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[CASIMIRO GARGANTA v. CA](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c2e03?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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[ GR No. L-12104, Mar 31, 1959 ]

CASIMIRO GARGANTA v. CA +

DECISION

105 Phil. 412

[ G. R. No. L-12104, March 31, 1959 ]

CASIMIRO GARGANTA, ET AL., PETITIONERS, VS. THE COURT OF APPEALS, ET AL., RESPONDENT.

D E C I S I O N

PADILLA, J.:

This is  a petition for writs of prohibition  and  preliminary injunction.

In  civil case No. 12083 of the Court of , First Instance of Pangasinan where the  petitioners  Casimiro  Garganta and  Catalina  Donato are plaintiffs and the respondents, except the Court of Appeals and the Sheriff of the Province of Pangasinan,  are defendants, judgment  was rendered on 10 April 1956 for the  former and against the latter (Annex  A).  On  18 April notice thereof  was received by counsel for the defendants (Annex B).  On 16  May the defendants filed a motion  for reconsideration  (Annex B).   On 1  June the defendants filed  a pleading where "arguments to  support  the motion  for reconsideration of the decision filed by defendants  on  May 16, 1956" were advanced  (Annex  C).  On  4  June the Court denied the motion for reconsideration  (Annex D).   On 18 June the defendants filed their notice of appeal and  record on appeal (Annex H).  On 23 June Rufino E. Gonzales, in his own behalf as  cross-defendant and  as  counsel for the other cross-defendants, filed an "objection  to the record on appeal and counter petition for writ of  execution"" on the ground that the appeal  was filed  out of time  (Annex E).   On 27 June  the defendants replied  to the objection (Annex F).  On  24 July  the plaintiffs  objected to the allowance of the defendants' record on appeal on the same ground invoked by the cross-defendants  (Annex G).  On 26 July the Court allowed the defendants' record on appeal (Annex H).  Motions for reconsiderations  (Annexes I & J) were denied on 6 September (Annex J-l).  In the Court of Appeals,  the appellees reiterated their motion to dismiss the appeal  for the same  reasons  advanced by them in the  court  below  (CA-G.R.  No.  18884-R).  On 29 December the Court of Appeals denied  their  motion for the reason that the trial  court  already had  passed upon the same grounds advanced before  it.  Hence this petition to restrain  the  Court of Appeals from proceeding with  the  appeal for want  of jurisdiction  to entertain  it. On 25 March 1957 this Court issued a writ of "preliminary injunction after the  petitioner  had filed  a surety bond in the sum of P200, enjoining the Court of Appeals from proceeding to consider the appeal in CA-G.R. No. 18884-R.

On 18 April 1956 notice of judgment of the Court  of First Instance was received by counsel for the respondents. The latter had thirty days from notice of  judgment  to take an appeal, or  up to 18 May, pursuant  to section 3, Rule  41.  On 16  May,  two days  before the end  of the thirty-day period,  the respondents moved for reconsideration of .the  judgment and on  1  June  filed a  pleading where arguments in support of the motion  were advanced. On 6 June the postmaster of Lingayen sent  to respondents counsel at his address of record the notice to claim within  five days  from  the post office the  registered letter containing the  notice  denying  the  respondents'  motion for reconsideration.   However,  it  was not until  18 June that counsel  actually received notice of the denial  of the respondents  motion for reconsideration.  On the same day, 18 June, the  respondents filed their notice of appeal, appeal bond  and record on appeal.

Petitioners  contend that being  merely  pro forma the motion  for reconsideration  did not interrupt the  running" of the period within which  the appeal may  be taken.  Respondents claim otherwise. Respondents'  motion  for reconsideration  filed  in  the trial court is as follows:
Come now the defendants in  the above entitled case, thru their undersigned attorney and to this Honorable  Court,  respectfully pray the reconsideration of the decision of this  Honorable Court dated April 10, 1956, a copy of which was received by the undersigned counsel for the defendants on April 18, 1956, on the ground that  said  decision is completely  against the  evidence presented  during the trial of this case and  the same decision is against the law.

WHEREFORE,  it is  respectfully prayed  that the decision of this Honorable  Court dated April 10, 1956,  be  reconsidered and  set aside  and  another  decision  be rendered in  accordance  with  the evidence  presented during the trial of this case and in accordance  with law.  (Annex B.)
As the motion  sought  reconsideration of the judgment rendered by  the trial court "on the ground that said decision is completely  against the evidence presented during the trial  of  this case  and the  same decision  is against the  law,"  without  pointing out  the  findings  and  pronouncements  made in  the judgment that  were allegedly contrary to the evidence and  the  law, the motion was pro forma and did not stop the running of the period within which  to appeal.1  The fact that  on  1  June, before entry of the  order denying the motion for  reconsideration, the respondents filed a pleading where they pointed  out fraud on  the part  of  the defendant Rufino  E. Gonzales who on 26 July sold % of the land to the plaintiffs reserving the  right to repurchase it,  notwithstanding the fact that in civil case No. 16, Marcela Espinosa, et al. vs. Rufino E.  Gonzales, et  al.,  a writ of  execution was issued against  Rufino E.  Gonzales,  did not  cure the  defect  of the  motion  for  reconsideration.   Fraud  committed   by Rufino E.  Gonzales was not committed by the spouses  Casimiro Garganta and Catalina  Donato, unless the evidence showed that the latter  had knowledge of the fraud  being perpetrated by  one  of the vendors.  The judgment  in favor of the  plaintiffs, the herein petitioners, was predicated on the registration of the sale on 26 July 1948 or before the registration of the levy upon execution which was on 4 August 1948.  The trial court found that the sale in favor of the plaintiffs was valid as against  the  levy on  execution which brought about  the  sale of the  land in litigation by the sheriff  to the defendants.

