Case Summary (G.R. No. 218068)
Petitioner and Respondent Roles
Petitioners were defendants in an ejectment action in DARAB Case No. R-03-02-0213-Bul’02 and filed notices of appeal from the Regional Adjudicator’s adverse decision. Respondents were plaintiffs/landowners who sought ejectment and pursued motions alleging defective or forged notices of appeal.
Key Dates
Relevant chronology from the record: complaint filed March 6, 2002; Regional Adjudicator decision January 23, 2003; notices of appeal filed February 28 and March 5, 2003; May 6, 2003 Order giving due course to appeals except as to deceased defendants; implementation of writ of execution May 8–10, 2003; August 5, 2003 Order reinstating appeals of heirs and quashing writ as to them; Court of Appeals decision June 9, 2004; Supreme Court decision reviewing CA ruling (decision date falls in 2010).
Applicable Law and Procedural Framework
Governing constitutional framework: 1987 Philippine Constitution (applicable because the decision date is after 1990). Governing statutory and regulatory instruments and principles invoked in the decision: 1994 DARAB Rules of Procedure (applicable to the case filed in 2002), Rule XIII on appeals (Sections 1, 2, 5), Rule I general provisions requiring liberal construction for agrarian cases, Rule V on parties and real party in interest, Rule XIV on judicial review, PD No. 27 (emancipation of tenants) and agrarian statutes (RA 3844 and RA 6657) on succession and rights of heirs, and Article 3 of the Revised Penal Code on the necessity of dolo (criminal intent).
Factual Background
The dispute concerned several parcels totaling 58.8448 hectares in Sta. Barbara, Baliuag, Bulacan, covered by multiple TCTs. Respondents asserted petitioners were agricultural lessees bound to pay lease rentals and had not paid since 1994. Petitioners claimed farmer-beneficiary status with CLTs and unregistered emancipation patents. Respondents filed an ejectment complaint naming two deceased tenants (Avelino Santos and Pedro Bernardo) among defendants; their heirs (Delfin Sacdalan and Roberto Bernardo) actually appeared and participated at the proceedings, although formal substitution or amendment was not entered.
Regional Adjudicator’s Decision and Rationale
The Regional Adjudicator issued a decision (January 23, 2003) granting ejectment, severing tenancy, ordering vacatur and payment of lease rentals, and awarding liquidated damages. The Adjudicator’s reasoning relied on an administrative DAR order allegedly exempting the lands from CARP coverage (and directing cancellation of CLTs/EPs in the proper forum), making petitioners liable as lessees; because petitioners failed to prove rent payments since 1994, they were held to have lost security of tenure.
Notices of Appeal and Alleged Defects
Two groups of petitioners filed notices of appeal (Feb 28 and Mar 5, 2003). Both notices stated appeal was on “questions of fact and law” but were not signed by their prior counsel and omitted the specific DARAB wording that the errors, if not corrected, would cause “grave irreparable damage and injury.” The March 5 notice bore signatures above the names of deceased defendants, prompting respondents to allege forgery.
Regional Adjudicator’s May 6, 2003 Action and Subsequent Proceedings
On May 6, 2003, the Regional Adjudicator gave due course to the appeal generally but found the signatures of the deceased defendants falsified and issued a writ of execution against non-appealing defendants and the deceased defendants; that writ was executed May 8–10, 2003. Motions for reconsideration ensued from both parties. At a July 3, 2003 hearing, the heirs/widows explained their signing practices: a widow admitted signing her deceased husband’s name on pleadings and another testified that her son signed for her. Based on these explanations, the Adjudicator’s August 5, 2003 Order allowed the appeals of the heirs of the decedents, quashed the writ of execution as to them, and denied plaintiffs’ motion for reconsideration.
Court of Appeals Ruling
The Court of Appeals granted respondents’ certiorari petition and held the notices of appeal to be “mere scraps of paper” because they did not specify the grounds for appeal under Section 2, Rule XIII of the DARAB Rules; the CA also ruled the March 5, 2003 notice was forged and thus void. The CA therefore gave no legal effect to petitioners’ notices of appeal. A motion for reconsideration was denied by the CA.
Issues Presented to the Supreme Court
(1) Whether the notices of appeal were invalid “mere scraps of paper” for failure to specify grounds of appeal, and (2) whether the March 5, 2003 notice was null for containing falsified signatures.
Petitioners’ Contentions Before the Supreme Court
Petitioners contended they substantially complied with the DARAB appeal requirements and that the general statement “questions of fact and law” sufficed; they argued strict application of formalities unjustly deprived them of appellate rights and that their signatures (or those of heirs) were not intended to defraud but to preserve participation in the proceedings.
