA 2264 onl
y
applies for entirely new tax provisions.
LATIN MAXIM:
37, 38a, 38b
145
Tan v. COMELEC
Case No. 152
G.R. No. 112093 (October 4, 1994)
FACTS:
BP 885 is an act creating the new province of Negros del Norte. The plebiscite
for the approval of the act was only conducted in the municipalities prospective
ly
composing the new province. The parent provinces, which will get also affected,
were not included in the plebiscite.
ISSUE:
Is BP 885 unconstitutional?
HELD:
It is unconstitutional. The Constitution provides that a plebiscite must be held
in all units affected, including the parent province, and not just the new areas
. The
draft bill provided that the plebiscite be conducted in all units, and not just
the areas
constituting the new province, but the final bill only limited it to the latter.
LATIN MAXIM:
12a
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Philippine Government v. Municipality of Binangonan
Case No. 118
G.R. No. L-10202 (March 29, 1916)
Chapter VI, Page 268, Footnote No. 84
FACTS:
Petitioner Municipality of Cardona challenged the constitutionality of EO 66
by the Governor-General granting Binangonan municipal authority over 7 additiona
l
barrios. Petitioner claimed that the Governor-General has no legislative authori
ty and
that this legislation was not for the public good.
ISSUE:
Is EO 66 constitutional?
HELD:
It is constitutional. Every act of legislation is presumed to be constitutional
and
for the public good; facts need not be stated to prove it.
LATIN MAXIM:
12a, 37
People v. Del Rosario
Case No. 105
G.R. No. L-7234 (May 21, 1955)
FACTS:
On July 27, 1953, information was filed in the Municipal Court of Pasay
charging Paz M. del Rosario with slight physical injuries committed on May 28, 1
953.
The accused presented a motion to quash the information on the ground that the
offense charged had already prescribed in accordance with Art. 90 and Art. 91 of
the RPC. The municipal court sustained the motion and dismissed the case. Hence,
an appeal against the dismissal is made to the Supreme Court.
ISSUE:
1.
Whether the prescriptive period should commence from the very day on
which the crime was committed, or from the day following that in which it was
committed;
2.
W/N the term month in the RPC should be understood to be a month of 30
days, instead of the civil/calendar month.
HELD:
1. In computation of the period of time within which an act is to be done, the l
aw has
always directed that the first be excluded and the last included (Art. 13, Civil
Code).
Art. 18 of the CC directs that any deficiency in any special law must be supplie
d by
its provisions. As the RPC is deficient in that it does not explicitly define ho
w the period
is to be computed, resort must be had to Art. 13 of the CC.
2. By express provision of Article 13 on the new Civil Code, a month is to be
considered as the regular 30-day month. In accordance therewith, the term month
used in Art. 90 of the RPC should be understood to mean the regular 30-day month
and not the solar or civil month. Hence, the Court held that the offense charged
had
not yet prescribed because July is the 60th day from May 29.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 38b, 46a
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Salvatierra v. Court of Appeals
Case No.
G.R. No. 107797 (August 26, 1996)
FACTS:
Enrique Salvatierra died intestate and was survived by his legitimate brothers,
Tomas, Bartolome, Venancio, and Macario, and a sister, Marcela. His estate
consisted of 3 parcels of land (Lots 25, 26, & 27). Macario sold the 405 sq. mts
. out of
the 749 sq. mts. total area of Lot 26 to his son, Anselmo. Eventually, an extraju
dicial
partition with confirmation of sale was executed by and among the surviving legal
heirs of Enrique, which consisted of the aforementioned lots. Thereafter, Venanc
io
sold Lot No. 7 (which belonged to him by virtue of the said partition), and a 14
9-sq. m.
portion of Lot 26 to spouses Longalongs. It turned out, however, that Anselmo al
ready
obtained an OCT covering the whole of Lot No. 26. The complaints for reconveyanc
e
were filed 5 years after the issuance of such OCT to Anselmo.
ISSUE:
1.
Which prescriptive period for actions for annulment should prevail, Art. 1391 of
the new CC or Art. 1144 of the same Code?
2.
W/N there was a double sale.
HELD:
1. Art. 1144 of the CC prevails. The prescriptive period for such actions is 10
years, as
held in previous cases. Hence, the action for reconveyance had not yet prescribe
d.
There is no ambiguity in the terms and stipulations of the extrajudicial partiti
on. Thus,
the literal and plain meaning thereof should be observed. What Anselmo bought
from his father was only 405 sq. m of Lot 26. The registration of the whole Lot
26 in the
name of Anselmo was, therefore, done with evident bad faith.
2. There was no double sale. Both parties did not dispute the contents of the
extrajudicial partition.
LATIN MAXIM:
5a, 6c, 7a
147
ROUND 3
152
People v. Atop
Case No. 202
G.R. Nos. 124303-05 (February 10, 1998)
Chapter VII, Page 290, Footnote No. 29
FACTS:
Appellant was found guilty of 3 counts of rape. The trial court sentenced him
to 2 terms of reclusion perpetua for the first two counts, and to death for the
third,
holding that his common-law relationship with the victim s grandmother aggravated
the penalty. Private complainant Regina Guafin, 12 years old, is the granddaught
er
of Trinidad Mejos, the common-law wife of the Appellant.
ISSUE:
1. W/N the trial court erred in appreciating the nighttime and relationship as
aggravating the penalty imposable for the rape allegedly committed.
2. W/N the trial court erred in finding Appellant guilty beyond reasonable
doubt of the crimes charged.
HELD:
1. The trial court erred. Nocturnity must have been deliberately sought by the
Appellant to facilitate the crime or prevent its discovery or evade his capture
or
facilitate his escape. Neither can we appreciate relationship as aggravating. Th
e
scope of the relationship under Art. 15 of the RPC encompasses only the spouse,
ascendant, descendant, legitimate, natural or adopted brother or sister, and rel
ative
by affinity in the same degrees. Outside these enumerations and consistent with t
he
doctrine that criminal laws must be liberally construed in favor of the accused,
no
other relationship between the offender and the victim may aggravate the
imposable penalty for the crime committed.
2. The Appellant was found guilty beyond reasonable doubt. The offended
party s straightforward and unequivocal statements show indelible badges of truth.
LATIN MAXIM:
30a
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
People v. Padilla
Case No. 113
G.R. No. 47027 (February 4, 1941)
Chapter VII, Page 291, Footnote No. 30
FACTS:
Appellants Padilla, a Filipino citizen, and Von Arend, a German citizen, acting
jointly and conniving with each other, voluntarily, illegally, and criminally ev
aded the
provisions of Art. 4 of C.A. No. 138, which requires Philippine or U.S. citizens
hip before
the exercise or enjoyment of the privilege established in said article. It is co
ntended,
however, that notwithstanding the infringement of Sec. 4. of Act No. 138, the
Appellants cannot be punished therefore since the said Act imposes no penal
sanction whatsoever.
ISSUE:
W/N a violation of C.A. No. 138 may be prosecuted under C.A. No. 108,
entitled An Act to punish acts of evasion of the laws on the nationalization or c
ertain
rights, franchises or privileges.
HELD:
Yes. Any citizen of the Philippines or of the United States who knowingly allows
his name or citizenship to be used so that a person not so qualified may enjoy t
he
privilege granted to domestic entities by C.A. No. 138, as well as any alien pro
fiting
thereby, is guilty of violation of C.A. No. 108.
The very title of Act No. 108 gives unmistakable notice of the legislative inten
t
and purpose of punishing all acts of evasion of the laws of the nationalization
of
certain rights, franchise or privileges. Sec. 1 of the same Act applies punishme
nt
provided therein to all cases in which any constitutional or legal provision requ
ires
Philippine or United States citizenship as a requirement for the exercise or enj
oyment
of a right, franchise or privilege. Under Act No. 108, any legal provision, whene
ver
existing at the time of the passage of said Act or promulgated thereafter, would
fall
within its scope. One of such legal provision is Art. 4 of Act No. 138.
LATIN MAXIM:
6a, 6c, 9a
153
People v. Salazar
Case No. 223
G.R. No. L-13371 (September 24, 1959)
Chapter VII, Page 292, Footnote No. 36
FACTS:
The Appellant was charged with the crime of malversation of public funds.
The Appellant being the then Deputy Provincial and Municipal Treasurer, and as
such, accountable for the funds collected and received by him, did willfully,
feloniously and with grave abuse of confidence, misappropriate, and convert to h
is
own personal use and benefit, from said funds, the sum of P13,897.77. Upon
arraignment, the Appellant pleaded not guilty, which he later withdrew and
changed to guilty. He was sentenced to be imprisoned, to suffer the penalty of
perpetual special disqualification, to pay a fine, to indemnify the Government
without subsidiary imprisonment in case of insolvency, and to pay the costs. The
Appellant contends that the lower court committed an error in sentencing him to
suffer the aforementioned penalty on the ground of lack of malice in the commiss
ion
of the crime, in that, he did not apply the missing funds to his personal use an
d
benefit but lost the same while he was drunk.
ISSUE:
W/N the penalties imposed by the lower court were excessive given the
contention of Appellant.
HELD:
No. There is nothing in the record that supports the claim that missing funds
were lost while the Appellant was drunk. When he entered the plea of guilty, he
thereby admitted, not only his guilt, but also all the material facts alleged in
the
information, namely, that he willfully, feloniously and with grave abuse of
confidence, misappropriate, misapply, embezzle, and convert to his own personal
use and benefit, from said funds, the sum of P13,897.77, thus clearly indicating
malice or evil intent on his part. His plea of guilt carried with it the acknowl
edgement
or admission that the willful acts charged were done with malice.
