Case Summary (G.R. No. 201378)
Underlying Facts and Third‑Party Complaint
VLI sued GV Florida and its driver for damages arising from a collision between their buses. GV Florida answered by alleging a tire blow‑out caused by defective Michelin tires purchased from TCC; four of the tires sold by TCC had been installed on the bus involved in the collision. GV Florida then filed a third‑party complaint against TCC asserting that factory or mechanical defects in those tires were the proximate cause of the accident.
Service of Summons and TCC’s Motion to Dismiss
Summons to TCC was returned served upon Cherry Gino‑gino, who represented herself as TCC’s accounting manager/supervisor. TCC filed a Special Entry of Appearance and subsequently a motion to dismiss asserting multiple grounds: (1) improper service of summons because the server was not one of the officers enumerated in Section 11, Rule 14; (2) prescription of any implied warranty claim (Article 1571, six‑month period); (3) failure to state a cause of action; (4) failure to comply with the condition precedent of making a warranty claim/demand; (5) GV Florida’s burden to establish lack of its own negligence; (6) improper venue; and (7) failure to implead Michelin as an indispensable party.
RTC and CA Rulings
The RTC denied TCC’s motion to dismiss and denied reconsideration. TCC then filed a Rule 65 petition with the CA, which granted relief: the CA held that service upon the accounting manager was invalid under the exclusive list in Section 11, Rule 14, so the RTC lacked jurisdiction over TCC; it also ruled that GV Florida’s third‑party complaint was essentially an implied‑warranty action that had prescribed (calculating delivery shortly after the March 23, 2007 purchase and noting that GV Florida filed its third‑party complaint on April 8, 2008). The CA therefore reversed the RTC.
Legal Question Presented to the Supreme Court
The Supreme Court framed the principal question as whether the CA correctly found grave abuse of discretion by the RTC in denying TCC’s motion to dismiss — i.e., whether the CA properly used a Rule 65 special civil action to correct an interlocutory denial of dismissal.
Standard for Rule 65 Review and the Nature of “Grave Abuse of Discretion”
The Court reiterated that an order denying a motion to dismiss is interlocutory; interlocutory orders generally are not reviewable immediately except by a special civil action for certiorari when the interlocutory order is tainted with grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction. Grave abuse is not mere error of law or misappreciation of facts; it must be a patent, gross, arbitrary or despotic exercise of power that amounts to a virtual refusal to perform a duty. A Rule 65 petition must allege such grave abuse; absent such an allegation, the petition should be dismissed and the party must proceed to trial and raise the issue on appeal from a final judgment.
CA’s Approach Was Mere Disagreement, Not a Finding of Grave Abuse
The Supreme Court observed that TCC’s CA petition did not plead specific acts constituting grave abuse; instead the CA reversed the RTC by disagreeing with its legal conclusions (on service and prescription). The CA’s own dispositive paragraph framed the issues as lack of valid service and prescription, rather than as grave abuse. Because the CA’s reversal resulted from an error of judgment and not a demonstration of grave abuse of jurisdiction, the CA should have dismissed the Rule 65 petition rather than grant it.
Service of Summons: Strict Compliance, Remedy of Alias Summons, and Voluntary Appearance
The Court acknowledged the strictness of Section 11, Rule 14: service upon a domestic juridical entity must be on one of the enumerated officers (president, managing partner, general manager, corporate secretary, treasurer, or in‑house counsel) and that the list is exclusive. Jurisprudence requiring strict compliance was cited. Nevertheless, the Court emphasized that service of summons is the principal means to acquire jurisdiction but not the only one: Section 20, Rule 14 provides that a defendant’s voluntary appearance is equivalent to service. A party who appears without qualification and seeks affirmative relief waives objections to jurisdiction based on improper service. Here, although TCC initially filed an Answer ad cautelam, it later filed a pre‑trial brief without reserving objections to jurisdiction and expressly prayed to be allowed to present additional evidence. The Court found this constituted a voluntary submission to the RTC’s jurisdiction, thereby waiving the earlier objection to service. Moreover, even absent waiver, the proper remedial course for improper service is issuance of alias summons and not outright dismissal; refusal to dismiss on that ground did not amount to grave abuse.
Prescription as a Ground for Dismissal: When It May Be Decided on Pleadings
The Court explained the rule on prescription defenses: a motion to dismiss for prescription is appropriate only when prescription is evident on the face of the complaint. If prescription depends on contested evidentiary matters not apparent from the pleadings, dismissal without trial is improper. In this case, TCC maintained GV Florida’s claim was an implied‑warranty action subject
...continue readingCase Syllabus (G.R. No. 201378)
Procedural Posture
- Petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 filed by petitioner G.V. Florida Transport, Inc. (GV Florida) seeking reversal of the Court of Appeals (CA) Decision dated October 13, 2011 and Resolution dated March 26, 2012.
- CA had granted respondent Tiara Commercial Corporation’s (TCC) petition for certiorari and prohibition under Rule 65, finding that Branch 129, RTC, Caloocan City acted with grave abuse of discretion in refusing to dismiss GV Florida’s third-party complaint.