Respondents’ Contentions Before the Supreme Court
Respondents maintained that the notices were defective and frivolous under DARAB procedure for failing to specify grounds and that the March 5 notice contained forged signatures, which should be treated as invalid and potentially criminal; they urged strict adherence to rules intended to discourage dilatory appeals.
Supreme Court’s Governing Approach to Procedural Rules in Agrarian Cases
The Supreme Court emphasized that procedural rules are tools to secure fair and orderly proceedings but must be liberally construed to achieve substantial justice. Agrarian rules expressly mandate liberal construction and non-application of strict technical rules; proceedings before DARAB adjudicators are non‑litigious in nature and designed to be expeditious, inexpensive, and equitable. Dismissal of appeals for mere technical shortcomings is disfavored, particularly where the notice of appeal fulfilled its pragmatic purposes.
Analysis: Substantial Compliance with DARAB Notice Requirements
Applying Rule XIII provisions, the Court found the notices’ statement that the appeals were taken on “questions of fact and law” sufficient to meet Section 2(a) (errors in findings of fact or conclusions of law which, if uncorrected, would cause grave and irreparable damage). The omission of the precise phrase concerning “grave and irreparable damage” was regarded as an unnecessary literalism because the evident purpose of a notice is to signal timeliness, the general ground, serve notice to adverse parties, and trigger preparation of the records for elevation. The Court also noted that the notice’s role is not to detail objections (that is the function of the appeal memorandum). The petitioners’ lack of counsel at the time of filing and the subsequent entry of new counsel supported finding excusable noncompliance. The Regional Adjudicator’s function when an appeal is timely is ministerial — to give due course — and evaluation of frivolousness belongs to the Board on appeal, not to the adjudicator.
Analysis: Alleged Forgery and Heirs’ Signatures
The Court addressed the forgery allegation in context. Respondents themselves had contributed to the confusion by naming deceased persons as defendants rather than their heirs, contrary to DARAB Rule V requiring real party in interest. The heirs had voluntarily appeared, participated, and were treated as successors-in-interest during the proceedings, so jurisdiction over them was effectively acquired. On the signature issue, the Court found no evidence of criminal intent (dolo). Heirs and widows admitted the circumstances and their intention to participate and appeal; respondents were aware of the decedents’ deaths and the heirs’ participation. Under criminal law principles, falsification requires intent to deceive and effect on the integrity of the public document; here the formality of the name used did not change the substantive effect — the heirs
...continue readingCase Syllabus (G.R. No. 218068)
Procedural Posture and Relief Sought
- Petition for certiorari to the Supreme Court challenging the June 9, 2004 Decision of the Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. SP No. 79304 and the August 31, 2004 Resolution denying petitioners’ motion for reconsideration.
- CA had granted respondents’ petition and declared petitioners’ notices of appeal “mere scrap of paper” for (a) failure to specify the ground for appeal and (b) alleged forgery of signatures; CA’s dispositive ruling: “the Notices of Appeal filed by the private respondents before the public respondent are hereby decreed without legal effect.”
- Petitioners seek annulment and setting aside of the CA decision and reinstatement of the Regional Adjudicator’s August 5, 2003 Order giving due course to the notices of appeal.
Factual Antecedents — Parties, Land and Character of Possession
- Respondents: co-owners of several parcels (totaling 58.8448 hectares) in Sta. Barbara, Baliuag, Bulacan, covered by TCT Nos. T-158564, T-215772, T-215776, T-215777, T-215775; land primarily devoted to rice production.
- Petitioners: in actual possession as tillers; petitioners claim status as farmer-beneficiaries under Presidential Decree No. 27, holding Certificates of Land Transfer (CLTs) and unregistered emancipation patents (EPs); respondents assert petitioners are agricultural lessees obliged to pay annual lease rentals.
- On March 6, 2002, respondents filed a complaint for ejectment (DARAB Case No. R-03-02-0213-Bul’02) alleging non-payment of rentals since 1994.
- Two named defendants in the complaint, Avelino Santos and Pedro Bernardo, were deceased when complaint was filed (Avelino died December 29, 1997; Pedro died July 25, 1999); their successors-in-interest were Delfin Sacdalan and Roberto Bernardo respectively.
- No amendment to implead real parties-in-interest occurred; by order dated May 9, 2002, the Regional Adjudicator ordered legal heirs to substitute the decedents, but formal substitution did not take place; nonetheless, heirs appeared and participated and were recognized in the parties’ position papers.
Rulings of the Regional Adjudicator — Decision dated January 23, 2003
- Regional Adjudicator Fe Arche Manalang issued a Decision on January 23, 2003 in favor of respondents with dispositive reliefs:
- Severed and extinguished tenancy/leasehold relationship between plaintiffs-landowners and defendants over the described landholdings.
- Directed defendants and those claiming under them to vacate and surrender possession, remove improvements at their expense, and to continue paying annual leasehold rentals until plaintiffs are restored to possession.
