BCDA: CA decision on John Hay row irregular, abuse of discretion
>> Thursday, August 6, 2015
By Melody Brawner
The
state-owned Bases Conversion and Development Authority (BCDA) said it found the
decision of the Court of Appeals’ (CA) Special Fifth Division highly irregular
and in grave abuse of discretion, and vowed to
contest the decision as part of its rights under the judicial process
and its mandate to protect the interest of government and the public.
“We
are studying our legal options on whether to file a motion for reconsideration
or go straight to the Supreme Court. But if there is one thing we are sure of,
we will contest the patently erroneous decision of the CA,” BCDA head for legal
services lawyer Peter Paul Andrew T. Flores said.
According
to Flores, it is highly irregular for a court to modify the Final Award of an
Arbitral Tribunal.
He
noted that the final award has already been confirmed by the Regional Trial
Court (RTC) of Baguio based on BCDA’s and CJH Development Corporation’s
(CJHDevCo) respective petitions to confirm the said award. “The Final Award
became executory after all the parties accepted the judicial confirmation by
the RTC,” he said.
Flores
said the 67-page decision as ordered by Associate Justice Noel G. Tijam and
concurred by Associate Justice Myra V. Garcia-Fernandez and Associate Justice
Victoria Isabel A. Paredes led to a modified and different interpretation of
the Final Award.
He
said through its petition before the CA and the resulting decision, CJHDevCo
has circumvented the law by doing what under the Special ADP Rules, it is
proscribed or prohibited from doing.
“CJHDevCo,
through its petition before the CA, in effect modified and amended the Final
Award and Judicial Confirmation,” Flores said.
Flores
said the suit filed by CJHDevCo before the CA, supposedly in behalf of its
sublessees, was self-serving and made to perpetuate its operations despite the
ruling evicting it from Camp John Hay as CJHDevCo, its affiliates and officials
held interest in about 20 percent of all sublessees.
The
intervenors are mostly affiliates such as the College Assurance Plan,
subsidiaries such as the CJH Golf Club, and various associates. The CA is very
much aware that the intervenors are the same parties related to CJHDevCo and
were never innocent sublessees.
He
said CJHDevCo was a sublessor in bad faith. “Knowing that their [CJHDevCo]
lease with BCDA was only for 25 years, subject to renewal for another 25 years
and not an automatic 50 years. CJHDevCo
nonetheless gave a 50-year straight lease to its sublessees,” Flores said.
He
said the CA’s decision and interpretation of the Arbitral Award has also
obstructed and delayed the implementation of the said award.
According
to Flores the Final Award of the Arbitral Tribunal is very clear. It orders
“CJHDevCo “to vacate the leased premises and promptly deliver the leased
property, inclusive of all new constructions and permanent improvements
introduced during the term of the Lease as reckoned from the execution of the
Original Lease Agreement to Respondent [BCDA] in good and tenantable condition
in all respects, reasonable wear and tear excepted.”
The
Final Award also ordered BCDA “to return to
Claimant [CJHDevCo] the total amount of rentals Claimant has paid in the total amount of
P1,421,096,052.00 [P1.42 billion].
He
said consistent with the Final Award directing rescission and mutual
restitution, CJHDevCo once having been refunded by BCDA all the lease payments
it paid to BCDA and being released from obligation for the unpaid lease
payments due BCDA to the tune of P3.4 billion, CJHDevCo has the reciprocal
obligation to refund its sublessees all
that were paid so that the sublessees may themselves be restored.
“Otherwise,
CJHDevCo will have been unjustly enriched as the sublessees would have been
deprived of both their sublease and their lease payments,” Flores said.
He
noted the decision of the CA’s Former Special Fifth Division is grossly
disadvantageous to government as it absolves CJHDevCo from the responsibility
of refunding its sublessees and imposes upon the government the obligation to
honor sublease contracts until 2046 without compensation.
The
Baguio RTC had issued a writ of
rxecution that gives the green light for the
Baguio sheriff to implement the said award. However, before the Baguio Sheriff
could implement the “Notice to Vacate” CJHDevCo secured a Temporary Restraining
Order (TRO) from the CA that has since expired.
“With the issuance of the CA’s Former Fifth Division of the decision,
the implementation of the final award will be delayed.”
For
his part, BCDA President and CEO ArnelPaciano D. Casanova said the
Sobrepeña-led CJHDevCo is using the courts to delay the government to develop
government property and infrastructure and provide better facilities and
services for the public.
Casanova
said by misleading the Court of Appeals to issue a highly irregular decision,
Sobrepeña has denied the people in Camp John Hay and Baguio City better
services and facilities.
He
said this is not a new tactic of Sobrepeña.
“The Sobrepeña group has also evaded liabilities in the College
Assurance Plan (CAP) denying thousands of children the right to education by
doing the same squid tactics through misinterpretation and corporate-layering,”
Casanova said.
“BCDA
remains firm in its resolve to defend and protect public interest. We shall
continue the fight to recover government property that has been exploited by
the few who are rich and powerful at the expense of the many who are poor and
powerless,” Casanova added.
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