APT Vs CA

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Republic of the Philippines

SUPREME COURT
Manila

THIRD DIVISION

G.R. No. 121171 December 29, 1998

ASSET PRIVATIZATION TRUST, petitioner,


vs.
COURT OF APPEALS, JESUS S. CABARRUS, SR., JESUS S. CABARRUS, JR., JAIME T. CABARRUS, JOSE
MIGUEL CABARRUS, ALEJANDRO S. PASTOR, JR., ANTONIO U. MIRANDA, and MIGUEL M. ANTONIO, as
Minority Stock-Holders of Marinduque Mining and Industrial Corporation, respondents.

KAPUNAN, J.:

The petition for review on certiorari  before us seeks to reverse and set aside the decision of the Court of Appeals
which denied due course to the petition for certiorari  filed by the Asset Privatization Trust (APT) assailing the order of
the Regional Trial Court (RTC) Branch 62, Makati City. The Makati RTC's order upheld and confirmed the award
made by the Arbitration Committee in favor of Marinduque Mining and Industrial Corporation (MMIC) and against the
Government, represented by herein petitioner APT for damages in the amount of P2.5 BILLION (or approximately
P4.5 BILLION, including interest).

Ironically, the staggering amount of damages was imposed on the Government for exercising its legitimate right of
foreclosure as creditor against the debtor MMIC as a consequence of the latter's failure to pay its overdue and
unpaid obligation of P22 billion to the Philippine National Bank (PNB) and the Development Bank of the Philippines
(DBP).

The antecedent facts


of the case.

The development, exploration and utilization of the mineral deposits in the Surigao Mineral Reservation have been
authorized by Republic Act No. 1528, as amended by Republic Acts Nos. 2077 and 4167, by virtue of which laws, a
Memorandum of Agreement was drawn on July 3, 1968, whereby the Republic of the Philippines thru the Surigao
Mineral Reservation Board, granted MMIC the exclusive right to explore, develop and exploit nickel, cobalt and other
minerals in the Surigao mineral reservation.1 MMIC is a domestic corporation engaged in mining with respondent
Jesus S. Cabarrus, Sr. as President and among its original stockholders.

The Philippine Government undertook to support the financing of MMIC by purchase of MMIC debenture bonds and
extension of guarantees. Further, the Philippine Government obtained a firm commitment form the DBP and/or other
government financing institutions to subscribe in MMIC and issue guarantee/s for foreign loans or deferred payment
arrangements secured from the US Eximbank, Asian Development Bank, Kobe Steel, of amount not exceeding
US$100 Million.2
DBP approved guarantees in favor of MMIC and subsequent requests for guarantees were based on the unutilized
portion of the Government commitment. Thereafter, the Government extended accommodations to MMIC in various
amounts.

On July 13, 1981, MMIC, PNB and DBP executed a Mortgage Trust Agreement3 whereby MMIC, as mortgagor,
agreed to constitute a mortgage in favor or PNB and DBP as mortgagees, over all MMIC's assets; subject of real
estate and chattel mortgage executed by the mortgagor, and additional assets described and identified, including
assets of whatever kind, nature or description, which the mortgagor may acquire whether in substitution of, in
replenishment, or in addition thereto.

Article IV of the Mortgage Trust Agreement provides for Events of Default, which expressly includes the event that
the MORTGAGOR shall fail to pay any amount secured by this Mortgage Trust Agreement when due. 4

Article V of the Mortgage Trust Agreement prescribes in detail, and in addition to the enumerated events of defaults,
circumstances by which the mortgagor may be declared in default, the procedure therefor, waiver of period to
foreclose, authority of Trustee before, during and after foreclosure, including taking possession of the mortgaged
properties.5

In various requests for advances/remittances of loans if huge amounts, Deeds of Undertaking, Promissory Notes,
Loan Documents, Deeds of Real Estate Mortgages, MMIC invariably committed to pay either on demand or under
certain terms the loans and accommodations secured from or guaranteed by both DBP and PNB.

By 1984, DBP and PNB's financial both in loans and in equity in MMIC had reached tremendous proportions, and
MMIC was having a difficult time meeting its financial obligations. MMIC had an outstanding loan with DBP in the
amount of P13,792,607,565.92 as of August 31, 1984 and with PNB in the amount of P8,789,028,249.38 as July 15,
1984 or a total Government expose of Twenty Two Billion Six Hundred Sixty-Eight Million Five Hundred Thirty-Seven
Hundred Seventy and 05/100 (P22, 668,537,770.05), Philippine Currency. 6 Thus, a financial restructuring plan (FRP)
designed to reduce MMIC's interest expense through debt conversion to equity was drafted by the Sycip Gorres
Velayo accounting firm. 7 On April 30, 1984, the FRP was approved by the Board of Directors of the
MMIC.8 However, the proposed FRP had never been formally adopted, approved or ratified by either PNB or DBP.9

In August and September 1984, as the various loans and advances made by DBP and PNB to MMIC had become
overdue and since any restructuring program relative to the loans was no longer feasible, and in compliance with the
directive of Presidential Decree No. 385, DBP and PNB as mortgagees of MMIC assets, decided to exercise their
right to extrajudicially foreclose the mortgages in accordance with the Mortgage Trust Agreement. 10

The foreclosed assets were sold to PNB as the lone bidder and were assigned to three newly formed corporations,
namely, Nonoc Mining Corporation, Maricalum Mining and Industrial Corporation, and Island Cement Corporation. In
1986, these assets were transferred to the Asset Privatization Trust (APT). 11

On February 28, 1985, Jesus S. Cabarrus, Sr., together with the other stockholders of MMIC, filed a derivative suit
against DBP and PNB before the RTC of Makati, Branch 62, for Annulment of Foreclosures, Specific Performance
and Damages. 12 The suit, docketed as Civil Case No. 9900, prayed that the court: (1) annul the foreclosures, restore
the foreclosed assets to MMIC, and require the banks to account for their use and operation in the interim; (2) direct
the banks to honor and perform their commitments under the alleged FRP; and (3) pay moral and exemplary
damages, attorney's fees, litigation expenses and costs.

In the course of the trial, private respondents and petitioner APT, as successor of the DBP and the PNB's interest in
MMIC, mutually agreed to submit the case to arbitration by entering into a "Compromise and Arbitration Agreement,"
stipulating, inter alia:
NOW THEREFORE, for and in consideration of the foregoing premises and the mutual covenants
contained herein the parties agree as follows:

1. Withdrawal and Compromise. The parties have agreed to withdraw their respective claims from
the Trial Court and to resolve their dispute through arbitration by praying to the Trial Court to issue
a Compromise Judgment based on this Compromise and Arbitration Agreement.

In withdrawing their dispute from the court and in choosing to resolve it through arbitration, the
parties have agreed that:

(a) their respective money claims shall be reduced to purely money claims; and

(b) as successor and assignee of the PNB and DBP interests in MMIC and the MMIC accounts,
APT shall likewise succeed to the rights and obligations of PNB and DBP in respect of the
controversy subject of Civil Case No. 9900 to be transferred to arbitration and any arbitral
award/order against either PNB and/or DBP shall be the responsibility be discharged by and be
enforceable against APT, the parties having agreed to drop PNB and DBP from the arbitration.

2. Submission. The parties hereby agree that (a) the controversy in Civil Case No. 9900 shall be
submitted instead to arbitration under RA 876 and (b) the reliefs prayed for in Civil Case No. 9900
shall, with the approval of the Trial Court of this Compromise and Arbitration Agreement, be
transferred and reduced to pure pecuniary/money claims with the parties waiving and foregoing all
other forms of reliefs which they prayed for or should have prayed for in Civil Case No. 9900. 13

The Compromise and Arbitration Agreement limited the issues to the following:

5. Issues The issues to be submitted for the Committee's resolution shall be (a) Whether
PLAINTIFFS have the capacity or the personality to institute this derivative suit in behalf of the
MMIC or its directors, (b) Whether or not the actions leading to, and including,. the PNB-DBP
foreclosure of the MMIC assets were proper, valid and in good
faith. 14

This agreement was presented for approval to the trial court. On October 14, 1992, the Makati RTC, Branch 61,
issued an order, to wit:

WHEREFORE, this Court orders:

1. Substituting PNB and DBP with the Asset Privatization Trust as party
defendant.

2. Approving the Compromise and Arbitration Agreement dated October 6, 1997,


attached as Annex "C" of the Omnibus Motion.

3. Approving the Transformation of the reliefs prayed for [by] the plaintiffs in this
case into pure money claims; and

4. The Complaint is hereby DISMISSED. 15


The Arbitration Committee was composed of retired Supreme Court Justice Abraham Sarmiento as Chairman, Atty.
Jose C. Sison and former Court of Appeals Justice Magdangal Elma as Members. On November 24, 1993, after
conducting several hearings, the Arbitration Committee rendered a majority decision in favor of MMIC, the pertinent
portions of which read as follows:

Since, as this Committee finds, there is no foreclosure at all as it was not legally and validly done,
the Committee holds and so declares that the loans of PNB and DBP to MMIC. for the payment
and recovery of which the void foreclosure sales were undertaken, continue to remain outstanding
and unpaid. Defendant APT as the successor-in-interest of PNB and DBP to the said loans is
therefore entitled and retains the right, to collect the same from MMIC pursuant to, and based on
the loan documents signed by MMIC, subject to the legal and valid defenses that the latter may
duly and seasonably interpose. Such loans shall, however, be reduced by the amount which APT
may have realized from the sale of the seized assets of MMIC which by agreement should no
longer be returned even if the foreclosures were found to be null and void.

The documentary evidence submitted and adopted by the parties (Exhibits "3", "3-B"; Exhibit "100";
and also Exhibit "ZZZ") as their exhibits would show that the total outstanding obligation due to
DBP and PNB as of the date of foreclosure is P22,668,537,770.05, more or less.

Therefore defendant APT can, and is still entitled to, collect the outstanding obligations of MMIC to
PNB and DBP amounting to P22,668,537,770.05, more or less, with interest thereon as stipulated
in the loan documents from the date of foreclosure up to the time they are fully paid less the
proportionate liability of DBP as owner of 87% of the total capitalization of MMIC under the FRP.
Simply put, DBP shall share in the award of damages to, and in the obligations of, MMIC in
proportion to its 87% equity in tile total capital stock of MMIC.

x x x           x x x          x x x

As this Committee holds that the FRP is valid, DBP's equity in MMIC is raised to 87%. So pursuant
to the above provision of the Compromise and Arbitration Agreement, the 87% equity of DBP is
hereby deducted from the actual damages of P19,486,118,654.00 resulting in the net actual
damages of P2,531,635,425.02 plus interest.

DISPOSITION

WHEREFORE, premises considered, judgment is hereby rendered:

1. Ordering the defendant to pay to the Marinduque Mining and Industrial Corporation, except the
DBP, the sum of P2,531,635,425.02 with interest thereon at the legal rate of six per cent (6%) per
annum  reckoned from August 3, 9, and 24, 1984, pari passu, as and for actual damages. Payment
of these actual damages shall be offset by APT from the outstanding and unpaid loans of MMIC
with DBP and PNB, which have not been converted into equity. Should there be any balance due
to MMIC after the offsetting, the same shall be satisfied from the funds representing the purchase
price of the sale of the shares of Island Cement Corporation in the amount of P503,000,000.00
held under escrow pursuant to the Escrow Agreement dated April 22, 1988 or to such subsequent
escrow agreement that would supercede [sic] it pursuant to paragraph (9) of the Compromise and
Arbitration Agreement;

2. Ordering the defendant to pay to the Marinduque Mining and Industrial Corporation, except the
DBP, the sum of P13,000.000.00, as and for moral and exemplary damages. Payment of these
moral and exemplary damages shall be offset by APT from the outstanding and unpaid loans of
MMIC with DBP and PNB, which have not been converted into equity. Should there be any balance
due to MMIC after the offsetting, the same shall be satisfied from the funds representing the
purchase price of the sale of the shares of Island Cement Corporation in the amount of
P503,000,000.00 held under escrow pursuant to the Escrow Agreement dated April 22, 1988 or to
such subsequent escrow agreement that would supercede [sic] it pursuant to paragraph (9) of the
Compromise and Arbitration Agreement;

3. Ordering the defendant to pay to the plaintiff, Jesus S. Cabarrus, Sr., the sum of
P10,000,000.00, to be satisfied likewise from the funds held under escrow pursuant to the Escrow
Agreement dated April 22, 1988 or to such subsequent escrow agreement that would supersede it,
pursuant to paragraph (9) of the Compromise and Arbitration Agreement, as and for moral
damages; and

4. Ordering the defendant to pay arbitration costs.

This Decision is FINAL and EXECUTORY.

IT IS SO ORDERED. 16

Motions for reconsideration were filed by both parties, but the same were denied.

On October 17, 1993, private respondents filed in the same Civil Case No. 9900 an "Application/Motion for
Confirmation of Arbitration Award." Petitioner countered with an "Opposition and Motion to Vacate Judgment" raising
the following grounds.

1. The plaintiffs Application/Motion is improperly filed with this branch of the Court, considering that
the said motion is neither a part nor the continuation of the proceedings in Civil Case No. 9900
which was dismissed upon motion of the parties. In fact, the defendants in the said Civil Case No.
9900 were the Development Bank of the Philippines and the Philippine National Bank (PNB);

2. Under Section 71 of Rep. Act 876, an arbitration under a contract or submission shall be
deemed a special proceedings and a party to the controversy which was arbitrated may apply to
the court having jurisdiction, (not necessarily with this Honorable Court) for an order confirming the
award;

3. The issues submitted for arbitration have been limited to two: (1) propriety of the plaintiffs filing
the derivative suit and (2) the regularity of the foreclosure proceedings. The arbitration award
sought to be confirmed herein, far exceeded the issues submitted and even granted moral
damages to one of the herein plaintiffs;

4. Under Section 24 of Rep. Act 876, the Court must make an order vacating the award where the
arbitrators exceeded their powers, or so imperfectly executed them, that a mutual, final and definite
award upon the subject matter submitted to them was not made. 17

Private respondents filed a "REPLY AND OPPOSITION" dated November 10, 1984, arguing that a dismissal of Civil
Case No. 9900 was merely a "qualified dismissal" to pave the way for the submission of the controversy to arbitration
and operated simply as "a mere suspension of the proceedings" They denied that the Arbitration Committee had
exceeded its powers.
In an Order dated November 28, 1993, the trial court confirmed the award of the Arbitration Committee. The
dispositive portion of said order reads:

WHEREFORE, premises considered, and in the light of the parties [sic] Compromise and
Arbitration Agreement dated October 6, 1992, the Decision of the Arbitration Committee
promulgated on November 24, 1993, as affirmed in a Resolution dated July 26, 1994, and finally
settled and clarified in the Separate Opinion dated September 2, 1994 of Committee Member
Elma, and the pertinent provisions of RA 876, also known as the Arbitration Law, this Court
GRANTS PLAINTIFFS' APPLICATION AND THUS CONFIRMS THE ARBITRATION AWARD,
AND JUDGMENT IS HEREBY RENDERED:

(a) Ordering the defendant APT to the Marinduque Mining and Industrial Corporation (MMIC),
except the DBP, the sum of P3,811,757,425.00, as and for actual damages, which shall be partially
satisfied from the funds held under escrow in the amount of P503,000,000.00 pursuant to the
Escrow Agreement dated April 22, 1988. The balance of the award, after the escrow funds are fully
applied, shall be executed against the APT;

(b) Ordering the defendant to pay to the MMIC, except the DBP, the sum of P13,000,000.00 as and
for moral and exemplary damages;

(c) Ordering the defendant to pay to Jesus S. Cabarrus, Sr., the sum of P10,000,000.00 as and for
moral damages; and

(d) Ordering the defendant to pay the herein plaintiffs/applicants/movants the sum of
P1,705,410.23 as arbitration costs.

In reiteration of the mandates of Stipulation No. 10 and Stipulation No. 8 paragraph 2 of the
Compromise and Arbitration Agreement, and the final edict of the Arbitration Committee's decision,
and with this Court's Confirmation, the issuance of the Arbitration Committee's Award shall
henceforth be final and executory.

SO ORDERED. 18

On December 27, 1994, petitioner filed its motion for reconsideration of the Order dated November 28, 1994. Private
respondents, in turn, submitted their reply and opposition thereto.

On January 18, 1995, the trial court handed down its order denying APT's motion for reconsideration for lack of merit
and for having been filed out of time. The trial court declared that "considering that the defendant APT, through
counsel, officially and actually received a copy of the Order of this Court dated November 28, 1994 on December 6,
1994, the Motion for Reconsideration thereof filed by the defendant APT on December 27, 1994, or after the lapse of
21 days, was clearly filed beyond the 15-day reglementary period prescribed or provided  for by law for the filing of an
appeal from final orders, resolutions, awards, judgments or decisions of any court in all cases, and by necessary
implication for the filing of a motion for reconsideration thereof."

On February 7, 1995, petitioner received private respondents' Motion for Execution and Appointment of Custodian of
Proceeds of Execution dated February 6, 1995.

Petitioner thereafter filed with the Court of Appeals a special civil action for certiorari  with temporary restraining order
and/or preliminary injunction dated February 13, 1996 to annul and declare as void the Orders of the RTC-Makati
dated November 28, 1994 and January 18, 1995 for having been issued without or in excess of jurisdiction and/or
with grave abuse of discretion. 19 As ground therefor, petitioner alleged that:

THE RESPONDENT JUDGE HAS NOT VALIDLY ACQUIRED JURISDICTION MUCH LESS, HAS
THE COURT AUTHORITY, TO CONFIRM THE ARBITRAL AWARD CONSIDERING THAT THE
ORIGINAL CASE, CIVIL CASE NO. 9900, HAD PREVIOUSLY BEEN DISMISSED.

II

THE RESPONDENT JUDGE COMMITTED GRAVE ABUSE OF DISCRETION AND ACTED


WITHOUT OR IN EXCESS OF JURISDICTION, IN ISSUING THE QUESTIONED ORDERS
CONFIRMING THE ARBITRAL AWARD AND DENYING THE MOTION FOR
RECONSIDERATION OF ORDER OF AWARD.

III

THE RESPONDENT JUDGE GROSSLY ABUSED HIS DISCRETION AND ACTED WITHOUT OR
IN EXCESS OF AND WITHOUT JURISDICTION IN RECKONING THE COUNTING OF THE
PERIOD TO FILE MOTION FOR RECONSIDERATION, NOT FROM THE DATE OF SERVICE OF
THE COURT'S COPY CONFIRMING THE AWARD, BUT FROM RECEIPT OF A XEROX COPY
OF WHAT PRESUMABLY IS THE OPPOSING COUNSEL'S COPY THEREOF. 20

On July 12, 1995, he Court of Appeals, through its Fifth-Division, denied due course and dismissed the petition
for certiorari.

Hence, the instant petition for review on certiorari  imputing to the Court of Appeals the following errors:

ASSIGNMENT OF ERRORS

THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN NOT HOLDING THAT THE MAKATI REGIONAL TRIAL
COURT, BRANCH 62 WHICH HAS PREVIOUSLY DISMISSED CIVIL CASE NO. 9900 HAD LOST
JURISDICTION TO CONFIRM THE ARBITRAL AWARD UNDER THE SAME CIVIL CASE AND
NOT RULING THAT THE APPLICATION FOR CONFIRMATION SHOULD HAVE BEEN FILED AS
A NEW CASE TO BE RAFFLED OFF AMONG THE DIFFERENT BRANCHES OF THE RTC.

