Republic Vs Heirs of Borbon
Republic Vs Heirs of Borbon
Republic Vs Heirs of Borbon
FACTS:
1. In February 1993, NAPOCOR entered the property of the heirs of Saturnino Borbon
in Batangas in order to construct and maintain transmission lines.
2. On May 1995, NAPOCOR filed a complaint for expropriation in the RTC in Batangas
City seeking the acquisition of an easement of right of way over a portion of the
property alleging that it had negotiated with the respondents for the acquisition of the
easement but they had failed to reach any agreement; NAPOCOR was willing to
deposit the amount of P9,790.00 representing the assessed value of the portion sought
to be expropriated.
3. NAPOCOR prayed for the issuance of a writ of possession upon deposit to enable it
to enter and take possession and control of the affected portion of the property; to
demolish all improvements existing thereon; and to commence construction of the
transmission line project. It likewise prayed for the appointment of three
commissioners to determine the just compensation to be paid
4. The respondents staunchly maintained that NAPOCOR had not negotiated with them
before entering the property and that the entry was done without their consent;
nonetheless, they tendered no objection to NAPOCOR’s entry provided it would pay
just compensation not only for the portion sought to be expropriated but for the entire
property whose potential was greatly diminished, if not totally lost, due to the project.
5. RTC ordered NAPOCOR to pay the respondents: (1) just compensation for the whole
area of 14,257 square meters at the rate of P550.00/square meter; (2) legal rate of
interest from May 5, 1995 until full payment; and (3) the costs of suit. NAPOCOR
appealed.
6. CA affirmed RTC’s decision with modification. NAPOCOR shall pay only for the
occupied 6,326 square meters of the subject real property at the rate of P550.00 per
square meter and to pay legal interest therefrom until fully paid.
7. On December 2012, during the pendency of the appeal, NAPOCOR filed a Motion to
Defer Proceedings stating that negotiations between the parties were going on with a
view to the amicable settlement of the case.
8. On January 3, 2014, NAPOCOR filed a Manifestation and Motion to Discontinue
Expropriation Proceedings, informing that the parties failed to reach an amicable
agreement; that the property sought to be expropriated was no longer necessary for
public purpose because of the intervening retirement of the transmission lines installed
on the respondents’ property; that because the public purpose for which such property
would be used thereby ceased to exist, the proceedings for expropriation should no
longer continue, and the State was now duty-bound to return the property to its
owners; and that the dismissal or discontinuance of the expropriation proceedings was
in accordance with Section 4, Rule 67 of the Rules of Court.
9. NAPOCOR prayed that the proceedings be discontinued “under such terms as the
court deems just and equitable,” and that the compensation to be awarded the
respondents be reduced by the equivalent of the benefit they received from the land
during the time of its occupation, for which purpose the case could be remanded to
the trial court for the determination of reasonable compensation to be paid to them.
REPUBLIC V HEIRS OF BORBON (GR 165354)
10. NAPOCOR contends that the expropriation has become without basis for lack of
public purpose as a result of the retirement of the transmission lines; that if
expropriation still proceeds, the Government will be unduly burdened by payment of
just compensation for property it no longer requires; and that there is legal basis in
dismissing the proceedings, citing Metropolitan Water District v. De los Angeles where the
Court granted petitioner’s prayer for the quashal of expropriation proceedings and the
eventual dismissal of the proceedings on the ground that the land sought to be
expropriated was no longer “indispensably necessary” in the maintenance and
operation of petitioner's waterworks system.
HELD: Yes. Public use is the fundamental basis for the action for expropriation; hence,
NAPOCOR’s motion to discontinue the proceedings is warranted and should be granted.
The dismissal of the proceedings for expropriation at the instance of NAPOCOR is proper,
but, the dismissal or discontinuance of the proceedings must be upon such terms as the court
deems just and equitable.