LATIN MAXIM:
7b, 11e, 41a, 43
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
People v. Garcia
Case No. 209
No. L-2873 (February 28, 1950)
Chapter VII, Page 293, Footnote No. 41
FACTS:
The lower court, ignoring the Appellant s minority, sentenced him to an
indeterminate penalty of 4 years, 2 months and 1 day of prision correccional to
8
years of prision mayor for the crime of robbery. RA 47 which amended Art. 80 of
the
RPC by reducing from 18 to 16 the age below which the Appellant has to be
committed to the custody or care of a public or private, benevolent or charitabl
e
institution, instead of being convicted and sentenced to prison, has given rise t
o the
controversy. The Solicitor General believes that the amendment by implication ha
s
also amended par. 2 of Art. 68 of the RPC, which provides that when the offender
is
over 15 and under 18 years of age, the penalty next lower than that prescribed by
law shall be imposed, but always in the proper period.
ISSUE:
W/N the Appellant, being 17 years of age at the time of the commission of
the crime, was entitled to the privileged mitigating circumstance of Art. 68, pa
r. 2 of
the RPC.
HELD:
Yes. We find no irreconcilable conflict between Art. 68, par. 2, as it now stand
s
and Art. 80 as amended. There is no incompatibility between granting Appellant o
f
the ages of 15 to 18 a privileged mitigating circumstance and fixing at 16 the
maximum age of persons who are to be placed in a reformatory institution. All pa
rts
of a statute are to be harmonized and reconciled so that effect may be given to
each and every part thereof, and that conflicting interest in the same statute a
re
never to be supposed or so regarded, unless forced upon the court by an
unambiguous language.
LATIN MAXIM:
37, 38b
154
US v. Go Chico
Case No. 299
G.R. No. 4963 (September 15, 1909)
Chapter VII, Page 295, Footnote No. 49
FACTS:
Appellant is charged with the violation of Sec. 1 of Act No. 1696 or the Flag
Law, displaying in his store a number of medallions, in the form of a small butt
on,
upon the faces of which were imprinted in miniature the picture of Emilio Aguina
ldo,
and the flag or banner or device used during the late armed insurrection in the
Philippine Islands against the U.S. Appellant claims that he is ignorant of the
law and
consequently, had no corrupt intention to violate the law. He claims acquittal o
n the
ground that his guilt must be proven beyond reasonable doubt and that the law wa
s
referring to identical banners, emblem, flag, etc.
ISSUE:
1. W/N to be in violation of the Flag Law, Appellant must have acted with
criminal intent.
2. W/N the wording of the law exempts the articles displayed by the
Defendant.
HELD:
1. No, criminal intent isn t necessary for violation of the Flag Law.
2. The medallions, though not exactly identical, comes within the purview of
the class of articles referred to by the law.
Jurisprudence has held that in crimes made by statutory requirement, criminal
intent is not necessary. Intention of the perpetrator is entirely immaterial bec
ause to
hold otherwise would render the statute substantially worthless, and its executi
on
impossible. The statute did not include intent as an element of a crime, and it
is clear
so no interpretation is required. Clearly therefore, ignorance of the law is not
a valid
defense for violation thereof. The description in the law refers not to a partic
ular flag,
but to a type of flag.
LATIN MAXIM:
5a, 7a, 9a, 9c, 11a, 43, a
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Arriete v. Director of Public Works
Case no. 22
G.R. No. 37125 (September 30, 1933)
Chapter VII, Page 296, Footnote No. 52
FACTS:
Appellant Arriete, as legal guardian on behalf of minor Carmen Jagunap,
sought to recover the title and possession of three lots which were sold by the
sheriff
in a public auction to Appellee Ledesma (and thereafter sold to Fermin Caram) to
satisfy the judgment of a lien for nonpayment of taxes, under the Irrigation Act
No.
2152. However, it was found that the delinquent taxpayer was not the owner of sa
id
lots, but Carmen Jagunap was.
ISSUE:
W/N Appellee Ledesma has any rights over the lots acquired in good faith
under the final deed of sale of the provincial sheriff.
HELD:
No, she acquired no right at all. Act No. 2152 provided that regarding
expropriation of land, the list of lands filed by the Director of Public Lands m
ust be
published, and notice should be given to the owners to file answer or appear in
the
civil case. No such publication or notice was evident in this case.
It is not sufficient that they had actual knowledge. Statutes in the
derogation of rights are construed strictly. This is because people in a republi
can
state like ours enjoy inherent rights guaranteed by the Constitution or protecte
d by
law, like the right against undue deprivation of property. Thus, whenever there
are
statutes authorizing the expropriation of private land or property, these statut
es are
construed strictly.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 7a, 43
156
People v. Moran
Case No. 216
G.R. No. 17905 (January 27, 1923)
Chapter VII, Page 320, Footnote No. 167
FACTS:
Appellant was punished for violating the Election Law. When the decision
was published, it was increased to 6 months. Defendant alleges that the crime ha
s
already prescribed, pursuant to Sec. 71 of Act No. 3030, which was enacted by th
e
Legislature on March 9, 1922.
ISSUE:
W/N Act No. 3030 is meant to apply to the Administrative Code and whether
the said act should be retroactive with respect to Art. 22 and 7 of the RPC.
HELD:
Act No. 3030 is intended to be amendatory to several sections of the
Administrative Code. Furthermore, Art. 22 of the RPC can only be invoked with
reference to some other penal law. Hence with regard to Art. 7, the SC contends
that Art. 22 should still apply to special laws.
Also, the prescription of the crime is intimately connected with that of the
penalty. A statute declaring prescription of a crime has no other purpose than t
o
annul prosecution of the offender. When the statute makes no distinction, it mak
es
no exception. Statutes are not construed to have retrospective operation as to
destroy or impair rights unless such was clearly the intention.
The new law shortening the time of prescription indicates that the sovereign
acknowledges that the previous one was unjust and enforcing the latter would be
contradictory.
LATIN MAXIM:
26, 37, 46a, 48
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
People v. Reyes
Case No. 222
G.R. Nos. 74226-227 (July 27, 1989)
Chapter VII, Page 320, Footnote No. 168
FACTS:
On June 1983, the complainants allegedly discovered that the property of
their deceased parents was falsely transferred to Mizaph Reyes through falsified
signatures and untruthful statements in the deed of registration. However as the
deed
was registered on May 26, 1961, the lower courts held that the period of prescri
ption
has long passed.
ISSUE:
Whether or not the lower courts erred in dismissing the case due to the
passing of the prescriptive period.
HELD:
The SC ruled affirmed the decision of the lower court, as the registration of
land acts as a notice to the whole world. Under this, it is also presumed that t
he
purchaser has examined the instruments of the record.
The court will not hesitate to apply rules of construction in civil cases to tha
t of
criminal ones, should the circumstances warrant. Rights should not be left on a
precarious balance, always susceptible possible challenges. This should also app
ly to
criminal cases.
Furthermore, as stated in People v. Moran, in the interpretation of the law and
that of the prescription of crimes, a liberal reading that is most favorable to
the
accused is the one to be adopted.
LATIN MAXIM:
48
173
ISSUE:
W/N the dismissal of the complaint on the ground of improper venue was
correct.
HELD:
No. The rule on venue of personal actions cognizable by the CFI is found in
Sec. 2(b), Rule 4 of the Rules of Court, which provides that such "actions may b
e
commenced and tried where the Defendant or any of the Defendants resides or
may be found, or where the Plaintiff or any of the Plaintiffs resides, at the el
ection of
the Plaintiff." The word "may" is merely permissive and operates to confer discr
etion
upon a party. Under ordinary circumstances, the term "may be" connotes possibili
ty;
it does not connote certainty. "May" is an auxillary verb indicating liberty,
opportunity, permission or possibility.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 25a, b
182
Bersabal v. Salvador
Case No. 34
G.R. No. L-35910 (July 21, 1978)
Chapter VIII, Page 335, Footnote No. 25
FACTS:
Private Respondents filed an ejectment suit against the Petitioner. The
subsequent decision was appealed by the Petitioner and during its pendency, the
court issued an order stating that counsels for both parties are given 30 days fro
m
receipt of this order within which to file their memoranda in order for this cas
e to be
submitted for decision by the court. After receipt, Petitioner filed a motion ex
parte
to submit memorandum within 30 days from receipt of notice of submission of the
transcript of stenographic notes taken during the hearing of the case which was
granted by the court. But the Respondent judge issued an order dismissing the ca
se
for failure to prosecute Petitioner s appeal. Petitioner filed a motion for
reconsideration citing the submitted ex parte motion but the court denied it.
ISSUE:
W/N the mere failure of an Appellant to submit the mentioned memorandum
would empower the CFI to dismiss the appeal on the ground of failure to prosecut
e.
HELD:
The court is not empowered by law to dismiss the appeal on the mere failure
of an Appellant to submit his memorandum. The law provides that Courts shall
decide cases on the basis of the evidence and records transmitted from the city
courts: Provided parties may submit memoranda if so requested It cannot be
interpreted otherwise than that the submission of memoranda is optional.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Republic Planers Bank v. Agana Sr.
Case No. 133
G. R. No. 51765 (March 3, 1997)
FACTS:
Private Respondents filed in court a quo, an action for specific performance
to compel petitioner to redeem 800 preferred shares of stock with a face value o
f
P8,000.00 and to pay 1% quarterly interest thereon as quarterly dividend owing t
hem
under the terms and conditions of the certificates of stock. The court a quo ren
dered
judgment in favor of Private Respondents.