- Directed defendants to pay P300,000.00 as liquidated damages jointly and severally.
- Denied other claims for lack of basis; no pronouncement as to costs.
- Basis of Decision:
- The Decision relied on an exemption order (December 18, 1992) by DAR Regional Director Antonio M. Nuesa exempting the subject properties from CARP coverage and directing cancellation of CLTs/EPs in proper forum; under that premise petitioners could at best be lessees obligated to pay rent.
- Petitioners failed to prove compliance with rental obligations since 1994; Regional Adjudicator concluded they could no longer invoke security of tenure.
Notices of Appeal — Form, Signatures and Timeliness
- Petitioners filed two separate notices of appeal:
- First notice dated February 28, 2003 by Marciano Natividad, Alberto Enriquez, Benigno Cabingao, Rodolfo Dimaapi.
- Second notice dated March 5, 2003 by Cecilia Maniego, Jose Bautista, Eliza Pacheco, Roberto Bernardo, Ismael Natividad, Juanito Fajardo, Antonio Mananghaya, Jovita R. Diaz, Mario Pacheco, Emilio Peralta, Mario Galvez, and the two decedents Pedro and Avelino (the record indicates Pedro and Avelino were named although deceased).
- Form of notices: nearly identical language — “DEFENDANTS, unto this Honorable Board, hereby serve notice that they are appealing the decision rendered in the above-entitled case, which was received on February 18, 2003 to the DARAB, Central Office at Diliman, Quezon City on the grounds of question of law and fact.”
- Notable: the notices of appeal were not signed by counsel (Atty. Jaime G. Mena’s signature, which appeared in prior pleadings, was absent).
Respondents’ Motions, May 6, 2003 Order and Implementation
- On March 6, 2003 respondents filed:
- Motion to dismiss the appeal, and
- Ex parte motion for issuance of a writ of execution and/or partial implementation against non-appealing defendants.
- Respondents’ grounds for dismissal:
- Notices did not state grounds relied upon for appeal (purported noncompliance with Section 2, Rule XIII, DARAB Rules).
- March 5, 2003 notice filed beyond reglementary period.
- March 5, 2003 notice contained forged signatures of deceased Avelino and Pedro.
- May 6, 2003 Order of the Regional Adjudicator:
- Gave due course to the appeal except as to the decedents Avelino and Pedro, whose signatures were held falsified.
- Issued writ of execution against the non-appealing defendants and deceased defendants.
- Petitioners received the May 6 Order and writ on May 8, 2003; writ implemented May 8 and May 10, 2003.
Motions for Reconsideration, Hearing July 3, 2003 and August 5, 2003 Order
- Parties dissatisfied with May 6 Order filed motions for reconsideration.
- Heirs (including those whose appeal was initially disallowed) were represented later by DAR-Legal Counsel Atty. Dauphine B. Go (entry of appearance March 13, 2003).
- Heirs’ explanations at hearing (July 3, 2003):
- Pilar Bernardo (widow of Pedro) testified she did not personally sign the notice but allowed her son Roberto to sign on her behalf; Roberto admitted signing documents on behalf of his mother.
- Jovita Santos (widow of Avelino) admitted signing her deceased husband’s name on pleadings, explaining she intended to indicate the heirs’ intent to appeal.
- August 5, 2003 Order by Regional Adjudicator:
- Denied plaintiffs’ motion for reconsideration (filed May 13, 2003) and noted without action the Motion for Execution Pending Appeal.
- Gave due course to Motion for Reconsideration filed by Heirs of Pedro Bernardo, Heirs of Avelino Santos, and of Ismael Natividad, thereby allowing their appeal to the exclusion of other defendants-movants.
- Motu proprio quashed the writ of execution dated May 8, 2003 as to these heirs and nullified proceedings undertaken in connection therewith.
- The Order explicitly favored substantial justice over technical defect in affixing signatures where heirs voluntarily participated and intended to appeal.
Subsequent Orders and Remedies Exhausted Below
- Respondents filed further motions for reconsideration (August 14, 2003; denied November 13, 2003 — which ordered sheriff to restore farmholdings of the heirs of Avelino and Pedro — and another reconsideration denied January 9, 2004).
- Respondents then filed a petition for certiorari with the Court of Appeals, alleging the DARAB lacked jurisdiction to reverse portions of its Decision after execution and reiterating the notices were defective and forged.
Court of Appeals Ruling (June 9, 2004) — Findings and Rationale
- CA found in favor of respondents and granted their petition for certiorari.
- CA’s principal findings:
- The March 5, 2003 Notice of Appeal bearing signatures of deceased Avelino and Pedro was a product of forgery and therefore had no legal effect.
- Both notices of appeal (first and second groups) were “mere scraps of paper” for failure to comply with Section 2, Rule XIII (1994 DARAB Rules) by not specifically alleging g