The right of eminent domain is “the ultimate right of the sovereign power to appropriate, not
only the public but the private property of all citizens within the territorial sovereignty, to
public purpose.”
The exercise of such right is not unlimited. There are two mandatory requirements for the
power of eminent domain, namely: (1) that it is for a particular public purpose; and (2) that just
compensation be paid to the property owner. These requirements partake the nature of implied
conditions that should be complied with to enable the condemnor to keep the property
expropriated.
Public use which was traditionally understood as strictly limited to actual “use by the public”
has already been abandoned. “Public use” has now been held to be synonymous with “public
interest,” “public benefit,” and “public convenience.” The concept has expanded to include
utility, advantage or productivity for the benefit of the public.
It is essential that the element of public use of the property be maintained throughout the
proceedings for expropriation. Otherwise, the judgment of expropriation suffers an intrinsic
flaw, as it would lack one indispensable element for the proper exercise of the power of
eminent domain, namely, the particular public purpose for which the property will be devoted.
There is no question raised concerning the right of the State to acquire the land under the
power of eminent domain. It is the right of the state, through its regular organization, to
reassert either temporarily or permanently its dominion over any portion of the soil of the
state on account of public necessity and for the public good. The right of eminent domain is
REPUBLIC V HEIRS OF BORBON (GR 165354)
the right which the Government or the people retains over the estates of individuals to resume
them for public use. It is the right of the people, or the sovereign, to dispose, in case of public
necessity and for the public safety, of all the wealth contained in the state.
It is not denied that the purpose of the State was to acquire the land in question for public
use. The fundamental basis then of all actions brought for the expropriation of lands, under
the power of eminent domain, is public use. That being true, the very moment that it
appears at any stage of the proceedings that the expropriation is not for a public use,
the action must necessarily fail and should be dismissed, for the reason that the action
cannot be maintained at all except when the expropriation is for some public use. That
must be true even during the pendency of the appeal or at any other stage of the
proceedings. The moment it appears in whatever stage of the proceedings that the
expropriation is not for a public use the complaint should be dismissed and all the parties
thereto should be relieved from further annoyance or litigation.
NAPOCOR seeks to discontinue the expropriation proceedings on the ground that the
transmission lines constructed on the respondents’ property had already been retired. Verily,
the retirement of the transmission lines necessarily stripped the expropriation proceedings of
the element of public use. To continue with the expropriation proceedings despite the definite
cessation of the public purpose of the project would result in the rendition of an invalid
judgment in favor of the expropriator due to the absence of the essential element of public
use.
The Court grants the motion to discontinue the proceedings subject to the conditions and
requires the return of the property to the respondents.
In the context of the State's inherent power of eminent domain, there is a “taking” when the
owner is actually deprived or dispossessed of his property; when there is a practical destruction
or a material impairment of the value of his property or when he is deprived of the ordinary
use thereof. There is a “taking” in this sense when the expropriator enters private property
not only for a momentary period but for a more permanent duration, for the purpose of
devoting the property to a public use in such a manner as to oust the owner and deprive him
of all beneficial enjoyment thereof. For ownership, after all, “is nothing without the inherent
rights of possession, control and enjoyment. Where the owner is deprived of the ordinary and
beneficial use of his property or of its value by its being diverted to public use, there is taking
within the Constitutional sense.”
In view of the discontinuance of the proceedings and the eventual return of the property to
the respondents, there is no need to pay “just compensation” to them because their property
would not be taken by NAPOCOR. Instead of full market value of the property, therefore,
NAPOCOR should compensate the respondents for the disturbance of their property rights
from the time of entry in March 1993 until the time of restoration of the possession by paying
to them actual or other compensatory damages.
REPUBLIC V HEIRS OF BORBON (GR 165354)
This should mean that the compensation must be based on what they actually lost as a result
and by reason of their dispossession of the property and of its use, including the value of the
fruit trees, plants and crops destroyed by NAPOCOR’s construction of the transmission lines.