II

THE COURT OF APPEALS LIKEWISE ERRED IN HOLDING THAT PETITIONER WAS


ESTOPPED FROM QUESTIONING THE ARBITRATION AWARD, WHEN PETITIONER
QUESTIONED THE JURISDICTION OF THE RTC-MAKATI, BRANCH 62 AND AT THE SAME
TIME MOVED TO VACATE THE ARBITRAL AWARD.

III
THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN NOT HOLDING THAT THE RESPONDENT TRIAL
COURT SHOULD HAVE EITHER DISMISSED/DENIED PRIVATE RESPONDENTS'
MOTION/PETITION FOR CONFIRMATION OF ARBITRATION AWARD AND/OR SHOULD HAVE
CONSIDERED THE MERITS OF THE MOTION TO VACATE ARBITRAL AWARD.

IV

THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN NOT TREATING PETITIONER APT'S PETITION


FOR CERTIORARI  AS AN APPEAL TAKEN FROM THE ORDER CONFIRMING THE AWARD.

THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN NOT RULING ON THE LEGAL ISSUE OF WHEN TO
RECKON THE COUNTING OF THE PERIOD TO FILE A MOTION FOR RECONSIDERATION. 21

The petition is impressed with merit.

The RTC of Makati, Branch 62,

did not have jurisdiction to confirm

the arbitral award.

The use of the term "dismissed" is not "a mere semantic imperfection". The dispositive portion of the Order of the trial
court dated October 14, 1992 stated in no uncertain terms:

4. The Complaint is hereby DISMISSED. 22

The term "dismiss" has a precise definition in law. "To dispose of an action, suit, or motion without trial on
the issues involved. Conclude, discontinue, terminate, quash." 23

Admittedly, the correct procedure was for the parties to go back to the court where the case was pending to have the
award confirmed by said court. However, Branch 62 made the fatal mistake of issuing a final order dismissing the
case. While Branch 62 should have merely suspended the case and not dismissed it,24 neither of the parties
questioned said dismissal. Thus, both parties as well as said court are bound by such error.

It is erroneous then to argue, as private respondents do, that petitioner APT was charged with the knowledge that the
"case was merely stayed until arbitration finished," as again, the order of Branch 62 in very clear terms stated that the
"complaint was dismissed." By its own action, Branch 62 had lost jurisdiction over the case. It could not have validly
reacquired jurisdiction over the said case on mere motion of one of the parties. The Rules of Court is specific on how
a new case may be initiated and such is not done by mere motion in a particular branch of the RTC. Consequently,
as there was no "pending action" to speak of, the petition to confirm the arbitral award should have been filed as a
new case and raffled accordingly to one of the branches of the Regional Trial Court.

II

Petitioner was not estopped from


questioning the jurisdiction of

Branch 62 of the RTC of Makati.

The Court of Appeals ruled that APT was already estopped to question the jurisdiction of the RTC to confirm the
arbitral award because it sought affirmative relief in said court by asking that the arbitral award be vacated.

The rule is that "Where the court itself clearly has no jurisdiction over the subject matter or the nature of the action,
the invocation of this defense may be done at any time. It is neither for the courts nor for the parties to violate or
disregard that rule, let alone to confer that jurisdiction this matter being legislative in character." 25 As a rule then,
neither waiver nor estoppel shall apply to confer jurisdiction upon a court barring highly meritorious and exceptional
circumstances. 26 One such exception was enunciated in Tijam vs. Sibonghanoy, 27 where it was held that "after
voluntarily submitting a cause and encountering an adverse decision on the merits, it is too late for the loser to
question the jurisdiction or power of the court."

Petitioner's situation is different because from the outset, it has consistently held the position that the RTC, Branch
62 had no jurisdiction to confirm the arbitral award; consequently, it cannot be said that it was estopped from
questioning the RTC's jurisdiction. Petitioner's prayer for the setting aside of the arbitral award was not inconsistent
with its disavowal of the court's jurisdiction.

III

Appeal of petitioner to the

Court of Appeals thru certiorari

under Rule 65 was proper.

The Court of Appeals in dismissing APT's petition for certiorari  upheld the trial court's denial of APT's motion for
reconsideration of the trial court's order confirming the arbitral award, on the ground that said motion was filed
beyond the 15-day reglementary period; consequently, the petition for certiorari could not be resorted to as substitute
to the lost right of appeal.

We do not agree.

Section 99 of Republic Act No. 876, 28 provides that:

. . . An appeal may be taken from an order made in a proceeding under this Act, or from a
judgment entered upon an award through certiorari  proceedings, but such appeals shall be limited
to questions of law. . . ..

The aforequoted provision, however, does not preclude a party aggrieved by the arbitral award from resorting to the
extraordinary remedy of certiorari  under Rule 65 of the Rules of Court where, as in this case, the Regional Trial
Court to which the award was submitted for confirmation has acted without jurisdiction or with grave abuse of
discretion and there is no appeal, nor any plain, speedy remedy in the course of law.

Thus, Section 1 of Rule 65 provides:


Sec 1. Petition for Certiorari: — When any tribunal, board or officer exercising judicial functions,
has acted without or in excess of its or his jurisdiction, or with grave abuse of discretion and there
is no appeal, nor any plain, speed, and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law, a person
aggrieved thereby may file a verified petition in the proper court alleging the facts with certainty and
praying that judgment be rendered annulling or modifying the proceedings, as the law requires, of
such tribunal, board or officer.

In the instant case, the respondent court erred in dismissing the special civil action for certiorari, it being clear from
the pleadings and the evidence that the trial court lacked jurisdiction and/or committed grave abuse of discretion in
taking cognizance of private respondents' motion to confirm the arbitral award and, worse, in confirming said award
which is grossly and patently not in accord with the arbitration agreement, as will be hereinafter demonstrated.

IV

The nature and limits of the

Arbitrators' power.

As a rule, the award of an arbitrator cannot be set aside for mere errors of judgment either as to the law or as to the
facts. 29 Courts are without power to amend or overrule merely because of disagreement with matters of law or facts
determined by the arbitrators. 30 They will not review the findings of law and fact contained in an award, and will not
undertake to substitute their judgment for that of the arbitrators, since any other rule would make an award the
commencement, not the end, of litigation. 31 Errors of law and fact, or an erroneous decision of matters submitted to
the judgment of the arbitrators, are insufficient to invalidate an award fairly and honestly made. 32 Judicial review of
an arbitration is thus, more limited than judicial review of a trial. 33

Nonetheless, the arbitrators' award is not absolute and without exceptions. The arbitrators cannot resolve issues
beyond the scope of the submission agreement. 34 The parties to such an agreement are bound by the arbitrators'
award only to the extent and in the manner prescribed by the contract and only if the award is rendered in conformity
thereto. 35 Thus, Sections 24 and 25 of the Arbitration Law provide grounds for vacating, rescinding or modifying an
arbitration award. Where the conditions described in Articles 2038, 36
2039, 37 and 1040 38 of the Civil Code applicable to compromises and arbitration are attendant, the arbitration award
may also be annulled.

In Chung Fu Industries (Phils.) vs. Court of Appeals, 39 we held:

. . . . It is stated explicitly under Art. 2044 of the Civil Code that the finality of the arbitrators' award
is not absolute and without exceptions. Where the conditions described in Articles 2038, 2039 and
2040 applicable to both compromises and arbitrations are obtaining, the arbitrator's award may be
annulled or rescended. Additionally, under Sections 24 and 25 of the Arbitration Law, there are
grounds for vacating, modifying or rescinding an arbitrator's award. Thus, if and when the factual
circumstances referred to the above-cited provisions are present, judicial review of the award is
properly warranted.

According, Section 20 of R.A. 876 provides:

Sec. 20. Form and contents of award. — The award must be made in writing and signed and
acknowledge by a majority of the arbitrators, if more than one; and by the sole arbitrator, if there is
only only. Each party shall be furnished with a copy of the award. The arbitrators in their award
may grant any remedy or relief which they deem just and equitable and within the scope of the
agreement of the parties, which shall include, but not be limited to, the specific performance of a
contract.

x x x           x x x          x x x

The arbitrators shall have the power to decide only those matters which have been submitted to
them. The terms of the award shall be confined to such disputes. (Emphasis ours).

x x x           x x x          x x x

Sec. 24 of the same law enumerating the grounds for vacating an award states:

Sec. 24. Grounds for vacating award. — In any one of the following cases, the court must make an
order vacating the award upon the petition of any party to the controversy when such party proves
affirmatively that in the arbitration proceeding:

(a) The award was procured by corruption, fraud, or other undue means; or

(b) That there was evident partiality or corruption in the arbitrators or any of them; or

(c) That the arbitrators were guilty of misconduct in refusing to postpone the hearing upon sufficient
cause shown, or in refusing to hear evidence pertinent and material to the controversy; that one or
more of the arbitrators was disqualified to act as such under section nine hereof, and willfully
refrained from disclosing such disqualifications or any other misbehavior by which the rights of any
party have been materially prejudiced; or

(d) That the arbitrators exceeded their powers, or so imperfectly executed them, that a mutual, final
and definite award upon the subject matter submitted to them was not made. (Emphasis ours)

xxx xxx xxx.

Section 25 which enumerates the grounds for modifying the award provides:

Sec. 25. Grounds for modifying or correcting award — In anyone of the following cases, the court
must make an order modifying or correcting the award, upon the application of any party to the
controversy which was arbitrated:

(a) Where there was an evident miscalculation of figures, or an evident mistake in the description
of any person, thing or property referred to in the award; or

(b) Where the arbitrators have awarded upon a matter not submitted to them, not affecting the
merits of the decision upon the matter submitted; or

(c) Where the award is imperfect in a matter of form not affecting the merits of the controversy, and
if it had been a commissioner's report, the defect could have been amended or disregarded by the
court.

x x x           x x x          x x x
Finally, it should be stressed that while a court is precluded from overturning an award for errors in the determination
of factual issues, nevertheless, if an examination of the record reveals no support whatever for the arbitrators
determinations, their award must be vacated. 40 in the same manner, an award must be vacated if it was made in
"manifest disregard of the law." 41

Against the backdrop of the foregoing provisions and principles, we find that the arbitrators came out with an award in
excess of their powers and palpably devoid of factual and legal basis.

There was no financial

structuring program:

foreclosure of mortgage

was fully justified.

The point need not be belabored that PNB and DBP had the legitimate right to foreclose of the mortgages of MMIC
whose obligations were past due. The foreclosure was not a wrongful act of the banks and, therefore, could not be
the basis of any award of damages. There was no financial restructuring agreement to speak of that could have
constituted an impediment to the exercise of the banks' right to foreclose.

As correctly stated by Mr. Jose C. Sison, a member of the Arbitration Committee who wrote a separate opinion:

1. The various loans and advances made by DBP and PNB to MMIC have become overdue and
remain unpaid. The fact that a FRP was drawn up is enough to establish that MMIC has not been
complying with the terms of the loan agreement. Restructuring simply connotes that the obligations
are past due that is why it is "restructurable";

2. When MMIC thru its board and the stockholders agreed and adopted the FRP, it only means that
MMIC had been informed or notified that its obligations were past due and that foreclosure is
forthcoming;

3. At that stage, MMIC also knew that PNB-DBP had the option of either approving the FRP or
proceeding with the foreclosure. Cabarrus, who filed this case supposedly in behalf of MMIC
should have insisted on the FRP. Yet Cabarrus himself opposed the FRP;

4. So when PNB-DBP proceeded with the foreclosure, it was done without bad faith but with the
honest and sincere belief that foreclosure was the only alternative; a decision further explained by
Dr. Placido Mapa who testified that foreclosure was, in the judgment of PNB, the best move to
save MMIC itself.

Q : Now in this portion of Exh. "L" which was marked as Exh. "L-1", and we adopted as Exh. 37-A
for the respondent, may I know from you, Dr. Mapa what you meant by "that the decision to
foreclose was neither precipitate nor arbitrary"?

A : Well, it is not a whimsical decision but rather decision arrived at after weighty consideration of
the information that we have received, and listening to the prospects which reported to us that what
we had assumed would be the premises of the financial rehabilitation plan was not materialized nor
expected to materialize.

Q : And this statement that "it was premised upon the known fact" that means, it was referring to
the decision to foreclose, was premised upon the known fact that the rehabilitation plan earlier
approved by the stockholders was no longer feasible, just what is meant "by no longer feasible"?

A : Because the revenue that they were counting on to make the rehabilitation plan possible, was
not anymore expected to be forthcoming because it will result in a short fall compared to the prices
that were actually taking place in the market.

Q : And I suppose that was what you were referring to when you stated that the production targets
and assumed prices of MMIC's products, among other projections, used in the financial
reorganization program that will make it viable were not met nor expected to be met?

A : Yes.

x x x           x x x          x x x

Which brings me to my last point in this separate opinion. Was PNB and DBP absolutely unjustified
in foreclosing the mortgages?

In this connection, it can readily be seen and it cannot quite be denied that MMIC accounts in PNB-
DBP were past due. The drawing up of the FRP is the best proof of this. When MMIC adopted a
restructuring program for its loan, it only meant that these loans were already due and unpaid. If
these loans were restructurable because they were already due and unpaid, they are likewise
"forecloseable". The option is with the PNB-DBP on what steps to take.

The mere fact that MMIC adopted the FRP does not mean that DBP-PNB lost the option to
foreclose. Neither does it mean that the FRP is legally binding and implementable. It must be
pointed that said FRP will, in effect, supersede the existing and past due loans of MMIC with PNB-
DBP. It will become the new loan agreement between the lenders and the borrowers. As in all
other contracts, there must therefore be a meeting of minds of the parties; the PNB and DBP must
have to validly adopt and ratify such FRP before they can be bound by it; before it can be
implemented. In this case, not an iota of proof has been presented by the PLAINTIFFS showing
that PNB and DBP ratified and adopted the FRP. PLAINTIFFS simply relied on a legal doctrine of
promissory estoppel to support its allegations in this regard. 42

Moreover, PNB and DBP had to initiate foreclosure proceedings as mandated by P.D. No. 385, which took effect on
January 31, 1974. The decree requires government financial institutions to foreclose collaterals for loans where the
arrearages amount to 20% of the total outstanding obligations. The pertinent provisions of said decree read as follow:

Sec. 1. It shall be mandatory for government financial institutions, after the lapse of sixty (60) days
from the issuance of this Decree, to foreclose the collaterals and/or securities for any loan, credit,
accommodation, and/or guarantees granted by them whenever the arrearages on such account,
including accrued interest and other charges, amount to at least twenty percent (20%) of the total
outstanding obligations, including interest and other charges, as appearing in the books of account
and/or related records of the financial institutions concerned. This shall be without prejudice to the
exercise by the government financial institutions of such rights and/or remedies available to them
under their respective contracts with their debtors, including the right to foreclosure on loans,
credits, accommodations and/or guarantees on which the arrearages are less than twenty percent
(20%).

Sec. 2. No restraining order temporary or permanent injunction shall be issued by the court against
any government financial institution in any action taken by such institution in compliance with
the mandatory foreclosure provided in Section 1 hereof, whether such restraining order, temporary
or permanent injunction is sought by the borrower(s) or any third party or parties, except after due
hearing in which it is established by the borrower and admitted by the government financial
institution concerned that twenty percent (20%) of the outstanding arrearages has been paid after
the filing of foreclosure proceedings. (Emphasis supplied.)

Private respondents' thesis that the foreclosure proceedings were null and void because of lack of publication in the
newspaper is nothing more than a mere unsubstantiated aliegation not borne out by the evidence. In any case, a
disputable presumption exists in favor of petitioner that official duty has been regularly performed and ordinary
course of business has been followed. 43

VI

Not only was the foreclosure rightfully exercised by the PNB and DBP, but also, from the facts of the case, the
arbitrators in making the award went beyond the arbitration agreement.

In their complaint filed before the trial court, private respondent Cabarrus, et al. prayed for judgment in their favor:

1. Declaring the foreclosures effected by the defendants DBP and PNB on the assets of MMIC null
and void and directing said defendants to restore the foreclosed assets to the possession of MMIC,
to render an accounting of their use and/or operation of said assets and to indemnify MMIC for the
loss occasioned by its dispossession or the deterioration thereof;

2. Directing the defendants DBP and PNB to honor and perform their commitments under the
financial reorganization plan which was approved at the annual stockholders' meeting of MMIC on
30 April 1984;

3. Condemning the defendants DBP and PNB, jointly and severally to pay the plaintiffs actual
damages consisting of the loss of value of their investments amounting to not less than
P80,000,000, the damnum emergens and lucrum cessans in such amount as may be established
during the trial, moral damages in such amount as this Honorable Court may deem just and
equitable in the premises, exemplary damages in such amount as this Honorable Court may
consider appropriate for the purpose of setting an example for the public good, attorney's fees and
litigation expenses in such amounts as may be proven during the trial, and the costs legally taxable
in this litigation.

Further, plaintiffs pray for such other reliefs as may be just and equitable in the premises. 44

Upon submission for arbitration, the Compromise and Arbitration Agreement of the parties clearly and explicitly
defined and limited the issues to the following:

(a) whether PLAINTIFFS have the capacity or the personality to institute this derivative suit in
behalf of the MMIC or its directors;
(b) whether or not the actions leading to, and including, the PNB-DBP foreclosure of the MMIC
assets were proper, valid and in good faith. 45

Item No. 8 of the Agreement provides for the period by which the Committee was to render its decision, as well as
the nature thereof:

8. Decision. The committee shall issue a decision on the controversy not later than six (6) months
from the date of its constitution.

In the event the committee finds that PLAINTIFFS have the personality to file this suit and the
extra-judicial foreclosure of the MMIC assets wrongful, it shall make an award in favor of the
PLAINTIFFS (excluding DBP), in an amount as may be established or warranted by the evidence
which shall be payable in Philippine Pesos at the time of the award. Such award shall be paid by
the APT or its successor-in-interest within sixty (60) days from the date of the award in accordance
with the provisions of par. 9 hereunder. . . . . The PLAINTIFFS' remedies under this Section shall
be in addition to other remedies that may be available to the PLAINTIFFS, all such remedies being
cumulative and not exclusive of each other.

On the other hand, in case the arbitration committee finds that PLAINTIFFS have no capacity to
sue and/or that the extra-judicial foreclosure is valid and legal, it shall also make an award in favor
of APT based on the counterclaims of DBP and PNB in an amount as may be established or
warranted by the evidence. This decision of the arbitration committee in favor of APT shall likewise
finally settle all issues regarding the foreclosure of the MMIC assets so that the funds held in
escrow mentioned in par. 9 hereunder will thus be released in full in favor of
APT. 46

The clear and explicit terms of the submission notwithstanding, the Arbitration Committee clearly exceeded its
powers or so imperfectly executed them: (a) in ruling on and declaring valid the FRP; (b) in awarding damages to
MMIC which was not a party to the derivative suit; and (c) in awarding moral damages to Jesus S. Cabarrus, Sr.

The arbiters overstepped

their powers by declaring as

valid the proposed Financial

Restructuring Program.

