EN BANC
G.R. No. L-3144 November 19, 1907CARMEN AYALA DE ROXAS and PEDRO P. ROXAS, plaintiffs,
vs.
THE CITY OF MANILA and ROBERT G. DIECK, as city engineer, defendants.
Del-Pan, Ortigas and Fisher, for plaintiffs.
Modesto Reyes, for defendants.
ARELLANO, C.J.:
The defendants' demurred to the amended complaint
having been overruled, an answer was presented, and the trial of the
case proceeded with.
Briefly, the subject of this action may be stated as follows:
1. That on the 15th of January, 1906, the plaintiff,
as owner of the property situated on the Escolta, district of Binondo,
city of Manila, the eastern boundary of which adjoins the canal of San
Jacinto or Sibacon to the extent of 23.50 meters, the total area of the
ground being 658.19 square meters, applied to the city engineer, Robert
G. Dieck, the defendant herein, for a license to construct a terrace
over "the strip of land 3 meters in width between the main wall
of her house and the edge of the said canal of Sibacon or San Jacinto,
which strip of land belongs exclusively to her"; but the defendant
refused to grant the license or authorize the plaintiff to build the
terrace.
2. That a similar petition was addressed to the
Municipal Board of the city of Manila on the 30th of said month and
year, and it also was denied.
3. That, as the plaintiff has been informed, the sole
reason wherefore the license was denied is because "the said defendants
pretend to compel the plaintiff to leave vacant and without any
construction whatever thereon the said strip of 3 meters in width which
is a portion of the ground belonging to her, in order to use the same as
the wharf or public way so that the plaintiff will only be able to use
the said strip in the same manner and for the same purposes as the
public in general, thus losing the enjoyment, use, and exclusive
possession of the said strip of the property which the plaintiff and the
former owners thereof have enjoyed quietly and peacefully during more
than seventy years."
4. That the strip in question was occupied by a two-storey building constructed more than seventy years ago.
It appears from the evidence:
First. That the plaintiff's ownership of the whole
ground and of the strip in question is beyond all doubt, both by reason
of her title thereto and the entry thereof in the registry of property,
and by the acknowledgment thereof made by the city itself when obtaining
by means of condemnation proceedings a portion of the same property
adjoining the public road.
Second. That as a matter of fact, the license which
the plaintiff, using her right of ownership, requested for the
construction of a terrace on the strip of 3 meters adjoining the canal
of San Jacinto or Sibacon, was denied; both parties agreeing that the
denial was due to the intent to reserve the said strip for the
establishment of a public easement, although the opposing witnesses did
not agree as to the special easement intended to be established.
Third. That it was agreed between both parties that
the strip above referred to had not been expropriated in whole or in
part by the municipality of Manila, and that neither had the latter
offered any compensation for the same to the owner thereof.
Fourth. That according to Engineer Dieck, a
defendant, the purpose of the city was to use the said strip of 3 meters
as a place for discharging and landing goods, and as a place of shelter
for shipwrecked persons and for fishermen, and to devote it also,
together with other strips along the canal, by the gradual acquisition
of land, to a towpath for craft passing through the canal; that a
building line has been established by the Municipal Board along the
Sibacon Creek leaving a strip of 3 meters within which, according to
ordinances, no constructions would be permitted; that such is the
purpose and the intent on which the existing ordinances are based. But
John Tuther, the secretary of the Municipal Board, declares that, when
Ordinance No. 78 was under discussion, he does not recall having heard
any of the members of the board make reference to a towpath nor did he
ever hear anything said with reference to the purpose to which the strip
of 3 meters mentioned in Ordinance No. 78 was to be devoted, though he
believes that, by thus leaving a strip of 3 meters, it would be easier
to prevent collisions; that it would facilitate navigation, and that it
had never been the intention of the Board to indemnify the owners of
such strips of 3 meters by reason of the use which parties landing
thereon may make of the same.
Fifth. That, as stated in the brief of the
defendants, "the intention of the Municipal Board, when denying the
permit asked for by the plaintiff, has never been to establish any way
whatever along the Sibacon Creek so that said plaintiff could, if she
chose to, close her property with walls or the like perpendicularly to
said creek, that is, over the two lines perpendicular to said creek,
provided she does not close or build over the 3-meter space
running along the creek," which space is subject, as stated in the
evidence submitted by the defendants, to the "easement of public use for
the general interest of navigation, flotation, fishing, and salvage,"
citing the Law of Waters and the Civil Code.
Sixth. And that the result is, according to No. 19 of
the statement of facts of the complaint, "that the plaintiff shall only
be able to use said strip in the same manner and for the same purposes
as the general public, thus losing the enjoyment, use, and exclusive
possession of said strip of the ground which the plaintiff and the
former owners of the same have enjoyed as such owners quietly and
peacefully during more than seventy years."
What the defendants have therefore done is to prevent
the plaintiffs from continuing to enjoy, use, and freely dispose of
such strip of their ground, as they had been doing up to the time when
they applied for a license to construct a terrace over said strip, and
the defendants prevented it with the intention of establishing a public
easement provided for in an ordinance of their own which they consider
is pursuant to the provisions of the Law of Waters and of the Civil Code
in force.
