- Title
- Gaw vs. Court of Appeals
- Case
- G.R. No. 60783
- Decision Date
- Oct 31, 1990
- A dispute over encashed checks led to a partial judgment on pleadings, reversed by the Supreme Court due to due process violations and improper remedy.
269 Phil. 81
SECOND DIVISION
[ G.R. No. 60783. October 31, 1990 ] JOAQUIN S. GAW, THRU HIS ATTORNEY-IN-FACT EUSEBIO S. MILLAR, PETITIONER, VS. COURT OF APPEALS, HON. BENJAMIN RELOVA, IN HIS CAPACITY AS PRESIDING JUDGE, BRANCH XI, COURT OF FIRST INSTANCE OF MANILA, WORLDWIDE PHILIPPINES MARKETING CORPORATION AND THE SHERIFF OF MANILA, RESPONDENTS.
D E C I S I O N
D E C I S I O N
PARAS, J.:
This is a petition for certiorari with writ of preliminary injunction seeking to reverse and set aside: 1) the Decision of the Court of Appeals dated
Based from the records, the factual background of this case is as follows:
This action originated from the Court of First Instance of Manila, Branch XI, when private respondent Worldwide Philippines Marketing Corporation (WPMC for short) on
WPMC had its complaint amended twice, the last of which was dated
In the amended complaint, WPMC alleged, among others, the following:
5. That the defendant taking advantage of the foregoing personal and business relationship with the foregoing General Manager of the plaintiff, caused to be encashed several personal and postdated checks on various occasions ranging from Aug. 1980 to Jan. 1981 totalling to an aggregate and enormous amount of P315,332.00, Philippine currency, and specified hereunder, to wit:In the answer, Joaquin S. Gaw raised among others, the following as his special and affirmative defenses:
20. That with respect to the checks alleged in paragraph 5 of the amended complaint, defendant alleges the following: (a) Equitable Banking Corporation (Divisoria Branch) Check No. 11289889 dated September 18,1980 is not defendants check; that he has not withdrawn said check and he is not indebted to the plaintiff, much less to Charles E. Go and/or the latters father in the sum of P100,000.00; (b) That he admits having drawn Allied Banking Corporation (Padre Rada Branch) Check No. 30064865 datedAn order dated
In his opposition dated August 13, 1981, Joaquin S. Gaw alleged that there is absolutely no allegation in WPMCs complaint to the effect that the signature appearing on the checks as drawers are his signatures, for which reason, he need not specifically deny under oath the due execution and genuineness of said checks pursuant to and in accordance with Section 8, Rule 8 the Revised Rules of Court; and that with respect to the P40,000.00 check, he admits that said check is his check but he alleges that he has paid the same and considering that the defense is payment, he therefore, need not under oath, specifically deny the due execution and genuineness of said check.
On
A motion for reconsideration of the order dated
But on the same date, the trial court rendered a partial decision, the dispositive portion of which reads:
WHEREFORE, partial judgment is hereby rendered, ordering the defendant to pay the plaintiff the total sum of P140,000.00, with interest thereon at the legal rate from the filing of the complaint. SO ORDERED. (Rollo, p. 90; Petition, Annex J, p. 3)On
Meanwhile, on
Petitioner and intervenor Gaw Chee Hun filed a Joint Manifestation with Motion for Time to Supply Deficiencies and Submit Additional Matters to Complete Judicial Records which was granted on
On January 5, 1982, or even before respondent Judge could act on private respondents petition for reconstitution of judicial records and petitioners and intervenors joint petition to supply deficiencies of said records, private respondent moved for the issuance of a writ of execution which was opposed by the petitioner.
On
On
On the same date, a writ of execution was issued (Rollo, p. 144; Petition, Annex AA).
On certiorari with preliminary injunction, the Court of Appeals affirmed the decision of the trial court in its decision promulgated on
A motion for reconsideration of the above-quoted decision filed by petitioner on
Hence, this petition.
On
The main issue in this case is: Whether or not the respondent Appellate Court committed grave abuse of discretion in dismissing the petition for certiorari holding that appeal is the proper remedy.
The petition is impressed with merit.
It will be recalled that on
there was no hearing, the pre-trial hearing having been cancelled and as found by the same trial court in its Order dated
Under similar circumstances this Court ruled that the lower courts exercise of judicial authority in granting the motion for judgment on the pleadings and in rendering a decision without conducting a hearing to allow the parties to present their respective evidence was oppressive and amounted to excess of jurisdiction and grave abuse of discretion. The petition was considered a special civil action of certiorari (Marina vs. Eastern Quezon College, 168 SCRA 105-106 [1988]) reiterating an earlier ruling that certiorari is available despite the existence of the remedy of appeal in such cases. (Co Chuan Seng v. C.A., 128 SCRA 308 [1984]) Hence, respondent Appellate Court erred in ruling that appeal and not certiorari is the proper remedy.
Not unlike the foregoing situations, the instant case does not fall within the purview of Sec. 1 Rule 19 of the Rules of Court which provides that the lower court may, on motion of a party, direct judgment on the pleadings where an answer fails to tender an issue, or otherwise admits the material allegations of the adverse partys pleadings.
A careful perusal of the complaint filed by the private respondent against the petitioner will readily show that there was an absence of an allegation to the effect that the check in question in the amount of P100,000.00 bears the latters signature. On the contrary, petitioner in his answer stressed that it was not his check, that he has not drawn said check, and he was not indebted to the private respondent and/or to the latters father.
It is therefore evident that petitioners answer not only tendered an issue but clearly contested private respondents allegations in the complaint. Accordingly the lower court should not have rendered judgment on the pleadings.
The lower court went further by stating that a judgment on the pleadings was proper due to petitioners lack of specific denial under oath as to the genuinenes and due execution of the questioned check.
Section 8, Rule 8 of the Rules of Court provides for the rule on implied admission (by failure to make a sworn specific denial) of the genuineness and due execution of a document or instrument subject of an action or defense, but the same is not without exception. One of the exceptions is when the adverse party does not appear to be a party to the instrument, as held in the case of Lim Chingco v. Terariray, et al., 5 Phil, 120 [1906] sited in Paras, Rules of Court Annotated, Vol. I, Rules 1-56, 1989 Second Edition, pp. 258-259 and under which petitioner clearly falls, as there was no allegation in the complaint that the aforementioned check was drawn by the petitioner nor that the signature affixed thereto belongs to him. He is therefore under no obligation to specifically deny under oath the genuineness and due execution of the said check.
Furthermore, where there are factual issues in the answer that had to be ascertained at a hearing and not on the basis of the bare allegations in the pleadings, or evidence had yet to be submitted by the parties and to be assessed by the trial court, it is improper for the judge to rule on the strength alone of the plaintiffs allegations and to disregard the defendants expressed denial thereof in their answer (Rocamora vs. Regional Trial Court-Cebu, G.R. 65037, 23 November, 1988).
Undoubtedly said partial judgment being a clear denial of due process is null and void and it follows that the same did not gain finality; hence, a proper subject of this petition for certiorari.
PREMISES CONSIDERED, the assailed decision and resolution of the respondent Court of Appeals are hereby REVERSED and SET ASIDE and the records of this case are hereby REMANDED to the lower court for further proceedings.
SO ORDERED.
Melencio-Herrera, (Chairman), Padilla, Sarmiento, and Regalado, JJ., concur.Penned by Justice Onofre A. Villaluz and concurred in by Justices Crisolito Pascual and Guillermo P. Villasor.
Penned by Justice Onofre A. /illaluz.