Case Summary (G.R. No. L-49510)
Factual Background
DECORP asserted that it was a legislative franchise holder to operate and maintain electric services within its franchised area comprising the City of Dagupan and towns in Pangasinan, with its generating plant located in Calasiao. MC Adore was alleged to be a customer and to have caused the hotel to become operational in March 1978. MC Adore allegedly failed to pay its electric bills for September and October 1978, prompting DECORP to issue a Notice of Disconnection on November 25, 1978, with an implied 48-hour period to pay.
DECORP then disconnected electrical service on November 27, 1978 at 1:15 p.m., after the 48-hour period elapsed without payment. On December 6, 1978, MC Adore filed in the Court of First Instance of Rizal, Branch XVIII, a complaint for damages with a prayer for a writ of preliminary mandatory injunction, docketed as Civil Case No. Q-26502, and on the same date the presiding judge issued an ex parte order commanding DECORP and its agents in Dagupan to restore electrical power to the hotel not later than 5:00 p.m. on December 7, 1978, under pain of contempt, and set the matter for hearing on December 11, 1978.
On December 8, 1978, MC Adore filed a motion relating to substituting the cash bond with a surety bond, and separately filed a petition to declare DECORP and its officers in contempt. The respondent judge issued an order on December 8, 1978 stating that, without finally resolving contempt liability, the court found justification for placing corporate officers, except Atty. Leonardo Baro, in custody until compliance with the mandatory injunction. The order directed the arrest and confinement of Isabelita Llames, Primo Narvaez, and Jose Apigo if compliance was not made by midnight of December 8, 1978, and required the Philippine Constabulary authorities to enforce the order.
Proceedings in the Court of First Instance
On December 11, 1978, DECORP appeared and moved for reconsideration of the December 6 and December 8 orders on jurisdictional and grave abuse grounds. On December 19, 1978, the respondent judge denied reconsideration and ordered enforcement of the preliminary mandatory injunction. Although the case had pending proceedings, the petitioners asserted that electric power had still not been restored immediately, and it ultimately was restored only on December 22, 1978.
The respondent judge’s December 19, 1978 order, as quoted in the decision, reflected the court’s view that the dispute concerned the correctness of the electric billings: the change in billing for June 1978 from P25,380.70 to P80,243.62 following DECORP personnel’s discovery allegedly involving reversed polarity and its reliance on a Board of Power report not yet approved. The respondent judge also stated that the parties’ filings showed a dispute on meter readings and electric consumption, and it found it prejudicial to delay or paralyze hotel operations, particularly because MC Adore had obligations to foreign and local patrons.
Contentions of the Parties in the Certiorari and Prohibition Proceeding
The petitioners maintained that the Court of First Instance of Rizal, Branch XVIII, had no jurisdiction because the act complained of—disconnection of electricity—occurred in Dagupan City, which lay outside the territorial jurisdiction of the court sitting in Rizal and Quezon City. They also alleged that the respondent judge committed grave abuse of discretion by issuing the mandatory injunction and related coercive orders without due process.
MC Adore, in its comment, presented a broader narrative: it claimed that it had paid bills for March and April 1978, that it adopted an energy conservation program lowering consumption in May 1978, and that DECORP engaged in conduct allegedly involving retrieval and alteration of bills and tampering with electric meters. MC Adore also invoked regulatory intervention by the Board of Power and Waterworks restraining disconnection pending resolution of a letter-complaint, and it claimed that MC Adore mobilized authorities to enforce those restraints and thereby sought judicial relief as its “effective remedy.”
In the Supreme Court proceeding, the central issues remained whether the trial court in Rizal, Branch XVIII, had jurisdiction over Civil Case No. Q-26502 and whether the respondent judge acted with grave abuse of discretion in granting the writ of preliminary mandatory injunction requiring restoration of electrical service to the hotel in Dagupan City.
Supreme Court Resolution: Jurisdiction and Discretion on Preliminary Mandatory Injunction
The Supreme Court ruled that the Court of First Instance of Rizal, Branch XVIII had jurisdiction over Civil Case No. Q-26502. It anchored this conclusion on the fact that DECORP’s principal office was in Quezon City, where corporate business was managed by its board of directors, and where decisions were made. The Court treated the Dagupan personnel as merely carrying out orders of the officials in Quezon City. Hence, the acts sought to be restrained were being committed—at least in their origin and source—within Quezon City, and the mandatory injunction was addressed to the corporation in Quezon City.
The Court also held that the respondent judge did not commit grave abuse of discretion when issuing the questioned mandatory injunction. It observed that the respondent judge conducted hearings, allowed both parties full opportunity to present evidence, and issued orders only after ventilating the controversy and resetting hearings to allow a full hearing on the billings dispute and meter-related issues. The Court gave weight to the self-explanatory reasoning expressed in the respondent judge’s December 19, 1978 order: the controversy involved the change in billing and the parties’ competing positions on whether there was evidence of tampering and whether the meter readings faithfully reflected consumption. The Court stated that in light of the dispute and considering the public interest in avoiding paralysis of a hotel enterprise involving substantial investments and commitments, it was not fair to allow unilateral termination of service absent a clear and definite finding.
