G.R. No. 159507 April 19, 2006
ANICETO G. SALUDO, JR., Petitioner,
vs.
AMERICAN EXPRESS INTERNATIONAL, INC., and/or IAN T. FISH and DOMINIC MASCRINAS, Respondents.
ROMEO J. CALLEJO, SR.
Associate Justice
WE CONCUR:
Chief Justice
Footnotes
3 Rollo, pp. 104-105.
4 Citing Boleyley v. Hon. Villanueva, 373 Phil. 141, 146 (1999).
5 G.R. No. L-40428, March 31, 1976, 70 SCRA 298.
6 Id. at 305.
7 Local Government Code of 1991.
8 Id., Section 160 thereof.
9 Citing, among others, Baritua v. Court of Appeals, 335 Phil. 12, 18 (1997).
10 Koh v. Court of Appeals, supra note 5.
11 G.R. No. L-70640, June 29, 1988, 163 SCRA 60.
12 Rollo, p. 30.
13 Id. at 10.
16 Id.
17 G.R. No. L-22795, January 31, 1977, 75 SCRA 124.
18 Id. at 127-129.
19 CA Decision, p. 5; rollo, p. 26.
20 Section 6, Article VI of the Constitution reads:
21 Papandayan, Jr. v. Commission on Elections, 430 Phil. 754, 770 (2002).
22 Id..
23 Perez v. Commission on Elections, 375 Phil. 1106, 1117 (1999).
24 Dangwa Transportation Co., Inc. v. Sarmiento, supra note 17, at 129.
25 Supra note 5.
28 Order dated January 2, 2002 of the court a quo; rollo, p. 116.
29 Dangwa Transportation Co., Inc. v. Sarmiento, supra note 17, at 128.
30 Section 2, Rule 129, Rules of Court.
31 HERRERA, IV REMEDIAL LAW 78 (1999 ed.), citing 5 MORAN 58 (1980 ed.). Section 1, Rule 129 of the Rules of Court reads:
32 Id. at 81, citing MCCORMICK, EVIDENCE, 4th ed.
33 Id.
ANICETO G. SALUDO, JR., Petitioner,
vs.
AMERICAN EXPRESS INTERNATIONAL, INC., and/or IAN T. FISH and DOMINIC MASCRINAS, Respondents.
D E C I S I O N
CALLEJO, SR., J.:
Before the Court is the Petition for Review on
Certiorari filed by Aniceto G. Saludo, Jr. seeking to reverse and set
aside the Decision1
dated May 22, 2003 of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP No. 69553. The
assailed decision directed the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Maasin
City, Southern Leyte, Branch 25 thereof, to vacate and set aside its
Orders dated September 10, 2001 and January 2, 2002 in Civil Case No.
R-3172, and enjoined the presiding judge2
thereof from conducting further proceedings in said case, except to
dismiss the complaint filed therewith on ground of improper venue. The
petition also seeks to reverse and set aside the appellate court's
Resolution dated August 14, 2003 denying the motion for reconsideration
of the assailed decision.
The factual and procedural antecedents are as follows:
Aniceto G. Saludo, Jr. filed a complaint for damages
against the American Express International, Inc. (AMEX) and/or its
officers Ian T. Fish, Vice-President and Country Manager, and Dominic
Mascrinas, Head of Operations, with the RTC of Maasin City, Southern
Leyte. The case was raffled to Branch 25 of the said court.
The complaint alleged, inter alia, that plaintiff
(herein petitioner Saludo) "is a Filipino citizen, of legal age, and a
member of the House of Representatives and a resident of Ichon,
Macrohon, Southern Leyte, Philippines." On the other hand, defendant
(herein respondent AMEX, Inc.) "is a corporation doing business in the
Philippines and engaged in providing credit and other credit facilities
and allied services with office address at 4th floor, ACE Building, Rada
Street, Legaspi Village, Makati City." The other defendants (herein
respondents Fish and Mascrinas) are officers of respondent AMEX, and may
be served with summons and other court processes at their office
address.
The complaint's cause of action stemmed from the
alleged wrongful dishonor of petitioner Saludo's AMEX credit card and
the supplementary card issued to his daughter. The first dishonor
happened when petitioner Saludo's daughter used her supplementary credit
card to pay her purchases in the United States some time in April 2000.
