Dir of Land Vs CA and BA 194 Scra 224
Dir of Land Vs CA and BA 194 Scra 224
Dir of Land Vs CA and BA 194 Scra 224
February 7, 1977, the former cancelled the contract with regard to the said project
and declared the performance bond No. BCICI-3323 as forfeited. 4
On a motion for reconsideration filed by the private respondent, the Director of
Lands reinstated the said contract on June 20, 1977 without however granting the
companys request for a price adjustment, which denial the private respondent
seasonably appealed to the Secretary of Environment and Natural Resources. This
appeal is pending.
On April 14, 1983, the Director of Lands likewise scrapped the Valderama Plsm
contract because of the non-completion of the project despite the grant of repeated
extensions totalling 1,200 days. 5
Similarly, the private respondent appealed the cancellation of the said contract to
the Secretary of Environment and Natural Resources, where the appeal also still
remains pending.
Meanwhile, without both appeals being resolved, the Director of Lands conducted a
public bidding for the cadastral survey of several municipalities including the
Municipality of Numancia, Aklan and the Municipality of Valderama, Antique. In the
said bidding, Armando Villamayor and Cristina Matuod were declared as the
successful
bidders
for
the
Numancia
and
Valderama
projects,
respectively.chanrobles virtual lawlibrary
Thereupon, the private respondent filed a petition for prohibition and mandamus
with a prayer for a temporary restraining order with the Court of Appeals docketed
as CA-G.R. No. 10421, alleging that the Director of Lands acted without or in excess
of jurisdiction in awarding the said cadastral survey projects to other persons while
the appeals of the private respondent remain pending.
As adverted to at the outset, the respondent Court of Appeals in its decision dated
April 3, 1987 granted the said petition and denied in a resolution dated August 27,
1987 the petitioners motion for reconsideration.
Hence, this petition.
The petitioners assign the following errors 6 allegedly committed by the Court of
Appeals:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library
I
RESPONDENT COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN HOLDING THAT PUBLIC LAND
SUBDIVISION MAPPING (PLSM) AND PHOTO-CADASTRAL MAPPING (PCADM), ON ONE
HAND, AND A REGULAR CADASTRAL SURVEY, ON THE OTHER, "HAVE THE SAME
PURPOSE OF REGISTERING TITLES AND AS SUCH, ONE MAY SUBSTITUTE FOR THE
OTHER" (Decision, p. 4, Annex "C").
II
The question on the necessity of either or both projects must be better addressed to
the sound discretion of the proper administrative officials who admittedly have the
competence and technical expertise on the matters, In the case at bar, the
petitioner Director of Lands is "the official vested with direct and executive control
of the disposition of the lands of the public domain." 8 Specifically, Section 4 of
Commonwealth Act No. 141 provides that." . . [T]he Director of Lands shall have
direct executive control of the survey, classification, lease, sale, or any form of
concession or disposition and management of the public domain, and his decisions
as to questions of fact shall be conclusive when approved by the Secretary of
Agriculture and Commerce (now the Secretary of Environment and Natural
Resources)." chanrobles virtual lawlibrary
We likewise take cognizance of the wealth of jurisprudence on this doctrine of
primary administrative jurisdiction and exhaustion of administrative remedies. The
Court has consistently held that "acts of an administrative agency must not casually
be overturned by a court, and a court should as a rule not substitute its judgment
for that of the administrative agency acting within the parameters of its own
competence," 9 unless "there be a clear showing of arbitrary action or palpable and
serious error." 10 In similar vein, we reiterated recently the rule that the findings of
fact of quasi-judicial agencies which have acquired expertise because their
jurisdiction is confined to specific matters, in the present case cadastral surveys and
mappings and land registration, are accorded not only respect but more often than
not even finality. 11
On the other hand, the private respondent claims that his case is an exception and
invokes Leongson v. Court of Appeals 12 which states that "once the actuation of an
administrative official or administrative board or agency is tainted by a failure to
abide by the command of the law, then, it is incumbent on the courts of justice to
set matters right, with the Tribunal having the last say on the matter."cralaw
virtua1aw library
But ironically, it is precisely the "command of the law" that the Director of Lands
sought to implement when the respondent court enjoined the former from pushing
through with the award of the cadastral survey projects. We have quoted earlier the
provisions of Section 4 of Commonwealth Act No. 141 [The Public Land Law], which
explicitly empower and command the Director of Lands to have the direct executive
control of the survey and classification, inter alia, of lands of the public domain.