Granting, however, that the filing of the respondents' motion  for reconsideration  on  16 May  tolled the  period within which an appeal may be taken, still the appeal  filed on 18 June was not on time.  On 4 June the Court denied the respondents' motion for reconsideration.  On 6 June the postmaster of Lingayen sent to respondents' counsel at his address of record the notice to claim  within five days from the post office the registered letter containing the notice denying the  respondents'  motion  for  reconsideration.  Section 8, Rule 27,  partly provides that:
* * * Service by registered mail is  complete  upon actual receipt by the addressee; but if he fails to  claim his mail from the post office within five days from the date of  first notice of the  postmaster, the service shall take effect at the expiration  of such  time.
As counsel for the respondents  failed to claim the registered letter from the  post office within  five days from receipt  of the notice, service thereof was  deemed to have taken effect  five  days  after its receipt, (1)  or on 11 June. From this date the two days remaining out of the  thirty-day period resumed to  run.  The  two  remaining days ended  on  13  June.  The  notice of appeal, appeal bond and record on  appeal  filed on  18 June  were, therefore, beyond  the reglementary period, when judgment already had become final  and executory.

The failure of attorney Jose Rivera, respondents' counsel in the court below,  to  receive the notice sent by the postmaster at  his address of record and  to  claim from the post office the registered letter  containing the notice denying the motion  for reconsideration,  because  he  was in  Alaminos, where  he lived with his family,  and  because he was busy attending to his other cases in court, does not relieve the respondents from the adverse effect of  their  counsel's negligence.  It is  incumbent upon an attorney  to take such precaution as  to receive promptly all  judicial notices during  his  absence from his address of record.[1]

Respondents  contend  further  "that  the order of  the lower court giving  due course to the  appeal  of the appellants in Civil  Case No. 12038  had become final  and  executory  as  plaintiffs-appellants  did not appeal from  the said Order and hence the Honorable  Court  of  Appeals have no more authority to revoke  said  Order," and that it cannot be annulled by a writ of prohibition.   Section 14, Rule  41, provides:
A motion to dismiss  an  appeal on any of the  grounds mentioned in  the preceding  section  (failure to file notice, bond, or record on  appeal)  may  be filed  in  the Court of  First Instance prior to  the transmittal  of the  record to the appellate court.
Section 1, paragraph (a), Rule 52,  provides:
An appeal may  be  dismissed by  the Court of Appeals, on its own motion or on that of the appellee, on the following grounds: (a)  Failure to file, within the period prescribed by these rules, the  notice of appeal, appeal bond  or record on appeal;
The denial by the  trial court  of the  plaintiffs' motion to  dismiss  the  defendants appeal  did  not  preclude  the former  from renewing  or reiterating  in the Court of Appeals their  motion to dismiss the  appeal  under Rule 52.  An allowance  by a Court  of First Instance  of  an appeal  which  was not  taken  within  the reglementary period;  a denial by the same Court  of a motion to dismiss an appeal taken beyond such period; and a  denial by  the  Court of Appeals to dismiss  such  appeal, do not render the  appeal valid, effective and legal.  If an appeal be not taken within the reglementary period, the judgment becomes final, and the legality  of  the  allowance of the appeal  and of  the denial of the motion  to  dismiss the appeal  by  the trial  court  and the appellate court,  to which the  appeal  had been  forwarded, may always  be raised because it concerns the jurisdiction of the appellate court, a point which may be raised at  any stage of the proceedings in the appellate court.

The writ prayed for is granted  and  the writ of preliminary injunction heretofore issued is made final, with costs against the respondents, except the Court of Appeals and the  Provincial Sheriff of Pangasinan.

Paras, C. J., Bengzon, Montemayor, Reyes, A., Bautista Angelo,  Labrador, Concepcion, Reyes, J. B. L.,  and Endencia,  JJ., concur.



1 Valdez  vs. Jugo, 74 Phil.,  49; Reyes vs.  Court of Appeals, 74 Phil., 235;  Alvero vs. de la Rosa, 76  Phil., 428; Villalon vs. Yisp, 53 Off. Gaz.,  1094;  section 2, Rule 37.

(1) Pliego vs. Generisa, 73 Phil., 654.

[1] Martinez vs. Martinez, 90 Phil., 697.

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