The second dishonor occurred when petitioner Saludo used his principal
credit card to pay his account at the Hotel Okawa in Tokyo, Japan while
he was there with other delegates from the Philippines to attend the
Congressional Recognition in honor of Mr. Hiroshi Tanaka.
The dishonor of these AMEX credit cards were
allegedly unjustified as they resulted from respondents' unilateral act
of suspending petitioner Saludo's account for his failure to pay its
balance covering the period of March 2000. Petitioner Saludo denied
having received the corresponding statement of account. Further, he was
allegedly wrongfully charged for late payment in June 2000.
Subsequently, his credit card and its supplementary cards were canceled
by respondents on July 20, 2000.
Petitioner Saludo claimed that he suffered great
inconvenience, wounded feelings, mental anguish, embarrassment,
humiliation and besmirched political and professional standing as a
result of respondents' acts which were committed in gross and evident
bad faith, and in wanton, reckless and oppressive manner. He thus prayed
that respondents be adjudged to pay him, jointly and severally, actual,
moral and exemplary damages, and attorney's fees.
In their answer, respondents specifically denied the
allegations in the complaint. Further, they raised the affirmative
defenses of lack of cause of action and improper venue. On the latter,
respondents averred that the complaint should be dismissed on the ground
that venue was improperly laid because none of the parties was a
resident of Leyte. They alleged that respondents were not residents of
Southern Leyte. Moreover, notwithstanding the claim in his complaint,
petitioner Saludo was not allegedly a resident thereof as evidenced by
the fact that his community tax certificate, which was presented when he
executed the complaint's verification and certification of non-forum
shopping, was issued at Pasay City. To buttress their contention,
respondents pointed out that petitioner Saludo's complaint was prepared
in Pasay City and signed by a lawyer of the said city. Respondents
prayed for the dismissal of the complaint a quo.
Thereafter, respondents filed an Opposition to
Ex-Parte Motion (to Set Case for Pre-Trial) and Motion for Preliminary
Hearing (on Affirmative Defense of Improper Venue) to which petitioner
Saludo filed his Comments and/or Objections to the Affirmative Defense
of Improper Venue. He asserted that any allegation refuting his
residency in Southern Leyte was baseless and unfounded considering that
he was the congressman of the lone district thereof at the time of the
filing of his complaint. He urged the court a quo to take judicial
notice of this particular fact. As a member of Congress, he possessed
all the qualifications prescribed by the Constitution including that of
being a resident of his district. He was also a member of the Integrated
Bar of the Philippines-Southern Leyte Chapter, and has been such ever
since his admission to the Bar. His community tax certificate was issued
at Pasay City only because he has an office thereat and the office
messenger obtained the same in the said city. In any event, the
community tax certificate is not determinative of one's residence.
In the Order dated September 10, 2001, the court a
quo denied the affirmative defenses interposed by respondents. It found
the allegations of the complaint sufficient to constitute a cause of
action against respondents. The court a quo likewise denied respondents'
affirmative defense that venue was improperly laid. It reasoned, thus:
x x x [T]he fact alone that the plaintiff at the time
he filed the complaint was and still is, the incumbent Congressman of
the Lone District of Southern Leyte with residence at Ichon, Macrohon,
Southern Leyte, is enough to dispell any and all doubts about his actual
residence. As a high-ranking government official of the province, his
residence there can be taken judicial notice of. As such his personal,
actual and physical habitation or his actual residence or place of abode
can never be in some other place but in Ichon, Macrohon, Southern
Leyte. It is correctly stated by the plaintiff, citing the case of Core
v. Core, 100 Phil. 321 that, "residence, for purposes of fixing venue of
an action, is synonymous with domicile. This is defined as the
permanent home, the place to which, whenever absent for business or
pleasure, one intends to return, and depends on the facts and
circumstances, in the sense that they disclose intent. A person can have
but one domicile at a time. A man can have but one domicile for one and
the same purpose at any time, but he may have numerous places of
residence. Venue could be at place of his residence. (Masa v. Mison, 200
SCRA 715 [1991])3
Respondents sought the reconsideration thereof but
the court a quo denied the same in the Order dated January 2, 2002. They
then filed with the appellate court a petition for certiorari and
prohibition alleging grave abuse of discretion on the part of the
presiding judge of the court a quo in issuing the September 10, 2001 and
January 2, 2002 Orders. Upon respondents' posting of a bond, the
appellate court issued on March 14, 2002 a temporary restraining order
which enjoined the presiding judge of the court a quo from conducting
further proceedings in Civil Case No. R-3172.