ISSUE:
W/N Respondent Judge committed grave abuse of discretion amounting to
excess or lack of jurisdiction in compelling Petitioner bank to redeem Private
Respondents preferred shares
HELD:
Yes. Respondent Judge, in ruling that Petitioner must redeem the shares in
question, stated that, On the question of the redemption by the Defendant of said
preferred shares of stock, the very wordings of the terms and conditions in said
stock
certificates clearly allows the same. What Respondent Judge failed to recognize
was that while the stock certificate does allow redemption, the option to do so
was
clearly vested in the Petitioner Bank. The redemption therefore is clearly the t
ype
known as "optional". Furthermore, the terms and conditions set forth therein use
the
word "may". It is a settled doctrine in statutory construction that the word "ma
y"
denotes discretion, and cannot be construed as having a mandatory effect.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 6b, 7a, 30b, 36a
185
McGee v. Republic
Case No. 174
G.R. No. L-5387 (April 29, 1954)
Chapter VIII, Page 337, Footnote No. 37
FACTS:
Petitioner, an American citizen married to Leonarda Crisostomo, wants to
adopt her children by her first husband. However, he is barred from doing so und
er
Art. 335 of the old Civil Code which states that those who have legitimate,
legitimated, acknowledged natural children, or natural children by legal fiction
cannot adopt. Petitioner and Leonarda have one legitimate child. Despite Art. 33
5,
the trial court ruled in favor of the adoption, invoking Art. 338 which states t
hat a
step-child, by the step-father or step-mother can be adopted.
ISSUE:
W/N a husband having a legitimate child may adopt a step-child.
HELD:
No. One strong argument presented by the trial court in upholding the
adoption is that to hold otherwise would render Art. 338 meaningless and a
surplusage. However, it must be noted that Art. 335 and Art. 338 should be
considered in relation to each other. That a parent can adopt a step-child is li
mited
by Art. 335 that said parent cannot have a legitimate child in order to qualify
as an
adopter. One principle behind this is to protect the successional rights of the
legitimate child. In addition, under the laws of statutory construction, negativ
e words
and phrases are to be regarded as mandatory while those in the affirmative are
merely directory. Art. 335 is phrased in a negative manner: cannot adopt. While
Art.
338 is positive: the following may be adopted.
LATIN MAXIM:
15a
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Penid v. Virata
Case No. 101
G.R. No. L-44004 (March 25, 1983)
Chapter VIII, Page 338, Footnote No. 40
FACTS:
Confidential Information No. 28 of the BIR was filed by the Petitioners. It is a
sworn statement that listed the shipping companies and agents who had been
falsely declaring their gross earnings on the basis of a parity rate of P2.00 to
US $1.00
defrauding the Philippine Government of millions of pesos in taxes. Further,
Petitioners divulged other cases of erroneous conversion not listed in the Confi
dential
Information. One of these was Pan Fil Co. Inc. Now the Petitioners seek their 25
%
reward taken from the total revenue collected from shipping companies in payment
for their deficiencies as provided by RA 2338.
ISSUE:
W/N the Petitioners could claim reward from Pan Fil Co. Inc, a company
which is not included in the Confidential Information.
HELD:
Yes. According to Sec. 4 of RA 2338, In order to entitle an informer to a
reward, the information given by him must lead to or be instrumental in the disc
overy
of the fraud or violation and results in the recovery of collection of revenues .
Not only did the BIR rely on the Confidential Information submitted by the
Petitioners for their investigation, but also on the categorical statement that
other
shipping companies falsely declared their gross earnings, which led to further
investigations and, consequently, recovery of collection. Therefore, this inform
ation
was instrumental in the discovery of the fraud or violation.
In jurisprudence, statues offering rewards must be liberally construed in favor
of informers and with regard to the purpose for which they are intended.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 9d
189
Portillo v. Salvani
Case No. 243
G.R. No. L-32181 (March 10, 1930)
Chapter III, Page 101, Footnote No. 130
FACTS:
Appellant Salvani won the elections in 1928 for the office of provincial
governor of Antique. Appellee Portillo, his nearest opponent, filed an election
protest
on July 9, 1928. Decision was rendered on August 15, 1929 declaring appellee Por
tillo
the winner.
ISSUE:
W/N the decision by the trial judge declaring appellee Portillo is valid.
HELD:
The decision is void for want of jurisdiction. The Election Law provides that al
l
proceedings in an electoral contest shall be terminated within one year. Legisla
tive
history of the said legislation reveals that the shift of the tenor of the statu
te from
silence to mild admonition to stronger suggestion and finally to an emphatic and
explicit provision suggests the legislative intent to make the provision mandato
ry.
One year having already elapsed, the proceeding is deemed terminated and the
court loses jurisdiction rendering any subsequent decision void for want of juri
sdiction.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 7a, 7b, 9a, 43, 45, b2
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Querubin v. Court of Appeals
Case No. 247
G.R. No. L-2581 (December 2, 1948)
Chapter VIII, Page 332, Footnote No. 14
FACTS:
Petitioner defeated Felipe Mamuri in the election for the mayoralty of Ilagan.
Mamuri filed an election protest in the court, lost and filed an appeal thereaft
er. The
appeal was not acted upon for three months hence the petition to dismiss the cas
e
for the court had lost jurisdiction.
ISSUE:
W/N the CA had lost their jurisdiction to decide the appeal.
HELD:
No. Sec. 178 of the Election Code provides that appeals from decisions in
election contests should be decided within three months after filing. However, t
his
provision is directory in nature since to apply a mandatory character would defe
at
the purpose of due process of the law. The dismissal in such a case will constit
ute a
miscarriage of justice. The doctrine in Portillo v. Salvani should be abandoned.
LATIN MAXIM:
1, 2, 5b, 18b, 39b
193
Charters or special laws granted and enacted by the Legislature are in the
nature of private contracts. They do not constitute a part of the machinery of t
he
general government. The Legislature considers and makes provision for all the
circumstances of a particular case.
RA 3843 specifically provided for the retroactive effect of the law.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 9c, 46, 49
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Gallardo v. Borromeo
Case No. 50
G.R. No. L-36007 (May 25, 1988)
FACTS:
Petitioner filed to terminate the leasehold of the respondent tenant so he
(plaintiff) may cultivate it himself as he had retired from his government job a
s a letter
carrier. Upon appeal, the CA applying Sec. 7 of RA 6389, held that the landowner s
desire to cultivate the land himself is not a valid ground for dispossessing the
tenant.
ISSUE:
W/N the CA correctly gave retroactive application to Sec. 7 of RA 6389.
HELD:
No. The applicable law when petitioner filed his complaint was RA 3844 which
provided a ground for the ejectment of the tenant should the landowner have a
desire to personally cultivate the landholding. The newer law, R.A. 6389 elimina
ted
this ground.
In applying Art. 4 of the New Civil Code, RA 6389 cannot be given retroactive
effect in the absence of a statutory provision for retroactivity or a clear impl
ication of
the law to that effect. Since Congress failed to express an intention to make sa
id RA
retroactive, it may not apply to ejectment cases then already pending adjudicati
on
by the courts.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 46e
195
Laceste v. Santos
Case No. 140
G.R. No. 36886 (February 1, 1932)
Chapter IX, Page 351, Footnote No. 1
FACTS:
Petitioner committed rape along with Nicolas Lachica. The crime took effect
before the effectivity of the RPC. However, Lachica married the victim, Magdalen
a
de Ocampo, and was accordingly relieved from criminal prosecution. The petitione
r
continued to serve his sentence but now prays for the Court to set him at libert
y
through the writ of habeas corpus, pleading that there is no sufficient legal gr
ound for
continuing his imprisonment any longer based on the last sentence of Art. 344 of
the
RPC.
ISSUE:
W/N the last paragraph of Art. 344 of the RPC has retroactive effect.
HELD:
Yes. The petition for habeas corpus was granted. The principle granting to
the accused in certain cases an exception to the general rule that laws shall no
t be
retroactive when the law in question favors the accused applies. Conscience and
good law justify this exception.
LATIN MAXIM:
48
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Balatbat v. Court of Appeals and Passion
Case No. 29
G.R. No. L-36378 (January 27, 1992)
Chapter IX, Page 363, Footnote No. 73
FACTS:
Petitioner has an agricultural land in Sta. Ana, Pampanga containing 18,490
square meters of land owned by Garcia. Garcia sold the land to private responden
t
Pasion and had declared it for taxation purposes under Tax Declaration No. 126.
Private respondent Pasion claims that he will cultivate the land pursuant to Sec
. 36(1)
of RA 3844. However, petitioner maintains that the case should have been decided
in light of Sec. 7 of RA 6389 since, in view of the appeal the respondent still
does not
have the vested right to acquire the land.
ISSUE:
W/N Sec. 7 of RA 6389 should be given retroactive effect.
HELD:
No. Art. 4 of the Civil Code provides that there should be no retroactive
effect unless otherwise provided by law. In order for a law to have a retroactiv
e
effect it should have a provision stating its retroactivity, otherwise nothing s
hould be
understood which is not embodied in the law. Furthermore the law is a rule
established to guide our action with no binding effect until it is enacted, thus
laws
have no effect in past times but laws look forward in the future.
LATIN MAXIM:
20, 46b, 46e
People v. Zeta
Case No. 232
G.R. No. L-7140 (December 22, 1955)
Chapter VI, Page 266, Footnote No. 72
FACTS:
Appellant was found guilty of violating RA 145 for having collected fees in
excess of 5% of the amount received by the claimant as compensation for services
rendered. At the time the agreement was made the law in force was C.A. No. 675
which allowed a person to charge not more than 5% of any amount that the
claimant would collect. The trial court in convicting appellant held that the
agreement for the payment of a 5% fee on the amount collected was void and
illegal.
ISSUE:
W/N RA 145 has a retroactive effect.
HELD:
No. It does not appear in the language of RA 145 that it should be given
retroactive effect. There is a need of a law to tell the retroactivity of RA 145
for it to
act on cases under the old law. Laws cannot be given retroactive effect unless i
t is
specifically stated in the provision. Furthermore, strict construction on the la
w was
made so as not to prejudice the constitutional right of the constructor and for
the law
not to have any retroactive effect.
