1 Ong Vs Mazo Case Digest Ok

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1 THIRD DIVISION

G.R. No. 145542, June 04, 2004


ELENA S. ONG, Petitioner,
vs.
HON. FRANCISCO V. MAZO AS PRESIDING JUDGE, REGIONAL
TRIAL COURT, GUIUAN, EASTERN SAMAR, BRANCH 3, ELVIRA C.
LANUEVO AND CHARITO A. TOMILLOSO, Respondents.
PONENTE: CARPIO MORALES, J.

Facts:
Private respondents filed a complaint for damages against
petitioner in RTC Eastern Samar which arose from a vehicular
accident whereby a bus owned by petitioner allegedly bumped
a jeep owned and driven by respondent Lanuevo, with
Tomilloso as her passener at the time. After petitioner filed her
Answer with Counterclaim, and later a motion to dismiss the
complaint, respondents filed a motion for leave of court to file
an amended complaint which was granted.

On 14 November 1996, petitioner served written


interrogatories upon respondents and on 21 November 1996,
she filed a Manifestation and Omnibus Motion seeking an
order from the trial court directing respondents to answer the
interrogatories. Respondents objected to the motion. On 6
May 1999, the RTC denied the motion on the ground that it
constituted a fishing expedition which would be more
properly ventilated in a pre-trial conference. Petitioner moved
to reconsider but was denied on 4 July 2000.

On 4 August 2000, petitioner filed a petition for certiorari with


CA assailing RTC orders as having been issued with grave
abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction.
On 17 August 2000, the CA dismissed the petition due to late
filing. Petitioner moved to reconsider arguing that what was
filed was a special civil action for certiorari under Rule 65, not
an appeal. On 10 October 2000, the CA denied petitioners
motion for reconsideration. Hence, the present petition.
Issue:
Whether or not the RTCs denial of petitioners Manifestation
and Omnibus Motion to seek an order from RTC to compel
respondents to answer the interrogatories is proper.

Ruling:

NO. Petition is Impressed with Merit.

Parties Arguments
To the present petition, respondents filed their Comment,[20]
explaining that the appellate court considered petitioners
petition thereat as an appeal because it found the assailed
orders of the trial court as not warranting the remedy of the
special civil action of certiorari.

On the denial by the trial court of petitioners motion to direct


respondents to answer the written interrogatories,
respondents justified the same, it contending that the trial
court had jurisdiction to pass upon the propriety of such mode
of discovery under Section 3, Rule 26 of the Rules of Court and
that the remedy of certiorari is unavailing since what is
traversed is an error of law or fact that is properly the subject
of an appeal.

Insisting that the trial court erred in refusing to compel


respondents to answer her written interrogatories, petitioner,
in her Reply[21] to respondents Comment, invokes this Courts
plenary power to resolve not only the issue of the appellate
courts dismissal of her petition but also the question of
whether the trial court gravely abused its discretion in
disallowing the written interrogatories.

In their respective memoranda,[22] both parties raise the issue


of the propriety of availment of written interrogatories.
Meanwhile, on February 28, 2001, the trial court suspended
indefinitely the proceedings in the initiatory civil case between
the parties in light of petitioners appeal before this Court.[23]

The appeal is impressed with merit.

On August 4, 2000, when petitioner filed her petition for


certiorari before the appellate court, Section 4 of Rule 65, as
amended by Circular No. 39-98 read:

SEC. 4. Where petition filed. The petition may be filed not later than
sixty (60) days from notice of the judgment, order or resolution sought
to be assailed in the Supreme Court or, if it relates to the acts or
omissions of a lower court or of a corporation, board, officer or person in
the Regional Trial Court exercising jurisdiction over the territorial area as
defined by the Supreme Court. It may also be filed in the Court of
Appeals whether or not the same is in aid of its appellate jurisdiction, or
in the Sandiganbayan if it is in aid of its appellate jurisdiction. If it
involves the acts or omissions of a quasi-judicial agency, and unless
otherwise provided by law or these rules, the petition shall be filed in and
cognizable only by the Court of Appeals.

If the petitioner had filed a motion for new trial or


reconsideration in due time after notice of said judgment,
order or resolution, the period herein fixed shall be interrupted.
If the motion is denied, the aggrieved party may file the
petition within the remaining period, but which shall not be
less than five (5) days in any event, reckoned from such notice
of denial. No extension of time to file the petition shall be
granted except for the most compelling reason and in no case
to exceed fifteen (15) days. (Underscoring supplied)

Under the foregoing rule, when petitioners counsel received


on July 18, 2000 the trial courts order of July 4, 2000 denying
her motion for reconsideration of the Order of May 6, 1999,
she still had 15 days left of the 60-day period to file the
petition for certiorari.
Section 4 of Rule 65 was subsequently further amended,
however, by A.M. No. 00-2-03-SC which took effect on
September 1, 2000 as follows:

