Republic of the Philippines
SUPREME COURT
Manila
FIRST DIVISION
G.R. No. 168251 July 27, 2011
JESUS M. MONTEMAYOR, Petitioner,
vs.
VICENTE D. MILLORA, Respondent.
D E C I S I O N
DEL CASTILLO, J.:
When the dispositive portion of a judgment is clear and unequivocal, it must be executed strictly according to its tenor.
This Petition for Review on Certiorari1 assails the Decision2 dated May 19, 2005 of the Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. SP No. 81075, which dismissed the petition for certiorari seeking to annul and set aside the Orders dated September 6, 20023 and October 2, 20034 of the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Quezon City, Branch 98 in Civil Case No. Q-93-17255.
Factual Antecedents
On July 24, 1990, respondent Atty. Vicente D. Millora (Vicente) obtained a
loan of ₱400,000.00 from petitioner Dr. Jesus M. Montemayor (Jesus) as evidenced by a promissory note5 executed by Vicente. On August 10, 1990, the parties executed a loan contract6 wherein it was provided that the loan has a stipulated monthly interest of 2% and that Vicente had already paid the amount of ₱100,000.00 as well as the ₱8,000.00 representing the interest for the period July 24 to August 23, 1990.
Subsequently and with Vicente’s consent, the interest rate was increased to 3.5% or ₱10,500.00 a month. From March 24, 1991 to July 23, 1991, or for a period of four months, Vicente was supposed to pay ₱42,000.00 as interest but was able to pay only ₱24,000.00. This was the last payment Vicente made. Jesus made several demands7 for Vicente to settle his obligation but to no avail.
Thus, on August 17, 1993, Jesus filed before the RTC of Quezon City a Complaint8 for Sum of Money against Vicente which was docketed as Civil Case No. Q-93-17255. On October 19, 1993, Vicente filed his Answer9 interposing a counterclaim for attorney’s fees of not less than ₱500,000.00. Vicente claimed that he handled several cases for Jesus but he was summarily dismissed from handling them when the instant complaint for sum of money was filed.
Ruling of the Regional Trial Court
In its Decision10 dated October 27, 1999, the RTC ordered Vicente to pay Jesus his monetary obligation amounting to ₱300,000.00 plus interest of 12% from the time of the filing of the complaint on August 17, 1993 until fully paid. At the same time, the trial court found merit in Vicente’s counterclaim and thus ordered Jesus to pay Vicente his attorney’s fees which is equivalent to the amount of Vicente’s monetary liability, and which shall be set-off with the amount Vicente is adjudged to pay Jesus, viz:
WHEREFORE, premises above-considered [sic], JUDGMENT is hereby rendered ordering defendant Vicente D. Millora to pay plaintiff Jesus M. Montemayor the sum of ₱300,000.00 with interest at the rate of 12% per annum counted from the filing of the instant complaint on August 17, 1993 until fully paid and whatever amount recoverable from defendant shall be set off by an equivalent amount awarded by the court on the counterclaim representing attorney’s fees of defendant on the basis of "quantum meruit" for legal services previously rendered to plaintiff.
No pronouncement as to attorney’s fees and costs of suit.
SO ORDERED.11
On December 8, 1999, Vicente filed a Motion for Reconsideration12 to which Jesus filed an Opposition.13 On March 15, 2000, Vicente filed a Motion for the Issuance of a Writ of Execution14 with respect to the portion of the RTC Decision which awarded him attorney’s fees under his counterclaim. Jesus filed his Urgent Opposition to Defendant’s Motion for the Issuance of a Writ of Execution15 dated May 31, 2000.
In an Order16 dated June 23, 2000, the RTC denied Vicente’s Motion for Reconsideration but granted his Motion for Issuance of a Writ of Execution of the portion of the decision concerning the award of attorney’s fees.