LATIN MAXIM:
11b, 20, 46e
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
San Jose v. Rehabilitation Finance Corp.
Case No. 271
G.R. No. L-7766 (November 29, 1955)
Chapter IX, Page 369, Footnote No. 104
FACTS:
Plaintiff presented this petition to recover the interest she supposedly has in
her pre-war loan with defendant. The basis of the suit was RA 671 amending RA 40
1,
the former law condoning the pre-war loans and the interest corresponding from
January 1, 1946 to March 14, 1951. The lower court decided for defendant to retu
rn
the interest to the plaintiff.
ISSUE:
W/N the lower court was correct in imposing the return of interest to plaintiff
by the defendant.
HELD:
Yes. RA 671 is made to condone only the unpaid interest. It did not include
within its term completed payment and paid interest. Where a statute was amended
and reenacted, the amendment should be construed as if it had been included in
the original act; but it could afford no retroactive effect unless plainly made
so by the
terms of the amendment.
LATIN MAXIM:
20, 46e
198
People v. Sumilang
Case No. 226
G.R. No. L-49187 (December 18, 1946)
Chapter IX, Page 371, Footnote No. 111
FACTS:
The petitioner was convicted of the crime of arson and sentenced to the
indeterminate penalty from 5 years and 4 months and 21 days of prision correctio
nal
to 10 years and 1 day of prision mayor. On appeal, both the CA and the SC affirm
ed
the sentence of the lower court.
Based on the records, a copy of the resolution of the Court denying the
motion for reconsideration was mailed to the petitioner s attorney. However, the
attorney alleges in his petition that he did not receive the notice because then
he
was already hiding in the mountains of Laguna as a guerilla officer of the Marki
ngs
guerilla. The attorney prays that the reading of the sentence be suspended and t
hat
petitioner be allowed to file whatever pleading that may be allowed by this
Honorable Tribunal necessary for the protection of the rights of the petitioner.
ISSUE:
W/N the petition to suspend reading of sentence and to file pleading or
motion should be granted.
HELD:
No. It is a well established rule of statutory construction that statutes regula
ting
the procedure of the courts will be construed as applicable to actions pending a
nd
undetermined at the time of their passage. Procedural laws are retrospective in
that
sense and to that extent.
LATIN MAXIM:
46e
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Palomo Building Tenants Association v. Intermediate Appellate Court
Case No. 97
G.R. No. L-68043 (October 31, 1984)
FACTS:
Petitioner filed an action for Declaration of Nullity of Sale and Damages with
Preliminary Injunction before the then Court of First Instance of Manila against
respondents Government Service Insurance System (GSIS) and Capitol Hills, as
principal defendants, and the five (5) judges of the then City Court of Manila i
n the
injunction aspect of the case. Respondent GSIS and Capitol Hills filed separate
motions to dismiss on the grounds that the complaint states no cause of action a
nd
that there are other actions pending between the same parties for the same cause
.
Respondent judge granted private respondents' motion to dismiss.
ISSUE:
W/N the Intermediate Appellate Court (IAC) erred in sustaining the order of
respondent, denying petitioner's motion for approval of the record on appeal due
to
failure to amend the record on appeal within the period granted them.
HELD:
Yes. Petitioners invoke Section 39 of the Judiciary Reorganization Act of 1980
(BP 129) which dispensed with the record on appeal and claim that herein
respondent IAC erred in not applying retrospectively the said law. Ruled in Alda
y vs.
Camilon, "[t]he reorganization having been declared to have been completed, BP
Big. 129 is now in full force and effect. A Record on Appeal is no longer necess
ary for
taking an appeal. The same proviso appears in Section 18 of the Interim Rules an
d
Guidelines issued by this Court on January 11, 1983. Being procedural in nature,
those
provision s may be applied retroactively for the benefit of petitioners, as appe
llants.
'Statutes regulating the procedure of the courts will be construed as applicable
to
actions pending and undetermined at the time of their passage. Procedural laws a
re
retrospective in that sense and to that extent' (People vs. Sumilang, 77 Phil. 7
64
[19461.] "
LATIN MAXIM:
5a, 46e
199
ISSUE:
W/N there is retroactivity of the amendment of Sec. 13 of RA 85, by RA 3147.
HELD:
Yes. One of the purposes of Congress when it enacted RA 3147, by amending
Sec. 13 of RA 85, was to erase any doubts regarding the legality of the acquisit
ion by
the DBP of the 159 lots from the PHHC for the housing project which it intended
to
establish for its employees who did not yet have houses of their own. It is, the
refore, a
curative statute to render valid the acquisition by the DBP of the 159 lots from
the
PHHC.
LATIN MAXIM:
46e
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Briad Agro Development Corp. v. Hon. dela Serna, and dela Cruz, et al.
Case No. 39
G.R. No. 83225 (June 29, 1989)
Chapter IX, Page 376, Footnote No. 136
FACTS:
The case arose out of a complaint filed by Trade Union of the Philippines and
Allied Services WFTU Local Chapter No. ROI-005 against respondent agricultural f
irm
for alleged underpayment/non-payment of minimum wage, ECOLA, overtime pay,
legal holiday pay, night shift differential pay, 13th month pay and service ince
ntive
leave pay. Respondent failed to submit controverting evidence despite due notice
;
Director Balbin thus ruled in favor of the employees and ordered respondent to p
ay
P5,369,909.30.
In its appeal to the NLRC, Briad Agro questioned the Regional Director s
authority to entertain the pecuniary claim of workers, which NLRC dismissed on t
he
strength of E.O. 111 amending Art. 128(b) of the Labor Code, which granted to
Regional Directors jurisdiction over monetary claims.
ISSUE:
W/N the jurisdiction over money claims is exclusive to the Labor Arbiters, by
force of Art. 217 of the Labor Code.
HELD:
The Court held that E.O. 111 has the character of a curative law to remedy a
defect that attached to the provision subject of the amendment. This was clear f
rom
the proviso: The provisions of Art. 217 of this Code notwithstanding The intended
effect was clearly to make the Secretary of Labor and the various Regional Direc
tors
have concurrent jurisdiction. E.O. 111 therefore has retroactive effect.
LATIN MAXIM:
6a, 9, 30b, 38b, 46e
Erectors, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Commission, Hon. Andres, Jr. and Burg
os
Case No. 99
G.R. No. 104215 (May 8, 1996)
Chapter IX, Page 377, Footnote No. 140
FACTS:
Private respondent was recruited to work in Saudi Arabia as a service
contract driver. Months after, another contract was executed which changed his
position into that of a helper/laborer. When private respondent returned to the
Philippines, he invoked his first contract and demanded that petitioner pay the
difference between his salary and allowance as indicated in the said contract an
d
the amount actually paid to him, plus his contractual bonus.
Private respondent filed the complaint with the Labor Arbiter but E.O. No. 797
was passed, creating the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA),
vested with the original and exclusive jurisdiction over money claims between
employers and employees abroad. The Labor Arbiter still proceeded with the case
and rendered a Decision in favor of private respondent.
ISSUE:
W/N E.O. 797 should be given retroactive effect and thus divest the Labor
Arbiter of jurisdiction.
HELD:
No. E.O. 797 is not a curative statute and is therefore not included in the
exception to the rule on prospectivity. Laws should only be applied prospectivel
y
unless the legislative intent to give them retroactive effect is expressly decla
red or is
necessitated. Furthermore, the jurisdiction over the subject matter is determine
d by
the law in force at the time of the commencement of the action; in this case, th
ese
were P.D. 1691 and 1391.
LATIN MAXIM:
35, 46a, 46c, 46e
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Santos v. Duata and the Court of Appeals
Case No. 274
G.R. No. L-20901 (August 31, 1965)
Chapter IX, Page 376, Footnote No. 134
FACTS:
Duata and Aguilar bought a parcel of land which subsequently became a
quarter part of Lot No. 37. The lot was purchased by Santos, Gaanan and Aguilar.
For
convenience, the title was issued in Santos s name.
On August 3, 1955, private respondent Duata, the daughter of the Duata
spouses, instituted an action for reconveyance of ¼ of Lot No. 37. Santos denied t
he
spouses ownership, claiming that the land had been sold to her by Aguilar in a
private document. The trial court pronounced the document as a pacto de retro
sale and ruled in favor of Santos. Upon appeal, the CA ruled that the transactio
n was
actually an equitable mortgage under Art. 1602 of the New Civil Code and set asi
de
the decision of the trial court.
ISSUE:
Whether Santos and Aguilar, in executing the said private document,
intended a mortgage or sale with pacto de retro.
HELD:
It is a mortgage. Art. 1602 was designed primarily to curtail the evils brought
about by contracts of sale with right of repurchase; it envisioned contracts of
sale
with right to repurchase where the real intention of the parties is that the pre
tended
purchase price is money loaned, and in order to secure the payment of the loan,
a
contract purporting to be a pacto de retro sale is drawn up.
Said article is remedial in nature and can thus be applied retroactively to
cases arising prior to the effectivity of the New Civil Code.
LATIN MAXIM:
8c, 17, 21, 46e
204
Ongsiako v. Gamboa
Case No. 90
G.R. No. L-1867 (April 8, 1950)
FACTS:
In 1946, Ongsiako (landowner) and Gamboa (tenant) entered into a contract
pursuant of Sec. 8 of Act 4054. This act provided that the palay would be divide
d
equally by the 2 parties. However, later that same year, Act 4054 was amended by
RA 34. During liquidation, Gamboa sought application of the amendatory law which
provided for crop division on a 55-45 basis in favor of the tenants. Ongsiako in
sists that
RA 34 is not remedial in nature and therefore cannot be given retroactive effect
.