The Arbitration Committee went beyond its mandate and thus acted in excess of its powers when it ruled on the
validity of, and gave effect to, the proposed FRP.

In submitting the case to arbitration, the parties had mutually agreed to limit the issue to the "validity of the
foreclosure" and to transform the relief prayed for therein into pure money claims.

There is absolutely no evidence that the DBP and PNB agreed, expressly or impliedly, to the proposed FRP. It
cannot be overemphasized that a FRP, as a contract, requires the consent of the parties thereto. 47 The contract
must bind both contracting parties. 48 Private respondents even by their own admission recognized that the FRP had
yet not been carried out and that the loans of MMIC had not yet been converted into equity. 49
However, the Arbitration Committee not only declared the FRP valid and effective, but also converted the loans of
MMIC into equity raising the equity of DBP to 87%. 50

The Arbitration Committee ruled that there was "a commitment to carry out the FRP" 51 on the ground of promissory
estoppel.

Similarly, the principle of promissory estoppel applies in the present case considering as we
observed, the fact that the government (that is, Alfredo Velayo) was the FRP's proponent. Although
the plaintiffs are agreed that the government executed no formal agreement, the fact remains that
the DBP itself which made representations that the FRP constituted a "way out" for MMIC. The
Committee believes that although the DBP did not formally agree (assuming that the board and
stockholders' approvals were not formal enough), it is bound nonetheless if only for its conspicuous
representations.

Although the DBP sat in the board in a dual capacity — as holder of 36% of MMIC's equity (at that
time) and as MMIC's creditor — the DBP can not validly renege on its commitments simply
because at the same time, it held interests against the MMIC.

The fact, of course, is that as APT itself asserted, the FRP was being "carried out" although
apparently, it would supposedly fall short of its targets. Assuming that the FRP would fail to meet
its targets, the DBP — and so this Committee holds — can not, in any event, brook any denial that
it was bound to begin with, and the fact is that adequate or not (the FRP), the government is still
bound by virtue of its acts.

The FRP, of course, did not itself promise a resounding success, although it raised DBP's equity in
MMIC to 87%. It is not an excuse, however, for the government to deny its commitments. 52

Atty. Sison, however, did not agree and correctly observed that:

But the doctrine of promissory estoppel can hardly find application here. The nearest that there can
be said of any estoppel being present in this case is the fact that the board of MMIC was, at the
time the FRP was adopted, mostly composed of PNB and DBP representatives. But those
representatives, singly or collectively, are not themselves PNB or DBP. They are individuals with
personalities separate and distinct from the banks they represent. PNB and DBP have different
boards with different members who may have different decisions. It is unfair to impose upon them
the decision of the board of another company and thus pin them down on the equitable principle of
estoppel. Estoppel is a principle based on equity and it is certainly not equitable to apply it in this
particular situation. Otherwise the rights of entirely separate distinct and autonomous legal entities
like PNB and DBP with thousands of stockholders will be suppressed and rendered nugatory. 53

As a rule, a corporation exercises its powers, including the power to enter into contracts, through its board of
directors. While a corporation may appoint agents to enter into a contract in its behalf, the agent should not exceed
his authority. 54 In the case at bar, there was no showing that the representatives of PNB and DBP in MMIC even had
the requisite authority to enter into a debt-for-equity swap. And if they had such authority, there was no showing that
the banks, through their board of directors, had ratified the FRP.

Further, how could the MMIC be entitled to a big amount of moral damages when its credit reputation was not exactly
something to be considered sound and wholesome. Under Article 2217 of the Civil Code, moral damages include
besmirched reputation which a corporation may possibly suffer. A corporation whose overdue and unpaid debts to
the Government alone reached a tremendous amount of P22 Billion Pesos cannot certainly have a solid business
reputation to brag about. As Atty. Sison in his separate opinion persuasively put it:

Besides, it is not yet a well settled jurisprudence that corporations are entitled to moral damages.
While the Supreme Court may have awarded moral damages to a corporation for besmirched
reputation in Mambulao vs. PNB, 22 SCRA 359, such ruling cannot find application in this case. It
must be pointed out that when the supposed wrongful act of foreclosure was done, MMIC's credit
reputation was no longer a desirable one. The company then was already suffering from serious
financial crisis which definitely projects an image not compatible with good and wholesome
reputation. So it could not be said that there was a "reputation" besmirched by the act of
foreclosure. 55

The arbiters exceeded their

authority in awarding damages

to MMIC, which is not impleaded

as a party to the derivative suit.

Civil Case No. 9900 filed before the RTC being a derivative suit, MMIC should have been impleaded as a party. It
was not joined as a party plaintiff or party defendant at any stage of the proceedings. As it is, the award of damages
to MMIC, which was not a party before the Arbitration Committee, is a complete nullity.

Settled is the doctrine that in a derivative suit, the corporation is the real party in interest while the stockholder filing
suit for the corporation's behalf is only a nominal party. The corporation should be included as a party in the suit.

An individual stockholder is permitted to institute a derivative suit on behalf of the corporation


wherein he holds stock in order to protect or vindicate corporate rights, whenever the officials of the
corporation refuse to sue, or are the ones to be sued or hold the control of the corporation. In such
actions, the suing stockholder is regarded as a nominal party, with the corporation as the real party
in interest. . . . . 56

It is a condition sine qua non that the corporation be impleaded as a party because —

. . . Not only is the corporation an indispensable party, but it is also the present rule that it must be
served with process. The reason given is that the judgment must be made binding upon the
corporation in order that the corporation may get the benefit of the suit and may not bring a
subsequent suit against the same defendants for the same cause of action. In other words the
corporation must be joined as party because it is its cause of action that is being litigated and
because judgment must be a res ajudicata  against it. 57

The reasons given for not allowing direct individual suit are:

(1) . . . "the universally recognized doctrine that a stockholder in a corporation has no title legal or
equitable to the corporate property; that both of these are in the corporation itself for the benefit of
the stockholders." In other words, to allow shareholders to sue separately would conflict with the
separate corporate entity principle;
(2) . . . that the prior rights of the creditors may be prejudiced. Thus, our Supreme Court held in the
case of Evangelista v. Santos, that "the stockholders may not directly claim those damages for
themselves for that would result in the appropriation by, and the distribution among them of part of
the corporate assets before the dissolution of the corporation and the liquidation of its debts and
liabilities, something which cannot be legally done in view of section 16 of the Corporation Law . . .;

(3) the filing of such suits would conflict with the duty of the management to sue for the protection
of all concerned;

(4) it would produce wasteful multiplicity of suits; and

(5) it would involve confusion in a ascertaining the effect of partial recovery by an individual on the
damages recoverable by the corporation for the same act. 58

If at all an award was due MMIC, which it was not, the same should have been given sans  deduction, regardless of
whether or not the party liable had equity in the corporation, in view of the doctrine that a corporation has a
personality separate and distinct from its individual stockholders or members. DBP's alleged equity, even if it were
indeed 87%, did not give it ownership over any corporate property, including the monetary award, its right over said
corporate property being a mere expectancy or inchoate right. 59 Notably, the stipulation even had the effect of
prejudicing the other creditors of MMIC.

The arbiters, likewise,

exceeded their authority

in awarding moral damages

to Jesus Cabarrus, Sr.

It is perplexing how the Arbitration Committee can in one breath rule that the case before it is a derivative suit, in
which the aggrieved party or the real party in interest is supposedly the MMIC, and at the same time award moral
damages to an individual stockholder, to wit:

WHEREFORE, premises considered, judgment is hereby rendered:

x x x           x x x          x x x

3. Ordering the defendant to pay to the plaintiff, Jesus S. Cabarrus, Sr., the sum of
P10,000,000.00, to be satisfied likewise from the funds held under escrow pursuant to the Escrow
Agreement dated April 22, 1988 or to such subsequent escrow agreement that would supersede it,
pursuant to paragraph (9), Compromise and Arbitration Agreement, as and for moral
damages; . . . 60

The majority decision of the Arbitration Committee sought to justify its award of moral damages to Jesus S. Cabarrus,
Sr. by pointing to the fact that among the assets seized by the government were assets belonging to Industrial
Enterprise Inc. (IEI), of which Cabarrus is the majority stockholder. It then acknowledged that Cabarrus had already
recovered said assets in the RTC, but that "he won no more than actual damages. While the Committee cannot
possibly speak for the RTC, there is no doubt that Jesus S. Cabarrus, Sr., suffered moral damages on account of that
specific foreclosure, damages the Committee believes and so holds, he, Jesus S. Cabarrus, Sr., may be awarded in
this proceeding." 61

Cabarrus cause of action for the seizure of the assets belonging to IEI, of which he is the majority stockholder, having
been ventilated in a complaint he previously filed with the RTC, from which he obtained actual damages, he was
barred by res judicata  from filing a similar case in another court, this time asking for moral damages which he failed
to get from the earlier case. 62 Worse, private respondents violated the rule against non-forum shopping.

It is a basic postulate that a corporation has a personality separate and distinct from its stockholders. 63 The
properties foreclosed belonged to MMIC, not to its stockholders. Hence, if wrong was committed in the foreclosure, it
was done against the corporation. Another reason is that Jesus S. Cabarrus, Sr. cannot directly claim those damages
for himself that would result in the appropriation by, and the distribution to, him part of the corporation's assets before
the dissolution of the corporation and the liquidation of its debts and liabilities. The Arbitration Committee, therefore,
passed upon matters nor submitted to it. Moreover, said cause of action had already been decided in a separate
case. It is thus quite patent that the arbitration committee exceeded the authority granted to it by the parties'
Compromise and Arbitration Agreement by awarding moral damages to Jesus S. Cabarrus, Sr.

Atty. Sison, in his separate opinion, likewise expressed befuddlement to the award of moral damages to Jesus S.
Cabarrus, Sr.:

It is clear and it cannot be disputed therefore that based on these stipulated issues,
the parties  themselves have agreed that the basic ingredient of the causes of action in this case is
the wrong committed on the corporation (MMIC) for the alleged illegal foreclosure of its assets. By
agreeing to this stipulation, PLAINTIFFS  themselves (Cabarrus, et al.) admit that the cause of
action pertains only to the corporation (MMIC) and that they are filing this for and in behalf of
MMIC.

Perforce this has to be so because it is the basic rule in Corporation Law that "the shareholders
have no title, legal or equitable to the property which is owned by the corporation (13 Am. Jur. 165;
Pascual vs. Oresco, 14 Phil. 83). In Ganzon & Sons vs. Register of Deeds, 6 SCRA 373, the rule
has been reiterated that "a stockholder is not the co-owner of corporate property." Since the
property or assets foreclosed belongs [sic] to MMIC, the wrong committed, if any, is done against
the corporation. There is therefore no direct injury or direct violation of the rights of Cabarrus et al.
There is no way, legal or equitable, by which Cabarrus et al. could recover damages in their
personal capacities even assuming or just because the foreclosure is improper or invalid. The
Compromise and Arbitration Agreement itself and the elementary principles of Corporation Law say
so. Therefore, I am constrained to dissent from the award of moral damages to Cabarrus. 64

From the foregoing discussions, it is evident that, not only did the arbitration committee exceed its powers or so
imperfectly execute them, but also, its findings and conclusions are palpably devoid of any factual basis, and in
manifest disregard of the law.

We do not find it necessary to remand this case to the RTC for appropriate action. The pleadings and memoranda
filed with this Court, as well as in the Court of Appeals, raised and extensively discussed the issues on the merits.
Such being the case, there is sufficient basis for us to resolve the controversy between the parties anchored on the
records and the pleadings before us. 65

WHEREFORE, the Decision of the Court of Appeals dated July 17, 1995, as well as the Orders of the Regional Trial
Court of Makati, Branch 62, dated November 28, 1994 and January 19, 1995, is hereby REVERSED and SET
ASIDE, and the decision of the Arbitration Committee is hereby VACATED.
SO ORDERED.

Romero, J., Please see dissenting opinion.

Purisima, J., Concur and also with the separate concurring opinion of Justice Pardo.

Pardo, J., With separate concurring opinion.

Separate Opinions

ROMERO, J.,  dissenting opinion;

In the instant petition for review on certiorari, petitioner. Asset Privatization Trust (APT) is impugning the decision of
respondent Court of Appeals in CA-GR SP No. 36484 dated July 17, 1995, grounded upon the following assigned
errors which it had allegedly committed:

1) The Court of Appeals erred in not holding that the Makati Regional Trial Court, Branch 62, which
had previously dismissed Civil Case No. 9900, had lost jurisdiction to confirm the arbitral award
under the same civil case and in not ruling that the application for confirmation should have been
filed as a new case to be raffled among the different branches of the RTC;

2) The Court of Appeals likewise erred in holding that petitioner was estopped from questioning the
arbitration award, when petitioner questioned the jurisdiction of the RTC-Makati, Branch 62, and at
the same time moved to vacate the arbitral award;

3) The Court of Appeals erred in not holding that the respondent Trial Court should have either
dismissed/denied private respondents' motion/petition for confirmation of arbitration award and/or
should have considered the merits of the motion to vacate (the) arbitral award;

4) The Court of Appeals erred in not treating petitioner APT's petition for certiorari  as an appeal
taken from the order confirming the award; and

5) The Court of Appeals erred in not ruling on the legal issue of when to reckon the counting of the
period to file a motion for reconsideration.1

The resolution of these issues will ultimately test the process of arbitration, how effective or ineffective it is as an
alternative mode of settling disputes, and how it is affected by judicial review. My esteemed colleagues have taken
the view that the petition is impressed with merit and that the assailed decision of the Court of Appeals should be
reversed. In doing so, I believe they have dealt arbitration a terrible blow and wasted years, even decades, of
development in this field. I beg to differ and, therefore, dissent.
The controversy is actually simpler than it appears. The Marinduque Mining and Industrial Corporation (MMIC)
obtained several loans from the Philippine National Bank (PNB) and the Development Bank of the Philippines (DBP)
secured by mortgages over practically all of its assets. As of July 15, 1984, MMIC's obligation had ballooned to
P22,668,537,770.05, 2 and it had no way of making the required payments. MMIC and its two creditor banks thus
ironed out a complex financial restructuring plan (FRP) designed to drastically reduce MMIC's liability through a
"debt-to-equity" scheme. 3 This notwithstanding, the creditors opted to sell MMIC's mortgaged properties through
extrajudicial foreclosure proceedings, where PNB turned out to be the lone bidder.4

Aggrieved by this apparent bad faith on the part of the creditor banks, private respondents Jesus S. Cabarrus, Sr.,
and other minority stockholders of MMIC filed a derivative suit5 against PNB and DBP before the Makati Regional
Trial Court. They prayed for the annulment of the foreclosure and for the restoration of the company's assets, the
recognition by the creditor banks of their commitments under the FRP, and the payment of damages, as well as
attorney's fees and costs of litigation. The case was raffled to Branch 62 and docketed as Civil Case No. 9900.

In the meantime, the rights and interests of PNB and DBP, including MMIC's indebtedness, were transferred to
petitioner, created by virtue of Proclamation No. 50, in relation to Administrative Order No. 14. Hence, petitioner was
substituted as party defendant in Civil Case No. 9900.

On October 6, 1992, the parties entered into a Compromise and Arbitration Agreement 6 providing, inter alia, that
they were withdrawing their respective claims, which would be reduced to pure money claims, and that they were
submitting the controversy to arbitration under Republic Act No. 876.7 The issues for arbitration were thus limited to a
determination of the plaintiffs' capacity or right to institute the derivative suit in behalf of the MMIC or its directors, and
of the propriety of the foreclosure. Of notable import was the provision on the nature of the judgment that the
arbitration committee might render, viz.:

10. Binding Effect and Enforcement. The award of the arbitration committee shall be final and
executory upon its issuance upon the parties to the arbitration and their assigns and successors-
in-interest. In the event the award is not voluntarily satisfied by the losing party, the party in whose
favor the award has been made may, pursuant to Republic Act No. 876, apply to the proper
Regional Trial Court for its enforcement. (Emphasis supplied)

Upon motion of the parties, this agreement was presented to the court a quo  for its approval.8 On October 14, 1992,
said court issued an order (a) dismissing the complaint; (b) substituting the creditor banks with the APT as party
defendant; (c) "approving the Compromise and Arbitration Agreement dated October 6, 1992"; and (d) "approving the
transformation of the reliefs prayed for by the plaintiffs in this case into pure money claims."9

On November 24, 1993, after more than six months of hearing, the arbitration committee 10 concluded that the
assailed foreclosure was not valid and accordingly decided the case in favor of MMIC. Hence, petitioner was ordered
to pay MMIC actual damages in the amount of P2,531,635,425.02, with legal interest, and moral and exemplary
damages amounting to P13,000,000.00, and to pay Jesus S. Cabarrus, Sr., the sum of P10,000,000.00 by way of
moral damages, such awards to be offset from the outstanding and unpaid obligations of MMIC with the creditor
banks, which have not been converted into equity. The committee likewise decreed its decision to be "final and
executory." 11

Nearly a year later, MMIC filed in Civil Case No. 9900, a verified "Application/Motion for Confirmation of Arbitration
Award." 12 This was opposed by petitioner on two grounds, namely, that Branch 62 no longer had jurisdiction to act
on said motion after it "dismissed" the complaint in its order of October 14, 1992, and that the award "far exceeded
the issues submitted" for arbitration by the parties. 13 Not wanting to be outdone, MMIC filed a "Reply and
Opposition," arguing that the "qualified dismissal" of Civil Case No. 9900 was merely intended to expedite the
submission of the controversy to arbitration and was, therefore, "a mere suspension of the proceedings," and that the
arbitration committee did not exceed its authority in making the award.

On November 28, 1994, the trial court issued an order 14 confirming the award of the committee in all respects except
as to the award of actual damages to MMIC, which was increased to P3,811,757,425.00. The order closed with the
following declaration:

In reiteration of the mandates of Stipulation No. 10 and Stipulation No. 8 paragraph 2 of the
Compromise and Arbitration Agreement, and the final edict of the Arbitration Committee's decision,
and with this Court's Confirmation, the issuance of the Arbitration Committee's Award shall
henceforth be final and executory.

Petitioner filed a "Motion for Reconsideration" of said order on December 27, 1994; but this was denied by the
court a quo  in its order dated January 18, 1995 for lack of merit and for having been filed beyond the reglementary
period. Thus, it said:

. . . (C)onsidering that the defendant APT, through counsel, officially and actually received a copy
of the Order of this Court dated November 28, 1994 on December 6, 1994, the Motion for
Reconsideration thereof filed by the defendant APT on December 27, 1994, or after the lapse of 21
days, was clearly filed beyond the 15-day reglementary period prescribed or  provided for . . . (by
law) for the filing of an appeal from final orders, resolutions, awards, judgments or decisions of any
court in all cases, and by necessary implication, for the filing of a motion for reconsideration
thereof.

Instead of appealing such denial, petitioner filed on February 15, 1995, an "Appeal by Certiorari . . . . under Sections
1 and 2 of Rule 65 of the Revised Rules of Court" before the Court of Appeals, praying for the nullification of the trial
court's orders dated November 28, 1994 and January 18, 1995. It argued that the trial court had no jurisdiction or
authority to confirm the arbitral award, "considering that the original case, Civil Case No. 9900, had previously been
dismissed," and that the trial judge "acted with grave abuse of discretion in issuing the questioned orders confirming
the award and denying the motion for reconsideration thereof." 15

On July 17, 1995, the Court of Appeals dismissed the petition for lack of merit. 16 From this dismissal, petitioner
elevated its cause to this Tribunal for a review, raising the issues stated at the outset.

