Court dismisses mandamus case against Baguio officials
>> Monday, December 21, 2015
By
Aileen P. Refuerzo
BAGUIO CITY – The Regional Trial Court (RTC)
dismissed the case for mandamus filed by a businesswoman against city officials
for non-issuance of a zoning clearance and a building permit over her lot at
Outlook Drive here which is covered by a spurious Certificate of Ancestral Land
Title (CALT).
In a four-page
decision issued Dec. 10, RTC Branch 3 Judge Emmanuel Rasing agreed with
respondents Mayor Mauricio Domogan, city legal officer Melchor Carlos Rabanes
and city planning and development coordinator Evelyn Cayat that the petitioner
Imelda Tan Lao represented by attorney-in-fact Roger Angway “failed to state a
cause of action and the relief prayed for are not justified by the allegations
of the petition.”
“Before mandamus is
issued, it is essential that the Petitioner should have a clear legal right to
the thing demanded and it must be the imperative duty of respondent to perform
the act. This is where the Petition fails,” the court said.
“Petitioner is asking
the Court to order the issuance of a locational clearance. Her Petition,
however, failed to state that she has complied with all the requirements for
issuance of the clearance applied for. Such failure makes the Court
unable to determine on the face of the Petition that Petitioner has all the
requirements (and that) respondents neglected to perform their
functions…”
“To stress the point,
the Petition merely confined itself on the issue of how the pendency of some
suits affecting O-CALT-130 will not affect her, she being an alleged buyer in
good faith. Compliance with all the requirements… was never mentioned.
Therefore, even a hypothetical admission of the truth of the allegations
of the Petition will not justify the grant of the relief prayed for.”
Moreover the court
said mandamus does not apply on the situation as the requisites for the
clearance being sought by the petitioner “involve exercise of judgment” and is
not a ministerial function.
In her
petition filed last Aug. 20, Lao represented Angway asked the court to order
the respondents to issue the clearance and permit applied for and to reimburse
the litigation expenses.
She claimed owning the
2,972 square meter lot under TCT NO. 018-2012002678; and being denied issuance
of the clearance or permit by Cayat citing the legal opinion from the city
legal office penned by Attorney III IsaganiLiporada that the requested
clearance cannot be processed due to the pending cases involving the mother title.
She denied knowledge
over the lot’s circumstances but averred that her purchase of the same was done
in good faith and is justified under Republic Act No. 8371 of the Indigenous
Peoples Rights Act of 1997, section 8 (B) and other issuances.
The city officials
however said the city cannot issue the requested clearance and permit to the
land as it is covered by a CALT that was issued anomalously apart from being
“inalienable” and part of a “road easement of Outlook Drive” and therefore
“incapable of appropriation by any private individual and beyond the commerce
of men.”
In the comment
submitted Sept. 14 to the court, the city executives said Lao’s transfer
certificate of title (TCT) is a transfer from TCT 2010002820 registered in the
name of Virginia Gao-an which is a derivative of Original CALT 130 registered
in the name of the heirs of Josephine Abanag Molintas.
“OCT No. O-CALT-130
and its derivative titles are presently the subject of cancellation proceedings
with the NCIP in NCIP OJ Case No. 007-2011 and with the Supreme Court in G.R.
No. 208480,” the officials noted in the comment.
In the comment, the
respondents said Lao “cannot be considered as an innocent purchaser for value”
because as a “veteran businesswoman and long-time resident of Baguio as alleged
by her,” she should have been aware of the status of O-CALT-130 which is
of public knowledge since it covers lands already titled under the Torrens
system, government reservations like the Wright Park and the Mansion Grounds
and areas within the road-right of way and the subject of newspaper reports and
public information campaigns.
“The property covered
by her title forms part of the road easement of an area of Baguio which the
seat and location of government reservations and popular tourist destinations
namely the Wright Park and Mansion House. This fact alone should have put
petitioner on her guard and inquiry.”
They said the
annotation of cases in the previous titles of the lot should have also made her
wary of its status.
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