Because of this, the original contract starting an equal sharing of profits shou
ld be
followed.
ISSUE:
W/N RA 34 is remedial in nature and should be given retroactive effect.
HELD:
Yes. In the past, laws concerning this issue have been amended with the
intent of being remedial and therefore, producing retroactive effect. Moreover,
it is
clearly shown in the recommendation of the President concerning RA 34 that this b
ill
seeks to amend the Rice Share Tenancy Act in such a way to make the division of
the
crops more equitable to the tenants The principal feature of this bill is to incr
ease
the participation of the tenants in the production of the land he is cultivating
.
LATIN MAXIM:
2a, 6b, 9a, 49
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Amandy v. People
Case No. 7
G.R. No. 79010 (May 23, 1988)
FACTS:
Petitioner was arrested and tried for possession of 1.6 grams of marijuana.
Because he pleaded guilty in his trial, he was given a sentence of six years and
1 day
(the minimum time for his offense). Petitioner then filed for probation alleging
P.D.
968. However, the petition was denied because P.D. 1990 had repealed P.D. 968, n
o
longer permitting petitioner to fall under those eligible for probation.
ISSUE:
W/N the lower court erred in disapproving Amandy s petition for probation.
HELD:
No. The law clearly declares who are entitled to probation and who aren t.
Petitioner does not fall under those entitled because those who have been
sentenced to serve a maximum term of more than six years are excluded from the
benefits of the Probation Law. Because P.D. 1990 was promulgated after P.D. 968,
the
former prevails. Where the law is clear and unambiguous, it must be taken as it
is,
devoid of judicial addition or subtraction.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 7a, 7b, 22a, 25a, 36a, 43, 49
207
LATIN MAXIM:
4, 5b, 9a, 36b
Government v. Springer
Case No. 119
G.R. No. L-26979 (April 1, 1927)
Chapter I, Page 38, Footnote No. 166
FACTS:
The National Coal Company elected its board of directors via vote in
accordance with its by-laws. However, the respondents are stated as usurping and
illegally occupying said positions since they were not elected by the proper
shareholders.
The National Coal Company was formed by the Philippine Government. The
Government intended to retain a majority stake in the said company; however, it
ended up occupying almost 90% of the stock. During the election of directors, th
ree
members of the government appeared, two from the legislative and one from the
executive.
ISSUE:
W/N the executive is the sole administrator of the Philippine Government.
HELD:
Yes. Sec. 4 of Act No. 2705, as amended by Sec. 2 of Act No. 2822, as
purports to vest the voting power of the government-owned stock in the National
Coal Company in the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of
Representatives, is unconstitutional and void.
LATIN MAXIM:
6c, 9a, 30a, 38b
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Mecano v. Commission on Audit
Case No. 176
G.R. No. 103982 (December 11, 1992)
Chapter X, Page 395, Footnote No. 45
FACTS:
Petitioner seeks to nullify the decision of the Commission on Audit (COA)
embodied in its Endorsement denying his claim for reimbursement under Sec. 699 o
f
the Revised Administrative Code (RAC), as amended.
Petitioner is a Director II of the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI). He wa
s
hospitalized for cholecystitis from March 26 to April 7, 1990, on account of whi
ch he
incurred medical and hospitalization expenses, the total amount of which he is
claiming from the COA. However, the reimbursement process was stalled because of
the issue that the RAC Sec. 699 was repealed by the Administrative Code of 1987.
ISSUE:
1. W/N petitioner can claim from the COA.
2. W/N Sec. 699 of RAC was repealed by the Administrative Code of 1987.
HELD:
Petition was granted. The question of whether or not petitioner can claim from
COA is rooted on whether or not Sec. 699 of the RAC has been repealed. The Court
finds that that section although not included in the reenactment of the
Administrative Code of 1987 is merely under implied repeal, and the Court consid
ers
such implied repeal as not favorable. Also the Court finds that laws must be in
accord
with each other. The second sentence of Art. 173 of the Labor Code, as amended b
y
P.D. 1921, expressly provides that "the payment of compensation under this Title
shall
not bar the recovery of benefits as provided for in Sec. 699 of the RAC whose
benefits are administered by the system (SSS or GSIS) or by other agencies of th
e
government.
LATIN MAXIM:
30a, 32, 37, 38b, 49
209
Penal Code has not been impliedly repealed by Sec. 1048 of the Administrative
Code. The powers of the courts and the Director of Health are complementary with
each other. Thus, any person confined in any asylum by order of the court in
accordance with Art. 8 of the Penal Code cannot be discharged from custody
without the acquiescence of the Director of Health. The converse proposition equ
ally
holds true.
LATIN MAXIM:
38b, 49
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Ynchausti & Co v. Stanley
Case No. 174
G.R. No 12330 (January 25, 1917)
FACTS:
The petitioner, a company engaged in the coastwise shipping business,
sought to prohibit the Insular Collector of Customs from enforcing the requireme
nt,
which states that coastwise vessels shall carry third mate as one of the officer
s on
each vessel. The petitioner relied upon the ground that Act No. 2614 was not and
could not have been repealed by the Administrative Code; Act No. 2614 being
specific with regard to the management of Philippine vessels.
ISSUE:
W/N there is a conflict between Act No. 2614 and paragraph (e) of Sec. 1312
of the Administrative Code.
HELD:
There is no express repeal of Act No. 2614. It is apparent that there was no
specific intention to repeal the statute. The Philippine Legislature could not h
ave
intended to repeal said Act within less than three weeks after its passage and
substitute in its place absolutely nothing except the uncontrolled judgment of t
he
Insular Collector of Customs.
LATIN MAXIM:
9a, 9c, 49, 50
210
U.S. v. Tantoco
Case No. 164
G.R. No. 11338 (August 15, 1916)
FACTS:
The defendant was charged with having illegally in his possession and under
his control a certain amount of opium. The trial court dismissed the complaint o
n the
theory that Act No. 2381 and all other laws had been repealed by the Act of the
United States Congress. The Government appealed.
ISSUE:
What the effect of said Act was upon local legislation dealing with the subject
of opium.
HELD:
That the United States Congress did not intend to repeal any of the local laws
dealing with the subject of opium appears from the law itself. Whether or not an
Act
is impliedly repealed is a question of legislative intent to be ascertained by a
n
examination of both statutes, and in the light of the reason, purpose, and objec
t of
both. The United States Congress never intended to relax the stringent provision
s
relating to the smoking of opium or to its use in any of its forms whatever.
LATIN MAXIM:
9a, 49
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Fabros, et al. v. Laya
Case No. 44
G. R. No. 70832 (December 18, 1987)
FACTS:
This is a consolidated case involving the allocation of the incremental
proceeds of authorized tuition fee increases of private schools provided for in
Sec.
3(a) of P.D. 451, and thereafter, under the Education Act of 1982 (BP 232). Then
Minister of Education Jaime C. Laya promulgated the disputed MECS Order No. 25,
entitled Rules and Regulations to Implement the Provisions of BP 232, The Educat
ion
Act of 1982, relative to Student Fees for School Year 1985-1986. Petitioners pra
yed for
temporary restraining order on the Rules and Regulations, which was granted to
them. However, four schools prayed for the lifting of the TRO on the ground that
their
tuition fee increase has already been approved pursuant to P.D. 451, which the
Court thereby lifted.
ISSUE:
W/N BP 232 has repealed P.D. 451 which thereby makes MECS Order No. 25
valid.
HELD:
Yes. Under P.D. 451, the authority to regulate the imposition of tuition and
other school fees or charges by private schools is lodged with the Secretary of
Education and Culture, where Sec. 42 of BP 232 liberalized the procedure by
empowering each private school to determine its rate of tuition and other school
fees or charges. P.D. 451 provides that 60% of the incremental proceeds of tuiti
on
fee increases shall be applied or used to augment the salaries and wages of
members of the faculty and other employees of the school; while BP 232 provides
that the increment shall be applied or used in accordance with the regulations
promulgated by the MECS. Hence, there was a repeal.
LATIN MAXIM:
4, 39b
211
ISSUE:
W/N RA 2207 was repealed by RA 3452.
HELD:
The importation may be illegal on the ground that such importation belong
exclusively to private parties, thereby prohibiting any government agency from d
oing
so. RA 2207 provides that should there be an existing or imminent shortage in th
e
local supply of rice of such gravity as to constitute a national emergency, and
this is
certified by the National Economic Council, the President may authorize such
importation thru any government agency that he may designate. The two laws,
although with a common objective, refer to different methods applicable to diffe
rent
circumstances. The two laws can therefore be construed as harmonious parts of th
e
legislative expression of its policy to promote a rice and corn program. In orde
r to
effect a repeal by implication, the latter statute must be irreconcilably incons
istent
and repugnant to the prior existing law, hence there was no repeal.
LATIN MAXIM:
38b, 39a
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Brias de Coya v. Tan Lua, et al.
Case No. 16
G.R. No. 30756 (September 22, 1931)
FACTS:
Defendant-appellant Tan Lua was declared an insolvent in the Philippines
while she was in China. At this, she appointed her son to manage, sell and encum
ber
her properties situated in the Philippines. A certain Vicente Nepomuceno was
appointed assignee of the involuntary insolvency. Defendant-appellant executed a
mortgage deed of a parcel of land to petitioner so as to secure a loan. The assi
gnee
filed his appointment for the purpose of transferring the property to him.
ISSUE:
W/N the mortgage given by respondent to petitioner was valid and legal
considering the fact that the assignee recorded his appointment after the transf
er
has been made.
