Case Summary (G.R. No. 231164)
Petitioner’s Position
Mayor Osmeña sought review of the Court of Appeals (CA) decision that granted a writ of kalikasan and ordered the permanent cessation of dumping at the Inayawan landfill and continued rehabilitation. Petitioner contended, among other arguments, that respondent failed to comply with the 30-day prior notice requirement for citizen suits under R.A. No. 9003 (Ecological Solid Waste Management Act of 2000) and R.A. No. 8749 (Clean Air Act).
Respondent’s Claims and Reliefs Sought
Respondent alleged that reopening and continued operation of the Inayawan landfill caused serious environmental damage and threatened the constitutional right to a balanced and healthful ecology. He argued the landfill had outlived its useful life, operated in violation of multiple environmental laws and regulations (including R.A. 9003, R.A. 8749, R.A. 9275, P.D. No. 856, and DAO No. 2003-30), and asked for issuance of the writ of kalikasan and a Temporary Environmental Protection Order (TEPO).
Key Dates and Procedural Milestones
- April 6, 1993: DENR issued an Environmental Compliance Certificate (ECC) for the Inayawan sanitary landfill.
- 2011–2015: Cebu City initiated closure proceedings; partial closure and, formally, closure on June 15, 2015 under former Mayor Michael Rama.
- June–July 2016: City sought temporary reopening; EMB expressed no objection subject to commitments and monitoring; landfill reopened in July 2016.
- September 2, 2016: EMB issued Notice of Violation and Technical Conference.
- September 6, 2016: DOH Inspection Report recommending immediate closure.
- September 23, 2016: Respondent filed petition for writ of kalikasan with the CA.
- October 6, 2016: CA granted writ of kalikasan and set hearing for TEPO; December 15, 2016: CA decision granting writ and ordering permanent cessation; March 14, 2017: CA denied motion for reconsideration.
- March 20, 2018: Supreme Court decision denying petitioner’s Rule 45 petition and affirming CA.
Applicable Law and Remedial Framework
The Supreme Court applied the 1987 Philippine Constitution as the constitutional basis for the environmental right invoked (given the decision date). The RPEC (A.M. No. 09-6-8-SC) and its provisions on the writ of kalikasan (Rule 7) and citizen suits (Rule 2, Section 5) were central. Statutory provisions invoked by parties included R.A. No. 9003 (citizen suit provision and prohibitions on open dumps), R.A. No. 8749, R.A. No. 9275, P.D. No. 856, and relevant DENR administrative orders (including DAO No. 34-01 referenced in the record).
Nature and Scope of the Writ of Kalikasan
The Court reiterated that the writ of kalikasan is an extraordinary remedy designed to protect the constitutional right to a balanced and healthful ecology where environmental damage is of such magnitude that it prejudices inhabitants in two or more cities or provinces. The RPEC allows direct filing with the Supreme Court or any Court of Appeals station. The elements for the writ under Section 1, Rule 7 of RPEC are: (1) actual or threatened violation of the constitutional right to a balanced and healthful ecology; (2) violation arising from an unlawful act or omission by a public official/employee or private entity; and (3) environmental damage of such magnitude as to prejudice life, health, or property of inhabitants in two or more cities or provinces.
Court’s Ruling on the 30-Day Notice Requirement
The Supreme Court held that the 30-day prior notice required under the citizen-suit provisions of R.A. 9003 and R.A. 8749 is inapplicable to petitions for the writ of kalikasan filed under the RPEC. The RPEC creates a separate and distinct action and permits direct resort to the CA or the Supreme Court when dictated by public welfare. Because the writ is extraordinary and the RPEC expressly allows direct filing, the Court exercised discretion to accept the petition without the 30-day statutory notice.
Analysis and Findings on the Writ’s Requisites
The Court found that respondent sufficiently established the requisites for the writ. The record demonstrated actual and threatened violations of the constitutional right to a balanced and healthful ecology arising from the City Government’s operation of the landfill, and environmental damage of sufficient magnitude. The Court emphasized that the precise degree of damage is not numerically defined in the Rules; gravity and territorial scope are evaluated case-by-case.
Evidence of Environmental Harm and Noncompliance
The Court relied on the EMB Compliance Evaluation Report (CER) dated August 18, 2016; the EMB Notice of Violation and Technical Conference dated September 2, 2016; the DOH Inspection Report dated September 6, 2016; testimony and admissions (including DENR-7 officials); and 15 affidavits from affected residents and business owners. Key factual findings included: conversion of the sanitary landfill into a dumpsite operation in violation of R.A. 9003; failure to provide proper leachate collection and treatment; lack of regular water-quality monitoring and gas-emission controls; air pollution and foul odors affecting Cebu City and neighboring Talisay City; leachate being discharged without proper
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Citation and Forum
- Supreme Court of the Philippines, En Banc; 828 Phil. 560; G.R. No. 231164; Decision dated March 20, 2018; penned by Justice Tijam.
- Petition for Review on Certiorari under Rule 45 from the Court of Appeals Decision dated December 15, 2016 and Resolution dated March 14, 2017 in CA G.R. SP No. 004WK.
- Petition filed by Mayor Tomas R. Osmeña (Mayor Osmeña) in his capacity as City Mayor of Cebu; respondent is Joel Capili Garganera representing the people of Cebu City and Talisay City and future generations.
Antecedent and Factual Background
- 1993: Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) issued an Environmental Compliance Certificate (ECC) for the Solid Waste Sanitary Landfill Project at Inayawan, proposed by the Metro Cebu Development Project Office (MCDPO); the Inayawan landfill served as Cebu City’s garbage disposal site thereafter.
