Banco Espanol V Palanca Digest
Banco Espanol V Palanca Digest
Banco Espanol V Palanca Digest
Facts:
On 16 June 1906, Engracio executed a mortgage on his
property valued at P292K in favor of El Banco as security for a
loan of P218K. After its execution, Engracio returned to China
and died there. When payments were not made, El Banco filed
an action on 31 March 1908 with CFI Manila to foreclose the
mortgage. As the defendant was a nonresident, a publication
was made in newspaper of Manila to give notice to the
Engracio, and that a copy of the summons and complaint is
deposited in the post office directed to Engracio at his last
place of residence (Amoy, China).
Issues:
1. Whether or not CFI acquired jurisdiction over the person of
the defendant.
2. Whether or not the proceedings were conducted in such a
manner as to constitute due process.
Ruling:
YES. Decision Appealed From is Affirmed.
The idea upon which the decision in Pennoyer vs. Neff (supra)
proceeds is that the process from the tribunals of one State
cannot run into other States or countries and that due process
of law requires that the defendant shall be brought under the
power of the court by service of process within the State, or by
his voluntary appearance, in order to authorize the court to
pass upon the question of his personal liability. The doctrine
established by the Supreme Court of the United States on this
point, being based upon the constitutional conception of due
process of law, is binding upon the courts of the Philippine
Islands. Involved in this decision is the principle that in
proceedings in rem or quasi in rem against a nonresident who
is not served personally within the state, and who does not
appear, the relief must be confined to the res, and the court
cannot lawfully render a personal judgment against him.
(Dewey vs. Des Moines, 173 U. S., 193; 43 L. ed., 665;
Heidritter vs. Elizabeth Oil Cloth Co., 112 U. S., 294; 28 L. ed.,
729.) Therefore in an action to foreclose a mortgage against a
nonresident, upon whom service has been effected exclusively
by publication, no personal judgment for the deficiency can be
entered. (Latta vs. Tutton, 122 Cal., 279; Blumberg vs. Birch,
99 Cal., 416.)
Where, however, the judgment is not void on its face, and may therefore
be enforced if permitted to stand on the record, courts in many instances
refuse to exercise their quasi equitable powers to vacate a judgement
after the lapse of the term ay which it was entered, except in clear cases,
to promote the ends of justice, and where it appears that the party
making the application is himself without fault and has acted in good
faith and with ordinary diligence. Laches on the part of the applicant, if
unexplained, is deemed sufficient ground for refusing the relief to which
he might otherwise be entitled. Something is due to the finality of
judgments, and acquiescence or unnecessary delay is fatal to motions of
this character, since courts are always reluctant to interfere with
judgments, and especially where they have been executed or satisfied.
The moving party has the burden of showing diligence, and unless it is
shown affirmatively the court will not ordinarily exercise its discretion in
his favor. (15 R. C. L., 694, 695.)
Public policy requires that judicial proceedings be upheld, and that titles
obtained in those proceedings be safe from the ruthless hand of
collateral attack. If technical defects are adjudged potent to destroy such
titles, a judicial sale will never realize that value of the property, for no
prudent man will risk his money in bidding for and buying that title which
he has reason to fear may years thereafter be swept away through some
occult and not readily discoverable defect. (Martin vs. Pond, 30 Fed.,
15.)
The court which made the decree . . . was a court of general jurisdiction.
Therefore every presumption not inconsistent with the record is to be
indulged in favor of its jurisdiction. . . . It is to be presumed that the court
before making its decree took care of to see that its order for
constructive service, on which its right to make the decree depended,
had been obeyed.
It is true that in this case the former judgment was the subject
of collateral , or indirect attack, while in the case at bar the
motion to vacate the judgment is direct proceeding for relief
against it. The same general presumption, however, is
indulged in favor of the judgment of a court of general
jurisdiction, whether it is the subject of direct or indirect attack
the only difference being that in case of indirect attack the
judgment is conclusively presumed to be valid unless the
record affirmatively shows it to be void, while in case of direct
attack the presumption in favor of its validity may in certain
cases be overcome by proof extrinsic to the record.
The presumption that the clerk performed his duty and that
the court made its decree with the knowledge that the
requirements of law had been complied with appear to be
amply sufficient to support the conclusion that the notice was
sent by the clerk as required by the order. It is true that there
ought to be found among the papers on file in this cause an
affidavit, as required by section 400 of the Code of Civil
Procedure, showing that the order was in fact so sent by the
clerk; and no such affidavit appears. The record is therefore
silent where it ought to speak. But the very purpose of the law
in recognizing these presumptions is to enable the court to
sustain a prior judgment in the face of such an omission. If we
were to hold that the judgment in this case is void because the
proper affidavit is not present in the file of papers which we
call the record, the result would be that in the future every title
in the Islands resting upon a judgment like that now before us
would depend, for its continued security, upon the presence of
such affidavit among the papers and would be liable at any
moment to be destroyed by the disappearance of that piece of
paper. We think that no court, with a proper regard for the
security of judicial proceedings and for the interests which
have by law been confided to the courts, would incline to favor
such a conclusion. In our opinion the proper course in a case of
this kind is to hold that the legal presumption that the clerk
performed his duty still maintains notwithstanding the
absence from the record of the proper proof of that fact.
SEC. 113. Upon such terms as may be just the court may relieve a party
or legal representative from the judgment, order, or other proceeding
taken against him through his mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or
excusable neglect; Provided, That application thereof be made within a
reasonable time, but in no case exceeding six months after such
judgment, order, or proceeding was taken.
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