I find it distressing that, in reaching the outcome of this controversy, the majority has emasculated the process of
arbitration itself. This should not be the case for after all, the decision of the arbitration committee is no longer the
one being attacked in these proceedings, but the judgment of the Court of Appeals which herein petitioner found to
be erroneous. The Court has had occasion to trace the history of arbitration and to discuss its significance in the case
of Chung Fu Industries (Phils.), Inc. v. Court of Appeals, 17 viz.:

Allow us to take a leaf from history and briefly trace the evolution of arbitration as a mode of
dispute settlement.

Because conflict is inherent in human society, much effort has been expended by men and
institutions in devising ways of resolving the same. With the progress of civilization, physical
combat has been ruled out and instead, more specific means have been evolved, such as recourse
to the good offices of a disinterested third party, whether this be a court or a private individual or
individuals.
Legal history discloses that "early judges called upon to solve private conflicts were primarily the
arbiters, persons not specially trained but in whose morality, probity and good sense the parties in
conflict reposed full trust. Thus, in Republican Rome, arbiter  and judge  (judex) were synonymous.
The magistrate of praetor, after noting down the conflicting claims of litigants, and clarifying the
issues, referred them for decision to a private person designated by the parties, by common
agreement, or selected by them from an apposite listing (the album judicium) or else by having the
arbiter chosen by lot. The judges proper, as specially trained state officials endowed with (their)
own power and jurisdiction, and taking cognizance of litigations from beginning to end, only
appeared under the Empire, by the so-called cognitio extra ordinem."

Such means of referring a dispute to a third party has also long been an accepted alternative to
litigation at common law.

Sparse though the law and jurisprudence may be on the subject of arbitration in the Philippines, it
was nonetheless recognized in the Spanish Civil Code; specifically, the provisions on compromises
made applicable to arbitrations under Articles 1820 and 1821. Although said provisions were
repealed by implication with the repeal of the Spanish Law of Civil Procedure, these and additional
ones were reinstated in the present Civil Code.

Arbitration found a fertile field in the resolution of labor-management disputes in the Philippines.
Although early on, Commonwealth Act 103 (1936) provided for compulsory arbitration as the state
policy to be administered by the Court of Industrial Relations, in time such a modality gave way to
voluntary arbitration. While not completely supplanting compulsory arbitration which until today is
practiced by government officials, the Industrial Peace Act which was passed in 1953 as Republic
Act No. 875, favored the policy of free collective bargaining, in general, and resort to grievance
procedure, in particular, as the preferred mode of settling disputes in industry. It was accepted and
enunciated more explicitly in the Labor Code, which was passed on November 1, 1974 as
Presidential Decree No. 442, with the amendments later introduced by Republic Act No. 6715
(1989).

Whether utilized in business transactions or in employer-employee relations, arbitration was


gaining wide acceptance. A consensual process, it was preferred to orders imposed by
government upon the disputants. Moreover, court litigations tended to be time-consuming, costly,
and inflexible due to their scrupulous observance of the due process of law doctrine and their strict
adherence to rules of evidence.

As early as the 1920's, this Court declared:

In the Philippines fortunately, the attitude of the court towards arbitration


agreements is slowly crystallizing into definite and workable form . . . The rule
now is that unless the agreement is such as absolutely to close the doors of the
courts against the parties, which agreement would be void, the courts will look
with favor upon such amicable arrangements and will only with great reluctance
interfere to anticipate or nullify the action of the arbitrator.

That there was a growing need for a law regulating arbitration in general was acknowledged when
Republic Act No. 876 (1953), otherwise known as the Arbitration Law, was passed. "Said Act was
obviously adopted to supplement — not to supplant — the New Civil Code on arbitration. It
expressly declares that "the provisions of chapters one and two, Title XIV, Book IV of the Civil
Code shall remain in force."
x x x           x x x          x x x

In practice nowadays, absent an agreement of the parties to resolve their disputes via a particular
mode, it is the regular courts that remain the fora to resolve such matters. However, the parties
may opt for recourse to third parties, exercising their basic freedom to "establish such stipulations,
clauses, terms and conditions as they may deem convenient, provided they are not contrary to law,
morals, good customs, public order or public policy." In such a case, resort to the arbitration
process may be spelled out by them in a contract in anticipation of disputes that may arise between
them. Or this may be stipulated in a submission agreement when they are actually confronted by a
dispute. Whatever be the case, such recourse to an extrajudicial means of settlement is not
intended to completely deprive the courts of jurisdiction. In fact, the early cases on arbitration
carefully spelled out the prevailing doctrine at the time, thus: ". . . a clause in a contract providing
that all matters in dispute between the parties shall be referred to arbitrators and to them alone is
contrary to public policy and cannot oust the courts of jurisdiction."

But certainly, the stipulation to refer all future disputes to an arbitrator or to submit an ongoing
dispute to one is valid. Being part of a contract between the parties, it is binding and enforceable in
court in case one of them neglects, fails or refuses to arbitrate. Going a step further, in the event
that they declare their intention to refer their differences to arbitration first before taking court
action, this constitutes a condition precedent, such that where a suit has been instituted
prematurely, the court shall suspend the same and the parties shall be directed forthwith to
proceed to arbitration.

A court action may likewise be proper where the arbitrator has not been selected by the parties.

x x x           x x x          x x x

. . . It is stated explicitly under Art. 2044 of the Civil Code that the finality of the arbitrator's award is
not absolute and without exceptions. Where the conditions described in Articles 2038, 2039 and
2040 18 applicable to both compromises and arbitrations are obtaining, the arbitrators' award may
be annulled or rescinded. Additionally, under Sections 24 and 25 of the Arbitration Law, there are
grounds for vacating, modifying or rescinding an arbitrator's award. Thus, if and when the factual
circumstances referred to in the above-cited provisions are present, judicial review of the award is
properly warranted.

What if courts refuse or neglect to inquire into the factual milieu of an arbitrator's award to
determine whether it is in accordance with law or within the scope of his authority? How may the
power of judicial review be invoked?

This is where the proper remedy is certiorari  under Rule 65 of the Revised Rules of Court. It is to
be borne in mind, however, that this action will lie only where a grave abuse of discretion or an act
without or in excess of jurisdiction on the part of the voluntary arbitrator is clearly shown. For "the
writ of certiorari  is an extraordinary remedy and that certiorari  jurisdiction is not to be equated with
appellate jurisdiction. In a special civil action of certiorari, the Court will not engage in a review of
the facts found nor even of the law as interpreted or applied by the arbitrator unless the supposed
errors of fact or of law are so patent and gross and prejudicial as to amount to a grave abuse of
discretion or an exces de pouvoir  on the part of the arbitrator." 19

So, what are the issues that need to be addressed in this action? Certainly not the capacity of the plaintiffs below to
file the derivative suit in behalf of MMIC nor the validity of the extrajudicial foreclosure conducted by PNB and DBP.
These were the issues submitted for arbitration by the parties and resolved with finality  by the arbitration committee
upon agreement of the parties themselves. The issues, therefore, all stemming from the judgment of the Court of
Appeals, may be narrowed down to three: (1) Was it right in upholding the trial court's authority to confirm the
arbitration award considering that said court had earlier dismissed the complaint? (2) Was it correct in finding that
herein petitioner was estopped from questioning such award? (3) Was it justified in not treating petitioner's petition
for certiorari  as an appeal from the trial court's order confirming said award?

(1) Petitioner overly stresses the fact that in the trial court's order of October 14, 1992; the complaint was "dismissed"
upon approval of the Compromise and Arbitration Agreement between the parties. Such dismissal, however, far from
finally disposing of the controversy as the term denotes, simply "suspended" it during the period of arbitration. It is, as
a colleague pointed out during the deliberation of this action, a mere "semantic imperfection." Here is a situation
where the intent of the tribunal was obviously not to end the case with finality, but to place the proceedings in
abeyance while the parties breathed life into an alternative mode of settling their differences in the most expeditious
manner. Arbitration is not a self-enforcing process. It focuses the direction of the hearing and the reception and
appreciation of evidence by assigning these tasks to a group of persons chosen by the parties, themselves. By this, a
circuitous and time-consuming court trial is avoided, leaving the court with the singular duty of confirming the
arbitrators' decision, and allowing it to devote more of its time to resolving other cases. As the appellate court
correctly pointed out:

. . . (T)he dismissal of the Complaint in Civil Case No. 9900 was not intended by the parties and by
the court a quo, despite the phraseology in Item No. 4 or the dispositive portion of the Order of
October 14, 1992, as a dismissal that would put an end to the case. Rather it was simply a
pronouncement for the cessation of the proceedings in the court and the commencement of the
arbitration proceedings. It was for all intents and purposes a stay of the civil action until an
arbitration has been had or pending the return of the arbitral award. This is evident since the
parties submitted to the court below not only an agreement to arbitrate but also a compromise
which is always submitted to the court for approval and as a basis for a judgment. . . . 20

Regarding the trial court's authority to confirm the decision of the arbitration committee, suffice it to say that such was
not merely its right but its duty as well. Under Section 22 of R.A. No. 876, upon application or motion of any party to
arbitration, the court has the obligation of confirming the arbitrators' award absent any specific ground to vacate,
modify or correct the same. Herein private respondents did apply for such confirmation on February 7, 1995. This
was even opposed by petitioner on the ground that the judgment had not yet become final and executory, in
complete disregard of paragraph 10 of the Compromise and Arbitration Agreement and the very decision of the
arbitration committee.

The award itself was properly made since it was not vacated, modified or corrected upon any of the grounds
enumerated under Sections 24 and 25 of R.A. No. 876, to wit:

Sec. 24. Grounds for vacating award. — In any one of the following cases, the court must make an
order vacating the award upon the petition of any party to the controversy when such party proves
affirmatively that in the arbitration proceedings:

(a) The award was procured by corruption, fraud, or other undue means; or

(b) That there was evident partiality or corruption in the arbitrators or any of them; or

(c) That the arbitrators were guilty of misconduct in refusing to postpone the hearing upon sufficient
cause shown, or in refusing to hear evidence pertinent and material to the controversy; that one or
more of the arbitrators was disqualified to act as such under section nine hereof, and willfully
refrained from disclosing such disqualifications or of any other misbehavior by which the rights of
any party have been materially prejudiced; or

(d) That the arbitrators exceeded their powers, or so imperfectly executed them, that a mutual, final
and definite award upon the subject matter submitted to them was not made.

Where an award is vacated, the court, in its discretion, may direct a new hearing either before the
same arbitrators or before a new arbitrator or arbitrators chosen in the manner provided in the
submission or contract for the selection of the original arbitrator or arbitrators, and any provision
limiting the time in which the arbitrators may make a decision shall be deemed applicable to the
new arbitration and to commence from the date of the court's order.

Where the court vacates, an award, costs, not exceeding fifty pesos, and disbursements may be
awarded to the prevailing party and the payment thereof may be enforced in like manner as the
payment of costs upon the motion in an action

Sec. 25. Grounds for modifying or correcting award. — In any one of the following cases, the court
must make an order modifying or correcting the award, upon the application of any party to the
controversy which was arbitrated:

(a) Where there was an evident miscalculation of figures, or an evident mistake


in the description of any person, thing or property referred to in the award; or

(b) Where the arbitrators have awarded upon a matter not submitted to them, not
affecting the merits of the decision upon the matter submitted; or

(c) Where the award is imperfect in a matter of form not affecting the merits of
the controversy, and if it had been a commissioner's report, the defect could
have been amended or disregarded by the court.

The order may modify and correct the award so as to effect the intent thereof and promote justice between the
parties. (Emphasis supplied)

Petitioner utterly failed to prove the existence of any of these grounds. Its strongest argument, that the arbitration
award "far exceeded the issue submitted for arbitration," apart from being unsubstantiated, does not go into the
merits of the award, which is the only way its modification or correction could be justified under the terms of Section
25, aforequoted.

Furthermore, petitioner violated several covenants by asking the court a quo to vacate the arbitration award. First, in
paragraph 10 of the Compromise and Arbitration Agreement, it agreed to abide by the arbitration committee's
decision which "shall be final and executory upon its issuance upon the parties to the arbitration and their assigns
and successors-in-interest." Next, the decision that the arbitrators did render on November 24, 1993 specifically
declared the same to be "final and executory." Finally, in the court's confirmation order of November 28, 1994, the
finality of the award was reiterated by the court. Arbitration, as an alternative mode of settlement, is gaining
adherents in legal and judicial circles here and abroad. If its tested mechanism can simply be ignored by an
aggrieved party, one who, it must be stressed, voluntarily and actively participated in the arbitration proceedings from
the very beginning, it will destroy the very essence of mutuality inherent in consensual contracts.
2) Petitioner claims that it is not estopped from questioning the arbitration award probably because,
notwithstanding its tenacious quest for affirmative relief, it did not translate this pursuit into positive action.
The Court of Appeals succinctly puts it in this wise:

. . . The record shows that on its motion, petitioner APT was able to postpone the hearing on
therein plaintiffs' application/motion for confirmation of arbitral award to a date and time that it
chose. However, when said matter was called for hearing, only counsel for therein plaintiffs
showed up. Nonetheless, respondent Judge gave APT a period of seven (7) days from notice
within which to comment on the application/motion for confirmation. At no time did petitioner APT
ask for a hearing to present its evidence. While petitioner APT repeatedly sought to vacate the
arbitral award, it made no concrete move to pursue its cause. In fact, at the hearing on its motion
for reconsideration, both parties through their respective counsels gave oral arguments and
thereafter agreed to submit the motion for reconsideration for resolution. If petitioner APT honestly
believed that the respondent Judge erroneously took cognizance of plaintiffs Application/Motion for
Confirmation of Arbitration Award, then it should have limited itself to challenging the jurisdiction of
said court. The fact remains that petitioner APT repeatedly sought affirmative relief from the
respondent Judge in the same Civil Case No. 9900. Under the circumstances, petitioner APT may
not be heard now to complain that it was deprived of its right to question the award made by the
Arbitration Committtee. 21 (Emphasis supplied)

3) The final issue which, to my mind, has particular relevance to the case at bar, pertains to the alleged error
of the Court of Appeals in not treating APT's petition for certiorari  as an appeal from the trial court's
confirmation order.

Petitioner's counsel received a copy of the confirmation order dated November 28, 1994, on December 12,
1994. 22 Said order was, for review purposes, a "final order" because it finally disposed of the case. Other than
executing the confirmation order, there was nothing else that the court was duty-bound to perform. Petitioner's
remedy, therefore, was to question the order, by appeal on certiorari, not before the Court of Appeals, but before the
Supreme Court 23 within the reglementary period of fifteen days which expired on December 27, 1994. Instead of
appealing, however, petitioner filed a motion for reconsideration of the order on said deadline. Unfortunately, this was
denied by the court a quo  in its order dated January 18, 1995, a copy of which was received by petitioner's counsel
on February 1, 1995. Under prevailing procedural laws, it had just one day to perfect its appeal. On February 15,
1995, petitioner opted to file with the Court of Appeals an "Appeal by Certiorari  . . . under Sections 1 and 2 of Rule
65 of the Revised Rules of Court." The reason is obvious: It could no longer file a regular appeal from the assailed
order because the period for doing so has lapsed. The Court of Appeals thus made the following pertinent
observation.

. . . Assuming arguendo that petitioner APT's counsel received a copy (of the November 28, 1994,
order), as claimed by them, on December 12, 1994, then the petitioner had fifteen (15) days
therefrom or until December 27, 1994, within which to appeal. The petitioner's motion for
reconsideration was admittedly filed on December 27, 1994, the last day of the reglementary 15-
day period, and the order dated January 18, 1995, denying the same was received by petitioner's
counsel on February 1, 1995. Petitioner APT had only the following day to perfect his appeal.
Instead, it chose to file the instant special civil action of certiorari  on February 15, 1995.

From the start, petitioner seemed unsure of its position on appeal. While initially questioning the "order confirming the
award" of the arbitration committee, it later stated that it was raising the issue of "filing by (herein private
respondents) of a Motion for Execution and Appointment of Custodian of proceeds of Execution dated February 6,
1995." The latter recourse is obviously erroneous, for no appeal under either Rule 45 or Rule 65 may be taken from a
"motion" or the "filing" of one. Under Rule 45, only judgments or final orders of a court or tribunal may be appealed to
a higher court, while Rule 65 allows a special civil action where the acts of a tribunal, board or officer are under
attack for being performed with grave abuse of discretion.

The applicable law, of course, is R.A. No. 876, which provides for appeals from arbitration awards under Section 29
thereof, viz.:

. . . (A)n appeal may be taken from . . . a judgment entered upon an award


through certiorari  proceedings, but such appeals shall be limited to questions of law. The
proceedings upon such an appeal, including the judgment thereon, shall be governed by the Rules
of Court in so far as they are applicable.

The term "certiorari" in the aforequoted provision refers to an ordinary appeal under Rule 45, not the special action
of certiorari  under Rule 65. It is an "appeal," as Section 29 proclaims. The proper forum for this action is, under the
old and the new rules of procedure, the Supreme Court. Thus, Section 2(c) of Rule 41 of the 1997 Rules of Civil
Procedure states that, "In all cases where only questions of law are raised or involved, the appeal shall be to the
Supreme Court by petition for review on certiorari  in accordance with Rule 45." Moreover, Section 29 limits the
appeal to "questions of law," another indication that it is referring to an appeal by certiorari  under Rule 45 which,
indeed, is the customary manner of reviewing such issues. On the other hand, the extraordinary remedy
of certiorari  under Rule 65 may be availed of by a party where there is "no appeal, nor any plain, speedy, and
adequate remedy in the course of law," and under circumstances where "a tribunal, board or officer exercising
judicial functions, has acted without or in excess of its or his jurisdiction, or with grave abuse of discretion." 24

Based on the foregoing, it is clear that petitioner had run out of options after its motion for reconsideration was denied
by the trial court in its order dated January 18, 1995. To compound its negligence, it filed the wrong action with the
wrong forum. These, to my mind, are serious procedural flaws. To rule otherwise, as the majority did, would
constitute a grave injustice to private respondents.

I vote to DISMISS the petition.

PARDO, J.,  separate concurring opinion;

I concur. However, I wish to add a few points not particularly emphasized in the majority opinion.