Intending to appeal the portion of the RTC Decision which declared him liable to Jesus for the sum of ₱300,000.00 with interest at the rate of 12% per annum counted from the filing of the complaint on August 17, 1993 until fully paid, Vicente filed on July 6, 2000 a Notice of Appeal.17 This was however denied by the RTC in an Order18 dated July 10, 2000 on the ground that the Decision has already become final and executory on July 1, 2000.19
Meanwhile, Jesus filed on July 12, 2000 a Motion for Reconsideration and Clarification20 of the June 23, 2000 Order granting Vicente’s Motion for the Issuance of a Writ of Execution. Thereafter, Jesus filed on September 22, 2000 his Motion for the Issuance of a Writ of Execution.21 After the hearing on the said motions, the RTC issued an Order22 dated September 6, 2002 denying both motions for lack of merit. The Motion for Reconsideration and Clarification was denied for violating Section 5,23 Rule 15 of the Rules of Court and likewise the Motion for the Issuance of a Writ of Execution, for violating Section 6,24 Rule 15 of the same Rules.
Jesus filed his Motion for Reconsideration25 thereto on October 10, 2002 but this was eventually denied by the trial court through its Order26 dated October 2, 2003.
Ruling of the Court of Appeals
Jesus went to the CA via a Petition for Certiorari27 under Rule 65 of the Rules of Court.
On May 19, 2005, the CA issued its Decision the dispositive portion of which provides:
WHEREFORE, the foregoing considered, the petition for certiorari is DENIED and the assailed Orders are AFFIRMED in toto. No costs.
SO ORDERED.28
Not satisfied, Jesus is now before this Court via a Petition for Review on Certiorari under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court.
Issue
notwithstanding the finality of the trial court’s decision of October 27, 1999, as well as the orders of September 6, 2002 and October 2, 2003, the legal issue to be resolved in this case is whether x x x [DESPITE] the absence of a specific amount in the decision representing respondent’s counterclaim, the same could be validly [offset] against the specific amount of award mentioned in the decision in favor of the petitioner.29
Petitioner’s Arguments
Jesus contends that the trial court grievously erred in ordering the implementation of the RTC’s October 27, 1999 Decision considering that same does fix the amount of attorney’s fees. According to Jesus, such disposition leaves the matter of computation of the attorney’s fees uncertain and, hence, the writ of execution cannot be implemented. In this regard, Jesus points out that not even the Sheriff who will implement said Decision can compute the judgment awards. Besides, a sheriff is not clothed with the authority to render judicial functions such as the computation of specific amounts of judgment awards.
Respondent’s Arguments
Vicente counter-argues that the October 27, 1999 RTC Decision can no longer be made subject of review, either by way of an appeal or by way of a special civil action for certiorari because it had already attained finality when after its promulgation, Jesus did not even file a motion for reconsideration thereof or interpose an appeal thereto. In fact, it was Vicente who actually filed a motion for reconsideration and a notice of appeal, which was eventually denied and disapproved by the trial court.
Our Ruling
The petition lacks merit.
The October 27, 1999 Decision of the RTC is already final and executory, hence, immutable.
At the outset, it should be stressed that the October 27, 1999 Decision of the RTC is already final and executory. Hence, it can no longer be the subject of an appeal. Consequently, Jesus is bound by the decision and can no longer impugn the same. Indeed, well-settled is the rule that a decision that has attained finality can no longer be modified even if the modification is meant to correct erroneous conclusions of fact or law. The doctrine of finality of judgment is explained in Gallardo-Corro v. Gallardo:30
Nothing is more settled in law than that once a judgment attains finality it thereby becomes immutable and unalterable. It may no longer be modified in any respect, even if the modification is meant to correct what is perceived to be an erroneous conclusion of fact or law, and regardless of whether the modification is attempted to be made by the court rendering it or by the highest court of the land. Just as the losing party has the right to file an appeal within the prescribed period, the winning party also has the correlative right to enjoy the finality of the resolution of his case. The doctrine of finality of judgment is grounded on fundamental considerations of public policy and sound practice, and that, at the risk of occasional errors, the judgments or orders of courts must become final at some definite time fixed by law; otherwise, there would be no end to litigations, thus setting to naught the main role of courts of justice which is to assist in the enforcement of the rule of law and the maintenance of peace and order by settling justiciable controversies with finality.31
To stress, the October 27, 1999 Decision of the RTC has already attained finality. "Such definitive judgment is no longer subject to change, revision, amendment or reversal. Upon finality of the judgment, the Court loses its jurisdiction to amend, modify or alter the same. Except for correction of clerical errors or the making of nunc pro tunc entries which cause no prejudice to any party, or where the judgment is void, the judgment can neither be amended nor altered after it has become final and executory. This is the principle of immutability of final judgment."32
The amount of attorney’s fees is ascertainable from the RTC Decision. Thus, compensation is possible.
