G.R. No. L-2944 - JANUARY 1950 - PHILIPPINE JURISPRUDENCE CASE NUMBERCASE TITLE G.R. No. L-2944January 31, 1950 Julia Manuela Lichauco, et al. vs. Antonio G. Lucero, et al. G.R. No. L-2851January 31, 1950 Angela Goyena de Quizon vs. Philippine National Bank, et al. G.R. No. L-2592January 31, 1950 Municipality of Dingras vs. Cornelio Bonoan, et al. G.R. No. L-2321January 31, 1950 People of the Philippines vs. Arsenia Nuñez G.R. No. L-2237January 31, 1950 People of the Philippines vs. Amado Menor G.R. No. L-2235January 31, 1950 People of the Philippines vs. Urbano Marasigan G.R. No. L-2216January 31, 1950 Dee C. Chuan & Sons, Inc. vs. Court of Industrial Relations, et al. G.R. No. L-2196January 31, 1950 El Pueblo de Pilipinas vs. Pedro Capua G.R. No. L-2156January 31, 1950 El Pueblo de Pilipinas vs. Pedro Antonio G.R. No. L-2065January 31, 1950 People of the Philippines vs. Hilarion Jardinico G.R. No. L-2000January 31, 1950 People of the Philippines vs. Francisco Deduyo G.R. No. L-1731January 31, 1950 People of the Philippines vs. Faustino Flores G.R. No. L-1676January 31, 1950 People of the Philippines vs. Leon Gutierrez G.R. No. L-1624January 31, 1950 People of the Philippines vs. Felipe Reyes G.R. No. L-1655January 31, 1950 People of the Philippines vs. Roberto Bautista G.R. No. L-1577January 31, 1950 Enrique Bautista vs. Eustaquio Fule G.R. No. L-1559January 31, 1950 Filipinas Compañia de Seguros vs. Tan Chuaco G.R. No. L-3282January 28, 1950 Victorina A. de Gaerlan, et al. vs. Felix Martinez, et al. G.R. No. L-2811January 28, 1950 Prescila S. Eboña, et al. vs. Municipality of Daet G.R. No. L-2548January 28, 1950 Dee C. Chuan, et al. vs. Court of Industrial Relations, et al. G.R. No. L-2540January 28, 1950 Benigno S. Viray vs. Amnesty Commission of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, et al. G.R. No. L-2095January 28, 1950 People of the Philippines vs. Fausto Clamania G.R. No. L-2003January 28, 1950 Filemon Arciga vs. Ernesto de Jesus, et al. G.R. No. L-1986January 28, 1950 Placida Clemente de Belarmino, et al. vs. Pedro de Mesa G.R. No. L-711January 28, 1950 People of the Philippines vs. Amado Pañganiban, et al. G.R. No. L-2347January 23, 1950 Anselmo Bulasag, et al. vs. ALipio Ramos, et al. G.R. No. L-2248January 23, 1950 in re: Vicente Rosal Pardo.Vicente Rosal Pardo vs. Republic G.R. No. L-2247January 23, 1950 in re: Florentino Uy Boco. Florentino Uy Boco vs. Republica de Filipinas G.R. No. L-1477January 18, 1950 People of the Philippines vs. Julio Guillen G.R. No. L-858January 18, 1950 El Pueblo de Filipinas vs. Gregorio Hontañosas G.R. No. L-3033January 13, 1950 Philippine Manufacturing Co. vs. National Labor Union, et al. G.R. No. L-2700January 13, 1950 People of the Philippines vs. Manuel Blanco G.R. No. L-2569January 13, 1950 Gotamco Lumber Company vs. Court of Industrial Relations, et al. G.R. No. L-2015January 6, 1950 Luisa Cruz vda. de Jose, et al. vs. Eugenia dela Paz The Lawphil Project - Arellano Law Foundation, Inc. Julia Manuela Lichauco, et al. vs. Antonio G. Lucero, et al. Angela Goyena de Quizon vs. Philippine National Bank, et al. Municipality of Dingras vs. Cornelio Bonoan, et al. People of the Philippines vs. Arsenia Nuñez People of the Philippines vs. Amado Menor People of the Philippines vs. Urbano Marasigan Dee C. Chuan & Sons, Inc. vs. Court of Industrial Relations, et al. El Pueblo de Pilipinas vs. Pedro Capua El Pueblo de Pilipinas vs. Pedro Antonio People of the Philippines vs. Hilarion Jardinico People of the Philippines vs. Francisco Deduyo People of the Philippines vs. Faustino Flores People of the Philippines vs. Leon Gutierrez People of the Philippines vs. Felipe Reyes People of the Philippines vs. Roberto Bautista Enrique Bautista vs. Eustaquio Fule Filipinas Compañia de Seguros vs. Tan Chuaco Victorina A. de Gaerlan, et al. vs. Felix Martinez, et al. Prescila S. Eboña, et al. vs. Municipality of Daet Dee C. Chuan, et al. vs. Court of Industrial Relations, et al. Benigno S. Viray vs. Amnesty Commission of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, et al. People of the Philippines vs. Fausto Clamania Filemon Arciga vs. Ernesto de Jesus, et al. Placida Clemente de Belarmino, et al. vs. Pedro de Mesa People of the Philippines vs. Amado Pañganiban, et al. Anselmo Bulasag, et al. vs. ALipio Ramos, et al. in re: Vicente Rosal Pardo.Vicente Rosal Pardo vs. Republic in re: Florentino Uy Boco. Florentino Uy Boco vs. Republica de Filipinas People of the Philippines vs. Julio Guillen El Pueblo de Filipinas vs. Gregorio Hontañosas Philippine Manufacturing Co. vs. National Labor Union, et al. People of the Philippines vs. Manuel Blanco Gotamco Lumber Company vs. Court of Industrial Relations, et al. Luisa Cruz vda. de Jose, et al. vs. Eugenia dela Paz The Lawphil Project - Arellano Law Foundation, Inc.
