42 - Cease Vs CA 93 Scra 483
42 - Cease Vs CA 93 Scra 483
42 - Cease Vs CA 93 Scra 483
483
FIRST DIVISION
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484
GUERRERO, J.:
Appeal by certiorari from the decision of the Court of
Appeals in CA-G.R. No. 45474, entitled Ernesto Cease, et
al. vs. Hon. Manolo L. Maddela,
Judge of the Court of First
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Instance of Quezon, et al. which dismissed the petition for
certiorari, mandamus, and prohibition instituted by the
petitioners against the respondent judge and the private
respondents.
The antecedents of the case, as found by the appellate
court, are as follows:
IT RESULTING: That the antecedents are not difficult to
understand; sometime in June 1908, one Forrest L. Cease common
predecessor in interest of the parties together with five (5) other
American citizens organized the Tiaong Milling and Plantation
Company and in the course of its corporate existence the company
acquired various properties but at the same time all the other
original incorporators were bought out by Forrest L. Cease together
with his children namely Ernest, Cecilia, Teresita, Benjamin,
Florence and one Bonifacia Tirante also considered a member of the
family; the charter of the company lapsed in June 1958; but
whether there were steps to liquidate it, the record is silent; on 13
August 1959, Forrest
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the properties and assets of the defunct Tiaong Milling now under
its name, custody and control to whomsoever be appointed as
Receiverdisqualifying any of the parties hereinthe latter to
act accordingly upon proper assumption of office; and
4) Special Proceedings No. 3893 for administration is terminated
and dismissed; the instant case to proceed but on issues of
damages only and for such action inherently essential for
partition.
SO ORDERED.
Lucena City, December 27, 1989., pp. 122-a-123, rollo;
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and that the questions presented cannot be raised for the first
time before this Court of Appeals;
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FOREST L. CEASE.
III. IN AFFIRMING THE ARBITRARY CONCLUSION
OF THE LOWER COURT THAT ITS DECISION
OF
DECEMBER
27,
1969
IS
AN
INTERLUCUTORY DECISION. IN DISMISSING
THE PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDAMUS,
AND IN AFFIRMING THE MANIFESTLY
UNJUST JUDGMENT RENDERED WHICH
CONTRADICTS THE FINDINGS OF ULTIMATE
FACTS THEREIN CONTAINED.
During the period that ensued after the filing in this Court
of the respective briefs and the subsequent submission of
the case for decision, some incidents had transpired, the
summary of which may be stated as follows:
1. Separate from this present appeal, petitioners filed
a petition for certiorari and prohibition in this
Court, docketed as G.R. No. L-35629 (Ernesto
Cease, et al. vs. Hon. Manolo L. Maddela, et al.)
which challenged the order of respondent judge
dated September 27, 1972 appointing his Branch
Clerk of Court, Mr. Eleno M. Joyas, as receiver of
the properties subject of the appealed civil case,
which order, petitioners saw as a virtual execution
of the lower courts judgment (p. 92, rollo). In Our
resolution of November 13, 1972, issued in G.R. No.
L-35629, the petition was denied since respondent
judge merely appointed an auxilliary receiver for
the preservation of the properties as well as for the
protection of the interests of all parties in Civil
Case No. 6326; but at the same time, We expressed
Our displeasure in the appointment of the branch
clerk of court or any other court personnel for that
matter as receiver. (p. 102, rollo).
2. Meanwhile, sensing that the appointed receiver was
making some attempts to take possession of the
properties,
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See Martin, Rules of Court, Vol III, 308 (1973) citing the cases of
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ties in both proceedings being exactly the same, but not only this,
let it not be forgotten that when His Honor dismissed Special
Proceedings No. 3893, that dismissal precisely was a dismissal that
petitioners herein had themselves sought and solicited from
respondent Judge as petitioners themselves aver in their present
petition pp. 5-6, rollo; this Court must find difficulty in reconciling
petitioners attack with the fact that it was they themselves that
had insisted on that dismissal; on the principle that not he who is
favored but he who is hurt by a judicial order is he only who should
be heard to complain and especially since extraordinary legal
remedies are remedies in extremis granted to parties who have
been the victims not merely of errors but of grave wrongs, and it
cannot be seen how one who got what he had asked could be heard
to claim that he had been the victim of a wrong, petitioners should
not now complain of an order they had themselves asked in order to
attack such an order afterwards; if at all, perhaps, third parties,
creditors, the Bureau of Internal Revenue, might have been
prejudiced, and could have had the personality to attack that
dismissal of Special Proceedings No. 3893, but not petitioners
herein, and it is not now for this Court of Appeals to protect said
third persons who have not come to the Court below or sought to
intervene herein;
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The miranda ruling has since then been applied as the new
rule by a unanimous Court in Valdez vs. Bagasao, 82 SCRA
22 (March 8, 1978).
If there were a valid genuine claim of exclusive
ownership of the inherited properties on the part of
petitioners to respondents action for partition, then under
the Miranda ruling, petitioners would be sustained, for as
expressly held therein the general rule of partition that an
appeal will not lie until the partition or distribution
proceedings are terminated will not apply where appellant
claims exclusive ownership of the whole property and
denies the adverse partys right to any partition.
But this question has now been rendered moot and
academic
for
the
very
issue
of
exclusive
ownershipclaimedby petitioners to deny and defeat
respondents right to partitionwhich is the very core of
their rejected appealhas been squarely resolved herein
against them, as if the appeal had been given due course.
The Court has herein expressly sustained the trial courts
findings, as affirmed by the Court of Appeals, that the
assets or properties of the defunct company constitute the
estate of the deceased proprietor (supra at page 7) and the
defunct companys assertion of ownership of the properties
is a legal contradiction and would but thwart the
liquidation and final distribution and partition of the
properties among the
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