Moreover, in the same law, in Section 6 thereof," [T]he Director of Lands, with the
approval of the Secretary of Agriculture and Commerce (now Secretary of
Environment and Natural Resources) shall prepare and issue such forms,
instructions, rules, and regulations consistent with this Act, as may be necessary
and proper to carry into effect the provisions thereof and for the conduct of
proceedings arising under such provisions."cralaw virtua1aw library
Aside from these "command(s) of the law" giving to the Director of Lands the "direct
executive control" of the subject matter of the controversy in this case, the Land
Registration Commission (LRC) requires in its Circulars 13 Nos. 371 (1980), 394
(1981), and 32 (1983) the full and complete technical description of lands prior to
their registration. The said requirement can only be accomplished through the
1.
sub-lot identification and delineation of tenanted private agricultural lands
primarily devoted to rice and/or corn (photo-sketching for land reform);
2.
3.
establishment of photo control points for every photograph by tertiary
traverse from control stations;
4.
monumenting of lots claimed as private or public lands and sketching on
photo-maps;
5.
numerical survey of the residential, commercial and industrial lots in the
poblacion and barrios, preparation of cadastral maps from sketches on maps, and
mapping by ground method of covered areas;
6.
7.
I-A.
1.
sub-lot identification and delineation and tenanted private agricultural lands
primarily devoted to rice and/or corn (sketching for land reform) and sketching of
lots claimed as private or public lands;
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
II.
1.
Sketching by transit and stadia or any acceptable method of lots claimed as
private or public lands;
2.
3.
Monumenting of corners of lots claimed as private, government or public
land;
4.
Numerical survey of all lots including parcels covered by Operation Land
Transfer (OLT) whether or not previously subjected to PMS;
5.
Survey of foreshore areas as a strip indicating on the cadastral map areas
covered by existing lease applications;
6.
Establishment of political boundary monuments and survey thereof by
secondary control;
7.
Accomplishment of land use maps, questionnaire for land use inventory and
land use summary report;
8.
Preparation and submittal of the complete survey returns of the cases
submitted for verification and approval;
9.
Preparation of overlays on drafting film of CMs containing OLT areas and list
of claimants thereof.
An analysis of above list depicts that the greater bulk of the activities in Plsm and
Pcadm projects is sketching; whereas, in a regular cadastral survey, the entire area
of the municipality is subjected to a numerical survey. While Plsm and Pcadm
projects lead to the preparation of mere graphical sketches or maps, a cadastral
survey results in the preparation of complete survey returns and technical
descriptions of individual lots necessary for registration purposes.14
But even granting arguendo that the Plsm and Pcadm projects on the one hand, and
the cadastral survey on the other, are similar activities, there is no legal bar for the
private respondent, assuming that the Secretary of Environment and Natural
Resources resolves the appeals in its favor, to finish the mapping projects and then
demand the corresponding remuneration from the Director of Lands. In the same
way, compensation would be due to the winning bidders in question once their own
cadastral survey projects would have been accomplished. In case the Director of
Lands fails to pay upon fulfillment of the said contracts, then any contractor may
validly resort to judicial action to enforce its legitimate demands.chanrobles
virtualawlibrary chanrobles.com:chanrobles.com.ph
Meanwhile, the proper remedy of the private respondent would be to pursue
promptly its appeals with the Secretary of Environment and Natural Resources as
regards its cancelled and questioned contracts rather than seek judicial imprimatur
to its improper interference with administrative prerogatives and thus provide a
convenient cover-up for its breaches of its own contractual obligations.