1st Set of Cases
1st Set of Cases
1st Set of Cases
Tuvera 136 SCRA 27 (April 24, 1985) 146 SCRA 446 (December 29, 1986)
TAÑADA VS. TUVERA
FACTS:
Invoking the right of the people to be informed on matters of public concern as well as the principle
that laws to be valid and enforceable must be published in the Official Gazette, petitioners filed for
writ of mandamus to compel respondent public officials to publish and/or cause to publish various
presidential decrees, letters of instructions, general orders, proclamations, executive orders, letters
of implementations and administrative orders.
The Solicitor General, representing the respondents, moved for the dismissal of the case, contending
that petitioners have no legal personality to bring the instant petition.
ISSUE:
Whether or not publication in the Official Gazette is required before any law or statute becomes
valid and enforceable.
HELD:
Art. 2 of the Civil Code does not preclude the requirement of publication in the Official Gazette, even
if the law itself provides for the date of its effectivity. The clear object of this provision is to give the
general public adequate notice of the various laws which are to regulate their actions and conduct as
citizens. Without such notice and publication, there would be no basis for the application of the
maxim ignoratia legis nominem excusat. It would be the height of injustive to punish or otherwise
burden a citizen for the transgression of a law which he had no notice whatsoever, not even a
constructive one.
The very first clause of Section 1 of CA 638 reads: there shall be published in the Official Gazette….
The word “shall” therein imposes upon respondent officials an imperative duty. That duty must be
enforced if the constitutional right of the people to be informed on matter of public concern is to be
given substance and validity.
Defendant-appellant contended that Commonwealth Act. No., 638 and Act 2930 both require said
circular to be published in the Official Gazette, it being an order or notice of general applicability. The
Solicitor General answering this contention says that Commonwealth Act. No. 638 and 2930 do not
require the publication in the Official Gazette of said circular issued for the implementation of a law in
order to have force and effect.
ISSUE: whether the circular should be published first to have the force and effect of law.
Moreover, as a rule, circulars and regulations especially like the Circular No. 20 of the Central Bank in
question which prescribes a penalty for its violation should be published before becoming effective,
this, on the general principle and theory that before the public is bound by its contents, especially its
penal provisions, a law, regulation or circular must first be published and the people officially and
specifically informed of said contents and its penalties.
In the present case, although circular No. 20 of the Central Bank was issued in the year 1949, it was
not published until November 1951, that is, about 3 months after appellant's conviction of its violation.
It is clear that said circular, particularly its penal provision, did not have any legal effect and bound no
one until its publication in the Official Gazzette or after November 1951
D.M. Consunji, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals and Maria Juego-G.R. No. 137873, April 20 2001
Justice Kapunan
Emeterio Cui vs. Arellano University G.R. No. 15172--May 30, 1961
FACTS: Before the school year 1948-1949 Emeterio Cui took up preparatory law course in the
Arellano University. After Finishing his preparatory law course plaintiff enrolled in the College of Law
of the defendant from school year 1948-1949. Plaintiff finished his law studies in the defendant
university up to and including the first semester of the fourt year. During all the school years in which
plaintiff was studying law in defendant law college, Francisco R. Capistrano, brother of mother of
plaintiff, was the dean of college of law and legal counsel of the defendant university. Plaintiff enrolled
for last semester of his law studies in the defendant university but failed to pay tuition fees because
his uncle Dean Francisco R. Capistrano, having severed his connection with defendant and having
accepted the deanship and chancellorship of the college of law of the Abad Santos University
graduating from the college of law of the latter university. Plaintiff, during all the time he has studying
law in Defendant University was awarded scholarship grants, for scholastic merit, so that his
semestral tuition fees were retured to him after the end of semester and when his scholarship grants
were awarded to him. The whole amount of tuition fess paid by the plaintiff to defendant and refunded
to him by the latter from the first semester up to and including the first semester of his last year in
college of law or the fourth year, is in total P1,003.87. After Graduating in law from Abad Santos
University he applied to take the bar examination. To secure permission to take the bar, he needed
the transcript of his records in defendant Arellano University. Plaintiff petitioned the latter to issue to
him the needed transcripts. The defendant refused until after he paid back the P1,003.87 which
defendant refunded him. As he could not take the bar examination without those transcripts, plaintiff
paid to defendant the said sum under protest.