On May 22, 2003, the appellate court rendered the
assailed decision granting respondents' petition for certiorari as it
found that venue was improperly laid. It directed the court a quo to
vacate and set aside its Orders dated September 10, 2001 and January 2,
2002, and enjoined the presiding judge thereof from further proceeding
in the case, except to dismiss the complaint.
The appellate court explained that the action filed
by petitioner Saludo against respondents is governed by Section 2, Rule 4
of the Rules of Court. The said rule on venue of personal actions
basically provides that personal actions may be commenced and tried
where plaintiff or any of the principal plaintiffs resides, or where
defendant or any of the principal defendants resides, at the election of
plaintiff.
Venue was improperly laid in the court a quo,
according to the appellate court, because not one of the parties was a
resident of Southern Leyte. Specifically, it declared that petitioner
Saludo was not a resident thereof. The appellate court pronounced that,
for purposes of venue, the residence of a person is his personal, actual
or physical habitation, or his actual residence or place of abode,
which may not necessarily be his legal residence or domicile provided he
resides therein with continuity and consistency.4
The appellate court quoted the following discussion in Koh v. Court of Appeals5 where the Court distinguished the terms "residence" and "domicile" in this wise:
x x x [T]he term domicile is not exactly synonymous
in legal contemplation with the term residence, for it is [an]
established principle in Conflict of Laws that domicile refers to the
relatively more permanent abode of a person while residence applies to a
temporary stay of a person in a given place. In fact, this distinction
is very well emphasized in those cases where the Domiciliary Theory must
necessarily supplant the Nationality Theory in cases involving
stateless persons.
x x x x
"There is a difference between domicile and
residence. Residence is used to indicate a place of abode, whether
permanent or temporary; domicile denotes a fixed permanent residence to
which when absent, one has the intention of returning. A man may have a
residence in one place and a domicile in another. Residence is not
domicile, but domicile is residence coupled with intention to remain for
an unlimited time. A man can have but one domicile for one and the same
purpose at any time, but he may have numerous places of residence. His
place of residence generally is his place of domicile, but is not by any
means, necessarily so since no length of residence without intention of
remaining will constitute domicile."6 (Italicized for emphasis)
In holding that petitioner Saludo is not a resident
of Maasin City, Southern Leyte, the appellate court referred to his
community tax certificate, as indicated in his complaint's verification
and certification of non-forum shopping, which was issued at Pasay City.
Similarly, it referred to the same community tax certificate, as
indicated in his complaint for deportation filed against respondents
Fish and Mascrinas. Under Republic Act No. 7160,7
the community tax certificate shall be paid in the place of residence
of the individual, or in the place where the principal office of the
juridical entity is located.8
It also pointed out that petitioner Saludo's law office, which was also
representing him in the present case, is in Pasay City. The foregoing
circumstances were considered by the appellate court as judicial
admissions of petitioner Saludo which are conclusive upon him and no
longer required proof.
The appellate court chided the court a quo for
stating that as incumbent congressman of the lone district of Southern
Leyte, judicial notice could be taken of the fact of petitioner Saludo's
residence thereat. No evidence had yet been adduced that petitioner
Saludo was then the congressman of Southern Leyte and actual resident of
Ichon, Macrohon of the said province.
The appellate court held that, based on his
complaint, petitioner Saludo was actually residing in Pasay City. It
faulted him for filing his complaint with the court a quo when the said
venue is inconvenient to the parties to the case. It opined that under
the rules, the possible choices of venue are Pasay City or Makati City,
or any place in the National Capital Judicial Region, at the option of
petitioner Saludo.
It stressed that while the choice of venue is given
to plaintiff, said choice is not left to his caprice and cannot deprive a
defendant of the rights conferred upon him by the Rules of Court.9
Further, fundamental in the law governing venue of actions that the
situs for bringing real and personal civil actions is fixed by the rules
to attain the greatest possible convenience to the party litigants by
taking into consideration the maximum accessibility to them - i.e., to
both plaintiff and defendant, not only to one or the other - of the
courts of justice.10
The appellate court concluded that the court a quo
should have given due course to respondents' affirmative defense of
improper venue in order to avoid any suspicion that petitioner Saludo's
motive in filing his complaint with the court a quo was only to vex and
unduly inconvenience respondents or even to wield influence in the
outcome of the case, petitioner Saludo being a powerful and influential
figure in the said province. The latter circumstance could be regarded
as a "specie of forum shopping" akin to that in Investors Finance Corp.
v. Ebarle11
where the Court mentioned that the filing of the civil action before
the court in Pagadian City "was a specie of forum shopping" considering
that plaintiff therein was an influential person in the locality.