- 2011: Cebu City government resolved to close the Inayawan landfill (SP Resolution and Executive Order of former Mayor Michael Rama).
- Aug. 24, 2011: SP Resolution No. 12-0582-2011 allocated P1,204,500 for preparation of closure and rehabilitation plan for Inayawan landfill; Mar. 21, 2012: SP Resolution No. 12-2617-2012 authorized bidding for that plan.
- Following plans and bidding, the landfill was partially closed and waste disposal shifted to a privately operated landfill in Consolacion.
- June 15, 2015: Formal closure of Inayawan landfill pursuant to former Mayor Rama’s directive.
- June 8 & June 27, 2016: Acting Cebu City Mayor Margot Osmeña wrote to DENR-EMB Regional Director Engr. William Cuñado requesting temporary reopening and submitted the City’s commitments under R.A. No. 9003; EMB responded that it had no authority to issue a Notice to Proceed but raised no objection provided commitments were honored and EMB monitoring would occur.
- July 2016: Acting Mayor Margot officially reopened the Inayawan landfill.
- Sept. 2, 2016: EMB issued a Notice of Violation and Technical Conference to Mayor Osmeña regarding violations of the ECC in operating Inayawan landfill.
- Sept. 6, 2016: Department of Health (DOH) Inspection Report recommended immediate closure due to lack of sanitary requirements and environmental, health and community safety issues (DOH Regional Sanitary Engineer Henry D. Saludar).
- Sept. 23, 2016: Joel Capili Garganera filed a petition for writ of kalikasan with prayer for a Temporary Environmental Protection Order (TEPO) before the Court of Appeals, asserting serious environmental damage, unsuitability of the landfill, and violations of environmental laws and regulations.
- Oct. 6, 2016: Court of Appeals granted the writ of kalikasan and required a verified return; summary hearing set for TEPO application.
- Dec. 15, 2016: Court of Appeals Decision granted the writ of kalikasan, ordering permanent cessation of dumping at Inayawan, continued rehabilitation, EMB monitoring, and potential filing of criminal/civil/administrative charges upon non-compliance; required monthly progress reports from DENR-EMB.
- Mar. 14, 2017: Court of Appeals denied Mayor Osmeña’s motion for reconsideration and directed submission of the Safe Closure and Rehabilitation Plan (SCRP) within 30 days.
- March 20, 2018: Supreme Court En Banc denied the petition and affirmed the Court of Appeals Decision and Resolution.
Parties and Roles
- Petitioner: Mayor Tomas R. Osmeña, in his capacity as City Mayor of Cebu (seeking reversal of CA decision).
- Respondent/Petitioner below: Joel Capili Garganera, for and on his own behalf and representing the people of Cebu and Talisay and future generations, incl. the unborn.
- Administrative/Technical participants: DENR-Environmental Management Bureau (EMB); DOH (Department of Health); Metro Cebu Development Project Office (MCDPO); former Mayor Michael Rama; Acting Mayor Margot Osmeña.
- Court of Appeals: Associate Justice Edgardo L. Delos Santos (pen), concurred by Associate Justices Edward B. Contreras and Germano Francisco D. Legaspi.
- Supreme Court: En Banc; majority opinion by Justice Tijam; concurrence by named justices; Acting Chief Justice Carpio noted.
Procedural Posture
- Litigation commenced by writ of kalikasan petition before the Court of Appeals (Oct. 2016); CA issued writ and later granted permanent relief (Dec. 15, 2016).
- Petitioner filed motion for reconsideration in CA; denied (Mar. 14, 2017).
- Petitioner elevated case to Supreme Court by Petition for Review on Certiorari under Rule 45; Supreme Court resolved on March 20, 2018.
Legal Issues Presented
- Whether the 30-day prior notice requirement for citizen suits under R.A. No. 9003 (Ecological Solid Waste Management Act) and R.A. No. 8749 (Philippine Clean Air Act) is required prior to filing the instant writ of kalikasan petition.
- Whether the Court of Appeals correctly found that the requisites for issuance of the writ of kalikasan were sufficiently established in this case.
Applicable Statutes, Rules, and Authorities Cited
- Rules of Procedure for Environmental Cases (RPEC), A.M. No. 09-6-8-SC:
- Section 5, Rule 2 — Citizen suit provision permitting Filipino citizens to file actions to enforce environmental laws; notice and intervention mechanics; citizen suits filed under R.A. 8749 and R.A. 9003 governed by their provisions.
- Section 1, Rule 7 — Nature of the writ of kalikasan: remedy for persons or entities representing those whose constitutional right to a balanced and healthful ecology is violated or threatened by unlawful acts or omissions involving environmental damage of such magnitude as to prejudice life, health or property of inhabitants in two or more cities or provinces.
- Section 3, Rule 7 — Where to file: Supreme Court or any Court of Appeals station.
- R.A. No. 9003 (Ecological Solid Waste Management Act of 2000): Section 52 (citizen suits) requiring 30-day notice before filing certain suits.
- R.A. No. 8749 (Philippine Clean Air Act of 1999): Section 41 (citizen suits) requiring 30-day notice.
- R.A. No. 9275 (Philippine Clean Water Act of 2004), P.D. No. 856 (Code on Sanitation), and DENR DAO No. 2003-30 (IRR for Environmental Impact Statement) — invoked as laws and regulations allegedly violated.
- DENR Administrative Order No. 34-01 — criteria for leachate collection/treatment, water/gas monitoring, prohibition against open dump sites per R.A. 9003 Section 17(h).
- Precedents and authorities cited in the opinion: Segovia v. Climate Change Commission; Hon. Paje v.