Mendoza V Villas

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Mendoza v. Villas G.R. No. 187256. February 23, 2011. First Division; Velasco, Jr., J.

Facts: In the 2007 barangay elections, Constancio Mendoza obtained the highest votes for the position of Punong Barangay of Barangay Balatasan, Bulalacao, Oriental Mindoro. Consequently, the Commission on Elections (COMELEC) proclaimed Mendoza as the duly-elected Punong Barangay. Thus, the losing candidate, Thomas Pajanel, filed a petition for quo warranto with the Municipal Trial Court (MTC). Eventually, the MTC disqualified Mendoza and declared that Liwanag Herato, who obtained the highest number of votes for the position of Barangay Kagawad, was entitled to succeed him as Punong Barangay. Mendoza appealed the decision to the COMELEC. Nevertheless, on February 2008, Enrilo Villas, as Mayor of Bulalacao, Oriental Mindoro, administered the Oath of Office to Herato. Meanwhile, Mendoza sought the advice of the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) as to who should exercise the powers of Punong Barangay given the prevailing controversy. A DILG Undersecretary responded to Mendozas inquiry informing Villas that Mendoza should occupy the post of Punong Barangay as there was no Writ of Execution Pending Appeal of the MTC Decision. Nevertheless, Municipal Administrator Edezer Aceron issued a letter to Marlon de Castro, the local branch manager of the Land Bank of the Philippines (LBP), requesting that transactions entered into by Mendoza in behalf of Barangay Balatasan should not be honored. In the same letter, Aceron dismissed the DILG letter, saying that it was merely advisory and not binding on the municipal government and the LBP. Thereafter, Mendoza and the Sangguniang Barangay of Balatasan filed a Petition for Mandamus with Damages and Prayer for the Writ of Preliminary Mandatory Injunction with a Regional Trial Court (RTC). They prayed that the LBP be directed to release the funds of Barangay Balatasan to them in order to render necessary, basic public services to the inhabitants of the barangay. Eventually, Villas and Herato filed a Motion to Dismiss, where a copy of the COMELEC Resolution in COMELEC Case No. SPA-07-243-BRGY was attached. This case originated from a disqualification case against Mendoza filed with the COMELEC by one Senen Familara before the conduct of the 2007 barangay elections. In the Resolution, the COMELEC disqualified Mendoza as a candidate for Punong Barangay for having already served three consecutive terms for the same position. In response, Mendoza presented a Certification from the COMELEC which stated that COMELEC Case No. SPA-07-243-BRGY is still pending before it. Nevertheless, the RTC dismissed the petition on the strength of the COMELEC Resolution. Aggrieved, Mendoza appealed the RTCs dismissal directly to the Supreme Court. Issue: Whether or not, even assuming that the petition was not filed prematurely, it must still be dismissed for having become moot and academic? Held: Yes. A moot and academic case is one that ceases to present a justiciable controversy by virtue of supervening events, so that a declaration thereon would be of no practical value. As a rule, courts decline jurisdiction over such case, or dismiss it on ground of mootness. With the conduct of the 2010 barangay elections, a supervening event has transpired that has rendered this case moot and academic and subject to dismissal. This is because, whatever judgment is reached, the same can no longer have any practical legal effect or, in the nature of things, can no longer be enforced. Mendozas term of office has expired with the conduct of last years local elections. As such, the special civil action before the RTC, where the assailed Orders were issued, can no longer prosper. Mendoza no longer has any legal standing to further pursue the case, rendering this petition moot and academic.

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