The decretal portion of the assailed Decision dated May 22, 2003 of the appellate court reads:
UPON THE VIEW WE TAKE OF THIS CASE, THUS, the
challenged orders must be, as they hereby are, VACATED and SET ASIDE and
the respondent judge, or any one acting in his place or stead, is
instructed and enjoined to desist from further proceeding in the case,
except to dismiss it. The temporary restraining order earlier issued is
hereby converted into a writ of preliminary injunction, upon the posting
this time by petitioners [herein respondents], within five (5) days
from receipt of this decision, of a bond in the amount of Five Million
Pesos (P5,000,000.00), to answer for all damages that
private respondent [herein petitioner] may sustain by reason of the
issuance of such injunction should the Court finally decide that
petitioners are not entitled thereto. Private respondent, if he so
minded, may refile his case for damages before the Regional Trial Court
of Makati City or Pasay City, or any of the Regional Trial Courts of the
National Capital Judicial Region. Without costs.
SO ORDERED.12
Petitioner Saludo sought the reconsideration of the
said decision but the appellate court, in the Resolution dated August
14, 2003, denied his motion for reconsideration. Hence, he filed the
instant petition for review with the Court alleging that:
The Court of Appeals, (Special Fourth Division), in
promulgating the afore-mentioned Decision and Resolution, has decided a
question of substance in a way probably not in accord with law or with
applicable decisions of this Honorable Court.
(a) the Court of Appeals erred in not taking judicial
notice of the undisputed fact that herein petitioner is the incumbent
congressman of the lone district of Southern Leyte and as such, he is a
residence (sic) of said district;
(b) the Court of Appeals erred in dismissing the
complaint on the basis of improper venue due to the alleged judicial
admission of herein petitioner;
(c) the Court of Appeals in dismissing the complaint ignored applicable decisions of this Honorable Court; and1avvphil.net
(d) the Court of Appeals erred in deciding that
herein petitioner violated the rules on venue, and even speculated that
herein petitioner's motive in filing the complaint in Maasin City was
only to vex the respondents.13
In gist, the sole substantive issue for the Court's
resolution is whether the appellate court committed reversible error in
holding that venue was improperly laid in the court a quo in Civil Case
No. R-3172 because not one of the parties, including petitioner Saludo,
as plaintiff therein, was a resident of Southern Leyte at the time of
filing of the complaint.
The petition is meritorious.
Petitioner Saludo's complaint for damages against
respondents before the court a quo is a personal action. As such, it is
governed by Section 2, Rule 4 of the Rules of Courts which reads:
SEC. 2. Venue of personal actions. - All other
actions may be commenced and tried where the plaintiff or any of the
principal plaintiffs resides, or where the defendant or any of the
principal defendants resides, or in the case of a non-resident defendant
where he may be found, at the election of the plaintiff.
The choice of venue for personal actions cognizable
by the RTC is given to plaintiff but not to plaintiff's caprice because
the matter is regulated by the Rules of Court.14
The rule on venue, like other procedural rules, is designed to insure a
just and orderly administration of justice, or the impartial and
evenhanded determination of every action and proceeding.15
The option of plaintiff in personal actions cognizable by the RTC is
either the place where defendant resides or may be found, or the place
where plaintiff resides. If plaintiff opts for the latter, he is limited
to that place.16
Following this rule, petitioner Saludo, as plaintiff,
had opted to file his complaint with the court a quo which is in Maasin
City, Southern Leyte. He alleged in his complaint that he was a member
of the House of Representatives and a resident of Ichon, Macrohon,
Southern Leyte to comply with the residency requirement of the rule.
However, the appellate court, adopting respondents'
theory, made the finding that petitioner Saludo was not a resident of
Southern Leyte at the time of the filing of his complaint. It hinged the
said finding mainly on the fact that petitioner Saludo's community tax
certificate, indicated in his complaint's verification and certification
of non-forum shopping, was issued at Pasay City. That his law office is
in Pasay City was also taken by the appellate court as negating
petitioner Saludo's claim of residence in Southern Leyte.
