Tapuz v. Del Rosario
Tapuz v. Del Rosario
RESOLUTION
BRION, J : p
The petition and its annexes disclose the following material antecedents:
The private respondents spouses Gregorio Sanson and Ma. Lourdes T. Sanson
(the "private respondents"), filed with the Fifth Municipal Circuit Trial Court of Buruanga-
Malay, Aklan (the "MCTC" ) a complaint 3 dated 24 April 2006 for forcible entry and
damages with a prayer for the issuance of a writ of preliminary mandatory injunction
against the petitioners Daniel Masangkay Tapuz, Aurora Tapuz-Madriaga, Liberty M.
Asuncion, Ladylyn Bamos Madriaga, Everly Tapuz Madriaga, Excel Tapuz, Ivan Tapuz
and Marian Timbas (the "petitioners") and other John Does numbering about 120. The
private respondents alleged in their complaint that: (1) they are the registered owners
under TCT No. 35813 of a 1.0093-hectare parcel of land located at Sitio Pinaungon,
Balabag, Boracay, Malay, Aklan (the "disputed land"); (2) they were the disputed land's
prior possessors when the petitioners — armed with bolos and carrying suspected
firearms and together with unidentified persons numbering 120 — entered the disputed
land by force and intimidation, without the private respondents' permission and against
the objections of the private respondents' security men, and built thereon a nipa and
bamboo structure. DCcHAa
From the foregoing established facts, it could be safely inferred that the
plaintiffs were in actual physical possession of the whole lot in question since
1993 when it was interrupted by the defendants (sic) when on January 4, 2005
claiming to (sic) the Heirs of Antonio Tapuz entered a portion of the land in
question with view of inhabiting the same and building structures therein
prompting plaintiff Gregorio Sanson to confront them before BSPU, Police Chief
Inspector Jack L. Wanky and Barangay Captain Glenn Sacapaño. As a result of
their confrontation, the parties signed an Agreement (Annex 'D', Complaint p.
20) wherein they agreed to vacate the disputed portion of the land in question
and agreed not to build any structures thereon.
The foregoing is the prevailing situation of the parties after the incident
of January 4, 2005 when the plaintiff posted security guards, however,
sometime on or about 6:30 A.M. of April 19, 2006, the defendants some with
bolos and one carrying a sack suspected to contain firearms with other John
Does numbering about 120 persons by force and intimidation forcibly entered
the premises along the road and built a nipa and bamboo structure (Annex 'E',
Complaint, p. 11) inside the lot in question which incident was promptly
reported to the proper authorities as shown by plaintiffs' Certification (Annex 'F',
Complaint, p. 12) of the entry in the police blotter and on same date April 19,
2006, the plaintiffs filed a complaint with the Office of the Lupong
Tagapamayapa of Barangay Balabag, Boracay Island, Malay, Aklan but no
settlement was reached as shown in their Certificate to File Action (Annex 'G',
Complaint, p. 13); hence the present action. ETHCDS
It was against this factual backdrop that the petitioners filed the present petition
last 29 April 2008. The petition contains and prays for three remedies, namely: a petition
for certiorari under Rule 65 of the Revised Rules of Court; the issuance of a writ of
habeas data under the Rule on the Writ of Habeas Data; and finally, the issuance of the
writ of amparo under the Rule on the Writ of Amparo.
To support the petition and the remedies prayed for, the petitioners present
factual positions diametrically opposed to the MCTC's findings and legal reasons. Most
importantly, the petitioners maintain their claims of prior possession of the disputed land
and of intrusion into this land by the private respondents. The material factual
allegations of the petition — bases as well of the petition for the issuance of the writ of
amparo — read:
"29. On April 29, 2006 at about 9:20 a.m. armed mensporting 12
gauge shot guns intruded into the property of the defendants [the land in
dispute]. They were not in uniform. They fired their shotguns at the defendants.