The petition before the Court is one for review via certiorari  under Rule 45 of the Revised Rules of Court seeking to
set aside the resolution of the Court of Appeals that denied due course and dismissed APT's petition for certiorari  to
annul the proceedings had before the Regional Trial Court, Makati, Branch 62, in Civil Case No. 9900, particularly the
order confirming the arbitration award, reading as follows:

WHEREFORE, premises considered, and in the light of the parties Compromise and Arbitration
Agreement dated October 6, 1992, the Decision of the Arbitration Committee promulgated on
November 24, 1993, as affirmed in a Resolution dated July 26, 1994, and finally settled and
clarified in the Separate Opinion dated September 2, 1994 of Committee Member Elma, and the
pertinent provisions of R.A. 876, also known as the Arbitration Law, this Court GRANTS
PLAINTIFFS' APPLICATION AND THUS CONFIRMS THE ARBITRATION AWARD AND
JUDGMENT IS HEREBY RENDERED:

(a) Ordering the defendant APT to the Marinduque Mining and


Industrial Corporation (MMIC), except the DBP, the sum of
P3,811,757,425.00, as and for actual damages under escrow
in the amount of P503,000,000.00 pursuant to the Escrow
Agreement dated April 22, 1988. The balance of the award,
after the escrow funds are fully applied, shall be executed
against the APT;

(b) Ordering the defendants to pay to the MMIC, except the


DBP, the sum of P13,000.00 as and for moral and exemplary
damages;

(c) Ordering the defendant to pay to Jesus S. Caburrus, Sr.,


the sum of P10,000,000.00 as and for moral damages; and

(d) Ordering the defendant to pay the herein


plaintiff/applicants/movants the sum of P1,705,410.00 as
arbitration costs.

In reiteration of the mandates of Stipulation No. 10 and Stipulation No. 8


paragraph 2 of the Compromise and Arbitration Agreement, and the final edict of
the Arbitration Committee's decision, and with this Court's Confirmation, the
issuance of the Arbitration Committee's Award shall henceforth be final and
executory.

SO ORDERED.

Originally instituted on February 8, 1985, in the Regional Trial Court, Makati, Metro Manila, private respondents,
Jesus S. Cabarrus, Sr., et al., a few of the numerous minority stockholders of Marinduque Mining and Industrial Corp.
(hereafter MMIC), filed a complaint, later amended on March 13, 1995, for annulment of foreclosure, specific
performance and damages against the Philippine National Bank (PNB) and the Development Bank of the Philippines
(DBP) alleging that in 1984, the PNB and DBP effected illegally the extra-judicial foreclosure of real estate and
chattel mortgages constituted in their favor by the MMIC by the latter's assets of real estate and chattels, to satisfy an
obligation amounting to P22,668,537,770.05, and that prior to the extra-judicial foreclosure, PNB and DBP had
agreed to a financial reorganization plan of MMIC to reduce the latter's indebtedness to P3 billion and to convert the
balance of its obligation into equity.

In their joint answer to the amended complaint, defendants PNB and DBP denied the material allegations of the
amended complaint but admitted that in August and September, 1984, they foreclosed extra-judicially the mortgages
on MMIC's assets, with the qualification that the correct amount of obligation owed by MMIC as of July 15, 1984, was
P22,083,313,168.29; that the foreclosure of the mortgages was legal and valid as mandated by Presidential Decree
No. 385 and by the provisions of the mortgage trust agreements between PNB, DBP and MMIC; and, that the
plaintiff's therein, herein respondents Cabarrus, et al., were not entitled to actual and moral damages.

In the course of the trial of Civil Case No. 9900, plaintiffs Jesus S. Cabarrus, et al. and the Asset Privatization Trust
(APT), as successor-in-interest of the DBP and PNB's interest in MMIC accounts, entered into a compromise and
arbitration agreement dated October 6, 1992, whereby they "agreed to move for the dismissal of the case, to
transform the reliefs prayed for therein into pure money claims and to submit the controversy to arbitration under
Republic Act (RA) 876 before a committee composed of three members" limiting the issues to two, namely:

(a) whether plaintiffs have the capacity or the personality to institute this
derivative suit in behalf of the MMIC or its directors, and
(b) whether or not the actions leading to, and including, the PNB-DBP
foreclosure of the MMIC assets were proper, valid and in good faith.

Thus, the parties created an Arbitration Committee composed of three (3) members, one (1) representative of the
plaintiff; one (1) representative of APT; and the Chairman to be agreed upon by both parties. Consequently, APT
nominated Atty. Jose C. Sison, a trustee of APT and its counsel; MMIC nominated former Justice of the Court of
Appeals Magtanggol Elma; and they selected retired Supreme Court Justice Abraham F. Sarmiento as Chairman.

After conducting hearings and receiving voluminous evidence, on November 24, 1993, the Arbitration Committee
released what purports to be its decision penned by the Chairman, the dispositive portion of which reads as follows:

DISPOSITION

WHEREFORE, premises considered judgment is hereby rendered:

1. Ordering the defendant to pay the Marinduque Mining and Industrial


Corporation, except the DBP, the sum of P2,531,635,425,02 with interest
thereon at the legal rate of six (6%) per cent per annum reckoned from August 3,
9 and 24, 1984, pari passu, as and for actual damages. Payment of these actual
damages shall be offset by APT from the outstanding and unpaid loans of MMIC
with DBP and PNB, which have not been converted into equity. Should there be
any balance due to MMIC after the offsetting, the same shall be satisfied from
the funds representing the purchase price of the sale of the shares of Island
Cement Corporation in the amount of P503,000,000.00 held under escrow
pursuant to the Escrow Agreement dated April 22, 1988 or to such subsequent
escrow agreement that would supersede it pursuant to paragraph (9) of the
Compromise and Arbitration Agreement;

2. Ordering the defendant to pay to the Marinduque Mining and Industrial


Corporation, except the DBP, the sum of P13,000,000.00, as and for moral and
exemplary damages. Payment of these moral and exemplary damages shall be
offset by APT from the outstanding and unpaid loans of MMIC with DBP and
PNB, which have not been converted into equity. Should there be any balance
due to MMIC after the offsetting, the same shall be satisfied from the funds
representing the purchase price of the sale of the shares of island Cement
Corporation in the amount of P503,000,000.00 held under escrow pursuant to
the Escrow Agreement dated April 22, 1988 or to such subsequent escrow
agreement that would supersede it pursuant to paragraph (9) of the Compromise
and Arbitration Agreement;

3. Ordering the defendant to pay to the plaintiff, Jesus S. Cabarrus, Sr., the sum
of P10,000,000.00, to be satisfied likewise from the funds held under escrow
pursuant to the Escrow Agreement dated April 22, 1988 or to such subsequent
escrow agreement that would supersede it, pursuant to paragraph (9),
Compromise and Arbitration Agreement, as and for moral damages; and

4. Ordering the defendant to pay arbitration costs.

This Decision is FINAL and EXECUTORY.


IT IS SO ORDERED.

Member Elma submitted a separate concurring and dissenting opinion reading as follows:

ELMA, concurring and dissenting:

I am in complete agreement with the findings of the Decision on the principal issues submitted for
the Committee's resolution, viz: that plaintiffs Cabarrus, et al., have the capacity or the personality
to institute this derivative suit in behalf of Marinduque Milling and Industrial Corporation (MMIC)
and that the actions leading to, and including, the PNB-DBP foreclosure of the MMIC assets were
improper, invalid and/or not done in good faith. Consequently, there is concurrence on my part to
the award of actual, moral and exemplary damages to MMIC, and moral damages to plaintiff Jesus
S. Cabarrus, Sr.

However, I am unable to agree with and, therefore, regretfully dissent as to the manner or method
of computation and amount of actual damages awarded to MMIC, particularly set forth in
paragraph 1 of the dispositive potion of the Decision.

x x x           x x x          x x x

Considering that under the "Compromise and Arbitration Agreement", the parties agreed that their
respective claims be reduced to purely pecuniary/money claims, then MMIC and/or plaintiffs on
behalf of all the other stockholders of MMIC are entitled to actual or compensatory damages
equivalent to the present value of their equity over the MMIC assets, i.e. the total stockholders'
equity of P20,826,700,952.00 as of December 31, 1992. Further, since as held in the Decision that
the DBP would have an 87% equity in MMIC as a consequence of the finding that the Financial
Rehabilitation Plan (FRP), is valid (p. 64 of the Decision), then the amount of P18,119,229,828.24
(equivalent to DBP's 87% equity) should be deducted from the total stockholders' equity of
P20,826,700,952.00 leaving a net amount of P2,707,471,123.76 to be awarded to MMIC
(excluding DBP's share) as actual or compensatory damages.

It is to be noted that defendant APT did not present any evidence rebutting the figures and
computations made by witness Pastor. Since the Decision finds the FRP valid, then the
stockholders of MMIC (excluding DBP) should be placed in the same position that they would have
been where not for the fact that the FRP was improperly and illegally aborted by PNB/DBP.
Accordingly, it is my submission that defendant APT should be ordered to pay MMIC (excluding
DBP) the sum of P2,707,471,123.76 with legal interest thereon per annum from August 3, 1984 as
and for actual damages.

x x x           x x x          x x x

Member Sison submitted a separate opinion reading as follows:

SEPARATE OPINION

x x x           x x x          x x x

It is clear and it cannot be disputed therefore that based on these stipulated


issues, the parties themselves have agreed that the basic ingredient of the
causes of action in this case is the wrong committed on the corporation (MMIC)
for the alleged illegal foreclosure of its assets. By agreeing to this stipulation,
PLAINTIFFS themselves (Cabarrus, et al.) admit that the cause of action
pertains only to the corporation (MMIC) and that they are filing this for and in
behalf of MMIC.

Perforce this has to be so because it is the basic rule in Corporation Law that
"the shareholders have no title, legal or equitable to the property which is owned
by the corporation (13 Am. Jur. 165; Pascual vs. Oresco, 14 Phil. 83). In Ganzon
& Sons vs. Register of Deeds, 6 SCRA 373, the rule has been reiterated that "a
stockholder is not the co-owner of the corporate property." Since the property or
assets foreclosed belongs to MMIC, the wrong committed, if any, is done against
the corporation. There is therefore no direct injury or direct violation of the rights
of Cabarrus et al. There is no way, legal or equitable by which Cabarrus et al,
could recover damages in their personal capacities even assuming or just
because the foreclosure is improper or invalid. The Compromise and Arbitration
Agreement itself and the elementary principles of Corporation Law say so.
Therefore, I am constrained to dissent from the award of moral damages to
Cabarrus.

Neither could I agree to the award of moral damages to MMIC. The acts
complained of here in which the Committee based its award of moral damages to
MMIC is the foreclosure of the various real estate and chattel mortgages. The
majority of the Committee believes that these foreclosure constitute a violation
on an agreement forged between PNB-DBP, on one hand, and MMIC, on the
other, regarding the restructuring of the various past due loans of MMIC to what
had been termed as the Financial Restructuring Program (FRP).

x x x           x x x          x x x

In this connection, it can readily be seen and it cannot quite be denied that MMIC
accounts in PNB-DBP were past due. The drawing up of the FRP is the best
proof of this. When MMIC adopted a restructuring program for its loan, it only
meant that these loans were already due and unpaid. If these loans were
restructurable because they were already due and unpaid, they are likewise
"forecloseable". The option is with the PNB-DBP on what steps to take.

The mere fact that MMIC adopted the FRP does not mean that DBP-PNB lost
the option to foreclose. Neither does it mean that the FRP is legally binding and
implementable. It must be pointed that said FRP will, in effect, supersede the
existing and past due loans of MMIC with PNB-DBP. It will become the new loan
agreement between the lenders and the borrowers. As in all other contracts,
there must therefore be a meeting of the minds of the parties; the PNB and DBP
must have to validly adopt and ratify such FRP before they can be bound by it;
before it can be implemented. In this case, not an iota of proof has been
presented by the PLAINTIFFS showing that PNB and DBP ratified and adopted
the FRP. PLAINTIFFS simply relied on a legal doctrine of promissory estoppel to
support its allegations in this regard.

x x x           x x x          x x x
All told, PNB and DBP had the right to foreclose and were justified in doing so.
But were the foreclosure legally done or carried out? Were the requirements of
notice, posting and publication required by Acts 3135 and 1508 substantially
complied with?

x x x           x x x          x x x

I cannot, however, concur with the for holding that such minor taint of illegality in
the foreclosure is enough to justify the award of damages, amounting to
P19,486,118,654.00. "Rules of law respecting the recovery of damages are
framed with reference to just rights or both parties, not merely what may be right
for an injured person to receive, but also what is just to compel the other party to
pay, to accord just compensation for the injury" (Kennings vs. Kline Ind. 602).
Following this universally accepted rule on damage, I do not believe it is just to
compel APT to pay such huge amount for such minor technical infraction.

But while I do not agree with this pronouncement of the Committee, I


nevertheless concur with the result as far as the disposition of the award for
actual damages is concerned. I agree that DEFENDANT APT can, and is still
entitled to, collect the outstanding obligations of MMIC to PNB and DBP
amounting to P22,668,537,770.05 with interest thereon as stipulated in the loan
documents from the date of foreclosure until the time they are fully paid. The
resultant effect of such a disposition is that APT can offset the said obligation
due from MMIC such that ultimately no damages will be due and payable to
MMIC. As there may be damage without injury, there can be injury without
damage (15 Am. Jur., p. 388). This case is a case of  "injury without damage".

Both parties moved for reconsideration of the "decision" of the Arbitration Committee. In addition, respondents
Cabarrus et al. filed a motion for clarification and to re-open the case to receive evidence. In a resolution dated July
26, 1984, with one member dissenting, the Arbitration Committee denied the motions for reconsideration of both
parties as well as all other pending motions.

On October 17, 1984, respondents Cabarrus et al. filed directly with the Regional Trial Court, Makati, Branch 62, in
the same Civil Case No. 9900, a pleading entitled application/motion for confirmation of arbitral award.

On November 4, 1994, petitioner APT filed an opposition and motion to vacate judgment, contending that
respondents' motion was improperly filed with the same branch of the court in Civil Case No. 9900, which was
previously dismissed, and that the motion should have been filed as a separate special proceedings in the Regional
Trial Court to be docketed by the Clerk of Court.

Nonetheless, acting on the application/motion, Judge Roberto C. Diokno, presiding judge, Regional Trial Court,
Makati, Branch 62, on November 28, 1994, issued an order granting plaintiffs' application confirming the arbitration
award, and rendering judgment as set out in the opening paragraph of this opinion.

On December 12, 1994, petitioner APT received notice of the lower court's order. On December 27, 1994, petitioner
APT filed a motion for reconsideration. By order dated January 18, 1995, the trial court denied the motion. On
February 7, 1995, respondents Cabarrus, et al. filed a motion for execution and appointment of custodian of
proceeds of execution. Petitioner opposed the motion. It is apparently still unresolved.
On February 15, 1995, petitioner APT filed with the Court of Appeals an original special civil action for certiorari  with
prayer for temporary restraining order or preliminary injunction1 to annul the two (2) orders of the respondent
Regional Trial Court above-mentioned confirming the arbitral award and denying its reconsideration.

The issue presented in said petition was whether respondent Judge Roberto C. Diokno, Regional Trial Court, Makati,
Branch 62, had jurisdiction to act on private respondents' application/motion for confirmation of arbitral award in the
same Civil Case No. 9900, which had been dismissed earlier on motion of the parties, and thus the court gravely
abused its discretion in confirming the arbitral award.

In its decision promulgated on July 17, 1995, the Court of Appeals denied due course and dismissed the petition
for certiorari  for lack of merit.

Hence, this petition for review filed on September 07, 1995. 2

The petition is impressed with merit.

First, the Regional Trial Court, Makati, Branch 62, did not validly acquire jurisdiction over the case by respondents'
filing of a mere motion in the same Civil Case No. 9900 because the case had been dismissed earlier and such
dismissal had become final and unappealable. As heretofore stated, on October 6, 1992, the parties entered into a
compromise and arbitration agreement expressly providing that they "have agreed to withdraw their respective claims
from the Trial Court and to resolve their dispute through arbitration by praying to the Trial Court to issue a
compromise judgment based on this Compromise and Arbitration agreement.

Clearly, the parties had withdrawn the action then pending with the Regional Trial Court, Makati, Branch 62, in Civil
Case No. 9900, and agreed that they would submit their dispute to arbitration and reduce their respective claims to
"purely money claims", "waiving and foregoing all other forms of reliefs which they prayed for or could have prayed
for in Civil Case No. 9900." The parties "agreed to move for the dismissal of the case, to transform the reliefs prayed
for therein to pure money claims and submit the controversy to arbitration under Republic Act (RA) 876 before a
committee composed of three members."

In its order dated October 12, 1992, in Civil Case No. 9900, the trial court presided over by respondent Judge
categorically decreed that "The complaint is hereby dismissed". Such disposition terminated the case finally and
irretrievably disposed of the same.3 The term "dismissed" has a definite meaning in law. "A judgment of 'dismissed',
without qualifying words indicating a right to take further proceedings, is presumed to be dismissed on the
merits".4 The dismissal could not have been a suspension of action provided for in the arbitration law, Republic Act
No. 876.

Upon the finality of such order of dismissal, the case could no longer be revived by mere motion. The trial court had
lost its authority over the case. 5 We cite as squarely applicable the decision where this Court emphatically said "But
after the dismissal has become final through the lapse of the fifteen-day reglementary period, the only way by which
the action may be resuscitated or 'revived,' is by the institution of a subsequent action through the filing of another
complaint and the payment of the fees prescribed by law. This is so because upon attainment of finality of a dismissal
through the lapse of said reglementary period, the Court loses jurisdiction and control over it and can no longer make
any disposition in respect thereof inconsistent with such dismissal"6 It is true that the confirmation of an arbitral award
is within the jurisdiction over the subject matter of a regional trial court. Such jurisdiction must be invoked by proper
motion as a special proceedings with notice to the parties filed in the proper court with the clerk of court (and upon
payment of the prescribed fees). 7

Second, the Arbitration Committee did not actually reach a valid decision on the subject controversy.
In the purported decision dated November 24, 1994, penned by Chairman Sarmiento, the Committee ordered
petitioner APT to pay to MMIC the sum of P2,531,635,425.02, with interest thereon at the legal rate at 6% per annum
from August 3, 9 and 24, 1984, pari passu  as actual damages; to pay MMIC P13 million, as moral and exemplary
damages, and to pay Jesus S. Cabarrus, Sr. P10 million, as moral damages.

In the concurring and dissenting opinion of Member Elma, he agreed with the finding on the principal issue submitted
for resolution. However, he dissented as to the manner or method of computation and amount of actual damages
awarded to MMIC. He submitted that APT should be ordered to pay MMIC the sum of P2,707,471,123.76, with legal
interest thereon per annum from August 3, 1984, as actual damages.

In his separate opinion, Member Sison stated that he concurred with the result as far as the disposition of the award
of actual damage is concerned. He agreed that APT is entitled to collect the outstanding obligations of MMIC to PNB
and DBP amounting to P22,668,537,770.05, with interest as stipulated in the loan documents from the date of
foreclosure until fully paid. The resultant effect is that APT can offset said obligation due from MMIC such that
ultimately no damages shall be due and payable to MMIC. He was against the award of moral and exemplary
damages to MMIC and Jesus S. Cabarrus, Sr.

It is obvious that the disposition in Chairman Sarmiento's award and the concurring and dissenting opinion of
Member Elma do not tally and, hence, because of the dissent of Member Sison, the Arbitration Committee did not
reach a majority decision constituting a valid judgment or fallo of the Committee.

The powers and duties of boards and commissions may not be exercised by the
individual members separately. Their acts are official only when done by the
members convened in session upon a concurrence of at least a majority and with
at least a quorum present.8

Respondents Cabarrus, et al. considered the disposition as confusing and incomplete as to the award of damages
and thereby requiring the reception of further evidence as to necessitate the re-opening of hearings on the case. On
May 20, 1994, they filed a motion for clarification seeking answer from the arbitration committee as to the final
amount of actual damages the MMIC is entitled to, and, on June 9, 1994, they filed a motion to reopen the case and
to receive evidence.

