Case Summary (G.R. No. 167714)
Petitions, Claims and Subject Property
The Republic filed two civil forfeiture complaints in July 2003 seeking forfeiture of various bank accounts and government securities allegedly related to fraudulent investments and money‑laundering. Respondents later moved to intervene, asserting they were assignees of the Baladjays’ properties by virtue of an involuntary insolvency proceeding in the RTC of Makati, and therefore had a valid proprietary interest in the bank accounts subject to the forfeiture actions.
Key Dates
- July 18 and 21, 2003: Republic filed the two civil forfeiture complaints in Manila RTC (Civil Case Nos. 03‑107308 and 03‑107325).
- September 25 and 27, 2006: Respondents filed separate Motions for Leave to Intervene and Admit Attached Answer‑in‑Intervention.
- August 8, 2007: Manila RTC issued a Joint Order denying the motions to intervene.
- January 10, 2008: Manila RTC denied reconsideration of the denial.
- May 21, 2009: CA rendered Decision granting respondents’ petition and finding grave abuse of discretion by the Manila RTC.
- May 17, 2010: CA denied the Republic’s motion for reconsideration.
- September 23, 2010; February 11, 2011; May 9, 2011: Manila RTC rendered decisions in the underlying forfeiture cases ordering forfeiture of the assets to the government (including an amended decision).
- June 4, 2014: Supreme Court dismissed the petition for review on certiorari as moot and academic.
Applicable Law
Primary statutes and rules invoked: Republic Act No. 9160 (Anti‑Money Laundering Act of 2001); Republic Act No. 8799 (Securities Regulation Code); and the Rule of Procedure in Cases of Civil Forfeiture, Asset Preservation, and Freezing of Monetary Instrument, Property, or Proceeds (A.M. No. 05‑11‑04‑SC, hereinafter “Civil Forfeiture Rules”). The Civil Forfeiture Rules’ Section 35 was central to the RTC’s rationale on intervention.
Section 35 of the Civil Forfeiture Rules
Section 35 provides a post‑forfeiture remedy: when a court issues an order of forfeiture in a civil forfeiture petition for a money‑laundering offense, any person not impleaded or intervening may file a verified petition with the court that rendered the forfeiture within fifteen days from finality of the forfeiture order to assert that property legitimately belongs to them and seek segregation or exclusion; failure to do so renders the forfeiture order executory and bars other claims.
Manila RTC Ruling and Rationale
The Manila RTC denied respondents’ motions to intervene, reasoning that Section 35 affords an adequate and exclusive remedy for persons not impleaded or who have not intervened: an interested person could file a verified petition after an order of forfeiture becomes final. On this basis the RTC concluded respondents were sufficiently protected and that intervention prior to a forfeiture order was not necessary.
Court of Appeals Ruling
The CA granted respondents’ petition for certiorari, holding that the Manila RTC committed grave abuse of discretion in denying intervention. The CA accepted respondents’ showing that they were assignees in the Makati insolvency proceeding and therefore had a legitimate interest in the accounts. The CA also interpreted Section 35 as not prohibiting intervention prior to a forfeiture order; the provision merely prescribes an additional post‑forfeiture remedy and does not preclude earlier intervention by a party claiming an interest.
Issue Before the Supreme Court
Whether the CA erred in concluding the Manila RTC gravely abused its discretion in denying respondents’ motions to intervene in the civil forfeiture proceedings.
Supreme Court Ruling and Reasoning
The Supreme Court dismissed the petition for review on certiorari on the ground that the case had become moot and academic. The SC noted that while the petition challenged the RTC’s denial of intervention, subsequently the Manila RTC rendered final decisions in both civil forfeiture actions ordering forfeiture of the assets in favor of the government. Those supervening events removed any justiciable controversy: adjudication of whether respondents should have been permitted to intervene would no
...continue readingCase Syllabus (G.R. No. 167714)
Facts of the Case
- On July 18, 2003, the Republic of the Philippines, represented by the Anti-Money Laundering Council (AMLC), filed a complaint for civil forfeiture entitled Republic v. R.A.B. Realty, Inc., et al., docketed as Civil Case No. 03-107308 before the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Manila.