HELD:
The Insolvency Law and the Land Registration Act compliment each other
and are both intended to protect the rights and interests of creditors, accordin
g the
latter a means for securing their insolvent debtor's property, against which the
y may
enforce their credits. Construing the Insolvency Law together with the Land
Registration Act, we reach the conclusion that in order that the assignment of t
he
insolvent debtor's real property made by the clerk of the proper court to the as
signee
may operate to vest in said assignee all of said estate from the commencement of
the insolvency proceedings, both such proceedings and the assignment must have
been recorded in the registry of deeds, the former from their commencement.
Petitioner is a mortgagee in good faith and therefore the mortgage upon the land
given to him by the latter, which was registered with a Torrens title, is legal
and valid.
LATIN MAXIM:
38b, 39a
212
Pamil v. Teleron
Case No. 195
G.R. No. L-34854 (November 20, 1978)
Chapter I, Page 33, Footnote No. 148
FACTS:
Respondent Fr. Gonzaga was elected and proclaimed municipal mayor of
Albuquerque, Bohol. The petitioner, himself an aspirant for the office, filed fo
r
Gonzaga s disqualification based on Sec. 2175 of the Administrative Code which
stated that in no case can ecclesiastics be elected to a municipal office.
ISSUE:
W/N an ecclesiastic is eligible to be elected.
HELD:
The vote was indecisive. Seven believed Sec. 2175 was no longer operative.
Five believed that the prohibition was not tainted with any constitutional infir
mity.
Though the five were a minority, the votes of the seven were insufficient to ren
der the
provision ineffective, hence it was presumed valid. Gonzaga was ordered to vacat
e
the mayoralty.
Dissenting Seven: The challenged provision was superseded by the 1935
Constitution, the supreme law, which mandated that no religious test shall be
required for the exercise of political rights. Sec. 2175 was also repealed by th
e
Election Code for ecclesiastics are no longer included in the enumeration of
ineligible persons. Also, legislation that intends to repeal all former laws upo
n the
subject shows the legislative intent to repeal the former statutory law.
Minor Five: For a later provision to repeal a prior one there must be such
absolute repugnance between the two. No such repugnance is discernible. Sec.
2175 has neither been repealed nor superseded. The section also admitted no
exception, therefore there can be none. The Court cannot rewrite the law under t
he
guise of interpretation.
LATIN MAXIM:
Dissenting Seven: 9a, 30a, 32, 49 Minor Five: 6c, 7a, 7c, 37, 43
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
People v. Almuete
Case No. 200
G.R. No. L-26551 (February 27, 1976)
Chapter IV, Page 142, Footnote No. 61
FACTS:
Almuete, et. al. were charged with the violation of Sec. 39 of the Agricultural
Tenancy Law (ATL). The accused, tenants of Fernando, allegedly pre-threshed a
portion of their respective harvests without notifying her or obtaining her cons
ent. The
accused filed a motion to quash alleging that at the time of the supposed offens
e,
there was no longer any law punishing the act.
ISSUE:
W/N pre-threshing was still a crime at the time the act was committed.
HELD:
Sec. 39 was impliedly repealed by the Agricultural Land Reform Code which
was already in force at the time of the act. The ALRC suspended the ATL. It inst
ituted
the leasehold system and abolished the rice share tenancy system. The prohibitio
n
against pre-threshing is premised on the existence of the rice share tenancy sys
tem
and is the basis for penalizing clandestine pre-threshing. The evident purpose i
s to
prevent the tenant and the landholder from defrauding each other in the division
of
the harvests. The legislative intent not to punish anymore the tenant s act of pre
-
threshing is evident by not re-enacting Sec. 39 of the ATL. A subsequent statute
,
revising the whole subject matter of a former statute operates to repeal the for
mer
statute. The repeal of a penal law deprives the courts of jurisdiction to punish
persons
charged with a violation of the old penal law prior to its repeal.
LATIN MAXIM:
9a, 10, 47, 49
216
LATIN MAXIM:
37, 50
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Lechoco v. Civil Aeronautics Board
Case No. 71
G.R. No. L-32979-81 (February 29, 1972)
FACTS:
Petitioner contends that by the enactment of RA 2677 amending Sec. 13(a)
and 14 of C.A. No. 146, jurisdiction to control rates of airships was taken away
from
the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) and re-vested in the Public Service Commission
(PSC) since RA 2677 impliedly repealed RA 776 which conferred to the CAB the
power of control over air rates and fares.
On the other hand, respondents argue that jurisdiction over air fares and rates
were, under both statutes, exercisable concurrently by the CAB and the PSC.
ISSUE:
Whether the authority to fix air carrier s rates is vested in the CAB or in the PS
C.
HELD:
Authority to fix air carrier s rates is vested in both the CAB and the PSC. Under
RA 776, the CAB can fix and determine reasonable individual, joint or special ra
tes
charges or fares for air carriers but is subject to the maximum rates on freight
s and
passengers that may be set by the PSC under RA 2677. Furthermore, implied repeal
of
statutes is not favored.
LATIN MAXIM:
37, 38b
Villegas v. Enrile
Case No. 171
G.R. No. L-29827 (March 31, 1973)
FACTS:
It is the contention of the petitioner that if Sec. 4 of the Decentralization Ac
t
be given effect, then the authority to appoint a City Fiscal is not lodged in
respondent Secretary of Justice but in him as Mayor of the City of Manila.
The defense of the respondents on the other hand is the continuing effectivity
of the provision of the Charter of the City of Manila, which negates the assumpt
ion of
authority on the part of the petitioner.
ISSUE:
W/N the Decentralization Act impliedly repealed the provision of the Charter
of the City of Manila.
HELD:
No. The issue in this case was already decided in previous jurisprudence in the
case of Villegas v. Subido. Furthermore, petitioner ignored the provision that t
he City
Fiscal is not included in the enumeration made in the Decentralization Act.
LATIN MAXIM:
2a, 5a, 37
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Villegas v. Subido
Case No. 172
G.R. No. L-24012 & L-24040 (August 9, 1965)
FACTS:
The Commissioner of Civil Service claims that RA 2260 impliedly repealed RA
557and 409 providing for the removal and suspension of policemen. The City Mayor
was ordered to cease from deciding administrative cases of officers and employee
s
in Manila and submit to the Commissioner of Civil Service all pending disciplina
ry
cases.
ISSUE
W/N RA 2260 impliedly repeal RA 557 and Sec. 22 of RA 409 so as to vest in the
Commissioner of Civil Service the exclusive and original jurisdiction to remove,
suspend and separate policemen and employees of the City of Manila in the
competitive service.
HELD:
No. RA 2260 states that the removal and suspension by the City Mayor can be
passed upon or reviewed by the Commissioner of Civil Service. It does not state
that
the power of removal is conferred to the other body. RA 557 and 409 are special
laws covering specific situations of policemen and employees of the City of Mani
la,
RA 557 and 409 subsists side-by-side with RA 2260 and are not impliedly repealed
by
the latter which is a general law. RA 2260 contemplates appeal from the decision
of
the City Mayor to the Commissioner of Civil Service, instead of to the President
.
Repeal by implication is not favored and if two laws can be reconciled, the
construction will be against such repeal.
LATIN MAXIM:
9a, 38b, 50
218
U.S. v. Palacio
Case No. 301
G.R. No. 11002 (January 17, 1916)
Chapter X, Page 406, Footnote No. 77
FACTS:
Respondent was accused of violating Sec. 87 of Act No. 82 when he willfully
omitted from the tax lists real property which he knows to be lawfully taxable.
He
posits that Act No. 2238 repeals by implication Act No. 82 because of the clause
in
Sec. 18 that states all acts or parts of Acts in conflict therewith are repealed.
ISSUE:
W/N Act No. 2238 had repealed the penal effect of Act No. 82.
HELD:
No. Act No. 2238 had done nothing but to change the method and
procedure provided in Act No. 82. Repeals by implication are not favored, unless
it is
manifest that such is the intention of the legislature. Act No. 2238 provides no
penalty
thus, Sec. 87 of Act No. 82 continues in force.
LATIN MAXIM:
9a, 38b
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Marin v. Nacianceno
Case No. 171
G.R. No. 5939 (March 29, 1911)
Chapter X, Page 411, Footnote No. 100
FACTS:
Felisa Hernandez died before the testatrix, but the testatrix did not alter her
will in respect to this legacy after the death of the legatee. The petitioners a
re the
surviving heirs of the devisee who relies upon Sec. 758 of the Code of Civil Pro
cedure
which provides that When a devise or a legacy is made to a child and the
devisee or legatee dies before the testator, leaving issues such issue shall take
the
estate so given as the devisee or legatee would have done unless a different
disposition is required by law. The executor of the will opposes the payment upon
the ground that such legatee had no interest therein, having died before the tes
tator
so as to pass to the heirs.
ISSUE:
W/N the heirs of Felisa Hernandez become the heir to her legacy after her
death even if the testator did not alter her will.
HELD:
Yes. The construction by the respondent would repeal or annul the section
absolutely. It is tantamount to saying that the legislature enacted a law and
repealed it at the same time. If petitioners are not entitled to the payment of
this
legacy, then Sec. 758 would have no value and might as well have never been
written which is an absurd interpretation.
LATIN MAXIM:
9a, 11
Velunta v. Chief, Philippine Constabulary
Case No. 309
G.R. No. L-71855 (January 20, 1988)
Chapter X, Page 412, Footnote No. 102
FACTS:
Petitioner as patrolman and member of the Integrated National police (INP)
apprehended a motorcycle driver for violation of traffic rules. An altercation
occurred which resulted in the shooting and death of the driver Lozano. Anacorit
a,
the widow of Lozano then filed for a criminal case where it was found that there
exists
a prima facie evidence that petitioner, with deliberate intent and with intent to
kill,
shot Lozano during the performance of duty. Petitioner contends that General Cou
rt
Martial has no jurisdiction since P.D. 1850 was repealed by E.O. 1040 & 1012.
