Digest
Digest
Digest
Where the law speaks in clear and categorical language, there is no room
for interpretation
PONENTE: PEREZ
FACTS:
Respondent Dolores Bans, an heir of Bartolome Bans owned a lot in
Bacacay, Albay. Adjoining the said lot is a property owned by Vicente
Medina. In 1997, Medina offered his lot for sale to the owners of the
adjoining lots. The property was eventually sold to Armando Barcellano. The
heirs of Bans contested the sale, and conveyed their intention to redeem
the property. However, according to Medina, the deed of sale has been
executed. There was also mention that the Bans heirs failed to give the
amount required by medina for them to redeem the lot. Action to redeem the
property was filed before the RTC. It denied the petition on the ground that
the Bans heirs failed to exercise their right to redemption within the period
provided in article 1623 of NCC. On appeal, such ruling was reversed.
ISSUE:
W/N the RTC decision to deny the Bans heirs of their right of legal
redemption is valid
HELD:
The court denied the petition, and affirmed the appellate court decision
granting the Bans heirs the right to redeem the subject property. The
decision was based on the provisions of article 1623 NCC. A written notice
must be issued by the prospective vendor. Nothing in the record and
pleadings submitted by the parties showed that there was a written notice
sent to the respondents. Without a written notice, the period of 30 days
within which the right of legal redemption may be exercised does not exist.
In this case, the law was clear. A written notice by the vendor is mandatory.
G.R. No. 152259, July 29, 2004ALFREDO T. ROMUALDEZ, petitioner,vs.THE
HONORABLE SANDIGANBAYAN (Fifth Division) and the PEOPLEof the
PHILIPPINES, respondents.FACTS:
The People of the Philippines, through the Presidential Commissionon
Good Government (PCGG), filed on July 12, 1989 an information before
theanti-graft court charging the accused with violation of Section 5, Republic
ActNo. 3019,5 as amended. That on or about and during the period from
July 16, 1975 to July 29, 1975, inMetro Manila, Philippines, and within the
jurisdiction of the Sandiganbayan,Alfredo T. Romualdez, brother-in-law of
Ferdinand E. Marcos, former Presidentof the Philippines, and therefore,
related to the latter by affinity within thethird civil degree, did then and there
willfully and unlawfully, and with evidentbad faith, for the purpose of
promoting his self-interested and/or that of others, intervene directly or
indirectly, in a contract between the NationalShipyard and Steel Corporation
(NASSCO), a government-owned andcontrolled corporation and the Bataan
Shipyard and Engineering Company(BASECO), a private corporation, the
majority stocks of which is owned byformer President Ferdinand E. Marcos,
whereby the NASSCO sold, transferredand conveyed to the BASECO its
ownership and all its titles and interests overall equipment and facilities
including structures, buildings, shops, quarters,houses, plants and
expendable and semi-expendable assets, located at theEngineer Island known
as the Engineer Island Shops including some of itsequipment and machineries from
Jose Panganiban, Camarines Norte neededby BASECO in its shipbuilding
and ship repair program for the amount of P5,000,000.00.
ISSUE:
ANTONIO
A.
vs.
COMMISSION ON AUDIT, respondent.
MECANO, petitioner,
RAC had been repealed by the Administrative Code of 1987 (Exec. Order
No. 292), solely for the reason that the same section was not restated nor
re-enacted in the latter. Petitioner also anchored his claim on Department of
Justice Opinion No. 73, S. 1991 by Secretary Drilon stating that the
issuance of the Administrative Code did not operate to repeal or abrogate in
its entirety the Revised Administrative Code. The COA, on the other hand,
strongly maintains that the enactment of the Administrative Code of 1987
operated to revoke or supplant in its entirety the RAC.
ISSUE:
Whether or not the Administrative Code of 1987 repealed or abrogated
Section 699 of the Revised Administrative Code of 1917.
HELD:
NO. Petition granted. Respondent ordered to give due course on
petitioners claim for benefits.
RATIO:
Repeal by implication proceeds on the premise that where a statute of later
date clearly reveals an intention on the part of the legislature to abrogate a
prior act on the subject, that intention must be given effect. Hence, before
there can be a repeal, there must be a clear showing on the part of the
lawmaker that the intent in enacting the new law was to abrogate the old
one. The intention to repeal must be clear and manifest; otherwise, at least,
as a general rule, the later act is to be construed as a continuation of, and
not a substitute for, the first act and will continue so far as the two acts are
the same from the time of the first enactment.
It is a well-settled rule of statutory construction that repeals of statutes by
implication are not favored. The presumption is against inconsistency and
repugnancy for the legislature is presumed to know the existing laws on the
subject and not to have enacted inconsistent or conflicting statutes. The two
Codes should be read in pari materia.