FIRST DIVISION
[G.R. No. 142950. March 26, 2001]
EQUITABLE PCI BANK, formerly EQUITABLE BANKING CORPORATION, petitioner, vs. ROSITA KU, respondent.
D E C I S I O N
KAPUNAN,
J.:
Can a person be evicted
by virtue of a decision rendered in an ejectment case where she was not joined
as a party? This was the issue that
confronted the Court of Appeals, which resolved the issue in the negative. To hold the contrary, it said, would violate
due process. Given the circumstances of
the present case, petitioner Equitable PCI Bank begs to differ. Hence, this petition.
On February 4, 1982,
respondent Rosita Ku, as treasurer of Noddy Dairy Products, Inc., and Ku Giok
Heng, as Vice-President/General Manager of the same corporation, mortgaged the
subject property to the Equitable Banking Corporation, now known as Equitable
PCI Bank to secure Noddy Inc.’s loan to Equitable. The property, a residential house and lot located in La Vista,
Quezon City, was registered in respondent’s name.
Noddy, Inc. subsequently
failed to pay the loan secured by the mortgage, prompting petitioner to
foreclose the property extrajudicially.
As the winning bidder in the foreclosure sale, petitioner was issued a
certificate of sale. Respondent failed
to redeem the property. Thus, on
December 10, 1984, the Register of Deeds canceled the Transfer Certificate of
Title in the name of respondent and a new one was issued in petitioner’s name.
On May 10, 1989,
petitioner instituted an action for ejectment before the Quezon City
Metropolitan Trial Court (MeTC) against respondent’s father Ku Giok Heng. Petitioner alleged that it allowed Ku Giok
Heng to remain in the property on the condition that the latter pay rent. Ku Giok Heng’s failure to pay rent prompted
the MeTC to seek his ejectment. Ku Giok
Heng denied that there was any lease agreement over the property.
On December 8, 1994, the
MeTC rendered a decision in favor of petitioner and ordered Ku Giok Heng to,
among other things, vacate the premises.
It ruled:
x x x for his failure or refusal to pay rentals despite proper
demands, the defendant had not established his right for his continued
possession of or stay in the premises acquired by the plaintiff thru
foreclosure, the title of which had been duly transferred in the name of the
plaintiff. The absence of lease
agreement or agreement for the payment of rentals is of no moment in the light
of the prevailing Supreme Court ruling on the matter. Thus: “It is settled that the buyer in foreclosure sale becomes
the absolute owner of the property purchased if it is not redeemed during the
period of one (1) year after the registration of the sale is as such he is
entitled to the possession of the property and the demand at any time following
the consolidation of ownership and the issuance to him of a new certificate of
title. The buyer can, in fact, demand
possession of the land even during the redemption period except that he has to
post a bond in accordance with Section 7 of Act No. 3155 as amended. Possession of the land then becomes an
absolute right of the purchaser as confirmed owner. Upon proper application and
proof of title, the issuance of a writ of possession becomes a ministerial duty
of the court. (David Enterprises vs.
IBAA[,] 191 SCRA 116).[1]
Ku Giok Heng did not
appeal the decision of the MeTC.
Instead, he and his daughter, respondent Rosita Ku, filed on December
20, 1994, an action before the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Quezon City to
nullify the decision of the MeTC.
Finding no merit in the complaint, the RTC on September 13, 1999
dismissed the same and ordered the execution of the MeTC decision.
Respondent filed in the
Court of Appeals (CA) a special civil action for certiorari assailing
the decision of the RTC. She contended
that she was not made a party to the ejectment suit and was, therefore,
deprived of due process. The CA agreed
and, on March 31, 2000, rendered a decision enjoining the eviction of
respondent from the premises.
On May 10, 2000,
Equitable PCI Bank filed in this Court a motion for an extension of 30 days
from May 10, 2000 or until June 9, 2000 to file its petition for review of the
CA decision. The motion alleged that
the Bank received the CA decision on April 25, 2000.[2] The Court granted the motion for a 30-day extension
“counted from the expiration of the reglementary period” and “conditioned upon
the timeliness of the filing of [the] motion [for extension].”[3]
On June 13, 2000,[4] Equitable Bank filed its petition, contending that
there was no need to name respondent Rosita Ku as a party in the action for
ejectment since she was not a resident of the premises nor was she in
possession of the property.
The petition is
meritorious.
Generally, no man shall
be affected by any proceeding to which he is a stranger, and strangers to a
case are not bound by judgment rendered by the court.[5] Nevertheless, a
judgment in an ejectment suit is binding not only upon the defendants in the
suit but also against those not made parties thereto, if they are:
a) trespassers, squatters
or agents of the defendant fraudulently occupying the property to frustrate the
judgment;
b) guests or other
occupants of the premises with the permission of the defendant;
c) transferees pendente
lite;
d) sub-lessees;
e) co-lessees; or
f) members of the family,
relatives and other privies of the defendant.[6]
Thus, even if respondent
were a resident of the property, a point disputed by the parties, she is
nevertheless bound by the judgment of the MeTC in the action for ejectment
despite her being a non-party thereto.