- Underlying original action: Victory Liner, Inc. (VLI) sued GV Florida and its driver Arnold Vizquera for damages arising from a collision on May 1, 2007.
- GV Florida filed a third‑party complaint against TCC on April 8, 2008; RTC ordered service of summons on TCC; TCC moved to dismiss; RTC denied motion to dismiss (Order dated March 2, 2009) and denied motion for reconsideration (Order dated July 16, 2009).
- TCC filed a Rule 65 special civil action before the CA; CA reversed the RTC. GV Florida elevated the case to the Supreme Court via Rule 45 petition.
- Supreme Court resolution: Petition granted; CA Decision and Resolution reversed; RTC Order of March 2, 2009 reinstated.
Facts
- Collision occurred between buses of VLI and GV Florida along Capirpiwan, Cordon, Isabela on May 1, 2007.
- VLI alleged negligence of GV Florida’s driver, Arnold Vizquera, and failure of GV Florida to supervise the employee.
- GV Florida asserted that factory and mechanical defects in Michelin tires caused a tire blowout, which was the proximate cause of the collision.
- GV Florida alleged purchase on March 23, 2007 of fifty (50) brand new Michelin tires from TCC; four of those tires were installed on the bus involved in the collision.
- Summons to TCC was returned served to Cherry Gino‑gino, who represented herself as an accounting manager/financial supervisor authorized to receive summons.
- TCC filed a Special Entry of Appearance and Ex-parte Motion for Extension of Time to File Responsive Pleading and/or Motion to Dismiss; extension granted by RTC.
- TCC later filed Motion to Dismiss and Answer Ad Cautelam; the case proceeded to pre-trial and parties submitted pre-trial briefs; TCC filed its pre-trial brief without reservation as to jurisdiction and reserved right to present additional evidence.
Third-Party Complaint and Service of Summons
- GV Florida’s third-party complaint alleged tire blowout caused by defects in Michelin tires purchased from TCC; proximate cause not within GV Florida’s control.
- RTC ordered service of summons on TCC; sheriff served summons on Cherry Gino‑gino, financial supervisor.
- Section 11, Rule 14 (enumeration of persons upon whom service on domestic juridical entities may be made) was central to the jurisdictional dispute.
Grounds Raised by TCC in Motion to Dismiss and Answer Ad Cautelam
- Lack of jurisdiction over TCC due to improper service of summons because the person served was not among those enumerated in Section 11, Rule 14.
- Prescription: the asserted cause of action was an implied warranty claim barred by six-month prescriptive period under Article 1571 of the Civil Code.
- Failure to state a cause of action: GV Florida did not specifically allege that the particular tires that blew out were purchased from TCC; a tire blowout does not absolve a common carrier of liability.
- Failure to comply with condition precedent for warranty claims: no prior warranty claim or demand submitted to TCC.
- GV Florida’s burden to first establish non‑negligence before impleading TCC.
- Improper venue because TCC’s principal place of business is in Makati.
- Failure to implead Michelin, the tire manufacturer, as an indispensable party.
RTC Rulings and Pre-trial Conduct
- RTC denied TCC’s motion to dismiss (Order, March 2, 2009) and denied motion for reconsideration (Order, July 16, 2009).
- Upon RTC order, case set for pre-trial; parties filed pre-trial briefs.
- TCC’s pre-trial brief did not reserve jurisdictional objections, failed to include RTC jurisdiction in the issues identified, and expressly reserved right to present additional evidence.
Court of Appeals Decision
- CA granted TCC’s Rule 65 petition, finding RTC acted with grave abuse of discretion in refusing to dismiss the third-party complaint.
- CA concluded:
- Service of summons on TCC was improper because Section 11, Rule 14 enumeration is exclusive; RTC thus lacked jurisdiction over TCC.
- GV Florida’s third‑party complaint was essentially an implied warranty claim subject to a six‑month prescription; assuming delivery occurred shortly after purchase (March 23, 2007), the April 8, 2008 filing was beyond six months and prescribed.
- CA therefore reversed the RTC Orders and granted TCC relief.
- CA noted delivery receipt for tires was not in the record but proceeded by presumption as to delivery date.
Issues Presented to the Supreme Court
- Whether the CA correctly found that the RTC acted with grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction in denying TCC’s motion to dismiss.
- Whether the CA correctly dismissed GV Florida’s third-party complaint on the ground of prescription.
- Procedural question of timeliness of GV Florida’s Rule 45 petition and whether extension of time was permissible under Rule 45.
Supreme Court: Timeliness and Motion for Extension
- Section 2, Rule 45 allows filing of a motion for extension of time; reglementary period for Rule 45 petition is 15 days from receipt of judgment/resolution/final order, and the Court may grant extension not exceeding 30 days on motion filed before the reglementary period.
- Supreme Court granted GV Florida’s motion for extension of time in a Resolution dated July 16, 2012; petition deemed timely filed.
Legal Standards and Doctrines Applied
- Interlocutory vs final orders: Order denying motion to dismiss is interlocutory; general remedy is to answer and proceed to trial; appeal not available except by showing grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction.
- Special civil action for certiorari (Rule 65) corrects errors in jurisdiction, not mere errors in judgment or misapplication of