Jesus contends that offsetting cannot be made because the October 27, 1999 judgment of the RTC failed to specify the amount of attorney’s fees. He maintains that for offsetting to apply, the two debts must be liquidated or ascertainable. However, the trial court merely awarded to Vicente attorney’s fees based on quantum meruit without specifying the exact amount thereof.
We do not agree.
For legal compensation to take place, the requirements set forth in Articles 1278 and 1279 of the Civil Code, quoted below, must be present.
ARTICLE 1278. Compensation shall take place when two persons, in their own right, are creditors and debtors of each other.
ARTICLE 1279. In order that compensation may be proper, it is necessary:
(1) That each one of the obligors be bound principally, and that he be at the same time a principal creditor of the other;
(2) That both debts consist in a sum of money, or if the things due are consumable, they be of the same kind, and also of the same quality if the latter has been stated;
(3) That the two debts be due;
(4) That they be liquidated and demandable;
(5) That over neither of them there be any retention or controversy, commenced by third persons and communicated in due time to the debtor.
"A debt is liquidated when its existence and amount are determined. It is not necessary that it be admitted by the debtor. Nor is it necessary that the credit appear in a final judgment in order that it can be considered as liquidated; it is enough that its exact amount is known. And a debt is considered liquidated, not only when it is expressed already in definite figures which do not require verification, but also when the determination of the exact amount depends only on a simple arithmetical operation x x x."33
In Lao v. Special Plans, Inc.,34 we ruled that:
When the defendant, who has an unliquidated claim, sets it up by way of counterclaim, and a judgment is rendered liquidating such claim, it can be compensated against the plaintiff’s claim from the moment it is liquidated by judgment. We have restated this in Solinap v. Hon. Del Rosario35 where we held that compensation takes place only if both obligations are liquidated.
In the instant case, both obligations are liquidated. Vicente has the obligation to pay his debt due to Jesus in the amount of ₱300,000.00 with interest at the rate of 12% per annum counted from the filing of the instant complaint on August 17, 1993 until fully paid. Jesus, on the other hand, has the obligation to pay attorney’s fees which the RTC had already determined to be equivalent to whatever amount recoverable from Vicente. The said attorney’s fees were awarded by the RTC on the counterclaim of Vicente on the basis of "quantum meruit" for the legal services he previously rendered to Jesus.
In its Decision, the trial court elucidated on how Vicente had established his entitlement for attorney’s fees based on his counterclaim in this manner:
Defendant, on his counterclaim, has established the existence of a lawyer-client relationship between him and plaintiff and this was admitted by the latter. Defendant had represented plaintiff in several court cases which include the Laguna property case, the various cases filed by Atty. Romulo Reyes against plaintiff such as the falsification and libel cases and the disbarment case filed by plaintiff against Atty. Romulo Reyes before the Commission on Bar Integration. Aside from these cases, plaintiff had made defendant his consultant on almost everything that involved legal opinions.
More particularly in the Calamba, Laguna land case alone, plaintiff had agreed to pay defendant a contingent fee of 25% of the value of the property for the latter’s legal services as embodied in the Amended Complaint signed and verified by plaintiff (Exh. 5). Aside from this contingent fee, defendant had likewise told plaintiff that his usual acceptance fee for a case like the Laguna land case is ₱200,000.00 and his appearance fee at that time was x x x ₱2,000.00 per appearance but still plaintiff paid nothing.