Respondent is the daughter of Ku Giok Heng, the defendant in the action
for ejectment.
Respondent nevertheless
claims that the petition is defective.
The bank alleged in its petition that it received a copy of the CA
decision on April 25, 2000. A
Certification dated June 6, 2000 issued by the Manila Central Post Office
reveals, however, that the copy “was duly delivered to and received by Joel
Rosales (Authorized Representative) on April 24, 2000.”[7] Petitioner’s motion for extension to file this
petition was filed on May 10, 2000, sixteen (16) days from the
petitioner’s receipt of the CA decision (April 24, 2000) and one (1) day beyond
the reglementary period for filing the petition for review (May 9, 2000).
Petitioner however
maintains “its honest representation of having received [a copy of the
decision] on April 25, 2000.”[8] Appended as Annex “A” to petitioner’s Reply is an
Affidavit[9] dated October 27,
2000 and executed by Joel Rosales, who was mentioned in the Certification as
having received the decision. The
Affidavit states:
(1) I am an employee of Unique Industrial & Allied Services, Inc. (Unique) a corporation duly organized and existing under Philippine laws with principal place of business at 1206 Vito Cruz St., Malate, Manila, and I am assigned with the Equitable PCI Bank, Mail and Courier Department, Equitable PCI Bank Tower II, cor. Makati Avenue and H.V. dela Costa St., Makati City, Metro Manila;
(2) Under the contract of services between the Bank and Unique, it is my official duty and responsibility to receive and pick-up from the Manila Central Post Office (CPO) the various mails, letters, correspondence, and other mail matters intended for the bank’s various departments and offices at Equitable Bank Building, 262 Juan Luna St., Binondo, Manila. This building, however, also houses various other offices or tenants not related to the Bank.
(3) I am not the constituted agent of “Curato Divina Mabilog Niedo Magturo Pagaduan Law Office” whose former address is at Rm. 405 4/F Equitable Bank Bldg., 262 Juan Luna St., Binondo, Manila, for purposes of receiving their incoming mail matters; neither am I any such agent of the various other tenants of the said Building. On occasions when I receive mail matters for said law office, it is only to help them receive their letters promptly.
(4) On April 24, 2000, I received the registered letter sent by the Court of Appeals, covered by Registry Receipt No. 125234 and Delivery No. 4880 (copy of envelope attached as Annex “A”) together with other mail matters, and brought them to the Mail and Courier Department;
(5) After sorting out these mail matters, on April 25, 2000, I erroneously recorded them on page 422 of my logbook as having been received by me on said dated April 25, 2000 (copy of page 422 is attached as Annex “B”).
(6) On April 27, 2000, this letter was sent by the Mail and Courier Department to said Law Office whose receiving clerk Darwin Bawar opened the letter and stamped on the “Notice of Judgment” their actual date of receipt: “April 27, 2000” (copy of the said Notice with the date so stamped is attached as Annex “C”).
(7) On May 8, 2000, Atty. Roland A. Niedo of said law office inquired from me as to my actual date of receipt of this letter, and I informed him that based on my logbook, I received it on April 25, 2000.
(8) I discovered this error only on September 6, 2000, when I was informed by Atty. Niedo that Postmaster VI Alfredo C. Mabanag, Jr. of the Central Post Office, Manila, issued a certification that I received the said mail on April 24, 2000.
(9) I hereby confirm that this error was caused by an honest mistake.
Petitioner argues that
receipt on April 25, 2000 by Joel Rosales, who was not an agent of its
counsel’s law office, did not constitute notice to its counsel, as required by
Sections 2[10] and 10,[11] Rule 13 of the
Rules of Court. To support this
contention, petitioner cites Philippine Long Distance Telephone Co. vs. NLRC.[12] In said case, the
bailiff served the decision of the National Labor Relations Commission at the
ground floor of the building of the petitioner therein, the Philippine Long
Distance Telephone Co., rather than on the office of its counsel, whose
address, as indicated in the notice of the decision, was on the ninth floor of
the building. We held that:
x x x practical considerations and the realities of the situation dictate that the service made by the bailiff on March 23, 1981 at the ground floor of the petitioner’s building and not at the address of record of petitioner’s counsel on record at the 9th floor of the PLDT building cannot be considered a valid service. It was only when the Legal Services Division actually received a copy of the decision on March 26, 1981 that a proper and valid service may be deemed to have been made. x x x.