The appellate court committed reversible error in
finding that petitioner Saludo was not a resident of Southern Leyte at
the time of the filing of his complaint, and consequently holding that
venue was improperly laid in the court a quo. In Dangwa Transportation
Co., Inc. v. Sarmiento,17 the Court had the occasion to explain at length the meaning of the term "resides" for purposes of venue, thus:
In Koh v. Court of Appeals, we explained that the
term "resides" as employed in the rule on venue on personal actions
filed with the courts of first instance means the place of abode,
whether permanent or temporary, of the plaintiff or the defendant, as
distinguished from "domicile" which denotes a fixed permanent residence
to which, when absent, one has the intention of returning.
"It is fundamental in the law governing venue of
actions (Rule 4 of the Rules of Court) that the situs for bringing real
and personal civil actions are fixed by the rules to attain the greatest
convenience possible to the parties-litigants by taking into
consideration the maximum accessibility to them of the courts of
justice. It is, likewise, undeniable that the term domicile is not
exactly synonymous in legal contemplation with the term residence, for
it is an established principle in Conflict of Laws that domicile refers
to the relatively more permanent abode of a person while residence
applies to a temporary stay of a person in a given place. In fact, this
distinction is very well emphasized in those cases where the Domiciliary
Theory must necessarily supplant the Nationality Theory in cases
involving stateless persons.
"This Court held in the case of Uytengsu v. Republic,
50 O.G. 4781, October, 1954, reversing its previous stand in Larena v.
Ferrer, 61 Phil. 36, and Nuval v. Guray, 52 Phil. 645, that -
'There is a difference between domicile and
residence. Residence is used to indicate a place of abode, whether
permanent or temporary; domicile denotes a fixed permanent residence to
which when absent, one has the intention of returning. A man may have a
residence in one place and a domicile in another. Residence is not
domicile, but domicile is residence coupled with the intention to remain
for an unlimited time. A man can have but one domicile for one and the
same purpose at any time, but he may have numerous places of residence.
His place of residence generally is his place of domicile, but is not by
any means, necessarily so since no length of residence without
intention of remaining will constitute domicile.' (Italicized for
emphasis)
"We note that the law on venue in Courts of First
Instance (Section 2, of Rule 4, Rules of Court) in referring to the
parties utilizes the words 'resides or may be found,' and not 'is
domiciled,' thus:
'Sec. 2(b) Personal actions - All other actions may
be commenced and tried where the defendant or any of the defendants
resides or may be found, or where the plaintiff or any of the plaintiffs
resides, at the election of the plaintiff.' (Italicized for emphasis)
"Applying the foregoing observation to the present
case, We are fully convinced that private respondent Coloma's
protestations of domicile in San Nicolas, Ilocos Norte, based on his
manifested intention to return there after the retirement of his wife
from government service to justify his bringing of an action for damages
against petitioner in the C.F.I. of Ilocos Norte, is entirely of no
moment since what is of paramount importance is where he actually
resided or where he may be found at the time he brought the action, to
comply substantially with the requirements of Sec. 2(b) of Rule 4, Rules
of Court, on venue of personal actions." (Koh v. Court of Appeals,
supra, pp. 304-305.)
The same construction of the word "resides" as used
in Section 1, Rule 73, of the Revised Rules of Court, was enunciated in
Fule v. Court of Appeals, et al. (G.R. No. L-40502) and Fule v. Hon.
Ernani C. Paño, et al. (G.R. No. L-42670), decided on November 29, 1976.
Thus, this Court, in the aforecited cases, stated:
"2. But, the far-ranging question is this: What does
the term 'resides' mean? Does it refer to the actual residence or
domicile of the decedent at the time of his death? We lay down the
doctrinal rule that the term 'resides' connotes ex vi termini 'actual
residence' as distinguished from 'legal residence or domicile.' This
term 'resides,' like the terms 'residing' and 'residence' is elastic and
should be interpreted in the light of the object or purposes of the
statute or rule in which it is employed. In the application of venue
statutes and rules - Section 1, Rule 73 of the Revised Rules of Court is
of such nature - residence rather than domicile is the significant
factor. Even where the statute uses the word 'domicile' still it is
construed as meaning residence and not domicile in the technical sense.