The Court recognized that jurisdictional disputes were not controlling when private property rights were involved and where the exercise of corporate will originated within the territorial reach of the issuing court. It contrasted cases where the injunction was improperly issued due to the presence of governmental privileges or offices beyond territorial jurisdiction, and it relied on the principle that when private rights are involved, relief may be granted where the will causing the prejudice has its origin within the court’s territorial jurisdiction. For this purpose, the Court cited jurisprudence such as Tan (64 SCRA 364) and Palinan (22 SCRA 1186), Ruiz (38 SCRA 559), and Cudiamat (22 SCRA 695) to distinguish situations involving non-ownership rights and governmental licenses, and it invoked Gonzales vs. Secretary of Public Works and Communications (18 SCRA 297) as support for upholding injunctive relief when interference with property in the relevant locale warranted judicial protection even when the respondent officer’s office was elsewhere.
Legal Basis and Reasoning: Territorial Reach of Injunctive Relief
In addressing jurisdiction, the Supreme Court referred to the Judiciary Act of 1948, Sec. 44(h), which granted courts of first instance original jurisdiction and power to issue writs of injunction in the manner provided in the Rules of Court. The Court reasoned that, because DECORP’s principal office and decision-making were in Quezon City, and because the plant in Dagupan acted only upon orders emanating from the Quezon City headquarters, the disconnection order had its life and source in Quezon Ci
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Case Syllabus (G.R. No. L-49510)
- Petitioners Dagupan Electric Corporation (DECORP) and its corporate officers Isabelita L. Llames, Primo C. Narvaez, and Jose T. Apigo filed an original special civil action for certiorari and prohibition to annul the proceedings in Civil Case No. Q-26502 of the Court of First Instance of Rizal, Branch XVIII.
- Petitioners also sought to prohibit the respondent judge from proceeding further, alleging lack of jurisdiction and grave abuse of discretion.
- Petitioners prayed for preliminary injunction to prevent enforcement of the questioned orders.
Parties and Procedural Posture
- Petitioners were the defendant Dagupan Electric Corporation and certain corporate officers named as defendants in the court below.
- Respondents were the Honorable Ernani Cruz Pano, District Judge of the Court of First Instance of Rizal, Branch XVIII, and MC Adoore Finance and Investment, Incorporated, the plaintiff in the court below.
- The underlying case in the trial court was Civil Case No. Q-26502, styled “MC Adore Finance and Investment, Inc., plaintiff, versus Dagupan Electric Corporation, et al., defendants.”
- The certiorari and prohibition proceeding was initiated directly before the Court, and the Court first required respondents to comment without initially giving due course.
- After comments and subsequent resolutions, the Court ultimately reviewed the jurisdictional and discretion issues arising from the trial court’s issuance of a writ of preliminary mandatory injunction and related orders.
Key Factual Allegations
- Petitioners alleged that DECORP held a legislative franchise to operate and maintain electric services in its franchised area comprising Dagupan City and specified towns in Pangasinan, with its generating plant in Calasiao, Pangasinan.
- MC Adore was alleged to own and operate the MC Adore International Palace Hotel in Dagupan City, which became operational in March, 1978.
- Petitioners alleged that MC Adore was a customer and failed to pay September and October 1978 electric bills.
- Petitioners stated that they served a Notice of Disconnection on November 25, 1978 and, upon lapse of a 48-hour period without payment, they disconnected electrical services on November 27, 1978 at 1:15 p.m.
- MC Adore filed a complaint for damages with writ of preliminary mandatory injunction on December 6, 1978 in the Court of First Instance of Rizal, Branch XVIII, docketed as Civil Case No. Q-26502.
- On December 6, 1978, the respondent judge issued an ex parte Order for preliminary mandatory injunction requiring petitioners and their agents to restore immediately not later than 5:00 p.m. on December 7, 1978 electric power to enable full hotel operation, under pain of contempt.
- On December 8, 1978, the private respondent moved to substitute a cash bond of P50,000.00 with a surety bond.
- On December 8, 1978, after alleged non-compliance, MC Adore moved to have petitioners declared in contempt, and the respondent judge issued an order ordering arrest and confinement of certain corporate officers if the mandatory injunction was not complied with by midnight.
- Petitioners later appeared on December 11, 1978 and moved for reconsideration of the December 6 and December 8 orders on jurisdictional and grave abuse grounds.
- On December 19, 1978, the respondent judge denied reconsideration, ordered enforcement, and the record showed electrical power was restored only on December 22, 1978.
Contentions on Jurisdiction
- Petitioners contended that the Court of First Instance of Rizal at Quezon City had no jurisdiction because the disconnection occurred in Dagupan City, which was outside the territorial jurisdiction of the court.
- Petitioners maintained that the acts complained of were tied to Dagupan City and thus fell beyond the province or district for which the trial court could validly issue injunctive process.
- Respondents countered that the disconnection was the result of an order issued by DECORP from its business office in Quezon City, and that the relevant corporate will and management decisions emanated from Quezon City.
Statutory and Legal Framework
- The decision anchored territorial injunctive authority on the Judiciary Act of 1948, Sec. 44 (Original jurisdiction), particularly the provision that courts of first instance and their judges had power to issue writs of injunction and other extraordinary writs in the manner provided in the Rules of Court.
- The trial court’s contempt-related actions referenced Sec. 3, Rule 71, Rules of Court, as reflected in the respondent judge’s orders concerning potential custody and enforcement measures for corporate officers.
Issues Framed
- The main issue concerned whether the Court of First Instance of Rizal, Branch XVIII at Quezon City had jurisdiction over Civil Case No. Q-26502.
- A corollary issue concerned whether the respondent judge acted with grave abuse of discretion in issuing the writ of preliminary mandatory injunction ordering restoration of electric power to the hotel in Dagupan City.
- The assessment also necessarily addressed whether the territorial nexus was satisfied because the disconnection was allegedly rooted in