[ G.R. No. L-45447. September 28, 1988 ] 248 Phil. 260
SECOND DIVISION
[ G.R. No. L-45447. September 28, 1988 ]
CARLITO V. SEMBRANO, PETITIONER, VS. HON. PEDRO A. RAMIREZ, PRESIDING JUDGE, COURT OF FIRST INSTANCE OF MANILA, BRANCH XXX AND NORTHERN MOTORS, INC., RESPONDENTS. D E C I S I O N
SARMIENTO, J.:
In this civil action for certiorari, the petitioner assails as grave abuse of discretion the undue liberality of the respondent judge[1] in giving due course to the private respondent’s appeal despite its alleged late perfection.
The facts pertinent to the crucial issue are simple. On October 9, 1974, the private respondent corporation as plaintiff commenced in the respondent court a suit against the petitioner as defendant for the payment of the unpaid price of a 1971 Vauxhall Victor Car purchased by the petitioner from the private respondent.[2] On August 30, 1976, the respondent court dismissed the complaint. In the same decision, the private respondent was ordered to repair the alternator of the car within thirty (30) days from the finality of the judgment, after which the defendant should resume paying the installments due on the unpaid balance including interest, on the 15th day of each and every month in accordance with the promissory note, until fully paid.[3]
The private respondent-plaintiff received a copy of the decision on September 7, 1976.[4] On October 7, 1976, the last day for the private respondent to perfect its appeal,[5] it filed a Motion for Reconsideration. On the same date, the respondent court issued an order denying the said motion “not only for non-observance of the Rules on notice and hearing, but for lack of merit, for reasons apparent on the face of the decision itself."[6] Not being notified, the petitioner did not react to the Motion for Reconsideration.
The private respondent received a copy of the order denying its Motion for Reconsideration on October 20, 1976.[7] A day after, the private respondent filed a notice of appeal, appeal bond in the amount of P120.00. and Urgent Ex-Parte Motion for Extension of Time to File Record on Appeal.[8] The trial court granted the ex-parte motion in an order dated October 27, 1976.[9]
On October 27, 1976 and November 18, 1976, the petitioner-defendant filed his Opposition To Plaintiff’s Motion For Plaintiff To File Record On Appeal (sic), and Opposition To Plaintiff’s Record On Appeal And/Or Motion To Dismiss, respectively, alleging among others that the “plaintiff’s right to appeal under Rule 41, Section 3 have (sic) already prescribed and the Honorable Court no longer have (sic) jurisdiction to grant plaintiff’s motion because the decision have (sic) become final."[10] On December 4, 1976, the petitioner filed his Supplemental Opposition to Plaintiff’s Motion For Approval Of Record On Appeal And/Or A Motion To Dismiss Appeal.[11]
On December 6, 1976, the respondent judge issued the questioned Order approving the private respondent’s Record On Appeal, denying the petitioner’s motion to dismiss appeal, and directing the Clerk of Court to forward the records of the case, together with the evidence, oral and documentary, to the Court of Appeals.[12] The petitioner’s motion for reconsideration dated December 27, 1976 was also denied by the trial court in an order dated January 7, 1977.[13] Hence, this petition.
We rule for the petitioner.
The private respondent corporation failed to file seasonably its notice of appeal, and therefore the respondent Judge committed a grave abuse of discretion in giving it due course.