Applying the foregoing
provisions and jurisprudence, petitioner submits that actual receipt by its
counsel was on April 27, 2000, not April 25, 2000. Following the argument to its logical conclusion, the motion for
extension to file the petition for review was even filed two (2) days before
the lapse of the 15-day reglementary period.
That counsel treated April 25, 2000 and not April 27, 2000 as the date
of receipt was purportedly intended to obviate respondent’s possible argument
that the 15-day period had to be counted from April 25, 2000.
The Court is not wholly
convinced by petitioner’s argument. The
Affidavit of Joel Rosales states that he is “not the constituted agent of
‘Curato Divina Mabilog Nedo Magturo Pagaduan Law Office.’” An agency may be
express but it may also be implied from the acts of the principal, from his
silence, or lack of action, or his failure to repudiate the agency, knowing
that another person is acting on his behalf without authority.[13] Likewise,
acceptance by the agent may also be express, although it may also be implied
from his acts which carry out the agency, or from his silence or inaction
according to the circumstances.[14] In this case, Joel
Rosales averred that “[o]n occasions when I receive mail matters for said law
office, it is only to help them receive their letters promptly,” implying that
counsel had allowed the practice of Rosales receiving mail in behalf of the
former. There is no showing that
counsel had objected to this practice or took steps to put a stop to it. The facts are, therefore, inadequate for the
Court to make a ruling in petitioner’s favor.
Assuming the motion for
extension was indeed one day late, petitioner urges the Court, in any event, to
suspend its rules and admit the petition in the interest of justice. Petitioner invokes Philippine National Bank
vs. Court of Appeals,[15] where the petition
was filed three (3) days late. The
Court held:
It has been said time and again that the perfection of an appeal within the period fixed by the rules is mandatory and jurisdictional. But, it is always in the power of this Court to suspend its own rules, or to except a particular case from its operation, whenever the purposes of justice require it. Strong compelling reasons such as serving the ends of justice and preventing a grave miscarriage thereof warrant the suspension of the rules.
The Court proceeded to
enumerate cases where the rules on reglementary periods were suspended. Republic vs. Court of Appeals[16] involved a delay of six days; Siguenza vs.
Court of Appeals,[17] thirteen days; Pacific
Asia Overseas Shipping Corporation vs. NLRC,[18] one day; Cortes
vs. Court of Appeals,[19] seven days; Olacao
vs. NLRC,[20] two days; Legasto
vs. Court of Appeals,[21] two days; and
City Fair Corporation vs. NLRC,[22] which also
concerned a tardy appeal.
The Court finds these
arguments to be persuasive, especially in light of the merits of the petition.
WHEREFORE, the petition is GIVEN DUE COURSE and
GRANTED. The decision of the
Court of Appeals is REVERSED.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr., C.J.
(Chairman), Puno, Pardo, and Ynares-Santiago,
JJ., concur.
[1] Rollo,
pp. 74-75.
[2] Id.,
at 3.
[3] Id.,
at 6.
[4] The
last day to file the petition was on June 9, 2000 but because of the Court’s 99th Anniversary Celebration, business
transactions were suspended on said date per Memorandum Circular No. 03-2000.
[5] Matuguina
Integrated Wood Products, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals, 263 SCRA 490
(1996).
[6] Oro
Cam Enterprises, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals, 319 SCRA 444 (1999).
[7] Rollo,
p. 198. Emphasis supplied.
[8] Id.,
p. 189.
[9] Id.,
at 198.
[10] SEC. 2. Filing and service defined. – Filing is
the act of presenting the pleading or other paper of the clerk of court.
Service is the act of providing a party with a copy of the
pleading or paper concerned. If any
party has appeared by counsel, service upon him shall be made upon his counsel
or one of them, unless service upon the party himself is ordered by the
court. Where one counsel appears for
several parties, he shall only be entitled to one copy of any paper served upon
him by the opposite side.
[11] SEC.
10. Completeness of service. –
Personal service is complete upon actual delivery. Service by ordinary mail is complete upon the expiration of ten
(10) days after mailing, unless the court otherwise provides. Service by registered mail is complete upon
actual receipt by the addressee, or after five (5) days from the date he
received the first notice of the postmaster, whichever date is earlier.
[12] 128
SCRA 402 (1984).
[13] Civil
Code, Art. 1869.
[14] Id.,
Art. 1870.
[15] 246
SCRA 304 (1995).
[16] 83
SCRA 453 (1978).
[17] 137
SCRA 570 (1985).
[18] 161
SCRA 122 (1988).
[19] 161
SCRA 444 (1988).
[20] 177
SCRA 38 (1989).
[21] 172
SCRA 722 (1989).
[22] 243
SCRA 572 (1995).