ISSUE:
W/N the Court Martial has jurisdiction.
HELD:
Yes. It is specifically stated under E.O. 1012 that it is only the operational
supervision and direction over all units of the INP that was transferred from the
Constabulary to the city/municipal government. Under E.O. 1040, it is the exerci
se of
administrative control and supervision over units of the INP that was transferred
to
the President. The allegation that P.D. 1850 has been expressly repealed by clea
r and
precise provision of E.O. 1040 is inaccurate. Repeals by implication are not fav
ored
and will not be so declared unless the intent of the legislators in manifested.
LATIN MAXIM:
9a, 20c, 27, 37
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Pacis v. Averia
Case No. 194
G.R. No. L-22526 (November 29, 1966)
Chapter X, Page 413, Footnote No. 105
FACTS:
Petitioner, the Acting Collector of Customs, commenced a seizure and
forfeiture proceedings pursuant to the Tariff and Customs Code referring to the
incident wherein sailors were wounded in a chase for boat loaded with untaxed
cigarettes. On the same day, Marges, the alleged boat owner, filed a Civil Case
for
replevin alleging that the boat was stolen. The fishing boat therein was transfe
rred to
the Provincial Sheriff, and later on to Marges as commanded by respondent Hon.
Averia.
ISSUE:
3.
W/N Marges could recover the fishing boat.
4.
W/N Provincial Sheriff may be held in contempt for failure to comply with
the writ.
HELD:
1. No. The jurisdiction of the Collector of Customs is provided for in RA
1937 which took effect much later than the Judiciary Act. It is axiomatic that t
he later
law prevails over the prior statute.
2. Yes. The writ was received by respondent Sheriff. It has also caught
the Supreme Court s notice that respondent sheriff has practically taken the cudge
ls
for the boat owner. He went beyond his official acts and proceeded to espouse th
e
cause of the boat owner giving impression that his interest in the subject is mo
re than
just the interest of a public official.
LATIN MAXIM:
9a, 20c, 49
Herman v. Radio Corporation of the Philippines
Case No. 123
G.R. No. 26802 (July 15, 1927)
Chapter X, Page 414, Footnote No. 107
FACTS:
Two Philippine corporation attempting to develop the commercial radio
business (Far Eastern Radio Inc. and Radio Corp.) agreed to merge. The petitione
r
herein has been largely interested in the respondent corporation, and in
consideration of the cancelled contract for his services to the respondent, it w
as
agreed in the contract of merger that he should be offered the post of manager o
f
the traffic department.
ISSUE:
W/N Herman s claim for salary has been expressly waived in the final
agreement.
HELD:
Yes. In Sec. 333 of the Code of Civil Procedures, it mentions that whenever a
party has, by his own declaration, act or omission, intentionally or deliberatel
y led
another to believe a particular thing is true and to act upon such belief, he ca
nnot
be permitted to falsify it. Sec. 1815 of the Civil Code also does not apply sinc
e the
transaction was more than a compromise. The Code of Civil Procedures must prevai
l
because it is a later expression of legislative will than Art. 1815 of the Civil
Code.
LATIN MAXIM:
9a, 49
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Philippine National Bank v. Cruz, et al.
Case No. 239
G.R. No. 80593 (December 18, 1989)
Chapter X, Page 414, Footnote No. 108
FACTS:
Aggregate Mining Exponents (AMEX) suffered huge financial losses and was
unable to pay its remaining employees. Two years after, AMEX entered into an
operation contract agreement with T.M. San Andres Development Corporation, thus
enabling the latter to acquire on lease the equipment of AMEX.
The unpaid workers filed for monetary compensation before the Labor Arbiter.
The said Arbiter awarded backwages and separation pay. AMEX did not appeal but
PNB, as mortgage-creditor, appealed and alleged that the workers should be given
their unpaid wages only and not the termination pay. The NLRC denied the appeal
of PNB. Hence, this instant petition by the PNB on the grounds that Article 110
of the
Labor Code does not create lien in favor of the workers for unpaid wages upon th
e
properties of the employer.
ISSUE:
W/N Art. 110 of the Labor Code is to be construed as not favoring the unpaid
workers because of the order of preference provided in Art. 2241 to 2245 of the
Civil
Code.
HELD:
No. Art. 110 of the Labor Code provides for worker preference in case of
bankruptcy . It specifically states that In the event of bankruptcy of an employer s
business, his workers shall enjoy FIRST preference as regards to their unpaid wa
ges,
any provision of law to the contrary not withstanding such unpaid wages shall be
paid in FULL before claims of the government and other creditors may be paid.
LATIN MAXIM:
6a, 49
221
Arayata v. Joya
Case No. 9
G.R. No. L-28067 (March 10, 1928)
FACTS:
Cecilio Joya was leasing six friar lots, and he started paying the Government
for such. Because the number of lands he can hold is limited, he conveyed some o
f
the lots to respondent F. Joya as administrator.
Cecilio died before fully paying the Government for the lands. His widow,
herein petitioner, was ruled to own only one-half of the lot based on the Civil
Code
provision on conjugal property. The court then sought to deliver the property to
Florentino for liquidation and distribution.
Petitioner claimed that under Act 1120, Sec. 16, the widow receives all deeds
of her deceased spouse upon compliance with requirements of the law.
ISSUE:
Whether the Civil Code provision on conjugal property prevails or Act 1120 s
full conveyance of the property to the widow.
HELD:
Act 1120 prevails. It lays down provisions regarding acquisition, disposition,
and transmission of friar lands, which are contrary to the Civil Code. The Civil
Code is
a general law, while Act 1120 is a special law. The special law must prevail.
LATIN MAXIM:
50
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Sitchon, et al. v. Aquino
Case No. 147
G.R. No. L-8500 (February 27, 1956)
FACTS:
Respondent Aquino, the City Engineer of Manila, demolished the houses of
the six petitioners in this class suit, because their houses were public nuisance
s built
on public streets and river beds.
Petitioners contend that under the Civil Code, Art. 701 and 702, it is the distr
ict
health officer who should remove public nuisances. Respondent, on the other hand
,
argues that RA 409, the Revised Charter of the City of Manila, grants the power
to
remove public nuisances to the City Engineer.
ISSUE:
Whose job it is to determine and demolish public nuisances, the health officer
under the Civil Code or the city engineer under RA 409.
HELD:
The City Engineer, under RA 409, has jurisdiction. The Civil Code is a general
law applicable throughout the Philippines, whereas RA 409 is a special law that
pertains solely to the City of Manila. When a general and a special law are in c
onflict,
the latter prevails.
LATIN MAXIM:
50
225
Bellis v. Bellis
Case No. 14
G.R. No. L-23678 (June 6, 1967)
FACTS:
Amos Bellis, a citizen of Texas USA, died. He had 7 legitimate and 3 illegimate
children, all surnamed Bellis. After the execution of the decedent s will, which w
as
executed in the Philippines where the properties involved were situated, the exe
cutor
divided the residuary estate into 7 equal portions for the benefit of the testat
or s 7
legitimate children. Herein appellants filed their respective oppositions on the
ground
that the partition deprived of their legitimes as illegitimate children. Relying
on Art. 16
of the New Civil Code which provides that the national law of the decedent shoul
d
apply (Texas Law), which did not provide for legitimes, the CFI of Manila denied
such
oppositions.
ISSUE:
Whether Texas Law or the Philippine Law must apply in intestate and
testamentary succession.
HELD:
Texas Law should apply. Art. 16, par 2, and Art. 1039 of the Civil Code render
applicable the national law of the decedent, in intestate or testamentary
successions. It must have been the purpose of the Congress to make Art. 16, par.
2 a
specific provision in itself which must be applied in testate and intestate succ
ession.
As further indication of this intent, Art. 1039 provides that the capacity to su
cceed is
governed by the national of the decedent. It is thus evident that Congress has n
ot
intended to extend our system of legitimes to the succession of foreign national
s.
LATIN MAXIM:
6b, 9c
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Philippine Trust Co. v. Macuan
Case No. 123
G.R. No. 32280 (March 24, 1930)
FACTS:
Defendant Macuan married F. Tormo, who became mentally incapacitated.
Defendant filed a petition to the Court asking that he be appointed guardian of
the
person and estate of his wife, the latter consisting in undivided half in a cert
ain land
with improvements, which is claimed to be conjugal property. Subsequently, M.
Tormo, et. al., filed a motion, which was later granted by the Court, praying th
at the
guardian be instructed to file a complete inventory of all the property belongin
g to
his ward. A special guardian, Philippine Trust Co., was appointed for the recove
ry of
the ownership and possession of the property herein involved.
ISSUE:
1. W/N a married woman judicially declared mentally incapacitated is
entitled to include in the inventory of her property that which is conjugal.
2. W/N the defendant may be compelled to include in the inventory of his
mentally incapacitated wife s property, her undivided half of the conjugal propert
y.
HELD:
1. No. She is not entitled to include half of the legal conjugal partnership,
which still subsists, in the inventory of her property.
2. The defendant, being the guardian, cannot be compelled to include in the
inventory of the same, said half of the conjugal property. The Court relied on 1
) the
Code of Civil Procedure, which is general in character; and 2) the Civil Code, w
hich
is more specific, referring to the management of the property of a demented ward
who is married. Thus, Civil Code takes precedence over the Code of Civil Procedu
re.
LATIN MAXIM:
50
Tan Liao v. American President Lines, Ltd.
Case No. 153
G.R. No. L-7280 (January 20, 1956)
FACTS:
This is an action filed by plaintiff-appellant Tan Liao for the recovery of
P92,755.00, with interest from the damages allegedly suffered by plaintiff due t
o the
wrongful and unauthorized delay and careless handling in the transportation of a
cargo of eggs undertaken by defendant for plaintiff from the port of New York, U
SA
to the port of Manila. The suit was brought more than a year from the receipt of
the
goods, and thereby, claimed by the defendant to have already prescribed in
accordance with the prescription given by the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act.
