1 OBRA Vs SPS Digest Share
1 OBRA Vs SPS Digest Share
1 OBRA Vs SPS Digest Share
BADUA et al
G.R. No. 149125
August 9, 2007
FACTS: Respondents alleged that their residential houses, erected on a lot
commonly owned by them situated in La Union, were located west of the
properties of the Obras, Bucasases, and Baduas. Their only access to the
national highway was a pathway traversing the northern portion of petitioners
property and the southern portion of the properties of the Bucasases and
Baduas. The pathway was more than one meter wide and sixteen meters long.
They claimed that this pathway had been established as early as 1955.In 1995,
however, petitioner Obra constructed a fence on the northern boundary of
their property; thus, blocking respondents access to the national highway.
Respondents demanded the demolition of the fence, but petitioner refused.
(The spouses Badua and Bucasas failed to file an answer; consequently, they
were declared in default.)
On July 7, 2000, after trial, the RTC rendered a Decision dismissing the
complaint. It held that respondents were not able to satisfy all the requisites
needed for their claim of an easement of right of way. It observed that when
petitioner fenced the northern portion of her property, respondents were able
to use another pathway as ingress and egress to the highway. It stated further
that the new pathway is more than adequate for respondents use .Thus, the
applied easement of right-of-way on the northern portion of petitioners
property was not allowed. The said Decision became final and executory.
It must be noted that the new pathway used by respondents, however,
traversed the southern portion of petitioners property. Sometime in 2001,
petitioner constructed a fence on this portion of her lot, which again restricted
the use of respondents new pathway. Aggrieved and prejudiced by petitioners
action, respondents filed a Motion to Enforce the July 7, 2000 Decision of the
RTC. They alleged that the Decision of the RTC dismissing the case was based
on the existence of a new pathway which they had been using since 1995.
Thus, they asserted that petitioner was prohibited from closing said passage.
On March 20, 2001, the RTC granted the said motion. Petitioner filed a
Motion for Reconsideration, but it was rejected by the trial courts.
Clarifying its July 7, 2000 Decision, the trial court, in its March 20, 2001
Order, held that the dismissal of the complaint depended on petitioners
representation that she was allowing respondents to use the southern
portion of her property as an alternative pathway. Since the southern
portion was an agreed pathway, petitioner could not reduce its width; thus,
the trial court ordered petitioner to remove the fence blocking the passage.
Hence, we have this present Petition for Review on Certiorari under Rule 45
ISSUE:
1. WON the Court can motu proprio declare a compulsory right of way on a
property not the subject of a pending case.
2. WON there was a voluntary easement over the southern portion of Obras
property
HELD: the petition is GRANTED.The June 20, 2001 and March 20, 2001
Orders of the RTC are hereby ANNULLED AND SET ASIDE.
1. NO; Essentially, petitioner questions the propriety of the trial courts
issuance of an order clarifying its final and executory decision and effectively
establishing an easement on petitioners property without proper adjudication.
An order of execution must conform to the terms of the dispositive portion of
the decision.
[A court that issues an order of execution in contravention of its final
judgment exceeds its jurisdiction and renders its order invalid.
The resolution of the court in a given issue embodied in the fallo or dispositive
part of a decision or order is the controlling factor as to settlement of rights of
the parties. Thus, where there is a conflict between the fallo and the ratio
decidendi or body of the decision, the fallo controls. This rule rests on
the theory that the fallo is the final order while the opinion in the body is
merely a statement ordering nothing. The rule applies when the dispositive
part of a final decision or order is definite, clear, and unequivocal, and can
wholly be given effect without need of interpretation or construction.
and, therefore, the dismissal of the case cannot, by any stretch of imagination,
be construed to encompass any grant of right-of-way to respondents relating
to the southern portion owned by petitioner.
Moreover, the construction of the fence on the southern portion was done by
petitioner after the rendition and finality of the July 7, 2000 Decision
dismissing the case. It is plain to see that such act of constructing the fence
was subsequent to the Decision and could not have been covered by said
judgment. The dispute that arose from the blockade of the pathway on the
southern portion could be the subject matter of another complaint but
definitely was not an issue in the case. In the new case, respondents are
obliged to prove all the essential elements of the easement of right-of-way a
requirement which they failed to satisfy in the prior civil case.
2. NO; The trial court, seemingly aware that it did not determine the legality of
an easement of right-of-way over the pathway located south of petitioners
property, nevertheless, concluded that the said passage was an agreed or
voluntary easement of right-of-way which petitioner should respect.
The trial court was in error.
It is a settled doctrine that a decision, after it becomes final, becomes
immutable and unalterable. Thus, the court loses jurisdiction to amend,
modify, or alter a final judgment and is left only with the jurisdiction to
execute and enforce it. Any amendment or alteration which substantially
affects a final and executory judgment is null and void for lack of jurisdiction,
including the entire proceedings held for that purpose.
To recapitulate, the dismissal of the Civil Case meant that no easement was
ever established on petitioners property. However, the trial court, by issuing
its March 20, 2001 Order directing petitioner to remove the fence that limited
respondents passage, effectively created a right-of-way on petitioners property
in favor of respondents allegedly on the basis of a voluntary agreement
between the parties. This directive was in contravention of its July 7, 2000
Decision; thus, it was null and void for having been issued outside of the
courts jurisdiction.
Granting for the sake of argument that the issue of voluntary easement of
right-of-way, subject of the assailed March 20, 2001 Order, was proper,
relevant, and material to the issue of right-of-way as averred in the complaint
in the Civil Case, still, the conclusion that there was an agreed or voluntary
easement of right-of-way had no basis. The records of the Civil case do not
reveal any agreement executed by the parties on the claimed right-of-way.
Glaring is the fact that the terms of the arrangement were not agreed upon by
the parties, more particularly, the payment of the proper indemnity. The
evidence is not ample enough to support the conclusion that there was a
verbal agreement on the right-of-way over the southern portion.
More so, since a right-of-way is an interest in the land, any agreement creating
it should be drawn and executed with the same formalities as a deed to a real
estate, and ordinarily must be in writing. No written instrument on this
agreement was adduced by respondents.