Later the following day at 2:00 a.m. two houses of the defendants were burned
to ashes. EcHIAC
30. These armed men [without uniforms] removed the barbed wire
fence put up by defendants to protect their property from intruders. Two of the
armed men trained their shotguns at the defendants who resisted their
intrusion. One of them who was identified as SAMUEL LONGNO y GEGANSO,
19 years old, single, and a resident of Binun-an, Batad, Iloilo, fired twice.
31. The armed men torched two houses of the defendants
reducing them to ashes. [. . .]
32. These acts of TERRORISM and (heinous crime) of ARSON
were reported by one of the HEIRS OF ANTONIO TAPUZ [. . .]. The
terrorists trained their shotguns and fired at minors namely IVAN
GAJISAN and MICHAEL MAGBANUA, who resisted their intrusion. Their
act is a blatant violation of the law penalizing Acts of Violence against
women and children, which is aggravated by the use of high-powered
weapons.
[. . .]
34. That the threats to the life and security of the poor indigent and
unlettered petitioners continue because the private respondents Sansons have
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under their employ armed men and they are influential with the police
authorities owing to their financial and political clout.
HSTAcI
35. The actual prior occupancy, as well as the ownership of the lot in
dispute by defendants and the atrocities of the terrorists [introduced into the
property in dispute by the plaintiffs] are attested by witnesses who are persons
not related to the defendants are therefore disinterested witnesses in the case
namely: Rowena Onag, Apolsida Umambong, Ariel Gac, Darwin Alvarez and
Edgardo Penarada. Likewise, the affidavit of Nemia T. Carmen is submitted to
prove that the plaintiffs resorted to atrocious acts through hired men in their bid
to unjustly evict the defendants." 13
The petitioners posit as well that the MCTC has no jurisdiction over the complaint
for forcible entry that the private respondents filed below. Citing Section 33 of The
Judiciary Reorganization Act of 1980, as amended by Republic Act No. 7691, 14 they
maintain that the forcible entry case in fact involves issues of title to or possession of
real property or an interest therein, with the assessed value of the property involved
exceeding P20,000.00; thus, the case should be originally cognizable by the RTC.
Accordingly, the petitioners reason out that the RTC — to where the MCTC decision
was appealed — equally has no jurisdiction to rule on the case on appeal and could not
have validly issued the assailed orders. cDCHaS
OUR RULING
We find the petitions for certiorari and issuance of a writ of habeas data
fatally defective, both in substance and in form. The petition for the issuance of
the writ of amparo, on the other hand, is fatally defective with respect to content
and substance. SIcCEA
We note in this regard that the petitioners' counsel stated in his attached
"Certificate of Compliance with Circular #1-88 of the Supreme Court" 16 ("Certificate of
Compliance") that "in the meantime the RTC and the Sheriff issued a NOTICE TO
VACATE AND FOR DEMOLITION not served to counsel but to the petitioners who sent
photo copy of the same NOTICE to their counsel on April 18, 2008 by LBC." To guard
against any insidious argument that the present petition is timely filed because of this
Notice to Vacate, we feel it best to declare now that the counting of the 60-day
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reglementary period under Rule 65 cannot start from the April 18, 2008 date cited by
the petitioners' counsel. The Notice to Vacate and for Demolition is not an order that
exists independently from the RTC orders assailed in this petition and in the previously
filed CA petition. It is merely a notice, made in compliance with one of the assailed
orders, and is thus an administrative enforcement medium that has no life of its own
separately from the assailed order on which it is based. It cannot therefore be the
appropriate subject of an independent petition for certiorari under Rule 65 in the context
of this case. The April 18, 2008 date cannot likewise be the material date for Rule 65
purposes as the above-mentioned Notice to Vacate is not even directly assailed in this
petition, as the petition's Prayer patently shows. 17
Based on the same material antecedents, we find too that the petitioners have
been guilty of willful and deliberate misrepresentation before this Court and, at the very
least, of forum shopping. ADcHES
By the petitioners' own admissions, they filed a petition with the Court of Appeals
(docketed as CA — G.R. SP No. 02859) for the review of the orders now also assailed
in this petition, but brought the present recourse to us, allegedly because "the CA did