ISSUE: Whether the provision of the contract between plaintiff and defendant, whereby the former
waived his right to transfer to another school without refunding to the latter the equivalent of his
scholarship in cash, is valid or not.
HELD: Memorandum No. 38 issued by the Director of Private Schools provides that “When students
are given full or partial scholarship, it is understood that such scholarship are merited and earned. The
amount in tuition and other fees corresponding to These scholarship should not be subsequently
charged to recipient students when they decide to quit school or to transfer to another institution.
Scholarship should not be offered merely to attract and keep students in a school.
Memorandum No. 38 merely incorporates a sound principle of public policy. The defendant uses the
scholarship as a business scheme designed to increase the business potential of an education
institution. Thus conceived it is not only inconsistent with sound policy but also good morals. The
practice of awarding scholarship to attract students and keep them in school is not Good custom nor
has it received some kind of social and practical confirmation except in some private institution as in
Arellano University.
Wherefore, the decision appealed from is hereby reversed and another one shall be entered
sentencing the defendant to pay the plaintiff the sum of P1,033.87, with interest thereon at the legal
rate from September 1, 1954, date of the institution of this case, as well as the costs, and dismissing
the defendant’s counterclaim. It is so ordered.
UNIVERSITY OF THE EAST, petitioner, vs. ROMEO A. JADER, respondent
G.R. No. 132344 February 17, 2000
Facts:
Romeo Jader was a law student at the University of the East from 1984 to 1988. In his first
semester of his fourth year, he failed to take the regular examination in Practice Court I for which he
was given an incomplete grade. He enrolled for the second semester and on February 1, 1988, he
filed an examination for the removal of his incomplete grade, which was approved by the dean. He
took the examination but was given a grade of 5 (failing).
The dean and the faculty members of the university deliberated as to who among their
graduating students would be allowed to graduate. Jader’s name was in the tentative list of
candidates for graduation. The invitation for the commencement exercises also included his name,
but at the foot of the list, the following was written:
This is a tentative list Degrees will be conferred upon these candidates who satisfactorily
complete requirements as stated in the University Bulletin and as approved of the Department of
Education, Culture and Sports
During the ceremony, Jader’s name was called, and he received a rolled white sheet of paper
symbolical of the law diploma. After graduation, he took a leave of absence without pay from his job to
prepare for the bar examination and enrolled in a pre-bar review class. When he learned the
deficiency in his requirements for graduation, he dropped his review class and was not able to take
the bar exam.
Jader filed a case in the trial court, and the latter granted him the amount of Php35,470 as well
as Php5,000 for attorney’s fees. At the Court of Appeals, the decision of the trial court was upheld, but
the CA added the award for moral damages amounting to Php50,000.
Issues:
1. Can the University of the East be held liable for actual damages?
2. Is the university liable to pay Jader moral damages?
Ruling:
1. Yes. Educational institutions are duty-bound to inform the students of their academic status
and not wait for the latter to inquire from the former. The conscious indifference of a person to the
rights or welfare of the person/persons who may be affected by his act or omission can support a
claim for damages. The university could not just give the grades at any time because law students
have a deadline to meet in the submission of requirements for taking the bar. It was guilty of
negligence and for violating Articles 19 and 20 of the Civil Code, which provide
Art. 19. Every person must, in the exercise of his rights and in the performance of his duties, act
with justice, give everyone his due, and observe honesty and good faith.
Art. 20. Every person who, contrary to law, wilfully or negligently causes damage to another,
shall indemnify the latter for the same.
2. No. The Supreme Court did not agree with the findings of the Court of Appeals that Jader
suffered shock, trauma, and pain when he was informed that he could not graduate. It was his duty to
verify for himself whether he has completed all necessary requirements to be eligible for the bar
examinations. If respondent was indeed humiliated by his failure to take the bar, he brought this upon
himself by not verifying if he has satisfied all the requirements including his school records, before
preparing himself for the bar examination.