Some cases make a distinction between the terms 'residence' and
'domicile' but as generally used in statutes fixing venue, the terms are
synonymous, and convey the same meaning as the term 'inhabitant.' In
other words, 'resides' should be viewed or understood in its popular
sense, meaning, the personal, actual or physical habitation of a person,
actual residence or place of abode. It signifies physical presence in a
place and actual stay thereat. In this popular sense, the term means
merely residence, that is, personal residence, not legal residence or
domicile. Residence simply requires bodily presence as an inhabitant in a
given place, while domicile requires bodily presence in that place and
also an intention to make it one's domicile. No particular length of
time of residence is required though; however, the residence must be
more than temporary."18
There is no dispute that petitioner Saludo was the
congressman or the representative of the lone district of Southern Leyte
at the time of filing of his complaint with the court a quo. Even the
appellate court admits this fact as it states that "it may be conceded
that private respondent ever so often travels to Maasin City, Southern
Leyte, because he is its representative in the lower house."19
As a member of the House of Representatives,
petitioner Saludo was correctly deemed by the court a quo as possessing
the requirements for the said position,20
including that he was then a resident of the district which he was
representing, i.e., Southern Leyte. Significantly, for purposes of
election law, the term "residence" is synonymous with "domicile," thus:
x x x [T]he Court held that "domicile" and
"residence" are synonymous. The term "residence," as used in the
election law, imports not only an intention to reside in a fixed place
but also personal presence in that place, coupled with conduct
indicative of such intention. "Domicile" denotes a fixed permanent
residence to which when absent for business or pleasure, or for like
reasons, one intends to return. x x x21
It can be readily gleaned that the definition of
"residence" for purposes of election law is more stringent in that it is
equated with the term "domicile." Hence, for the said purpose, the term
"residence" imports "not only an intention to reside in a fixed place
but also personal presence in that place, coupled with conduct
indicative of such intention."22
When parsed, therefore, the term "residence" requires two elements: (1)
intention to reside in the particular place; and (2) personal or
physical presence in that place, coupled with conduct indicative of such
intention. As the Court elucidated, "the place where a party actually
or constructively has a permanent home, where he, no matter where he may
be found at any given time, eventually intends to return and remain,
i.e., his domicile, is that to which the Constitution refers when it
speaks of residence for the purposes of election law."23
On the other hand, for purposes of venue, the less
technical definition of "residence" is adopted. Thus, it is understood
to mean as "the personal, actual or physical habitation of a person,
actual residence or place of abode. It signifies physical presence in a
place and actual stay thereat. In this popular sense, the term means
merely residence, that is, personal residence, not legal residence or
domicile. Residence simply requires bodily presence as an inhabitant in a
given place, while domicile requires bodily presence in that place and
also an intention to make it one's domicile."24
Since petitioner Saludo, as congressman or the lone
representative of the district of Southern Leyte, had his residence (or
domicile) therein as the term is construed in relation to election laws,
necessarily, he is also deemed to have had his residence therein for
purposes of venue for filing personal actions. Put in another manner,
Southern Leyte, as the domicile of petitioner Saludo, was also his
residence, as the term is understood in its popular sense. This is
because "residence is not domicile, but domicile is residence coupled
with the intention to remain for an unlimited time."
Reliance by the appellate court on Koh v. Court of Appeals25 is misplaced. Contrary to its holding,26
the facts of the present case are not similar to the facts therein. In
Koh, the complaint was filed with the Court of First Instance in San
Nicolas, Ilocos Norte by plaintiff who admitted that he was a resident
of Kamias, Quezon City. Save for the fact that he grew up in San
Nicolas, Ilocos Norte and that he manifested the intent to return there
after retirement, plaintiff therein had not established that he was
actually a resident therein at the time of the filing of his complaint.
Neither did he establish that he had his domicile therein because
although he manifested the intent to go back there after retirement, the
element of personal presence in that place was lacking. To reiterate,
domicile or residence, as the terms are taken as synonyms, imports "not
only an intention to reside in a fixed place but also personal presence
in that place, coupled with conduct indicative of such intention."27
In contrast, petitioner Saludo was the congressman or
representative of Southern Leyte at the time of filing of his complaint
with the court a quo. Absent any evidence to the contrary, he is deemed
to possess the qualifications for the said position, including that he
was a resident therein. And following the definition of the term
"residence" for purposes of election law, petitioner Saludo not only had
the intention to reside in Southern Leyte, but he also had personal
presence therein, coupled with conduct indicative of such intention. The
latter element, or his bodily presence as an inhabitant in Southern
Leyte, was sufficient for petitioner Saludo to be considered a resident
therein for purposes of venue.