ISSUE:
W/N the action for damages had already prescribed, and thus, barred the
appellant to receive compensation for damages.
HELD:
Yes, it has already prescribed. The Carriage of Goods by Sea Act provides
that loss or damage suit must be brought within one year after the delivery of t
he
goods. Relying on the ruling in previous cases, the Court held that the prescrip
tive
period of 1 year established by the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act modified pro ta
nto
the provisions of Act No. 190 as to goods transported in foreign trade, the form
er
being a special act while the latter is a law of general application.
LATIN MAXIM:
5a, 50
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Court of Tax Appeal
Case No. 75
G.R. No. 44007 (March 20, 1991)
Chapter X, Page 415, Footnote No. 115
FACTS:
Private respondent, a British-owned foreign corporation was granted a
legislative franchise, pursuant to RA 808, which included a tax exemption from t
he
payment of all taxes except a franchise tax of 5% on the gross earnings and tax
on its
real property. The CIR assessed the corporation in the amount of 7M pesos
representing deficiency income tax maintaining that the franchise was inoperativ
e
for failure to comply with Sec. 8, Art. 14 of the 1935 Constitution which limits
the grant
of franchise to Filipino-owned corporations. The Court of Tax Appeals rendered t
he
franchise unconstitutional while declaring petitioner s assessment without effect
having been made beyond the prescribed period stipulated in the Tax Code.
ISSUE:
W/N the provision in the franchise requiring the payment of only 5% of the
gross receipts in lieu of any and all taxes is unenforceable and without legal e
ffect,
for failure of the respondent corporation to comply with the 1935 Constitution,
the
Corporation Law and the Public Service Act.
HELD:
No. The legislative franchise was valid. As a charter is in the nature of a priv
ate
contract, the imposition of another franchise tax on the corporation by the loca
l
authority would constitute an impairment of the contract between the government
and the corporation. RA 808 as a special statute must be deemed an exemption to
the general laws as it was meant to meet particular sets of conditions and
circumstances.
LATIN MAXIM:
9a, 50
227
Manzano v. Valera
Case No. 80
G.R. No. 122068 (July 8, 1998)
FACTS:
A criminal complaint for libel was filed in the sala of herein petitioner, who
initially recognized that the Regional Trial Court had jurisdiction over the cas
e
thereafter forwarding the records to the Office of the Provincial Prosecutor. Ho
wever,
the latter opined that the MTC should take cognizance of the case based on
Republic Act 7691 which expanded the jurisdiction of Metropolitan, Municipal Tri
al,
and Municipal Circuit Trial Courts to hear and decide criminal cases where the
penalty does not exceed 6 years. Petitioner thus filed a motion to dismiss upon
the
respondent s acceptance of the case for the MTC s lack of jurisdiction over the
offense charged.
ISSUE:
W/N the MTC has exclusive jurisdiction over complaints for libel.
HELD:
No. The applicable law is still Article 360 of the Revised Penal Code which
categorically provides that jurisdiction over libel cases are lodged with the Co
urts of
First Instance (now Regional Trial Courts). Although RA 7691 was enacted to
decongest the clogged dockets of the Regional Trial Courts by expanding the
jurisdiction of first level courts, the said law is of general character and doe
s not alter
the provisions of Article 360 of the RPC, which is a law of special nature. Gran
ted that
there seems to be no manifest intent to repeal or alter the jurisdiction in libe
l cases
from the provisions of R.A. 7691it must be maintained that a special law cannot
be
repealed, amended or altered by a subsequent general law by mere implication.
LATIN MAXIM:
37, 38, 50
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
Garcia v. Pascual, et al.
Case No. 110
G.R. No. L-16950 (December 22, 1961)
Chapter VI, Page 277, Footnote No. 118
FACTS:
Petitioner, a junior typist civil service eligible, was appointed by the Justice
of
Peace as clerk of the municipality of San Jose, Nueva Ecija. When vouchers were
submitted to the mayor, he did not want to approve them. His reason was RA 1551
has repealed Sec. 75 of RA 926, otherwise known as the Judiciary Act.
Sec. 75 of the Judiciary Act provides that justices of peace may have clerks of
court at the expense of the municipalities and shall be appointed by respective
justices. RA 1551 however, which is claimed to have repealed Sec. 75 of RA 296
provides that all employees whose salaries are paid out of the general funds of
the
municipalities shall be appointed by the mayor.
ISSUE:
W/N Sec. 75 of RA 926 has been repealed by RA 1551.
HELD:
The judge ruled that said RA 1551 did not expressly repeal Sec. 75 of the
Judiciary Act and that the two laws may be reconciled following the principle of
law
that a prior specific statute is not repealed by a subsequent general law. Also,
there
being no specific grant of authority in favor of the mayor to appoint the clerk
of
court, the power to appoint should not be considered lodged in the said mayor.
Lastly, the intent of the law in placing the appointment of the clerks in the ju
stice of
the peace is to prevent the importunities and pressure of prejudicial politics.
LATIN MAXIM:
6b, 9a, 32, 36d, 50, b2
229
Latin Maxims
Chapter II CONSTRUCTION AND INTERPRETATION
Chapter IV ADHERENCE TO, OR DEPARTURE FROM, LANGUAGE OF STATUTE LITERAL
INTERPRETATION
B. POWER TO CONSTRUE
6.
Index animi sermo est.
1.
Legis interpretation legis vim obtinet.
Speech is the index of intention.
Judicial construction and interpretation of a statute acquires the force of law.
C. CONTEMPORARY CONSTRUCTION
Maledicta et exposition quae corrumpit textum.
It is bad construction which corrupts the text.
2.
Contemporanea exposition est optima et fortissimo in lege.
Littera scripta manet.
Contemporary construction is strongest in law.
The written word endures.
Optima est legum interpres consuetudo.
Clausula rebus sic stantibus.
Custom is the best interpreter of a statute.
Things thus standing.
Regula pro lege, si deficit lex.
In default of the law, the maxim rules.
7.
Absoluta sentential expositore non indigent.
When the language of the law is clear, no explanation is required.
3.
Optimus interpres rerum usus.
Dura lex sed lex.
The best interpreter of the law is usage.
The law may be harsh but it is the law.
Communis error facit jus.
Hoc quidem perquam durum est, sed ita lex scripta est.
Common error sometimes passes as current law.
It is exceedingly hard, but so the law is written.
Quod ab initio non valet in tractu temporis non convalescit.
That which was originally void, does not by lapse of time become valid.
B. DEPARTURE FROM LITERAL INTERPRETATION
4.
Ratihabitio mandato aequiparatur.
8.
Aequitas nunquam contravenit legis.
Legislative ratification is equivalent to a mandate.
Equity never acts in contravention of the law.
Aequum et bonum est lex legume.
5.
Stare decisis et non quieta movere.
What is good and equal is the law of laws.
Follow past precedents and do not disturb what has been settled.
Jus ars boni et aequi.
Interest republicae ut sit finis litium.
Law is the art of equity.
The interest of the state demands that there be an end to litigation.
9.
Ratio legis est anima legis.
The reason of the law is the soul of the law.
231
Mutatis mutandis.
With the necessary changes.
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
234
Chapter VII STRICT OR LIBERAL CONSTRUCTION Chapter VIII MANDATORY AND DIRECTIONA
L STATUTES
A. IN GENERAL A. MANDATORY STATUTES
40. Salus populi est suprema lex. 45. Vigilantibus et non dormientibus jura subv
eniunt.
The voice of the people is the supreme law. The law aids the vigilant, not those
who slumber on their rights.
Statuta pro publico commodo late interpretantur. Potior est in tempore, potior e
st in jure.
Statutes enacted for the publc good are to be construed liberally. He who is fir
st in time is preferred in right.
Privatum incommodum publico bono pensatur.
The private interests of the individual must give way to the accommodation of Ch
apter IX PROSPECTIVE AND RETROACTIVE STATUTES
the public.
A. IN GENERAL
B. STATUTES STRICTLY CONSTRUED
46. Lex prospicit, non respicit.
41. Actus non facit reum nisi mens sit rea. The law looks forward, not backward.
The act does not make a person guilty unless the mind is also guilty. Lex de fut
uro, judex de praeterito.
Actus me invito facturs non est meus actus. The law provides for the future, the
judge for the past.
An act done by me against my will is not my act. -Nova constitutio futuris forma
m imponere debet non praeteritis.
-A new statute should affect the future, not the past.
42. Privilegia recipiunt largam interpretationem voluntate consonem concedentis.
Leges quae retrospciunt, et magna cum cautione sunt adhibendae neque
Privileges are to be interpreted in accordance with the will of him who grants e
nim janus locatur in legibus.
them. Laws which are retrospective are rarely and cautiously received, for Janus
has
Renunciatio non praesumitur. really no place in the laws.
Renunciation cannot be presumed. Leges et constitutiones futuris certum est dare
formam negotiis, non ad facta
praeterita revocari, nisi nominatim et de praeterito tempore et adhuc
43. Strictissimi juris. pendentibus negotiis cautum sit.
Follow the law strictly. Laws should be construed as prospective, not retrospect
ive, unless they are
expressly made applicable to past transactions and to such as are still
44. Nullum tempus occurit regi. pending.
There can be no legal right as against the authority that makes the law on
which the right depends. B. STATUTES GIVEN PROSPECTIVE EFFECT
47. Nullum crimen sine poena, nulla poena sine lege.
There is no crime without a penalty, there is no penalty without a law.
48. Favorabilia sunt amplianda, odiosa restringenda.
Penal laws which are favorable to the accused are given retroactive effect.
235