The lawyer-client relationship between the parties was severed because of the instant case. The court is however fully aware of defendant’s stature in life – a UP law graduate, Bar topnotcher in 1957 bar examination, former Senior Provincial Board Member, Vice-Governor and Governor of the province of Pangasinan, later as Assemblyman of the Batasang Pambansa and is considered a prominent trial lawyer since 1958. For all his legal services rendered to plaintiff, defendant deserves to be compensated at least on a "quantum meruit" basis.36
The above discussion in the RTC Decision was then immediately followed by the dispositive portion, viz:
WHEREFORE, premises above-considered, JUDGMENT is hereby rendered ordering defendant Vicente D. Millora to pay plaintiff Jesus M. Montemayor the sum of ₱300.000.00 with interest at the rate of 12% per annum counted from the filing of the instant complaint on August 17, 1993 until fully paid and whatever amount recoverable from defendant shall be set off by an equivalent amount awarded by the court on the counterclaim representing attorney’s fees of defendant on the basis of "quantum meruit" for legal services previously rendered to plaintiff.
No pronouncement as to attorney’s fees and costs of suit.
SO ORDERED.37 (Emphasis supplied.)
It is therefore clear that in the execution of the RTC Decision, there are two parts to be executed. The first part is the computation of the amount due to Jesus. This is achieved by doing a simple arithmetical operation at the time of execution. The principal amount of ₱300,000.00 is to be multiplied by the interest rate of 12%. The product is then multiplied by the number of years that had lapsed from the filing of the complaint on August 17, 1993 up to the date when the judgment is to be executed. The result thereof plus the principal of ₱300,000.00 is the total amount that Vicente must pay Jesus.
The second part is the payment of attorney’s fees to Vicente. This is achieved by following the clear wordings of the above fallo of the RTC Decision which provides that Vicente is entitled to attorney’s fees which is equivalent to whatever amount recoverable from him by Jesus. Therefore, whatever amount due to Jesus as payment of Vicente’s debt is equivalent to the amount awarded to the latter as his attorney’s fees. Legal compensation or set-off then takes place between Jesus and Vicente and both parties are on even terms such that there is actually nothing left to execute and satisfy in favor of either party.
In fact, the RTC, in addressing Jesus’ Motion for Reconsideration and Clarification dated July 12, 2000 had already succinctly explained this matter in its Order dated September 6, 2002, viz:
Notwithstanding the tenor of the said portion of the judgment, still, there is nothing to execute and satisfy in favor of either of the herein protagonists because the said decision also states clearly that "whatever amount recoverable from defendant shall be SET-OFF by an equivalent amount awarded by the Court on the counterclaim representing attorney’s fees of defendant on the basis of "quantum meruit" for legal services previously rendered to plaintiff" x x x.
Said dispositive portion of the decision is free from any ambiguity. It unequivocably ordered that any amount due in favor of plaintiff and against defendant is set off by an equivalent amount awarded to defendant in the form of counterclaims representing attorney’s fees for past legal services he rendered to plaintiff.
It will be an exercise in futility and a waste of so precious time and unnecessary effort to enforce satisfaction of the plaintiff’s claims against defendant, and vice versa because there is in fact a setting off of each other’s claims and liabilities under the said judgment which has long become final.38 (Emphasis in the original.)
A reading of the dispositive portion of the RTC Decision would clearly show that no ambiguity of any kind exists. Furthermore, if indeed there is any ambiguity in the dispositive portion as claimed by Jesus, the RTC had already clarified it through its Order dated September 6, 2002 by categorically stating that the attorney’s fees awarded in the counterclaim of Vicente is of an amount equivalent to whatever amount recoverable from him by Jesus. This clarification is not an amendment, modification, correction or alteration to an already final decision as it is conceded that such cannot be done anymore. What the RTC simply did was to state in categorical terms what it obviously meant in its decision. Suffice it to say that the dispositive portion of the decision is clear and unequivocal such that a reading of it can lead to no other conclusion, that is, any amount due in favor of Jesus and against Vicente is set off by an equivalent amount in the form of Vicente’s attorney’s fees for past legal services he rendered for Jesus.