The following ratiocination of the court a quo is apt:
Residence in civil law is a material fact, referring
to the physical presence of a person in a place. A person can have two
or more residences, such as a country residence and a city residence.
(Quetulio v. Ruiz, S.C. Off. Gaz. 156, Commentaries and Jurisprudence in
Civil Law, Vol. 1, page 211, Tolentino). Residence is acquired by
living in a place; on the other hand, domicile can exist without
actually living in the place. The important thing for domicile is that,
once residence has been established in one place, there be an intention
to stay there permanently, even if residence is also established in some
other place.
Thus, if a person lives with his family habitually in
Quezon City, he would have his domicile in Quezon City. If he also has a
house for vacation purposes in the City of Baguio, and another house in
connection with his business in the City of Manila, he would have
residence in all three places (Tolentino, Commentaries and Jurisprudence
on Civil Law, Vol. 1, Page 212, 1990 Edition) so that one[']s legal
residence or domicile can also be his actual, personal or physical
residence or habitation or place of abode if he stays there with
intention to stay there permanently.
In the instant case, since plaintiff has a house in
Makati City for the purpose of exercising his profession or doing
business and also a house in Ichon, Macrohon, Southern Leyte, for doing
business and/or for election or political purposes where he also lives
or stays physically, personally and actually then he can have residences
in these two places. Because it would then be preposterous to
acknowledge and recognize plaintiff Aniceto G. Saludo, Jr. as
congressman of Southern Leyte without also recognizing him as actually,
personally and physically residing thereat, when such residence is
required by law.28
The fact then that petitioner Saludo's community tax
certificate was issued at Pasay City is of no moment because granting
arguendo that he could be considered a resident therein, the same does
not preclude his having a residence in Southern Leyte for purposes of
venue. A man can have but one domicile for one and the same purpose at
any time, but he may have numerous places of residence.29
That petitioner Saludo was the congressman or
representative of the lone district of Southern Leyte at the time of the
filing of his complaint was admitted as a fact by the court a quo. In
this connection, it consequently held that, as such, petitioner Saludo's
residence in Southern Leyte, the district he was the representing,
could be taken judicial notice of. The court a quo cannot be faulted for
doing so because courts are allowed "to take judicial notice of matters
which are of public knowledge, or are capable of unquestionable
demonstration, or ought to be known to judges because of their judicial
functions."
30 Courts are likewise bound to take judicial notice,
without the introduction of evidence, of the law in force in the Philippines,
31 including its Constitution.
The concept of "facts of common knowledge" in the
context of judicial notice has been explained as those facts that are
"so commonly known in the community as to make it unprofitable to
require proof, and so certainly known to as to make it indisputable
among reasonable men."
32
Moreover, "though usually facts of 'common knowledge' will be generally
known throughout the country, it is sufficient as a basis for judicial
notice that they be known in the local community where the trial court
sits."
33
Certainly, the fact of petitioner Saludo being the duly elected
representative of Southern Leyte at the time could be properly taken
judicial notice of by the court a quo, the same being a matter of common
knowledge in the community where it sits.
Further, petitioner Saludo's residence in Southern
Leyte could likewise be properly taken judicial notice of by the court a
quo. It is bound to know that, under the Constitution, one of the
qualifications of a congressman or representative to the House of
Representatives is having a residence in the district in which he shall
be elected.
In fine, petitioner Saludo's act of filing his
complaint with the court a quo cannot be characterized as a "specie of
forum-shopping" or capricious on his part because, under the rules, as
plaintiff, he is precisely given this option.
Finally, respondents' claim that the instant petition
for review was not properly verified by petitioner Saludo deserves
scant consideration.
Section 4, Rule 7 of the Rules of Court reads:
Sec. 4. Verification. - Except when otherwise
specifically required by law or rule, pleadings need not be under oath,
verified or accompanied by affidavit.
A pleading is verified by an affidavit that the
affiant has read the pleading and that the allegations therein are true
and correct of his personal knowledge or based on authentic records.