Even the Arbitration Committee's resolution of the various motions for reconsideration and other reliefs was
conflicting. For Chairman Sarmiento, respondents' motion for reconsideration, dated December 15, 1993, and
petitioner's motion for reconsideration, dated January 3, 1994, respondents' motion for clarification dated June 8,
1994, and respondents' urgent motion to re-open the case and to receive evidence were all DENIED for lack of merit.

Member Elma dissented from the denial of the parties' motion for reconsideration, reiterating that MMIC is entitled to
actual damages in the sum of P2,707,471,123.76, with legal interest thereon from August 3, 1984.

Member Azura (substituting Sison) concurred with the Chairman in denying respondents' motion for reconsideration,
motion for clarification and motion to re-open the case but favored granting petitioner's (APT) motion for
reconsideration.

WHEREFORE, I vote to GRANT the petition at bench, reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals9 as well as the
orders of the Regional Trial Court, Makati, Branch 62, in Civil Case No. 9900, vacate the "decision" of the Arbitration
Committee dated November 24, 1993, and, finally, ENJOIN the trial court from further acting on the case.

Separate Opinions
ROMERO, J.,  dissenting opinion;

In the instant petition for review on certiorari, petitioner. Asset Privatization Trust (APT) is impugning the decision of
respondent Court of Appeals in CA-GR SP No. 36484 dated July 17, 1995, grounded upon the following assigned
errors which it had allegedly committed:

1) The Court of Appeals erred in not holding that the Makati Regional Trial Court, Branch 62, which
had previously dismissed Civil Case No. 9900, had lost jurisdiction to confirm the arbitral award
under the same civil case and in not ruling that the application for confirmation should have been
filed as a new case to be raffled among the different branches of the RTC;

2) The Court of Appeals likewise erred in holding that petitioner was estopped from questioning the
arbitration award, when petitioner questioned the jurisdiction of the RTC-Makati, Branch 62, and at
the same time moved to vacate the arbitral award;

3) The Court of Appeals erred in not holding that the respondent Trial Court should have either
dismissed/denied private respondents' motion/petition for confirmation of arbitration award and/or
should have considered the merits of the motion to vacate (the) arbitral award;

4) The Court of Appeals erred in not treating petitioner APT's petition for certiorari  as an appeal
taken from the order confirming the award; and

5) The Court of Appeals erred in not ruling on the legal issue of when to reckon the counting of the
period to file a motion for reconsideration.1

The resolution of these issues will ultimately test the process of arbitration, how effective or ineffective it is as an
alternative mode of settling disputes, and how it is affected by judicial review. My esteemed colleagues have taken
the view that the petition is impressed with merit and that the assailed decision of the Court of Appeals should be
reversed. In doing so, I believe they have dealt arbitration a terrible blow and wasted years, even decades, of
development in this field. I beg to differ and, therefore, dissent.

The controversy is actually simpler than it appears. The Marinduque Mining and Industrial Corporation (MMIC)
obtained several loans from the Philippine National Bank (PNB) and the Development Bank of the Philippines (DBP)
secured by mortgages over practically all of its assets. As of July 15, 1984, MMIC's obligation had ballooned to
P22,668,537,770.05, 2 and it had no way of making the required payments. MMIC and its two creditor banks thus
ironed out a complex financial restructuring plan (FRP) designed to drastically reduce MMIC's liability through a
"debt-to-equity" scheme. 3 This notwithstanding, the creditors opted to sell MMIC's mortgaged properties through
extrajudicial foreclosure proceedings, where PNB turned out to be the lone bidder.4

Aggrieved by this apparent bad faith on the part of the creditor banks, private respondents Jesus S. Cabarrus, Sr.,
and other minority stockholders of MMIC filed a derivative suit5 against PNB and DBP before the Makati Regional
Trial Court. They prayed for the annulment of the foreclosure and for the restoration of the company's assets, the
recognition by the creditor banks of their commitments under the FRP, and the payment of damages, as well as
attorney's fees and costs of litigation. The case was raffled to Branch 62 and docketed as Civil Case No. 9900.

In the meantime, the rights and interests of PNB and DBP, including MMIC's indebtedness, were transferred to
petitioner, created by virtue of Proclamation No. 50, in relation to Administrative Order No. 14. Hence, petitioner was
substituted as party defendant in Civil Case No. 9900.
On October 6, 1992, the parties entered into a Compromise and Arbitration Agreement 6 providing, inter alia, that
they were withdrawing their respective claims, which would be reduced to pure money claims, and that they were
submitting the controversy to arbitration under Republic Act No. 876.7 The issues for arbitration were thus limited to a
determination of the plaintiffs' capacity or right to institute the derivative suit in behalf of the MMIC or its directors, and
of the propriety of the foreclosure. Of notable import was the provision on the nature of the judgment that the
arbitration committee might render, viz.:

10. Binding Effect and Enforcement. The award of the arbitration committee shall be final and
executory upon its issuance upon the parties to the arbitration and their assigns and successors-
in-interest. In the event the award is not voluntarily satisfied by the losing party, the party in whose
favor the award has been made may, pursuant to Republic Act No. 876, apply to the proper
Regional Trial Court for its enforcement. (Emphasis supplied)

Upon motion of the parties, this agreement was presented to the court a quo  for its approval.8 On October 14, 1992,
said court issued an order (a) dismissing the complaint; (b) substituting the creditor banks with the APT as party
defendant; (c) "approving the Compromise and Arbitration Agreement dated October 6, 1992"; and (d) "approving the
transformation of the reliefs prayed for by the plaintiffs in this case into pure money claims."9

On November 24, 1993, after more than six months of hearing, the arbitration committee 10 concluded that the
assailed foreclosure was not valid and accordingly decided the case in favor of MMIC. Hence, petitioner was ordered
to pay MMIC actual damages in the amount of P2,531,635,425.02, with legal interest, and moral and exemplary
damages amounting to P13,000,000.00, and to pay Jesus S. Cabarrus, Sr., the sum of P10,000,000.00 by way of
moral damages, such awards to be offset from the outstanding and unpaid obligations of MMIC with the creditor
banks, which have not been converted into equity. The committee likewise decreed its decision to be "final and
executory." 11

Nearly a year later, MMIC filed in Civil Case No. 9900, a verified "Application/Motion for Confirmation of Arbitration
Award." 12 This was opposed by petitioner on two grounds, namely, that Branch 62 no longer had jurisdiction to act
on said motion after it "dismissed" the complaint in its order of October 14, 1992, and that the award "far exceeded
the issues submitted" for arbitration by the parties. 13 Not wanting to be outdone, MMIC filed a "Reply and
Opposition," arguing that the "qualified dismissal" of Civil Case No. 9900 was merely intended to expedite the
submission of the controversy to arbitration and was, therefore, "a mere suspension of the proceedings," and that the
arbitration committee did not exceed its authority in making the award.

On November 28, 1994, the trial court issued an order 14 confirming the award of the committee in all respects except
as to the award of actual damages to MMIC, which was increased to P3,811,757,425.00. The order closed with the
following declaration:

In reiteration of the mandates of Stipulation No. 10 and Stipulation No. 8 paragraph 2 of the
Compromise and Arbitration Agreement, and the final edict of the Arbitration Committee's decision,
and with this Court's Confirmation, the issuance of the Arbitration Committee's Award shall
henceforth be final and executory.

Petitioner filed a "Motion for Reconsideration" of said order on December 27, 1994; but this was denied by the
court a quo  in its order dated January 18, 1995 for lack of merit and for having been filed beyond the reglementary
period. Thus, it said:

. . . (C)onsidering that the defendant APT, through counsel, officially and actually received a copy
of the Order of this Court dated November 28, 1994 on December 6, 1994, the Motion for
Reconsideration thereof filed by the defendant APT on December 27, 1994, or after the lapse of 21
days, was clearly filed beyond the 15-day reglementary period prescribed or  provided for . . . (by
law) for the filing of an appeal from final orders, resolutions, awards, judgments or decisions of any
court in all cases, and by necessary implication, for the filing of a motion for reconsideration
thereof.

Instead of appealing such denial, petitioner filed on February 15, 1995, an "Appeal by Certiorari . . . . under Sections
1 and 2 of Rule 65 of the Revised Rules of Court" before the Court of Appeals, praying for the nullification of the trial
court's orders dated November 28, 1994 and January 18, 1995. It argued that the trial court had no jurisdiction or
authority to confirm the arbitral award, "considering that the original case, Civil Case No. 9900, had previously been
dismissed," and that the trial judge "acted with grave abuse of discretion in issuing the questioned orders confirming
the award and denying the motion for reconsideration thereof." 15

On July 17, 1995, the Court of Appeals dismissed the petition for lack of merit. 16 From this dismissal, petitioner
elevated its cause to this Tribunal for a review, raising the issues stated at the outset.

I find it distressing that, in reaching the outcome of this controversy, the majority has emasculated the process of
arbitration itself. This should not be the case for after all, the decision of the arbitration committee is no longer the
one being attacked in these proceedings, but the judgment of the Court of Appeals which herein petitioner found to
be erroneous. The Court has had occasion to trace the history of arbitration and to discuss its significance in the case
of Chung Fu Industries (Phils.), Inc. v. Court of Appeals, 17 viz.:

Allow us to take a leaf from history and briefly trace the evolution of arbitration as a mode of
dispute settlement.

Because conflict is inherent in human society, much effort has been expended by men and
institutions in devising ways of resolving the same. With the progress of civilization, physical
combat has been ruled out and instead, more specific means have been evolved, such as recourse
to the good offices of a disinterested third party, whether this be a court or a private individual or
individuals.

Legal history discloses that "early judges called upon to solve private conflicts were primarily the
arbiters, persons not specially trained but in whose morality, probity and good sense the parties in
conflict reposed full trust. Thus, in Republican Rome, arbiter  and judge  (judex) were synonymous.
The magistrate of praetor, after noting down the conflicting claims of litigants, and clarifying the
issues, referred them for decision to a private person designated by the parties, by common
agreement, or selected by them from an apposite listing (the album judicium) or else by having the
arbiter chosen by lot. The judges proper, as specially trained state officials endowed with (their)
own power and jurisdiction, and taking cognizance of litigations from beginning to end, only
appeared under the Empire, by the so-called cognitio extra ordinem."

Such means of referring a dispute to a third party has also long been an accepted alternative to
litigation at common law.

Sparse though the law and jurisprudence may be on the subject of arbitration in the Philippines, it
was nonetheless recognized in the Spanish Civil Code; specifically, the provisions on compromises
made applicable to arbitrations under Articles 1820 and 1821. Although said provisions were
repealed by implication with the repeal of the Spanish Law of Civil Procedure, these and additional
ones were reinstated in the present Civil Code.
Arbitration found a fertile field in the resolution of labor-management disputes in the Philippines.
Although early on, Commonwealth Act 103 (1936) provided for compulsory arbitration as the state
policy to be administered by the Court of Industrial Relations, in time such a modality gave way to
voluntary arbitration. While not completely supplanting compulsory arbitration which until today is
practiced by government officials, the Industrial Peace Act which was passed in 1953 as Republic
Act No. 875, favored the policy of free collective bargaining, in general, and resort to grievance
procedure, in particular, as the preferred mode of settling disputes in industry. It was accepted and
enunciated more explicitly in the Labor Code, which was passed on November 1, 1974 as
Presidential Decree No. 442, with the amendments later introduced by Republic Act No. 6715
(1989).

Whether utilized in business transactions or in employer-employee relations, arbitration was


gaining wide acceptance. A consensual process, it was preferred to orders imposed by
government upon the disputants. Moreover, court litigations tended to be time-consuming, costly,
and inflexible due to their scrupulous observance of the due process of law doctrine and their strict
adherence to rules of evidence.

As early as the 1920's, this Court declared:

In the Philippines fortunately, the attitude of the court towards arbitration


agreements is slowly crystallizing into definite and workable form . . . The rule
now is that unless the agreement is such as absolutely to close the doors of the
courts against the parties, which agreement would be void, the courts will look
with favor upon such amicable arrangements and will only with great reluctance
interfere to anticipate or nullify the action of the arbitrator.

That there was a growing need for a law regulating arbitration in general was acknowledged when
Republic Act No. 876 (1953), otherwise known as the Arbitration Law, was passed. "Said Act was
obviously adopted to supplement — not to supplant — the New Civil Code on arbitration. It
expressly declares that "the provisions of chapters one and two, Title XIV, Book IV of the Civil
Code shall remain in force."

x x x           x x x          x x x

In practice nowadays, absent an agreement of the parties to resolve their disputes via a particular
mode, it is the regular courts that remain the fora to resolve such matters. However, the parties
may opt for recourse to third parties, exercising their basic freedom to "establish such stipulations,
clauses, terms and conditions as they may deem convenient, provided they are not contrary to law,
morals, good customs, public order or public policy." In such a case, resort to the arbitration
process may be spelled out by them in a contract in anticipation of disputes that may arise between
them. Or this may be stipulated in a submission agreement when they are actually confronted by a
dispute. Whatever be the case, such recourse to an extrajudicial means of settlement is not
intended to completely deprive the courts of jurisdiction. In fact, the early cases on arbitration
carefully spelled out the prevailing doctrine at the time, thus: ". . . a clause in a contract providing
that all matters in dispute between the parties shall be referred to arbitrators and to them alone is
contrary to public policy and cannot oust the courts of jurisdiction."

But certainly, the stipulation to refer all future disputes to an arbitrator or to submit an ongoing
dispute to one is valid. Being part of a contract between the parties, it is binding and enforceable in
court in case one of them neglects, fails or refuses to arbitrate. Going a step further, in the event
that they declare their intention to refer their differences to arbitration first before taking court
action, this constitutes a condition precedent, such that where a suit has been instituted
prematurely, the court shall suspend the same and the parties shall be directed forthwith to
proceed to arbitration.

A court action may likewise be proper where the arbitrator has not been selected by the parties.

x x x           x x x          x x x

. . . It is stated explicitly under Art. 2044 of the Civil Code that the finality of the arbitrator's award is
not absolute and without exceptions. Where the conditions described in Articles 2038, 2039 and
2040 18 applicable to both compromises and arbitrations are obtaining, the arbitrators' award may
be annulled or rescinded. Additionally, under Sections 24 and 25 of the Arbitration Law, there are
grounds for vacating, modifying or rescinding an arbitrator's award. Thus, if and when the factual
circumstances referred to in the above-cited provisions are present, judicial review of the award is
properly warranted.

What if courts refuse or neglect to inquire into the factual milieu of an arbitrator's award to
determine whether it is in accordance with law or within the scope of his authority? How may the
power of judicial review be invoked?

This is where the proper remedy is certiorari  under Rule 65 of the Revised Rules of Court. It is to
be borne in mind, however, that this action will lie only where a grave abuse of discretion or an act
without or in excess of jurisdiction on the part of the voluntary arbitrator is clearly shown. For "the
writ of certiorari  is an extraordinary remedy and that certiorari  jurisdiction is not to be equated with
appellate jurisdiction. In a special civil action of certiorari, the Court will not engage in a review of
the facts found nor even of the law as interpreted or applied by the arbitrator unless the supposed
errors of fact or of law are so patent and gross and prejudicial as to amount to a grave abuse of
discretion or an exces de pouvoir  on the part of the arbitrator." 19

So, what are the issues that need to be addressed in this action? Certainly not the capacity of the plaintiffs below to
file the derivative suit in behalf of MMIC nor the validity of the extrajudicial foreclosure conducted by PNB and DBP.
These were the issues submitted for arbitration by the parties and resolved with finality  by the arbitration committee
upon agreement of the parties themselves. The issues, therefore, all stemming from the judgment of the Court of
Appeals, may be narrowed down to three: (1) Was it right in upholding the trial court's authority to confirm the
arbitration award considering that said court had earlier dismissed the complaint? (2) Was it correct in finding that
herein petitioner was estopped from questioning such award? (3) Was it justified in not treating petitioner's petition
for certiorari  as an appeal from the trial court's order confirming said award?

(1) Petitioner overly stresses the fact that in the trial court's order of October 14, 1992; the complaint was "dismissed"
upon approval of the Compromise and Arbitration Agreement between the parties. Such dismissal, however, far from
finally disposing of the controversy as the term denotes, simply "suspended" it during the period of arbitration. It is, as
a colleague pointed out during the deliberation of this action, a mere "semantic imperfection." Here is a situation
where the intent of the tribunal was obviously not to end the case with finality, but to place the proceedings in
abeyance while the parties breathed life into an alternative mode of settling their differences in the most expeditious
manner. Arbitration is not a self-enforcing process. It focuses the direction of the hearing and the reception and
appreciation of evidence by assigning these tasks to a group of persons chosen by the parties, themselves. By this, a
circuitous and time-consuming court trial is avoided, leaving the court with the singular duty of confirming the
arbitrators' decision, and allowing it to devote more of its time to resolving other cases. As the appellate court
correctly pointed out:
. . . (T)he dismissal of the Complaint in Civil Case No. 9900 was not intended by the parties and by
the court a quo, despite the phraseology in Item No. 4 or the dispositive portion of the Order of
October 14, 1992, as a dismissal that would put an end to the case. Rather it was simply a
pronouncement for the cessation of the proceedings in the court and the commencement of the
arbitration proceedings. It was for all intents and purposes a stay of the civil action until an
arbitration has been had or pending the return of the arbitral award. This is evident since the
parties submitted to the court below not only an agreement to arbitrate but also a compromise
which is always submitted to the court for approval and as a basis for a judgment. . . . 20

Regarding the trial court's authority to confirm the decision of the arbitration committee, suffice it to say that such was
not merely its right but its duty as well. Under Section 22 of R.A. No. 876, upon application or motion of any party to
arbitration, the court has the obligation of confirming the arbitrators' award absent any specific ground to vacate,
modify or correct the same. Herein private respondents did apply for such confirmation on February 7, 1995. This
was even opposed by petitioner on the ground that the judgment had not yet become final and executory, in
complete disregard of paragraph 10 of the Compromise and Arbitration Agreement and the very decision of the
arbitration committee.

The award itself was properly made since it was not vacated, modified or corrected upon any of the grounds
enumerated under Sections 24 and 25 of R.A. No. 876, to wit:

Sec. 24. Grounds for vacating award. — In any one of the following cases, the court must make an
order vacating the award upon the petition of any party to the controversy when such party proves
affirmatively that in the arbitration proceedings:

(a) The award was procured by corruption, fraud, or other undue means; or

(b) That there was evident partiality or corruption in the arbitrators or any of them; or

(c) That the arbitrators were guilty of misconduct in refusing to postpone the hearing upon sufficient
cause shown, or in refusing to hear evidence pertinent and material to the controversy; that one or
more of the arbitrators was disqualified to act as such under section nine hereof, and willfully
refrained from disclosing such disqualifications or of any other misbehavior by which the rights of
any party have been materially prejudiced; or

(d) That the arbitrators exceeded their powers, or so imperfectly executed them, that a mutual, final
and definite award upon the subject matter submitted to them was not made.