The Court affirmed the CA’s decision with modification. It granted Jader the actual damages of
Php35,470 with legal interest of 6 percent per annum computed from the date of the complaint until
fully paid, as well as Php5,000 for attorney’s fees. The award for moral damages, however, was
deleted.
Miciano v. Brimo
G.R. No. L-22595, 1 November 1927
FACTS:
Joseph Brimo, an alien testator (Turk) who made his will in the Philippines stated in the will
thathis property should be distributed in accordance with Philippine law, and not that of his nation.
The judicial administrator of the estate of the deceased filed a scheme of partition. However,
one of the brothers of the deceased opposed the said partition.
The appellant in the case, who opposed the same, based his opposition on the fact that the
deceased was a Turkish citizen, which his disposition should be in accordance with the laws of his
nationality.
Issue: Whether or not the disposition shall be made in accordance with Philippine Laws.
Held:
Even if the testator’s wishes must be given paramount importance, if the wishes of the
testator contravene a specific provision of law, then that provision in a will should not be given
effect. A person’s will is merely an instrument which is PERMITTED, so his right is not absolute. It
should be subject to the provisions of the Philippine laws.
The estate of a decedent shall be distributed in accordance with his national law. He
cannot provide otherwise.
The SC held that those who opposed would not forfeit their inheritance because that
provision is not legal.
Roehr v. Rodriguez
G.R. No. 142820, 20 June 2003
FACTS:
Wolfgang Roehr, a German citizen and resident of Germany, married Carmen Rodriguez, a
Filipina, on December 11, 1980, in Germany. They had two daughters. On August 28, 1996, Carmen
filed a petition for the declaration of nullity of marriage at the Makati RTC, but the petition was
denied. Meanwhile, Wolfgang Roehr obtained a decree of divorce from the Court of First Instance of
Hamburg-Blankenese, promulgated on December 16, 1997. The custody of the two children was
granted to Wolfgang by the said court.
Because of this, Wolfgang filed a Second Motion to Dismiss on May 20, 1999, on the ground
that the trial court had no jurisdiction over the matter since there is already a divorce decree
obtained abroad. Judge Guevara-Salonga granted the motion to dismiss. Carmen, however, filed a
Motion for Partial Reconsideration, praying that the case should proceed for the purpose of
determining the issues of custody of their children and the distribution of the properties. The judge
issued an order partially setting aside her order to dismiss for the purpose of tackling the issues of
property relations of the spouses as well as the custody of the children.
ISSUE:
W/N there is nothing left to be tackled by the Court since there are no conjugal properties
alleged in the annulment and the divorce decree provides for the finality of the custody of children.
RULING:
No. As a general rule, divorce decrees obtained by foreigners in other countries are
recognizable in our jurisdiction, but the legal effects thereof, e.g. on custody, care and support of the
children, must be determined by our courts. The Court held that before our courts can give the
effect of res judicata to a foreign judgment, such as the award of custody to petitioner by the
German court, it must be shown that the parties opposed to the judgment had been given ample
opportunity to do so on grounds allowed under Rule 39, Section 50 of the Rules of Court.
Pursuant to Article 26 of the Family Code, where a marriage between a Filipino citizen and a
foreigner is validly celebrated and a divorce is thereafter validly obtained abroad by the alien spouse
capacitating him or her to remarry, the Filipino spouse shall have capacity to remarry under
Philippine law. (As amended by Executive Order 227)
Moreover, Section 50 of the Rules of Court states that the effect of a judgment of a tribunal of
a foreign country, having jurisdiction to pronounce the judgment is as follows:
(a) In case of a judgment upon a specific thing, the judgment is conclusive upon the title to the
thing;
(b) In case of a judgment against a person, the judgment is presumptive evidence of a right as
between the parties and their successors in interest by a subsequent title; but the judgment may be
repelled by evidence of a want of jurisdiction, want of notice to the party, collusion, fraud, or clear
mistake of law or fact.
Since the proceedings in the German court were summary, the wife was not given opportunity
to challenge said judgment. Therefore, the divorce decree did not provide for the finality of the
custody of children.