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https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c313a?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09
[CARLOS CURILAN v. COURT OFAPPEALS](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c313a?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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[ GR No. L-13170, Jul 31, 1957 ]

CARLOS CURILAN v. COURT OFAPPEALS +

DECISION

G.R No. L-13170

[ G.R No. L-13170, July 31, 1957 ]

CARLOS CURILAN, ET AL., PETITIONERS, VS. THE COURT OFAPPEALS, ET AL., RESPONDENTS.

D E C I S I O N

BAUTISTA ANGELO, J.:

This is  a petition  for mandamus  and certiorari with preliminary injunction seeking to compel respondent Court to deliver to  petitioners the sum of P500.00 representing the cash bond  they  filed incident to  the issuance of the writ of  preliminary injunction issued in a  case  pending before said Court.   

This petition stems from a case  of forcible entry filed by Ismael Sanchez against Carlos Curilan, et al. before the Municipal  Court of Butuan  City.  The case was decided in favor of plaintiff, defendants having been ordered to vacate the properly.  Defendants failed to  perfect their appeal within  the reglementary period and so  plaintiff asked for execution of the judgment.   Dependants filed a petition  for relief before the court of first instance  which  was dismissed for lack of merit.  They tried to appeal the order  to the  Court  of  Appeals  but while  action on  the appeal was pending  defendants filed with the same court a petition  for certiorari and prohibition with preliminary injunction alleging abuse of discretion on the part of the lower  court.  The writ  of preliminary  injunction was granted  upon the filing of a bond  in The sum of P500.00. Petitioners put  up the bond in cash which was deposited with the Disbursing Officer of the Court of Appeals.  In due time the Court of Appeals entered judgment dismissing the petition and dissolving the  preliminary injunction, and  the judgment  having become final  the  Clerk of Court made  an  entry of said  judgment on  January 17,  1957.

On March  4, 1957, petitioners filed a motion to withdraw the cash bond on the ground that the judgment has become final, which was reiterated in a subsequent motion, for the reason that no action  has been taken  on the first-motion. But on July  5,  1957,  respondent Sanchez filed  a motion praying for the  execution  of the bond put up by petitioners to answer for the damages he had suffered arising  from the preliminary  injunction issued by the Court of Appeals considering that the petition for certiorari has been dismissed   for  lack  of  merit.  Respondent  Court  at first granted  the  motion for withdrawal of the cash bond but it later stayed its order while  at the  same time it denied the motion of respondent Sanchez without prejudice  on his part to file  the corresponding  action for damages in the  lower, court.  This resolution  entered on August 26, 1957 is  now the subject  of the present petition for  mandamus.

It appears that the  cash bond of P500.00 was put up by petitioners in relation to the writ of  preliminary injunction issued by respondent Court upon  their petition in the certiorari case then pending before said court.  It likewise appears  that the certiorari case  was  dismissed  for lack of merit and the decision became final on  January  17, 1957. But notwithstanding the fact that said decision has become final without respondent Sanchez having filed any claim for damages arising from the issuance of the preliminary injunction with notice to the surety, respondent Court entered a  resolution  allowing Sanchez to file the corresponding action for damages  in  the  lower  court. Petitioners now claim that respondent Court in granting such relief to Sanchez  has  committed a grave  abuse  of discretion.

Section 9, Rule 60 provides: 
"Sec. 9. Judgment to  damages  against party  and sureties. Upon the trial the amount of damages to be awarded to the plaintiff, or to the defendant, as the case may be, upon the bond of the other party, shall be  claimed, ascertained,  and  awarded under the same procedure  as prescribed  in Section 20 of Rule 59."
Section 20, Rule  59 provides:
"Sec. 20. Claim for damages on  plaintiff's  bond on account  of illegal attachment. If the judgment on the action be in favor of the defendant, he may  recover,  upon the bond given by the plaintiff, damages resulting from the attachment.   Such damages may be awarded only upon  application and after proper hearing, and shall be included in  the  final judgment.  The application  must be filed before the trial or, in the discretion of the court, before1 entry of the final judgment, with due  notice to the plaintiff and his surety or sureties, setting forth the facts showing his right to damages and the amount thereof.  Damages sustained during the pendency of  an appeal may be claimed by the defendant, if the judgment of the appellate court  be  favorable to  him, by filing an application therewith, with notice to the plaintiff and his surety or sureties, and the appellate court may allow the application  to be  heard and  decided by the trial court."
It  appears from the above provisions  that  whenever a bond is filed  because of  the  issuance of a preliminary  injunction and damages are suffered as a result thereof the claim for damages must be filed "before the trial or, in the discretion of  the court, before entry of the final judgment, with due notice  to plaintiff and his  surety  or sureties, setting forth the facts showing his right to damages and the  amount thereof."  It likewise appears that  such damages may be awarded  only upon  application and after proper hearing, and shall be Included in the final judgment. And  it has been held that this remedy is exclusive and by failing to file a motion for the determination of the damages on time and while the judgment is still under the control of the court, the claimant loses his right to such damages.

It appearing that  the decision  in the main  case  has become final and respondent Sanchez has failed to file his claim for damages on time or while his case is still under the control of the court, it follows that his claim to such damages is now lost and the liability of the surety on the bond extinguished.

Wherefore, the resolution of respondent Court entered on  August 26, 1957  is hereby set aside in  so far as  it grants respondent Sanchez the right to file a separate action for damages in the lower court.  It is ordered that the cash  bond  of P500.00  be returned  to petitioners.  Cost against respondent Sanchez.

Paras, C.J., Bengzon, Padilla, Montemayor, Concepcion, Labrador, Endencia, and Barrera, JJ., concur.

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