WHEREFORE, the instant Petition for Review on Certiorari is DENIED. The assailed Decision of the Court of Appeals dated May 19, 2005 in CA-G.R. SP No. 81075 which dismissed the petition for certiorari seeking to annul and set aside the Orders dated September 6, 2002 and October 2, 2003 of the Regional Trial Court of Quezon City, Branch 98 in Civil Case No. Q-93-17255, is hereby AFFIRMED.
SO ORDERED.
MARIANO C. DEL CASTILLO
Associate Justice
WE CONCUR:
TERESITA J. LEONARDO-DE CASTRO
Associate Justice
Acting Chairperson
ARTURO D. BRION Associate Justice |
LUCAS P. BERSAMIN Associate Justice |
MARTIN S. VILLARAMA, JR.
Associate Justice
C E R T I F I C A T I O N
Pursuant to Section 13, Article VIII of the Constitution, it is hereby certified that the conclusions in the above Decision had been reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the opinion of the Court’s Division.
RENATO C. CORONA
Chief Justice
Footnotes
1 Rollo, pp. 17-26.
2 CA rollo, pp. 91-97; penned by Associate Justice Josefina Guevara-Salonga and concurred in by Associate Justices Ruben T. Reyes and Fernanda Lampas Peralta.
3 Records, pp. 417-420; penned by Judge Evelyn Corpus-Cabochan.
4 Id. at 452.
5 Id. at 4.
6 Id. at 5.
7 Id. at 6, 10-14.
8 Id. at 1-3.
9 Id. at 20-24.
10 Id. at 308-314; penned by Judge Justo M. Sultan.
11 Id. at 313.
12 Id. at 315-345.
13 Id. at 348-356.
14 Id. at 358-359.
15 Id. at 372-373.
16 Id. at 375-376; penned by Judge Estrella T. Estrada.
17 Id. at 377-378.
18 Id. at 382.
19 This Order was issued prior to the promulgation of Neypes v. Court of Appeals, 506 Phil. 613 (2005), where the Court categorically set a fresh period of 15 days from a denial of a motion for reconsideration within which to appeal.
Before Neypes, the party seeking to appeal should file the notice of appeal within the remaining period from the denial of the motion for reconsideration. Here, Vicente filed his Motion for Reconsideration on December 8, 1999, the 15th day from his receipt on November 23, 1999 of the October 27, 1999 RTC Decision. Having consumed the 15-day period to appeal, Vicente should have filed his Notice of Appeal on July 1, 2000, or the day immediately after his receipt on June 30, 2000 of the June 23, 2000 Order denying his Motion for Reconsideration. Instead, he filed his Notice of Appeal on July 6, 2000.
20 Id. at 383-388.
21 Id. at 392-393.
22 Id. at 417-420.
23 Section 5. Notice of hearing. The notice of hearing shall be addressed to all parties concerned, and shall specify the time and date of the hearing which must not be later than ten (10) days after the filing of the motion.
24 Section 6. Proof of service necessary. No written motion set for hearing shall be acted upon by the court without proof of service thereof.
25 Records, pp. 421-427.
26 Id. at 452.
27 CA rollo, pp. 2-13.
28 Id. at 97.
29 Rollo, pp. 19-20.
30 403 Phil. 498 (2001).
31 Id. at 511.
32 Bongcac v. Sandiganbayan, G.R. Nos. 156687-88, May 21, 2009, 588 SCRA 64, 71.
33 Tolentino, Arturo M., Commentaries and Jurisprudence on the Civil Code of the Philippines, Vol. IV, 2002 ed., p. 371.
34 G.R. No. 164791, June 29, 2010, 622 SCRA 27, 36.
35 208 Phil. 561, 565 (1983).
36 Records, p. 313.
37 Id.
38 Id. at 420.
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