not act on the petition up to this date and for the petitioner (sic) to seek relief in the CA
would be a waste of time and would render the case moot and academic since the CA
refused to resolve pending urgent motions and the Sheriff is determined to enforce a
writ of demolition despite the defect of LACK OF JURISDICTION." 18
Interestingly, the petitioners' counsel — while making this claim in the body of the
petition — at the same time represented in his Certificate of Compliance 19 that:
"xxx xxx xxx
(e) the petitioners went up to the Court of Appeals to question the
WRIT OF PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION copy of the petition is attached (sic);
(f) the CA initially issued a resolution denying the PETITION
because it held that the ORDER TO VACATE AND FOR DEMOLITION OF
THE HOMES OF PETITIONERS is not capable of being the subject of a
PETITION FOR RELIEF, copy of the resolution of the CA is attached hereto;
(underscoring supplied) IACDaS
At the very least, the petitioners are obviously seeking to obtain from us, via the
present petition, the same relief that it could not wait for from the Court of Appeals in
CA-G.R. SP No. 02859. The petitioners' act of seeking against the same parties the
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nullification of the same RTC orders before the appellate court and before us at the
same time, although made through different mediums that are both improperly used,
constitutes willful and deliberate forum shopping that can sufficiently serve as basis for
the summary dismissal of the petition under the combined application of the fourth and
penultimate paragraphs of Section 3, Rule 46; Section 5, Rule 7; Section 1, Rule 65;
and Rule 56, all of the Revised Rules of Court. That a wrong remedy may have been
used with the Court of Appeals and possibly with us will not save the petitioner from a
forum-shopping violation where there is identity of parties, involving the same assailed
interlocutory orders, with the recourses existing side by side at the same time.
To restate the prevailing rules, "forum shopping is the institution of two or more
actions or proceedings involving the same parties for the same cause of action, either
simultaneously or successively, on the supposition that one or the other court would
make a favorable disposition. Forum shopping may be resorted to by any party against
whom an adverse judgment or order has been issued in one forum, in an attempt to
seek a favorable opinion in another, other than by appeal or a special civil action for
certiorari. Forum shopping trifles with the courts, abuses their processes, degrades the
administration of justice and congest court dockets. Willful and deliberate violation of
the rule against it is a ground for summary dismissal of the case; it may also constitute
direct contempt." 20 ITESAc
In sum, the petition for certiorari should be dismissed for the cited formal
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deficiencies, for violation of the non-forum shopping rule, for having been filed
out of time, and for substantive deficiencies.
The Writ of Amparo
To start off with the basics, the writ of amparo was originally conceived as a
response to the extraordinary rise in the number of killings and enforced
disappearances, and to the perceived lack of available and effective remedies to
address these extraordinary concerns. It is intended to address violations of or threats
to the rights to life, liberty or security, as an extraordinary and independent remedy
beyond those available under the prevailing Rules, or as a remedy supplemental to
these Rules. What it is not, is a writ to protect concerns that are purely property
or commercial. Neither is it a writ that we shall issue on amorphous and uncertain
grounds. Consequently, the Rule on the Writ of Amparo — in line with the
extraordinary character of the writ and the reasonable certainty that its issuance
demands — requires that every petition for the issuance of the writ must be supported
by justifying allegations of fact, to wit: TCcSDE
On the whole, what is clear from these statements — both sworn and unsworn — is the
overriding involvement of property issues as the petition traces its roots to questions of
physical possession of the property disputed by the private parties. If at all, issues
relating to the right to life or to liberty can hardly be discerned except to the extent that
the occurrence of past violence has been alleged. The right to security, on the other
hand, is alleged only to the extent of the threats and harassments implied from the
presence of "armed men bare to the waist" and the alleged pointing and firing of
weapons. Notably, none of the supporting affidavits compellingly show that the
threat to the rights to life, liberty and security of the petitioners is imminent or is
continuing.