Where an award is vacated, the court, in its discretion, may direct a new hearing either before the
same arbitrators or before a new arbitrator or arbitrators chosen in the manner provided in the
submission or contract for the selection of the original arbitrator or arbitrators, and any provision
limiting the time in which the arbitrators may make a decision shall be deemed applicable to the
new arbitration and to commence from the date of the court's order.

Where the court vacates, an award, costs, not exceeding fifty pesos, and disbursements may be
awarded to the prevailing party and the payment thereof may be enforced in like manner as the
payment of costs upon the motion in an action

Sec. 25. Grounds for modifying or correcting award. — In any one of the following cases, the court
must make an order modifying or correcting the award, upon the application of any party to the
controversy which was arbitrated:
(a) Where there was an evident miscalculation of figures, or an evident mistake
in the description of any person, thing or property referred to in the award; or

(b) Where the arbitrators have awarded upon a matter not submitted to them, not
affecting the merits of the decision upon the matter submitted; or

(c) Where the award is imperfect in a matter of form not affecting the merits of
the controversy, and if it had been a commissioner's report, the defect could
have been amended or disregarded by the court.

The order may modify and correct the award so as to effect the intent thereof and promote justice between the
parties. (Emphasis supplied)

Petitioner utterly failed to prove the existence of any of these grounds. Its strongest argument, that the arbitration
award "far exceeded the issue submitted for arbitration," apart from being unsubstantiated, does not go into the
merits of the award, which is the only way its modification or correction could be justified under the terms of Section
25, aforequoted.

Furthermore, petitioner violated several covenants by asking the court a quo to vacate the arbitration award. First, in
paragraph 10 of the Compromise and Arbitration Agreement, it agreed to abide by the arbitration committee's
decision which "shall be final and executory upon its issuance upon the parties to the arbitration and their assigns
and successors-in-interest." Next, the decision that the arbitrators did render on November 24, 1993 specifically
declared the same to be "final and executory." Finally, in the court's confirmation order of November 28, 1994, the
finality of the award was reiterated by the court. Arbitration, as an alternative mode of settlement, is gaining
adherents in legal and judicial circles here and abroad. If its tested mechanism can simply be ignored by an
aggrieved party, one who, it must be stressed, voluntarily and actively participated in the arbitration proceedings from
the very beginning, it will destroy the very essence of mutuality inherent in consensual contracts.

2) Petitioner claims that it is not estopped from questioning the arbitration award probably because,
notwithstanding its tenacious quest for affirmative relief, it did not translate this pursuit into positive action.
The Court of Appeals succinctly puts it in this wise:

. . . The record shows that on its motion, petitioner APT was able to postpone the hearing on
therein plaintiffs' application/motion for confirmation of arbitral award to a date and time that it
chose. However, when said matter was called for hearing, only counsel for therein plaintiffs
showed up. Nonetheless, respondent Judge gave APT a period of seven (7) days from notice
within which to comment on the application/motion for confirmation. At no time did petitioner APT
ask for a hearing to present its evidence. While petitioner APT repeatedly sought to vacate the
arbitral award, it made no concrete move to pursue its cause. In fact, at the hearing on its motion
for reconsideration, both parties through their respective counsels gave oral arguments and
thereafter agreed to submit the motion for reconsideration for resolution. If petitioner APT honestly
believed that the respondent Judge erroneously took cognizance of plaintiffs Application/Motion for
Confirmation of Arbitration Award, then it should have limited itself to challenging the jurisdiction of
said court. The fact remains that petitioner APT repeatedly sought affirmative relief from the
respondent Judge in the same Civil Case No. 9900. Under the circumstances, petitioner APT may
not be heard now to complain that it was deprived of its right to question the award made by the
Arbitration Committtee. 21 (Emphasis supplied)
3) The final issue which, to my mind, has particular relevance to the case at bar, pertains to the alleged error
of the Court of Appeals in not treating APT's petition for certiorari  as an appeal from the trial court's
confirmation order.

Petitioner's counsel received a copy of the confirmation order dated November 28, 1994, on December 12,
1994. 22 Said order was, for review purposes, a "final order" because it finally disposed of the case. Other than
executing the confirmation order, there was nothing else that the court was duty-bound to perform. Petitioner's
remedy, therefore, was to question the order, by appeal on certiorari, not before the Court of Appeals, but before the
Supreme Court 23 within the reglementary period of fifteen days which expired on December 27, 1994. Instead of
appealing, however, petitioner filed a motion for reconsideration of the order on said deadline. Unfortunately, this was
denied by the court a quo  in its order dated January 18, 1995, a copy of which was received by petitioner's counsel
on February 1, 1995. Under prevailing procedural laws, it had just one day to perfect its appeal. On February 15,
1995, petitioner opted to file with the Court of Appeals an "Appeal by Certiorari  . . . under Sections 1 and 2 of Rule
65 of the Revised Rules of Court." The reason is obvious: It could no longer file a regular appeal from the assailed
order because the period for doing so has lapsed. The Court of Appeals thus made the following pertinent
observation.

. . . Assuming arguendo that petitioner APT's counsel received a copy (of the November 28, 1994,
order), as claimed by them, on December 12, 1994, then the petitioner had fifteen (15) days
therefrom or until December 27, 1994, within which to appeal. The petitioner's motion for
reconsideration was admittedly filed on December 27, 1994, the last day of the reglementary 15-
day period, and the order dated January 18, 1995, denying the same was received by petitioner's
counsel on February 1, 1995. Petitioner APT had only the following day to perfect his appeal.
Instead, it chose to file the instant special civil action of certiorari  on February 15, 1995.

From the start, petitioner seemed unsure of its position on appeal. While initially questioning the "order confirming the
award" of the arbitration committee, it later stated that it was raising the issue of "filing by (herein private
respondents) of a Motion for Execution and Appointment of Custodian of proceeds of Execution dated February 6,
1995." The latter recourse is obviously erroneous, for no appeal under either Rule 45 or Rule 65 may be taken from a
"motion" or the "filing" of one. Under Rule 45, only judgments or final orders of a court or tribunal may be appealed to
a higher court, while Rule 65 allows a special civil action where the acts of a tribunal, board or officer are under
attack for being performed with grave abuse of discretion.

The applicable law, of course, is R.A. No. 876, which provides for appeals from arbitration awards under Section 29
thereof, viz.:

. . . (A)n appeal may be taken from . . . a judgment entered upon an award


through certiorari  proceedings, but such appeals shall be limited to questions of law. The
proceedings upon such an appeal, including the judgment thereon, shall be governed by the Rules
of Court in so far as they are applicable.

The term "certiorari" in the aforequoted provision refers to an ordinary appeal under Rule 45, not the special action
of certiorari  under Rule 65. It is an "appeal," as Section 29 proclaims. The proper forum for this action is, under the
old and the new rules of procedure, the Supreme Court. Thus, Section 2(c) of Rule 41 of the 1997 Rules of Civil
Procedure states that, "In all cases where only questions of law are raised or involved, the appeal shall be to the
Supreme Court by petition for review on certiorari  in accordance with Rule 45." Moreover, Section 29 limits the
appeal to "questions of law," another indication that it is referring to an appeal by certiorari  under Rule 45 which,
indeed, is the customary manner of reviewing such issues. On the other hand, the extraordinary remedy
of certiorari  under Rule 65 may be availed of by a party where there is "no appeal, nor any plain, speedy, and
adequate remedy in the course of law," and under circumstances where "a tribunal, board or officer exercising
judicial functions, has acted without or in excess of its or his jurisdiction, or with grave abuse of discretion." 24

Based on the foregoing, it is clear that petitioner had run out of options after its motion for reconsideration was denied
by the trial court in its order dated January 18, 1995. To compound its negligence, it filed the wrong action with the
wrong forum. These, to my mind, are serious procedural flaws. To rule otherwise, as the majority did, would
constitute a grave injustice to private respondents.

I vote to DISMISS the petition.

PARDO, J.,  separate concurring opinion;

I concur. However, I wish to add a few points not particularly emphasized in the majority opinion.

The petition before the Court is one for review via certiorari  under Rule 45 of the Revised Rules of Court seeking to
set aside the resolution of the Court of Appeals that denied due course and dismissed APT's petition for certiorari  to
annul the proceedings had before the Regional Trial Court, Makati, Branch 62, in Civil Case No. 9900, particularly the
order confirming the arbitration award, reading as follows:

WHEREFORE, premises considered, and in the light of the parties Compromise and Arbitration
Agreement dated October 6, 1992, the Decision of the Arbitration Committee promulgated on
November 24, 1993, as affirmed in a Resolution dated July 26, 1994, and finally settled and
clarified in the Separate Opinion dated September 2, 1994 of Committee Member Elma, and the
pertinent provisions of R.A. 876, also known as the Arbitration Law, this Court GRANTS
PLAINTIFFS' APPLICATION AND THUS CONFIRMS THE ARBITRATION AWARD AND
JUDGMENT IS HEREBY RENDERED:

(a) Ordering the defendant APT to the Marinduque Mining and


Industrial Corporation (MMIC), except the DBP, the sum of
P3,811,757,425.00, as and for actual damages under escrow
in the amount of P503,000,000.00 pursuant to the Escrow
Agreement dated April 22, 1988. The balance of the award,
after the escrow funds are fully applied, shall be executed
against the APT;

(b) Ordering the defendants to pay to the MMIC, except the


DBP, the sum of P13,000.00 as and for moral and exemplary
damages;

(c) Ordering the defendant to pay to Jesus S. Caburrus, Sr.,


the sum of P10,000,000.00 as and for moral damages; and

(d) Ordering the defendant to pay the herein


plaintiff/applicants/movants the sum of P1,705,410.00 as
arbitration costs.
In reiteration of the mandates of Stipulation No. 10 and Stipulation No. 8
paragraph 2 of the Compromise and Arbitration Agreement, and the final edict of
the Arbitration Committee's decision, and with this Court's Confirmation, the
issuance of the Arbitration Committee's Award shall henceforth be final and
executory.

SO ORDERED.

Originally instituted on February 8, 1985, in the Regional Trial Court, Makati, Metro Manila, private respondents,
Jesus S. Cabarrus, Sr., et al., a few of the numerous minority stockholders of Marinduque Mining and Industrial Corp.
(hereafter MMIC), filed a complaint, later amended on March 13, 1995, for annulment of foreclosure, specific
performance and damages against the Philippine National Bank (PNB) and the Development Bank of the Philippines
(DBP) alleging that in 1984, the PNB and DBP effected illegally the extra-judicial foreclosure of real estate and
chattel mortgages constituted in their favor by the MMIC by the latter's assets of real estate and chattels, to satisfy an
obligation amounting to P22,668,537,770.05, and that prior to the extra-judicial foreclosure, PNB and DBP had
agreed to a financial reorganization plan of MMIC to reduce the latter's indebtedness to P3 billion and to convert the
balance of its obligation into equity.

In their joint answer to the amended complaint, defendants PNB and DBP denied the material allegations of the
amended complaint but admitted that in August and September, 1984, they foreclosed extra-judicially the mortgages
on MMIC's assets, with the qualification that the correct amount of obligation owed by MMIC as of July 15, 1984, was
P22,083,313,168.29; that the foreclosure of the mortgages was legal and valid as mandated by Presidential Decree
No. 385 and by the provisions of the mortgage trust agreements between PNB, DBP and MMIC; and, that the
plaintiff's therein, herein respondents Cabarrus, et al., were not entitled to actual and moral damages.

In the course of the trial of Civil Case No. 9900, plaintiffs Jesus S. Cabarrus, et al. and the Asset Privatization Trust
(APT), as successor-in-interest of the DBP and PNB's interest in MMIC accounts, entered into a compromise and
arbitration agreement dated October 6, 1992, whereby they "agreed to move for the dismissal of the case, to
transform the reliefs prayed for therein into pure money claims and to submit the controversy to arbitration under
Republic Act (RA) 876 before a committee composed of three members" limiting the issues to two, namely:

(a) whether plaintiffs have the capacity or the personality to institute this
derivative suit in behalf of the MMIC or its directors, and

(b) whether or not the actions leading to, and including, the PNB-DBP
foreclosure of the MMIC assets were proper, valid and in good faith.

Thus, the parties created an Arbitration Committee composed of three (3) members, one (1) representative of the
plaintiff; one (1) representative of APT; and the Chairman to be agreed upon by both parties. Consequently, APT
nominated Atty. Jose C. Sison, a trustee of APT and its counsel; MMIC nominated former Justice of the Court of
Appeals Magtanggol Elma; and they selected retired Supreme Court Justice Abraham F. Sarmiento as Chairman.

After conducting hearings and receiving voluminous evidence, on November 24, 1993, the Arbitration Committee
released what purports to be its decision penned by the Chairman, the dispositive portion of which reads as follows:

DISPOSITION

WHEREFORE, premises considered judgment is hereby rendered:


1. Ordering the defendant to pay the Marinduque Mining and Industrial
Corporation, except the DBP, the sum of P2,531,635,425,02 with interest
thereon at the legal rate of six (6%) per cent per annum reckoned from August 3,
9 and 24, 1984, pari passu, as and for actual damages. Payment of these actual
damages shall be offset by APT from the outstanding and unpaid loans of MMIC
with DBP and PNB, which have not been converted into equity. Should there be
any balance due to MMIC after the offsetting, the same shall be satisfied from
the funds representing the purchase price of the sale of the shares of Island
Cement Corporation in the amount of P503,000,000.00 held under escrow
pursuant to the Escrow Agreement dated April 22, 1988 or to such subsequent
escrow agreement that would supersede it pursuant to paragraph (9) of the
Compromise and Arbitration Agreement;

2. Ordering the defendant to pay to the Marinduque Mining and Industrial


Corporation, except the DBP, the sum of P13,000,000.00, as and for moral and
exemplary damages. Payment of these moral and exemplary damages shall be
offset by APT from the outstanding and unpaid loans of MMIC with DBP and
PNB, which have not been converted into equity. Should there be any balance
due to MMIC after the offsetting, the same shall be satisfied from the funds
representing the purchase price of the sale of the shares of island Cement
Corporation in the amount of P503,000,000.00 held under escrow pursuant to
the Escrow Agreement dated April 22, 1988 or to such subsequent escrow
agreement that would supersede it pursuant to paragraph (9) of the Compromise
and Arbitration Agreement;

3. Ordering the defendant to pay to the plaintiff, Jesus S. Cabarrus, Sr., the sum
of P10,000,000.00, to be satisfied likewise from the funds held under escrow
pursuant to the Escrow Agreement dated April 22, 1988 or to such subsequent
escrow agreement that would supersede it, pursuant to paragraph (9),
Compromise and Arbitration Agreement, as and for moral damages; and

4. Ordering the defendant to pay arbitration costs.

This Decision is FINAL and EXECUTORY.

IT IS SO ORDERED.

Member Elma submitted a separate concurring and dissenting opinion reading as follows:

ELMA, concurring and dissenting:

I am in complete agreement with the findings of the Decision on the principal issues submitted for
the Committee's resolution, viz: that plaintiffs Cabarrus, et al., have the capacity or the personality
to institute this derivative suit in behalf of Marinduque Milling and Industrial Corporation (MMIC)
and that the actions leading to, and including, the PNB-DBP foreclosure of the MMIC assets were
improper, invalid and/or not done in good faith. Consequently, there is concurrence on my part to
the award of actual, moral and exemplary damages to MMIC, and moral damages to plaintiff Jesus
S. Cabarrus, Sr.
However, I am unable to agree with and, therefore, regretfully dissent as to the manner or method
of computation and amount of actual damages awarded to MMIC, particularly set forth in
paragraph 1 of the dispositive potion of the Decision.

x x x           x x x          x x x

Considering that under the "Compromise and Arbitration Agreement", the parties agreed that their
respective claims be reduced to purely pecuniary/money claims, then MMIC and/or plaintiffs on
behalf of all the other stockholders of MMIC are entitled to actual or compensatory damages
equivalent to the present value of their equity over the MMIC assets, i.e. the total stockholders'
equity of P20,826,700,952.00 as of December 31, 1992. Further, since as held in the Decision that
the DBP would have an 87% equity in MMIC as a consequence of the finding that the Financial
Rehabilitation Plan (FRP), is valid (p. 64 of the Decision), then the amount of P18,119,229,828.24
(equivalent to DBP's 87% equity) should be deducted from the total stockholders' equity of
P20,826,700,952.00 leaving a net amount of P2,707,471,123.76 to be awarded to MMIC
(excluding DBP's share) as actual or compensatory damages.

It is to be noted that defendant APT did not present any evidence rebutting the figures and
computations made by witness Pastor. Since the Decision finds the FRP valid, then the
stockholders of MMIC (excluding DBP) should be placed in the same position that they would have
been where not for the fact that the FRP was improperly and illegally aborted by PNB/DBP.
Accordingly, it is my submission that defendant APT should be ordered to pay MMIC (excluding
DBP) the sum of P2,707,471,123.76 with legal interest thereon per annum from August 3, 1984 as
and for actual damages.

x x x           x x x          x x x

Member Sison submitted a separate opinion reading as follows:

SEPARATE OPINION

x x x           x x x          x x x

It is clear and it cannot be disputed therefore that based on these stipulated


issues, the parties themselves have agreed that the basic ingredient of the
causes of action in this case is the wrong committed on the corporation (MMIC)
for the alleged illegal foreclosure of its assets. By agreeing to this stipulation,
PLAINTIFFS themselves (Cabarrus, et al.) admit that the cause of action
pertains only to the corporation (MMIC) and that they are filing this for and in
behalf of MMIC.

Perforce this has to be so because it is the basic rule in Corporation Law that
"the shareholders have no title, legal or equitable to the property which is owned
by the corporation (13 Am. Jur. 165; Pascual vs. Oresco, 14 Phil. 83). In Ganzon
& Sons vs. Register of Deeds, 6 SCRA 373, the rule has been reiterated that "a
stockholder is not the co-owner of the corporate property." Since the property or
assets foreclosed belongs to MMIC, the wrong committed, if any, is done against
the corporation. There is therefore no direct injury or direct violation of the rights
of Cabarrus et al. There is no way, legal or equitable by which Cabarrus et al,
could recover damages in their personal capacities even assuming or just
because the foreclosure is improper or invalid. The Compromise and Arbitration
Agreement itself and the elementary principles of Corporation Law say so.
Therefore, I am constrained to dissent from the award of moral damages to
Cabarrus.

Neither could I agree to the award of moral damages to MMIC. The acts
complained of here in which the Committee based its award of moral damages to
MMIC is the foreclosure of the various real estate and chattel mortgages. The
majority of the Committee believes that these foreclosure constitute a violation
on an agreement forged between PNB-DBP, on one hand, and MMIC, on the
other, regarding the restructuring of the various past due loans of MMIC to what
had been termed as the Financial Restructuring Program (FRP).

x x x           x x x          x x x

In this connection, it can readily be seen and it cannot quite be denied that MMIC
accounts in PNB-DBP were past due. The drawing up of the FRP is the best
proof of this. When MMIC adopted a restructuring program for its loan, it only
meant that these loans were already due and unpaid. If these loans were
restructurable because they were already due and unpaid, they are likewise
"forecloseable". The option is with the PNB-DBP on what steps to take.

