Beluso Vs Municipality of Panay

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Beluso vs.

Municipality of Panay, August 07, 2006

FACTS:

Petitioners are owners of parcels of land with a total area of about 20,424 square meters.
On November 8, 1995, the Sangguniang Bayan of the Municipality of Panay issued Resolution
No. 95-29 authorizing the municipal government through the mayor to initiate expropriation
proceedings. A petition for expropriation was thereafter filed on April 14, 1997 by the
Municipality of Panay (respondent) before the RTC of Roxas City.

Petitioners filed a Motion to Dismiss alleging that the taking is not for public use but only for the
benefit of certain individuals; that it is politically motivated because petitioners voted against the
incumbent mayor and vice-mayor; and that some of the supposed beneficiaries of the land
sought to be expropriated have not actually signed a petition asking for the property but their
signatures were forged or they were misled into signing the same.

RTC denied petitioners’ Motion to Dismiss. On October 1, 1997, the trial court issued an Order
appointing three persons as Commissioners to ascertain the amount of just compensation for
the property. Petitioners filed a "Motion to Hold in Abeyance the Hearing of the Court Appointed
Commissioners to Determine Just Compensation and for Clarification of the Court’s Order dated
October 1, 1997" which was denied by the trial court on November 3, 1997. MR was also
denied. At CA, it dismissed the Petition for Certiorari. It held that the petitioners were not denied
due process. MR was also denied. Hence, this present petition.

ISSUE: WON expropriation proceeding by the local government may proceed from a mere
resolution by its legislative body.

RULING: NO. The LGC requires that it be an ordinance.


Under Sec. 19 of R.A. No. 7160, which delegates to LGUs the power of eminent domain, it is
clear therefore that several requisites must concur before an LGU can exercise the power of
eminent domain, to wit:
1. An ordinance is enacted by the local legislative council authorizing the local chief executive,
in behalf of the local government unit, to exercise the power of eminent domain or pursue
expropriation proceedings over a particular private property.
2. The power of eminent domain is exercised for public use, purpose or welfare, or for the
benefit of the poor and the landless.
3. There is payment of just compensation, as required under Section 9, Article III of the
Constitution, and other pertinent laws.
4. A valid and definite offer has been previously made to the owner of the property sought to be
expropriated, but said offer was not accepted.

The Court in no uncertain terms have pronounced that a local government unit cannot authorize
an expropriation of private property through a mere resolution of its lawmaking body. R.A. No.
7160 otherwise known as the Local Government Code expressly requires an ordinance for the
purpose and a resolution that merely expresses the sentiment of the municipal council will not
suffice.

Ordinance vs Resolution:
A municipal ordinance is different from a resolution. An ordinance is a law, but a resolution is
merely a declaration of the sentiment or opinion of a lawmaking body on a specific matter. An
ordinance possesses a general and permanent character, but a resolution is temporary in
nature.

Additionally, the two are enacted differently -- a third reading is necessary for an ordinance, but
not for a resolution, unless decided otherwise by a majority of all the Sanggunian members.
If Congress intended to allow LGUs to exercise eminent domain through a mere resolution, it
would have simply adopted the language of the previous Local Government Code. But
Congress did not. In a clear divergence from the previous Local Government Code, Sec. 19 of
R.A. [No.] 7160 categorically requires that the local chief executive act pursuant to an
ordinance. x x x

In this case, as respondent’s expropriation was based merely on a resolution, such


expropriation is clearly defective. While the Court is aware of the constitutional policy promoting
local autonomy, the court cannot grant judicial sanction to an LGU’s exercise of its delegated
power of eminent domain in contravention of the very law giving it such power.

WHEREFORE, the petition is GRANTED. The decision of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP
No 47052 is REVERSED and SET ASIDE. The Complaint in Civil Action No. V-6958 is
DISMISSED without prejudice.No costs. SO ORDERED.

*Concept of Eminent Domain:


Eminent domain, which is the power of a sovereign state to appropriate private property to
particular uses to promote public welfare, is essentially lodged in the legislature. While such
power may be validly delegated to local government units (LGUs), other public entities and
public utilities the exercise of such power by the delegated entities is not absolute. In fact, the
scope of delegated legislative power is narrower than that of the delegating authority and such
entities may exercise the power to expropriate private property only when authorized by
Congress and subject to its control and restraints imposed through the law conferring the power
or in other legislations. Indeed, LGUs by themselves have no inherent power of eminent
domain.

Thus, strictly speaking, the power of eminent domain delegated to an LGU is in reality not
eminent but "inferior" since it must conform to the limits imposed by the delegation and thus
partakes only of a share in eminent domain. The national legislature is still the principal of the
LGUs and the latter cannot go against the principal’s will or modify the same.
The exercise of the power of eminent domain necessarily involves a derogation of a
fundamental right. It greatly affects a landowner’s right to private property which is a
constitutionally protected right necessary for the preservation and enhancement of personal
dignity and is intimately connected with the rights to life and liberty. Thus, whether such power is
exercised directly by the State or by its authorized agents, the exercise of such power must
undergo painstaking scrutiny.

Indeed, despite the existence of legislative grant in favor of local governments, it is still the duty
of the courts to determine whether the power of eminent domain is being exercised in
accordance with the delegating law.

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