A closer look at the statements shows that at least two of them — the statements
of Nemia Carreon y Tapuz and Melanie Tapuz are practically identical and unsworn.
The Certification by Police Officer Jackson Jauod, on the other hand, simply narrates
what had been reported by one Danny Tapuz y Masangkay, and even mentions that the
burning of two residential houses was "accidental". aCTHEA
As against these allegations are the cited MCTC factual findings in its decision in
the forcible entry case which rejected all the petitioners' factual claims. These findings
are significantly complete and detailed, as they were made under a full-blown judicial
process, i.e., after examination and evaluation of the contending parties' positions,
evidence and arguments and based on the report of a court-appointed commissioner.
We preliminarily examine these conflicting factual positions under the backdrop of
a dispute (with incidents giving rise to allegations of violence or threat thereof) that was
brought to and ruled upon by the MCTC; subsequently brought to the RTC o n an
appeal that is still pending; still much later brought to the appellate court without
conclusive results; and then brought to us on interlocutory incidents involving a plea for
the issuance of the writ of amparo that, if decided as the petitioners advocate, may
render the pending RTC appeal moot.
Under these legal and factual situations, we are far from satisfied with the prima
facie existence of the ultimate facts that would justify the issuance of a writ of amparo.
Rather than acts of terrorism that pose a continuing threat to the persons of the
petitioners, the violent incidents alleged appear to us to be purely property-related and
focused on the disputed land. Thus, if the petitioners wish to seek redress and hold the
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alleged perpetrators criminally accountable, the remedy may lie more in the realm of
ordinary criminal prosecution rather than on the use of the extraordinary remedy of the
writ of amparo. DcTAIH
Nor do we believe it appropriate at this time to disturb the MCTC findings, as our
action may carry the unintended effect, not only of reversing the MCTC ruling
independently of the appeal to the RTC that is now in place, but also of nullifying the
ongoing appeal process. Such effect, though unintended, will obviously wreak havoc on
the orderly administration of justice, an overriding goal that the Rule on the Writ of
Amparo does not intend to weaken or negate.
Separately from these considerations, we cannot fail but consider too at this point
the indicators, clear and patent to us, that the petitioners' present recourse via the
remedy of the writ of amparo is a mere subterfuge to negate the assailed orders that the
petitioners sought and failed to nullify before the appellate court because of the use of
an improper remedial measure. We discern this from the petitioners' misrepresentations
pointed out above; from their obvious act of forum shopping; and from the recourse
itself to the extraordinary remedies of the writs of certiorari and amparo based on
grounds that are far from forthright and sufficiently compelling. To be sure, when
recourses in the ordinary course of law fail because of deficient legal representation or
the use of improper remedial measures, neither the writ of certiorari nor that of amparo
— extraordinary though they may be — will suffice to serve as a curative substitute.
The writ of amparo, particularly, should not issue when applied for as a substitute for the
appeal or certiorari process, or when it will inordinately interfere with these processes
— the situation obtaining in the present case. DECSIT
While we say all these, we note too that the Rule on the Writ of Amparo provides
for rules on the institution of separate actions, 24 for the effect of earlier-filed criminal
actions, 25 and for the consolidation of petitions for the issuance of a writ of amparo with
a subsequently filed criminal and civil action. 26 These rules were adopted to promote
an orderly procedure for dealing with petitions for the issuance of the writ of amparo
when the parties resort to other parallel recourses.
Where, as in this case, there is an ongoing civil process dealing directly with the
possessory dispute and the reported acts of violence and harassment, we see no point
in separately and directly intervening through a writ of amparo in the absence of any
clear prima facie showing that the right to life, liberty or security — the personal concern
that the writ is intended to protect — is immediately in danger or threatened, or that the
danger or threat is continuing. We see no legal bar, however, to an application for the
issuance of the writ, in a proper case, by motion in a pending case on appeal or on
certiorari, applying by analogy the provisions on the co-existence of the writ with a
separately filed criminal case. IaAScD
In case of threats, the relief may include a prayer for an order enjoining
the act complained of; and
(f) Such other relevant reliefs as are just and equitable."