Republic of the Philippines
SUPREME COURT
Manila
EN BANC
G.R. No. L-2944 January 31, 1950
JULIA MANUELA LICHAUCO and MIGUELA ZAMORA,petitioners,
vs.
ANTONIO G. LUCERO, Judge of the Court of the First Instance of Pangasinan, and MANUEL JOSE LICHAUCO,respondents.
Arturo Agustines for petitioners.
Quijano and Alidio for respondents.
REYES,J.:
This is an action forcertiorarito annul an order of the respondent judge setting aside a prior order of another judge of the court for the same court for the issuance of a writ of execution in a case decided by said court but already, elevated to the Court of Appeals.
It appears that in said case the plaintiff Manuel Jose Lichauco, as a result of the cross-complaint interposed by the defendants, was adjudged to acknowledge the defendant Julia Manuela Lichauco as his natural child and to give her support in the sum of P50 a month. The case was appealed by the plaintiff to the Court of Appeals, where it was appealed docketed as CA-G. R No. 8635, but after the submission in that court was totally destroyed during the battle for the liberation of Manila. Neither party applied for the reconstitution of the destroyed record but on November 29, 1947, the appellees(petitioners therein) filed a motion for the execution of the judgment appealed from on the ground that appellants failure to ask for the reconstitution of the records within the period fixed by this Court operated as an abandonment of his appeal and rendered the said judgment final and executory.
On September 22, 1948, Judge Mañalac granted a motion and ordered execution to issue. Appellant asked for a reconsideration, and, although his motion was filed more than three months after he was notified of the order. It was granted by Judge Lucero, who vacated the order of Judge Mañalac and quashed the writ of execution issued thereunder. It was the appellee's turn to ask for reconsideration. But their motion for that purpose having been denied, they brought the present action forcertiorarito have Judge Lucero's order annulled.
It should at once be stated that the appeal of the case to the Court of Appeals divested the Court of the First Instance of its jurisdiction over the same, so that the order for execution issued by the Court of First Instance pending resolution of said appeal was void as having been rendered without jurisdiction. As such, it could be set aside at any time.
It is however, contended that the appellant should be deemed abandoned because of the appellants failure to ask for the reconstitution of the destroyed record. We can not subscribe to this contention, because once the record of the case is destroyed or lost, the duty of having the same reconstituted devolves upon both parties, so that the omission of one party alone to ask for reconstitution should not be construed as an abandonment of the case. Moreover, it was for the appellate court where the appeal was pending and not for the Court of First Instance, which had already lost jurisdiction, to determine whether the appeal had been abandoned or not, and until that determination had been made by the appellate court, the court of First instance would have no power to declare the judgment appealed from final and executory.
It follows from foregoing that the order complained of should be affirmed.
It appears, however, that although the record of the case in the Court of Appeals was totally destroyed, the original record in the Court of First Instance of Pangasinan, including the evidence, has remained in tact. In the circumstances, rather than put the parties to the necessity of filing a new action and conducting a new trial, we would be serving the interests of justice if we let them continue the old case by allowing them to prosecute the appeal anew, giving them reasonable time for that purpose.
Wherefore the petition for certiorari is denied and the appellant Manuel Jose Lichauco is given thirty days from the time he is notified of this decision to bring his appeal anew to the Court of Appeals. Without costs.
Moran, C.J., Ozaeta, Bengzon, Padilla, Tuason, Montemayor and Torres, JJ.,concur.
Separate Opinions
PARAS,J.,dissenting:
I dissent from so much of the decision of the majority as allows appellant Lichauco to appeal anew from the decision of the Court of First Instance of Pangasinan to the Court of Appeals within thirty days.
Under section 29 of Act No. 3110, in case the parties interested in a destroyed record fail to petition for the reconstitution thereof within the statutory period, they shall be understood to have waived the reconstitution and may file their respective actions anew. In view of the failure of the parties in the case herein involved (which was pending in the Court of Appeals when its records were destroyed) to timely move for proper reconstitution, the only course for us to follow is to hold that a new action is necessary. By allowing appellant Lichauco to appeal, this Court in effect sanctions the late filing of a petition for reconstitution, or the filing of an appeal after the expiration of the reglementary period. This result is very obvious. Suppose the appellees(herein petitioners) had not moved for the issuance of a writ of execution in the trial court, may appellant Lichauco validly institute, after the expiration of the statutory period, reconstitution proceedings in the Court of appeals, or instead prosecute anew an appeal from the decision of the trial court? of course not, and yet this is the very procedure authorized in the majority decision.
There are certain disadvantages and difficulties incident to the bringing of a new action, and whether they would prove to favor one or the other party, this Court has no right to disregard the intent and purposes of the Reconstitution Law (Act No. 3110).