SEC. 4. When and where petition filed. The petition shall be filed not
later than sixty (60) days from notice of the judgment, order or
resolution. In case a motion for reconsideration or new trial is timely filed,
whether such motion is required or not, the sixty (60) day period shall be
counted from notice of the denial of said motion. (Emphasis supplied)

In Systems Factors Corporation v. NLRC[24] and Unity Fishing


Development Corp. v. Court of Appeals,[25] this Court applied
retroactively the above-quoted amended rule on a fresh
60-day period for the filing of certiorari petitions from notice of
the denial of the motion for reconsideration. Thus, a petition
for certiorari admittedly filed past the 60-day period under
Section 4, Rule 65, as amended by Circular No. 39-98, but
filed on time where considered under the amendment in A.M.
No. 00-2-03-SC, was held to be seasonably filed.

Applying retroactively too Sec. 4 of Rule 65, as amended by


A.M. No. 00-2-03-SC, since petitioners petition for certiorari
was filed with the appellate court on August 4, 2000, after
receipt on July 18, 2000 by petitioner of the order of the trial
court denying her motion for reconsideration from which latter
date the 60-day period should be reckoned, the petition was
seasonably filed. It was thus error for the trial court to dismiss
the same.

Contrary then to petitioners protestation that the appellate


court erred in treating her petition for certiorari as an appeal
which was filed beyond the 15-day reglementary period, as
reflected above, the 15-day period left for petitioner to file the
petition referred to the remaining number of days left after
computation of the 60-day period in Section 4 of Rule 65 of the
Rules of Court, as then amended by Circular No. 39-98
With the setting aside of the appellate courts questioned
orders, the resolution of the present petition should have been
accomplished. Nonetheless, considering that the relatively
simple case for damages, which was instituted by respondents
against petitioner way back in 1996 or eight long years ago,
had virtually come to a halt due to the lingering legal issue
respecting the trial courts order stopping petitioner from
availing of her written interrogatories as a mode of discovery,
instead of remanding this case to the appellate court as
anyway both parties have advanced and argued the sole issue
which is purely one of law, in the overriding interest of justice,
this Court shall now resolve the issue as if it had been raised
via a special civil action for certiorari with this Court.[26]

No doubt, the twin orders denying the written interrogatories


were interlocutory in nature for they leave something more to
be done on the merits of the case.[27] And the extraordinary
writ of certiorari is generally not available to challenge an
interlocutory order of a trial court, the proper remedy in such
cases being an ordinary appeal from an adverse judgment
where incorporated in said appeal are the grounds for
assailing the interlocutory order.[28] Nonetheless, this by no
means is an absolute rule. If the assailed interlocutory order is
patently erroneous and the remedy of appeal would not afford
adequate and expeditious relief, certiorari may be allowed as a
mode of redress.[29]

This Court finds that the orders disallowing petitioners written


interrogatories are patently erroneous, hence, the resort to
certiorari is warranted. In denying petitioners availment of
interrogatories, the trial court was of the view that

. . . in as much that the written interrogatories is (sic) a sort of


fishing expedition, said questions and answer would be
properly ventilated in a pre-trial conference for which this
court direct the defendant Elena Ong to file her answer to the
amended complaint anent thereto, both parties are required
to file their respective pre-trial briefs after which this case will
be calendared for pre-trial conference.[30]

This Court has long espoused the policy of encouraging the


availment of the various modes or instruments of discovery as
embodied in Rules 24 to 29 of the Revised Rules of Court. Thus,
in Republic v. Sandiganbayan,[31] it held:

. . . Indeed it is the purpose and policy of the law that the


parties before the trial if not indeed even before the pre-trial
should discover or inform themselves of all the facts relevant
to the action, not only those known to them individually, but
also those known to their adversaries; in other words, the
desideratum is that civil trials should not be carried on in the
dark; and the Rules of Court make this ideal possible through
the deposition-discovery mechanism set forth in Rules 24 to
29.

The thrust of the Rules is to even make the availment of the


modes of discovery depositions, interrogatories and
requests for admissions without much court intervention
since leave of court is not necessary to put into motion such
modes after an answer to the complaint has been served.[32]
The rationale behind the recognition accorded the modes of
discovery is that they enable a party to discover the evidence
of the adverse party and thus facilitate an amicable settlement
or expedite the trial of the case.[33]

Thus, to deny a party the liberty to have his written


interrogatories answered by his opponent, as what the trial
court did, on the premise that the interrogatories were a
fishing expedition, is to disregard the categorical
pronouncement in aforementioned case of Republic vs.
Sandiganbayan that the time-honored cry of fishing
expedition can no longer provide a reason to prevent a party
from inquiring into the facts underlying the opposing partys
case through the discovery procedures.[34]
The trial courts orders, not being in accordance with law and
jurisprudential dictum, are therefore correctible by writ of
certiorari.

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