Support for the habeas data aspect of the present petition only alleges that:
"1. [ . . . ] Similarly, a petition for a WRIT OF HABEAS DATA is
prayed for so that the PNP may release the report on the burning of the homes
of the petitioners and the acts of violence employed against them by the private
respondents, furnishing the Court and the petitioners with copy of the same;
[...]
66. Petitioners apply for a WRIT OF HABEAS DATA commanding
the Philippine National Police [PNP] to produce the police report pertaining to
the burning of the houses of the petitioners in the land in dispute and likewise
the investigation report if an investigation was conducted by the PNP." SEHaTC
These allegations obviously lack what the Rule on Writ of Habeas Data requires
as a minimum, thus rendering the petition fatally deficient. Specifically, we see no
concrete allegations of unjustified or unlawful violation of the right to privacy related to
the right to life, liberty or security. The petition likewise has not alleged, much less
demonstrated, any need for information under the control of police authorities other
than those it has already set forth as integral annexes. The necessity or justification for
the issuance of the writ, based on the insufficiency of previous efforts made to secure
information, has not also been shown. In sum, the prayer for the issuance of a writ of
habeas data is nothing more than the "fishing expedition" that this Court — in the
course of drafting the Rule on habeas data — had in mind in defining what the purpose
of a writ of habeas data is not. In these lights, the outright denial of the petition for the
issuance of the writ of habeas data is fully in order. 2upjur08
SO ORDERED.
Puno, C.J., Quisumbing, Ynares-Santiago, Carpio, Austria-Martinez, Corona,
Azcuna, Tinga, Chico-Nazario, Reyes and Leonardo-de Castro, JJ., concur.
Carpio-Morales, Velasco, Jr. and Nachura, JJ., are on official leave.
Footnotes
7. Id., p. 191.
8. Id., p. 44.
14. Section 33. Jurisdiction of Metropolitan Trial Courts, Municipal Trial Courts and
Municipal Circuit Trial Courts in Civil Cases. — Metropolitan Trial Courts, Municipal Trial
Courts and Municipal Circuit Trial Courts shall exercise:
[...] TaHDAS
(3) Exclusive original jurisdiction in all civil actions which involve title to, or possession
of, real property, or any interest therein where the assessed value of the disputed
property or interest therein does not exceed Twenty Thousand Pesos (P20,000.00)or,
in civil actions in Metro Manila, where such assessed value does not exceed Fifty
Thousand Pesos (P50,000.00) exclusive of interest, damages of whatever kind,
attorney's fees, litigation expenses and costs: Provided, That in cases of land not
declared for taxation purposes, the value of such property shall be determined by the
assessed value of the adjacent lots.
16. Rollo, pp. 27-28; A separate substitute compliance for the required Statement of
Material Dates in petitions for certiorari under the second paragraph of Section 3, Rule
46, in relations with Rules 56 and 65 of the Revised Rules of Court. DISTcH
20. Spouses Julita dela Cruz v. Pedro Joaquin, G.R. No. 162788, July 28, 2005, 464
SCRA 576.
21. Reyes v. Sta. Maria, No. L-33213, June 29, 1979, 91 SCRA 164.
22. Section 5 of the Rule on the Writ of Amparo.
25. SEC. 22. Effect of Filing of a Criminal Action. — When a criminal action has been
commenced, no separate petition for the writ shall be filed. The reliefs under the writ
shall be available by motion in the criminal case.
The procedure under this Rule shall govern the disposition of the reliefs available under
the writ of amparo.ACETIa
26. SEC. 23. Consolidation. — When a criminal action is filed subsequent to the filing of a
petition for the writ, the latter shall be consolidated with the criminal action.
When a criminal action and a separate civil action are filed subsequent to a petition for a
writ of amparo, the latter shall be consolidated with the criminal action.
After consolidation, the procedure under this Rule shall continue to apply to the
disposition of the reliefs in the petition.
ETHCDS