In the decision entered by this court on the 5th of May, 1906, regarding the demurrer, the following was set forth:
The easement of a zone for public use, authorized by
article 73 of the Law of Waters of 1866, is developed in articles 160
and 161, inclusive, of said law; the general interest on behalf of which
the easement is supported is determined, for navigation, by articles
160 and 161; for flotation, by article 162; for salvage, by article 163;
and for fishing, by article 164; in all of them the owner of the
riverside property supports the easement "upon being previously
indemnified for loss and damage." (Folio 41.)
Said zone for public use, the same as a towpath, is
solely available for the purposes of navigation, flotation, fishing, and
salvage, being closed to any other use which be attempted; therefore,
it is erroneous to pretend that the right of the owner of the property
bordering upon the stream can be reduced to the level of the public
right; on the contrary he should only be called upon to bear those
burdens which are in the general interest, but not without prior, or
subsequently indemnity. (Folio 43.)
If as affirmed in statement No. 4, and accepted by
the defendants, the Sibacon Creek is a canal — let us grant that it is
navigable, because it has been held by competent authority — and that
under the name of a public wharf, which is the largest in area, it is
desired to establish a towpath, which is the smallest, it must be
remembered that the law does not grant it along navigable canals (art.
157), and, at all events, the establishment thereof must be preceded by
the corresponding indemnity. (Arts. 154 and 157.)
The matter at issue herein being the enforcement of
the Law of Waters and of the Civil Code, it is not out of place nor
untimely, even now, to point out the administrative law which ought to
have been applied had this act of the city of Manila been carried out by
the late ayuntamiento during the former sovereignty; an
administrative law which, owing to its having been so often repeated, is
now raised to the rank of an incontrovertible principle of law on the
matter.
The powers of the administration do not extend to the
establishment of new easements upon private property but simply to
preserve old ones, whenever a recent and easily proven usurpation
exists. (Decision of January 23, 1866.) lawphil.net
Ayuntamientos are not authorized to impose an
easement upon private property; therefore, any order thus given can not
be held to have been issued in the exercise of their lawful powers.
(Decision of July 28, 1866.)
Administrative action for the recovery of a public
easement which has been usurped by a constructive work of private
ownership can only be taken when such usurpation is of recent date and
easily proven.
When real rights are concerned an ayuntamiento may
prosecute such actions as it may consider itself entitled to, for the
possession or ownership in accordance with law. (Decision of October 26,
1866.)
This doctrine will be found far more vigorous at present upon reference to the principles of the law now in force.
According to article 349 of the Civil Code, no one
shall be deprived of his property, except by competent authority and
with sufficient cause of public utility, always after proper indemnity;
if this requisite has not been fulfilled the courts must protect, and
eventually restore possession to the injured party.
Under section 5 of the act of Congress of July 1,
1902, no legislation shall be enacted in the Philippine Islands which
shall deprive any person of life, liberty, or property without due
process of law; and the due process of law in order to deprive a person
of his property is, according to the Code of Civil Procedure, reserved
to the judicial authority. The refusal to grant a license or the
enactment of an ordinance whereby a person may be deprived of property
or rights, or an attempt thereat is made, without previously
indemnifying him therefor, is not, nor can it be, due process of law.1awphil.net
And, considering that the easement intended to be
established, whatever may be the object thereof, is not merely a real
right that will encumber the property, but is one tending to prevent the
exclusive use of one portion of the same, by expropriating it for a
public use which, be it what it may, can not be accomplished unless the
owner of the property condemned or seized be previously and duly
indemnified, it is proper to protect the appellant by means of the
remedy employed in such cases, as it is the only adequate remedy when no
other legal action can be resorted to, against an intent which is
nothing short of an arbitrary restriction imposed by the city by virtue
of the coercive power with which the same is invested. The question
involved here is not the actual establishment of an easement which might
be objected to by an action in court, but a mere act of obstruction, a
refusal which is beyond the powers of the city of Manila, because it is
not simply a measure in connection with building regulations, but is an
attempt to suppress, without due process of law, real rights which are
attached to the right of ownership.
When . . . any corporation, board, or person
unlawfully neglects the performance of an act which the law specially
enjoins as a duty resulting from an office, trust, or station, or
unlawfully excludes the plaintiff from the use and enjoyment of a right
or office to which he is entitled and from which he is unlawfully
precluded by such inferior tribunal, corporation, board, or person, and
the court, on trial, finds the allegations of the complaint to be true,
it may, if there is no other plain, speedy, and adequate remedy in the
ordinary courts of law, render a judgment granting a peremptory order
against the defendant, commanding him, immediately after the receipt of
such order, or at some other specified time, to do the act required to
be done to protect the rights of the plaintiff. (Code of Civil
Procedure, sec 222.)
Therefore, we hereby command the defendants, the city
of Manila, and Robert G. Dieck, as city engineer, or whomsoever may now
be acting as such, to immediately issue a license in favor of the
plaintiff herein, Doña Carmen Ayala de Roxas, to construct the terrace
as aforesaid in accordance with the plan and specification as per
Exhibit A, the said defendants to pay the costs of these proceedings. So
ordered.