- On July 21, 2003, the Republic filed a second complaint for civil forfeiture entitled Republic v. Ariola, Jr., et al., docketed as Civil Case No. 03-107325, also before the Manila RTC; these two matters are collectively referred to as the civil forfeiture cases.
- The Republic sought forfeiture of certain deposits and government securities maintained in several bank accounts by the defendants, assets alleged to be related to the unlawful activity of fraudulently accepting investments from the public in violation of the Securities Regulation Code and the Anti-Money Laundering Act of 2001.
- The defendants named in Civil Case No. 03-107308 included R.A.B. Realty, Inc., Rosario A. Baladjay, Saturnino M. Baladjay, Chinatrust (Phils.) Commercial Bank Corporation, and Rizal Commercial Banking Corporation.
- The defendants named in Civil Case No. 03-107325 included Conrado G. Ariola, Jr., Joseph Valiant Ariola, Patrocinia J. Ariola, Rosario A. Baladjay, Security Bank, and Bank of the Philippine Islands.
Respondents’ Intervention Filings and Basis of Interest
- On September 25 and 27, 2006, respondents Rafael A. Manalo, Grace M. Oliva, and Freida Z. Rivera-Yap filed identical separate Motions for Leave to Intervene and Admit Attached Answer-in-Intervention in the civil forfeiture cases.
- The respondents alleged that they had a valid interest in the bank accounts subject to the forfeiture actions.
- They asserted that, in Spec. Proc. Case No. 03-026 (a petition for involuntary insolvency) pending before the RTC of Makati City, Branch 204, they had been appointed as assignees of the properties of Spouses Saturnino and Rosario Baladjay (Sps. Baladjay) and of their conduit companies, who were impleaded as defendants in the civil forfeiture cases.
- The separate motions for intervention were filed in Civil Case No. 03-107308 (record at rollo pp. 220-223) and in Civil Case No. 03-107325 (record at rollo pp. 215-219), and were identical in substance.
Manila RTC’s Ruling Denying Intervention
- On August 8, 2007, the Manila RTC, Branch 24, rendered a Joint Order denying the respondents’ separate motions for intervention.
- The Manila RTC relied on Section 35 of the Rule of Procedure in Cases of Civil Forfeiture (Civil Forfeiture Rules) to justify the denial, reasoning that Section 35 provided an adequate remedy post-forfeiture by way of a verified petition for segregation or exclusion.
- The text of Section 35, as cited in the RTC’s Joint Order, reads in relevant part:
- "Sec. 35. Notice to file claims. - Where the court has issued an order of forfeiture of the monetary instrument or property in a civil forfeiture petition for any money laundering offense defined under Section 4 of Republic Act No. 9160, as amended, any person who has not been impleaded nor intervened claiming an interest therein may apply, by verified petition, for a declaration that the same legitimately belongs to him and for segregation or exclusion of the monetary instrument or property corresponding thereto. The verified petition shall be filed with the court which rendered the order of forfeiture within fifteen days from the date of finality of the order of forfeiture, in default of which the said order shall be executory and bar all other claims."
- The RTC reasoned that because Section 35 furnished the respondents with a post-forfeiture remedy, they "need not unduly worry as they are amply protected in the event the funds subject of the instant case are ordered forfeited in favor of the [Republic]" (rollo, p. 225).
- Respondents moved for reconsideration of the Joint Order; the Manila RTC denied reconsideration in an Order dated January 10, 2008, prompting the respondents to elevate the matter to the Court of Appeals (CA) by petition for certiorari.
Court of Appeals Decision and Rationale
- In a Decision dated May 21, 2009, the Court of Appeals granted the respondents’ petition for certiorari and held that the Manila RTC gravely abused its discretion in denyi