The crux of the controversy is the private respondent’s Motion For Reconsideration dated October 6, 1976 filed on the last day of the then thirty (30)-day period to appeal from the decision of the trial court. In that motion, the private respondent was claiming more than the amount adjudged. The motion likewise shows that although the name of the counsel of the petitioner (defendant in the court below) was typed as having been furnished with a copy thereof, no proof of service (no acknowledgment of receipt and no registry receipt attached) and no notice of hearing are contained therein.[14]
The law is clear. Under the then applicable provisions of Rule 41, Section 3,[15] both parties had only thirty (30) days from receipt of the trial court’s decision within which to file notice of appeal. The private respondent received a copy of the decision on September 7, 1987, so that he had only until October 7, 1976, the last day, to perfect its appeal, i.e., to file notice of appeal, appeal bond, and Record On Appeal. On the said last day, instead of filing a notice of appeal, the private respondent filed a Motion for Reconsideration.[16] The motion turned out to be fatally defective for, as earlier adverted to, it had no proof of service nor notice of hearing. The law[17] explicitly requires that notice of a motion shall be served by the applicant to all parties concerned at least three (3) days before the hearing thereof, together with a copy of the motion, and of any affidavits and other papers accompanying it, and that the notice shall be directed to the parties concerned, stating the time and place for the hearing of the motion.[18] The three-day notice required by the rules is intended not for the benefit of the movant but to avoid surprises upon the adverse party and to give the latter time to study and meet the arguments interposed in the motion.[19] Service of a copy of the motion on the opposing lawyers and an indication of the time and place of hearing are mandatory requirements.[20]
In Cledera vs. Sarmiento,[21] the Court categorically ruled:
The provisions of the aforequoted rules are clear and are couched in simple language, understandable to any college student, even if he is not a student of law. Sections 4 and 5 of Rule 15 require that the notice shall be directed to the parties concerned and shall state the time and place for the hearing of the motion, which notice shall also be served to all parties concerned at least three (3) days before the hearing thereof, together with a copy of the motion and other supporting documents. x x x
The Court has invariably held that a motion without notice of hearing is a mere scrap of paper.[22] It does not toll the running of the period of appeal.[23] This requirement of notice of hearing equally applies to a motion for reconsideration.[24] Without such notice, the motion is pro forma. And a pro forma motion for reconsideration does not suspend the running of the period to appeal.[25]
Emphatically in New Japan Motors, Inc. vs. Perucho,[26] we held:
The lower court was right in labelling and declaring aforesaid January 8, 1973 motion for reconsideration “x x x a useless scrap of paper which should not merit the attention of the Court.” Under Sections 4 and 5 of Rule 15 of the Rules of Court (not Rule 16 as erroneously stated by the lower court), a motion is required to be accompanied by a notice of hearing which must be served by the applicant on all parties concerned at least three (3) days before the hearing thereof and must state the time and place of hearing thereof. Section 6 of the same rule commands that “(N)o motion shall be acted upon by the Court, without proof of service of the notice thereof xxx.” It is therefore patent that the motion for reconsideration in question is fatally defective for it did not contain any notice of hearing. We have already consistently held in a number of cases that the requirements of Sections 4, 5 and 6 of Rule 15 of the Rules of Court are mandatory and that failure to comply with the same is fatal to movant’s cause (Omico Mining Industrial Corp. vs. Vallejos, 63 SCRA 285 [1975]; Andrada vs. Court of Appeals, 60 SCRA 379 [1975]; Sacdalan vs. Bautista, 56 SCRA 175. [1974], citing numerous cases and Cledera vs. Sarmiento, L-32450-51, June 10, 1971, 39 SCRA 552.)
It is clear, therefore, in the light of established doctrines, that the respondent judge committed a grave abuse of discretion, amounting to a lack of jurisdiction, in giving due course to the private respondent’s appeal. The order dated October 7, 1976 states as one of the reasons for the denial of the motion for reconsideration the non-observance of the rules on notice and hearing. For this alone, the respondent judge should have treated the motion as a mere scrap of paper and dismissed the appeal. But he did not. Perfunctorily he stated in the assailed order of December 6, 1976:
For the reason that this Court should not deny approval of a record on appeal so (as) to disallow a review of its decision by the appellate court in proper cases, and inasmuch as the inclusion in the record on appeal of the annexes referred to in the defendant’s opposition will not affect his substantial rights, the Court resolves to over rule the defendant’s opposition to the approval of the plaintiff’s record on appeal and to deny his motion to dismiss appeal.[27]
We find that the liberality exhibited by the respondent judge in this regard is misplaced.
The perfection of an appeal within the statutory or reglementary period is mandatory and jurisdictional and the failure thereof renders final and executory the questioned decision and deprives the appellate court of jurisdiction to entertain the appeal.[28] The petitioner is correct in assailing the respondent judge’s order. Where grave abuse of discretion has been palpably committed, or the broader interests of justice require exception, then certiorari lies in order that the error may be corrected and the injustice may be redressed.[29]
A final point. The private respondent in its Memorandum appeals for liberality that it may have ample opportunity to prove its claims on appeal and that a possible denial of substantial justice due to legal technicalities may be avoided. Be that as it may, equally important as substantive due process is procedural due process. The requirement of notice of hearing is an integral component of procedural due process. It is intended to afford the adverse parties a chance to be heard before the motion is resolved by the court.[30] This will enable the court to find out whether or not the adverse party is in conformity with the motion and, if he objects to it, to give him an opportunity to file his opposition.[31]
WHEREFORE, the Petition is hereby GRANTED. The Orders of the respondent court dated December 6, 1976 and January 7, 1977 are hereby SET ASIDE. The Decision of the respondent court in Civil Case No. 95566 dated August 30, 1976 is hereby declared FINAL and EXECUTORY. No costs.
SO ORDERED.
Melencio-Herrera (Chairman), Paras, Padilla and Regalado, JJ., concur.