The mere fact that MMIC adopted the FRP does not mean that DBP-PNB lost
the option to foreclose. Neither does it mean that the FRP is legally binding and
implementable. It must be pointed that said FRP will, in effect, supersede the
existing and past due loans of MMIC with PNB-DBP. It will become the new loan
agreement between the lenders and the borrowers. As in all other contracts,
there must therefore be a meeting of the minds of the parties; the PNB and DBP
must have to validly adopt and ratify such FRP before they can be bound by it;
before it can be implemented. In this case, not an iota of proof has been
presented by the PLAINTIFFS showing that PNB and DBP ratified and adopted
the FRP. PLAINTIFFS simply relied on a legal doctrine of promissory estoppel to
support its allegations in this regard.

x x x           x x x          x x x

All told, PNB and DBP had the right to foreclose and were justified in doing so.
But were the foreclosure legally done or carried out? Were the requirements of
notice, posting and publication required by Acts 3135 and 1508 substantially
complied with?

x x x           x x x          x x x

I cannot, however, concur with the for holding that such minor taint of illegality in
the foreclosure is enough to justify the award of damages, amounting to
P19,486,118,654.00. "Rules of law respecting the recovery of damages are
framed with reference to just rights or both parties, not merely what may be right
for an injured person to receive, but also what is just to compel the other party to
pay, to accord just compensation for the injury" (Kennings vs. Kline Ind. 602).
Following this universally accepted rule on damage, I do not believe it is just to
compel APT to pay such huge amount for such minor technical infraction.

But while I do not agree with this pronouncement of the Committee, I


nevertheless concur with the result as far as the disposition of the award for
actual damages is concerned. I agree that DEFENDANT APT can, and is still
entitled to, collect the outstanding obligations of MMIC to PNB and DBP
amounting to P22,668,537,770.05 with interest thereon as stipulated in the loan
documents from the date of foreclosure until the time they are fully paid. The
resultant effect of such a disposition is that APT can offset the said obligation
due from MMIC such that ultimately no damages will be due and payable to
MMIC. As there may be damage without injury, there can be injury without
damage (15 Am. Jur., p. 388). This case is a case of  "injury without damage".

Both parties moved for reconsideration of the "decision" of the Arbitration Committee. In addition, respondents
Cabarrus et al. filed a motion for clarification and to re-open the case to receive evidence. In a resolution dated July
26, 1984, with one member dissenting, the Arbitration Committee denied the motions for reconsideration of both
parties as well as all other pending motions.

On October 17, 1984, respondents Cabarrus et al. filed directly with the Regional Trial Court, Makati, Branch 62, in
the same Civil Case No. 9900, a pleading entitled application/motion for confirmation of arbitral award.

On November 4, 1994, petitioner APT filed an opposition and motion to vacate judgment, contending that
respondents' motion was improperly filed with the same branch of the court in Civil Case No. 9900, which was
previously dismissed, and that the motion should have been filed as a separate special proceedings in the Regional
Trial Court to be docketed by the Clerk of Court.

Nonetheless, acting on the application/motion, Judge Roberto C. Diokno, presiding judge, Regional Trial Court,
Makati, Branch 62, on November 28, 1994, issued an order granting plaintiffs' application confirming the arbitration
award, and rendering judgment as set out in the opening paragraph of this opinion.

On December 12, 1994, petitioner APT received notice of the lower court's order. On December 27, 1994, petitioner
APT filed a motion for reconsideration. By order dated January 18, 1995, the trial court denied the motion. On
February 7, 1995, respondents Cabarrus, et al. filed a motion for execution and appointment of custodian of
proceeds of execution. Petitioner opposed the motion. It is apparently still unresolved.

On February 15, 1995, petitioner APT filed with the Court of Appeals an original special civil action for certiorari  with
prayer for temporary restraining order or preliminary injunction1 to annul the two (2) orders of the respondent
Regional Trial Court above-mentioned confirming the arbitral award and denying its reconsideration.

The issue presented in said petition was whether respondent Judge Roberto C. Diokno, Regional Trial Court, Makati,
Branch 62, had jurisdiction to act on private respondents' application/motion for confirmation of arbitral award in the
same Civil Case No. 9900, which had been dismissed earlier on motion of the parties, and thus the court gravely
abused its discretion in confirming the arbitral award.

In its decision promulgated on July 17, 1995, the Court of Appeals denied due course and dismissed the petition
for certiorari  for lack of merit.

Hence, this petition for review filed on September 07, 1995. 2


The petition is impressed with merit.

First, the Regional Trial Court, Makati, Branch 62, did not validly acquire jurisdiction over the case by respondents'
filing of a mere motion in the same Civil Case No. 9900 because the case had been dismissed earlier and such
dismissal had become final and unappealable. As heretofore stated, on October 6, 1992, the parties entered into a
compromise and arbitration agreement expressly providing that they "have agreed to withdraw their respective claims
from the Trial Court and to resolve their dispute through arbitration by praying to the Trial Court to issue a
compromise judgment based on this Compromise and Arbitration agreement.

Clearly, the parties had withdrawn the action then pending with the Regional Trial Court, Makati, Branch 62, in Civil
Case No. 9900, and agreed that they would submit their dispute to arbitration and reduce their respective claims to
"purely money claims", "waiving and foregoing all other forms of reliefs which they prayed for or could have prayed
for in Civil Case No. 9900." The parties "agreed to move for the dismissal of the case, to transform the reliefs prayed
for therein to pure money claims and submit the controversy to arbitration under Republic Act (RA) 876 before a
committee composed of three members."

In its order dated October 12, 1992, in Civil Case No. 9900, the trial court presided over by respondent Judge
categorically decreed that "The complaint is hereby dismissed". Such disposition terminated the case finally and
irretrievably disposed of the same.3 The term "dismissed" has a definite meaning in law. "A judgment of 'dismissed',
without qualifying words indicating a right to take further proceedings, is presumed to be dismissed on the
merits".4 The dismissal could not have been a suspension of action provided for in the arbitration law, Republic Act
No. 876.

Upon the finality of such order of dismissal, the case could no longer be revived by mere motion. The trial court had
lost its authority over the case. 5 We cite as squarely applicable the decision where this Court emphatically said "But
after the dismissal has become final through the lapse of the fifteen-day reglementary period, the only way by which
the action may be resuscitated or 'revived,' is by the institution of a subsequent action through the filing of another
complaint and the payment of the fees prescribed by law. This is so because upon attainment of finality of a dismissal
through the lapse of said reglementary period, the Court loses jurisdiction and control over it and can no longer make
any disposition in respect thereof inconsistent with such dismissal"6 It is true that the confirmation of an arbitral award
is within the jurisdiction over the subject matter of a regional trial court. Such jurisdiction must be invoked by proper
motion as a special proceedings with notice to the parties filed in the proper court with the clerk of court (and upon
payment of the prescribed fees). 7

Second, the Arbitration Committee did not actually reach a valid decision on the subject controversy.

In the purported decision dated November 24, 1994, penned by Chairman Sarmiento, the Committee ordered
petitioner APT to pay to MMIC the sum of P2,531,635,425.02, with interest thereon at the legal rate at 6% per annum
from August 3, 9 and 24, 1984, pari passu  as actual damages; to pay MMIC P13 million, as moral and exemplary
damages, and to pay Jesus S. Cabarrus, Sr. P10 million, as moral damages.

In the concurring and dissenting opinion of Member Elma, he agreed with the finding on the principal issue submitted
for resolution. However, he dissented as to the manner or method of computation and amount of actual damages
awarded to MMIC. He submitted that APT should be ordered to pay MMIC the sum of P2,707,471,123.76, with legal
interest thereon per annum from August 3, 1984, as actual damages.

In his separate opinion, Member Sison stated that he concurred with the result as far as the disposition of the award
of actual damage is concerned. He agreed that APT is entitled to collect the outstanding obligations of MMIC to PNB
and DBP amounting to P22,668,537,770.05, with interest as stipulated in the loan documents from the date of
foreclosure until fully paid. The resultant effect is that APT can offset said obligation due from MMIC such that
ultimately no damages shall be due and payable to MMIC. He was against the award of moral and exemplary
damages to MMIC and Jesus S. Cabarrus, Sr.

It is obvious that the disposition in Chairman Sarmiento's award and the concurring and dissenting opinion of
Member Elma do not tally and, hence, because of the dissent of Member Sison, the Arbitration Committee did not
reach a majority decision constituting a valid judgment or fallo of the Committee.

The powers and duties of boards and commissions may not be exercised by the
individual members separately. Their acts are official only when done by the
members convened in session upon a concurrence of at least a majority and with
at least a quorum present.8

Respondents Cabarrus, et al. considered the disposition as confusing and incomplete as to the award of damages
and thereby requiring the reception of further evidence as to necessitate the re-opening of hearings on the case. On
May 20, 1994, they filed a motion for clarification seeking answer from the arbitration committee as to the final
amount of actual damages the MMIC is entitled to, and, on June 9, 1994, they filed a motion to reopen the case and
to receive evidence.

Even the Arbitration Committee's resolution of the various motions for reconsideration and other reliefs was
conflicting. For Chairman Sarmiento, respondents' motion for reconsideration, dated December 15, 1993, and
petitioner's motion for reconsideration, dated January 3, 1994, respondents' motion for clarification dated June 8,
1994, and respondents' urgent motion to re-open the case and to receive evidence were all DENIED for lack of merit.

Member Elma dissented from the denial of the parties' motion for reconsideration, reiterating that MMIC is entitled to
actual damages in the sum of P2,707,471,123.76, with legal interest thereon from August 3, 1984.

Member Azura (substituting Sison) concurred with the Chairman in denying respondents' motion for reconsideration,
motion for clarification and motion to re-open the case but favored granting petitioner's (APT) motion for
reconsideration.

WHEREFORE, I vote to GRANT the petition at bench, reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals9 as well as the
orders of the Regional Trial Court, Makati, Branch 62, in Civil Case No. 9900, vacate the "decision" of the Arbitration
Committee dated November 24, 1993, and, finally, ENJOIN the trial court from further acting on the case.

Footnotes

1 Rollo, pp. 261-262.

2 Id., at 262-263.

3 CA Rollo, p. 130.

4 Rollo, p. 264.

5 Ibid.

6 Id., at 261.

7 Id., at 265.
8 CA Rollo, p. 134.

9 Id., at 149.

10 CA Rollo, pp. 134-135.

11 Id., at 135-136.

12 Rollo, p. 266.

13 CA Rollo, pp. 109-110.

14 Id., at 111-112.

15 Id., at 111.

16 Id., at 168-172. Underscoring in the original.

17 Id., at 287-288.

18 CA Rollo, pp. 51-52.

19 Rollo, p. 38.

20 CA Rollo, p. 18.

21 Rollo, pp. 21-22.

22 CA Rollo, p. 11.

23 WEST'S LEGAL THESAURUS DICTIONARY, 1986 ed.

24 Bengson v. Chan, 75 SCRA 112 [1972].

25 La Naval Drug Co. v. CA, 236 SCRA 78 [1994].

26 Ibid.

27 23 SCRA 29 [1968].

28 Entitled "AN ACT TO AUTHORIZE THE MAKING OF ARBITRATION AND SUBMISSION


AGREEMENTS, TO PROVIDE FOR THE APPOINTMENT OF ARBITRATORS AND THE
PROCEDURE FOR ARBITRATION IN CIVIL CONTROVERSIES, AND FOR OTHER
PURPOSES." otherwise known as "The Arbitration Law."

29 The Hartbridge, 62 F. 2d 72 [1932].

30 Jaime Richardson & Sons v. W.E. Hedger Transp. Corp., 98 F. 2d 55 [1938].


31 General Construction Co. v. Hering Realty Co., 201 F. Supp. 487 [1962].

32 Coleman Company v. International Union, Etc., 317 P. 2d 831 [1957].

33 Bernhardt v. Polygraphic Co., 100 L ed 199 [1956].

34 Allstate Insurance Company v. Cook, 519 P .2d 66 [1974].

35 Coleman Company v. International Union, Etc., supra; Local 63, Textile Workers Union v.
Cheney Brothers, 109 A. 2d 240 [1954].

36 Art. 2038. A compromise in which there is mistake, fraud violence, intimidation, undue influence,
or falsity of documents, is subject to the provisions of article 1330 of this Code.

37 Art. 2039. When the parties compromise generally on all differences which they might have with
each other, the discovery of documents referring to one or more but not to all of the questions
settled shall not itself be a cause for annulment or rescission of the compromise, unless said
documents have been concealed by one of the parties.

But the compromise may be annulled or rescinded if it refers only to one thing to which one of the
parties has no right, as shown by the newly-discovered documents.

38 Art. 2040. If after a litigation has been decided by a final judgment, a compromise should be
agreed upon, either or both parties being unaware of the existence of the final judgment, the
compromise may be rescinded.

39 206 SCRA 545, 553-555 [1992].

40 Storer Broadcasting v. American Federation of Tel. 600 F. 2d 45 [1979].

41 See Wilko v. Swan, 346 U.S. 427, 74 S. Ct. 182, 98 L. ed. 168 [1953].

Note: U.S. laws on voluntary arbitration as alternative mode of setting dispute provide substantially
similar grounds to vacate an award as those in Philippine Laws. Under the Uniform Arbitration Act,
the grounds for vacation of an award are as follows:

• Procurement by corruption, fraud, or other undue means.

• Partiality on the part of an arbitrator appointed as neutral

• Misconduct or corruption of the arbitrators

• Exceeding of powers by the arbitrators

• Refusal of arbitrators to hear material evidence, or to give a postponement where there


was sufficient cause

• Prejudicial misconduct of the hearing


• Lack of a valid arbitration agreement, the issue not having been determined

Similar grounds for vacation of the award are stated in the United States Arbitration Act.

• Corruption, fraud or undue means.

• Evident partiality or corruption.

• Misconduct in refusal to postpone the hearing or to hear material evidence, or any other
misbehavior prejudicial to the rights of any party.

• The arbitrators exceeded their powers or so imperfectly executed them that a mutual,
final and definite award was not made. [4 Am Jur 2d., 235-236].

42 CA Rollo, pp. 176-179.

43 Sec. 3 (m) and (q), Rule 131, Rules of Court.

44 CA Rollo, pp. 76-77. Underscoring in the original.

45 Id., at 111-112.

46. Id., at 102. Underscoring in the original.

47 Art. 1318. Civil Code.

48 Art. 1308, id.

49 CA Rollo, p. 140.

50 In the computation of the award the Arbitration Committee deducted the share of DBP, thus:

As this Committee holds that the FRP is valid, DBP's equity in MMIC is raised to 87%. So pursuant
to the provision of the Compromise and Arbitration Agreement, the 87% equity of DBP is hereby
deducted from the actual
damages . . . (See Note 16.)

51 CA Rollo, p. 137.

52 Id., at 148-150.

53 Id., at 179-180.

54 Art. 1887, Civil Code.

55 CA Rollo, p. 178.

56 Gamboa vs. Victoriano, 90 SCRA 40, 47 [1979].


57 Agbayani's Commercial Law of the Philippines, Vol. III. p. 566, citing  Ballantine, pp. 366-367.

58 Id., at 565-566.

59 See  Evangelista vs. Santos, 86 Phil. 387 [1950].

60 CA Rollo, pp. 170-172.

61 Id., at 167.

62 Sec. 4 of Rule 2 of the Rules of Court (before its amendment by the 1998 Rules of Court
Procedure) provides:

Sec. 4. Effect of splitting a single cause of action. — If two or more complaints are brought for
different parts of a single cause of action the filing of the first may be pleaded in abatement of the
other or others, in accordance with section 1(c) of Rule 16, and a judgment upon the merits in any
one is available as a bar to the other.

63 Art. 2. Corporation Code.

64 CA Rollo, pp. 174-175. Underscoring in the original.

65 Caneda, Jr. vs. Court of Appeals, 181 SCRA 762 [1990]; Quisumbing vs. Court of Appeals, 122
SCRA 703 [1983]; Board of Liquidators vs. Zulueta, 115 SCRA 548 [1982].

ROMERO, J., dissenting opinion;

1 Rollo, pp. 11-36 @ 21-22.

2 CA Rollo, p. 261.

3 Ibid., pp. 134-135 re commitments of PNB and DBP.

4 Id., pp. 134-135.

5 The complaint was amended on March 11, 1985; CA Records, pp. 71-77.

6 CA Records, pp. 99-103.

7 Otherwise known as the "Arbitration Law."

8 Rollo, pp. 93-94.

9 Ibid., pp. 15-16.

10 Composed of retired Supreme Court Associate Justice Abraham Sarmiento, as Chairman, and
former Court of Appeals Associate Justice Magdangal B. Elma, nominee of the plaintiffs and Atty.
Jose C. Sison, APT's nominee and its lawyer of record, as members.
11 CA Records, pp. 107-173. Separate Opinions were submitted by Atty. Sison and Justice Elma.

12 Ibid., pp. 267-284.

13 Id., pp. 287-289.

14 Id., pp. 42-52.

15 Id., pp. 3-30.

16 Penned by Martinez Jr., J.: Ramirez and Morales,  JJ., concurring.

17 206 SCRA 545 (1992).

18 "Art. 2038. A compromise in which there is mistake, fraud, violence, intimidation, undue
influence, or falsity of documents, is subject to the provisions of article 1330 of this Code.

However, one of the parties cannot set up a mistake of fact as against the other if the latter, by
virtue of the compromise, has withdrawn from a litigation already commenced."

"Art. 2039. When the parties compromise generally on all differences which they might have with
each other, the discovery of documents referring to one or more but not to all of the questions
settled shall not itself be a cause for annulment or rescission of the compromise, unless said
documents have been concealed by one of the parties.

But the compromise may be annulled or rescinded if it refers only to one thing to which one of the
parties has no right, as shown by the newly-discovered documents."

"Art. 2040. If after a litigation has been decided by a final judgment, a compromise should be
agreed upon, either or both parties being unaware of the existence of the final judgment, the
compromise may be rescinded.

Ignorance of a judgment which may be revoked or set aside is not a valid ground for attacking a
compromise."

19 Citations omitted.

20 Rollo, pp. 50-51.

21 Ibid., pp. 53-54.

22 This date was supplied by petitioner in its "Appeal by Certiorari'" filed before the Court of
Appeals.

23 Sec. 2(c), Rule 41, 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure.

24 Sec. 1, Rule 65, 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure.

PARDO , J., separate concurring opinion;


1 Docketed as CA-G.R. SP No. 36484.

2 On August 28, 1998, the Court granted petitioner an extension of thirty days from the expiration
of the reglementary period within which to file a petition for certiorari.

3 Olympia International, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals, 180 SCRA 354; Paz Bacabac vs. Delfin, 1
SCRA 1194; Aquizap vs. Basilio, 21 SCRA 1435.

4 Black's Law Dictionary, Fourth Edition, 1951 edition, p. 556.

5 Cf. Isasi vs. Republic, 101 Phil. 405; Olympia International, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals, supra.

6 Ortigas & Company Limited Partnership vs. Judge Tirso Velasco; Dolores V. Molina vs. Hon.
Presiding Judge, RTC, Quezon City, Branch 105, 234 SCRA 455 [1994].

7 R.A. No. 576, Sections 22, 23.

8 42 Am. Jur. 389, Sec. 74,  cited in Arocha vs. Vivo, 21 SCRA 532, 540.

9 CA-G.R. SP No. 36484, promulgated on July 17, 1995.

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