A pleading required to be verified which contains a
verification based on "information and belief," or upon "knowledge,
information and belief," or lacks proper verification, shall be treated
as an unsigned pleading.
Petitioner Saludo's verification and certification of
non-forum shopping states that he has "read the contents thereof
[referring to the petition] and the same are true and correct of my own personal
knowledge and belief and on the basis of the records at hand." The same
clearly constitutes substantial compliance with the above requirements
of the Rules of Court.
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the petition is
GRANTED. The Decision dated May 22, 2003 and Resolution dated August 14,
2003 of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP No. 69553 are REVERSED and
SET ASIDE. The Orders dated September 10, 2001 and January 2, 2002 of
the Regional Trial Court of Maasin City, Southern Leyte, Branch 25
thereof, in Civil Case No. R-3172 are REINSTATED.
SO ORDERED.ROMEO J. CALLEJO, SR.
Associate Justice
WE CONCUR:
ARTEMIO V. PANGANIBAN
Chief Justice
Chairperson
Chief Justice
Chairperson
CONSUELO YNARES-SANTIAGO Associate Justice |
MA. ALICIA AUSTRIA-MARTINEZ Asscociate Justice |
MINITA V. CHICO-NAZARIO
Associate Justice
Associate Justice
C E R T I F I C A T I O N
Pursuant to Section 13, Article VIII of the
Constitution, it is hereby certified that the conclusions in the above
decision were reached in consultation before the case was assigned to
the writer of the opinion of the Court's Division.
ARTEMIO V. PANGANIBAN
Chief Justice
Footnotes
1
Penned by Associate Justice Renato C. Dacudao, with Associate Justices
Godardo A. Jacinto (Chairman) and Rodrigo V. Cosico, concurring; rollo,
pp. 24-30.
2 Honorable Romeo M. Gomez.3 Rollo, pp. 104-105.
4 Citing Boleyley v. Hon. Villanueva, 373 Phil. 141, 146 (1999).
5 G.R. No. L-40428, March 31, 1976, 70 SCRA 298.
6 Id. at 305.
7 Local Government Code of 1991.
8 Id., Section 160 thereof.
9 Citing, among others, Baritua v. Court of Appeals, 335 Phil. 12, 18 (1997).
10 Koh v. Court of Appeals, supra note 5.
11 G.R. No. L-70640, June 29, 1988, 163 SCRA 60.
12 Rollo, p. 30.
13 Id. at 10.
14 Escuerte v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 53485, February 6, 1991, 193 SCRA 541.
15 Id. at 544.16 Id.
17 G.R. No. L-22795, January 31, 1977, 75 SCRA 124.
18 Id. at 127-129.
19 CA Decision, p. 5; rollo, p. 26.
20 Section 6, Article VI of the Constitution reads:
No person shall be a Member of the House of
Representatives unless he is a natural-born citizen of the Philippines
and, on the day of the election, is at least twenty-five years of age,
able to read and write, and, except the party-list representatives, a
registered voter in the district in which he shall be elected, and a
resident thereof for a period of not less than one year immediately
preceding the day of the election.
22 Id..
23 Perez v. Commission on Elections, 375 Phil. 1106, 1117 (1999).
24 Dangwa Transportation Co., Inc. v. Sarmiento, supra note 17, at 129.
25 Supra note 5.
26
In its Resolution dated August 14, 2003 denying petitioner's motion for
reconsideration, the appellate court stated that the pertinent facts in
the case are similar to Koh; rollo, p. 38.
27 See, for example, Dangwa Transportation Co., Inc. v. Sarmiento, supra note 17, at 127.28 Order dated January 2, 2002 of the court a quo; rollo, p. 116.
29 Dangwa Transportation Co., Inc. v. Sarmiento, supra note 17, at 128.
30 Section 2, Rule 129, Rules of Court.
31 HERRERA, IV REMEDIAL LAW 78 (1999 ed.), citing 5 MORAN 58 (1980 ed.). Section 1, Rule 129 of the Rules of Court reads:
Judicial notice, when mandatory. - A court shall take
judicial notice, without the introduction of evidence, of the existence
and territorial extent of states, their political history, forms of
government and symbols of nationality, the law of nations, the admiralty
and maritime courts of the world and their seals, the political
constitution and history of the Philippines, the official acts of the
legislative, executive and judicial departments of the Philippines, the
laws of nature, the measure of time, and the geographical divisions.
33 Id.
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