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SECOND DIVISION

[G.R. No. 148595.  July 12, 2004]

SPOUSES ANTONIO S. PAHANG and LOLITA T. PAHANG, petitioners, vs. HON. AUGUSTINE A. VESTIL, Presiding Judge of Regional Trial Court- Branch 56, Mandaue City, DEPUTY SHERIFF, Regional Trial Court-Branch 56 and METROPOLITAN BANK and TRUST COMPANY, respondents.

D E C I S I O N

CALLEJO, SR., J.:

Before us is a petition for review on certiorari filed by the Spouses Antonio and Lolita Pahang, for the nullification of the Decision[1] and Resolution[2] of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP No. 59157.

The Antecedents

On January 5, 1996, the petitioners, Spouses Antonio and Lolita Pahang, received a short-term loan of one million five hundred thousand pesos (P1,500,000.00)  from the respondent Metropolitan Bank & Trust Company payable on December 27, 1996. The loan was covered by Non-Negotiable Promissory Note No. 190601[3] and was, likewise, secured by a real estate mortgage on a parcel of land covered by Transfer Certificate of Title (TCT) No. 29607.[4] As the petitioners failed to pay the loan, the interest and the penalties due thereon, the respondent foreclosed the real estate mortgage extrajudicially. As a consequence, the mortgaged property was sold at public auction on January 8, 1998 to the respondent bank as the highest bidder. A certificate of sale was executed by Pasnonito D. Antiporda as Ex-Officio Sheriff in favor of the respondent on January 14, 1998 and was registered with the Register of Deeds of Mandaue City on January 27, 1998.

On December 29, 1998, the respondent wrote the petitioners that the one-year redemption period of the property would expire on January 27, 1999.[5] Instead of redeeming the property, the petitioners filed, on January 19, 1999, a complaint for annulment of extrajudicial sale against the respondent bank and the Sheriff in the Regional Trial Court of Cebu (Mandaue City), Branch 56, docketed as Civil Case No. MAN-3454.[6]P1,500,000.00 to P2,403,770.73 by including excessive past due interest, penalty charges, attorney’s fees and sheriff’s expense. They claimed that such exorbitant charges were made to frustrate their chance to pay the loan, and to ensure that the respondent bank would be the highest bidder during the auction sale.  They also asserted that the respondent failed to remit to the Sheriff the purchase price of the property and was, likewise, guilty of fraud, collusion, breach of trust or misconduct in the conduct of the auction sale of their property. Besides praying for injunctive relief, the petitioners prayed for the following alternative reliefs: Therein, the petitioners alleged that the respondent bloated their obligation of

3.  After trial on the merits, and after determination of plaintiffs’ true obligation with defendant bank, to declare the foreclosure on the subject  property as null and void, and to allow  the plaintiffs to pay  the same; as alternative prayer, to allow the plaintiffs to redeem the subject real property based on the amount determined and established as true and exact obligation of plaintiffs to defendant bank.[7]

After the expiration of the one-year redemption period, the respondent consolidated its ownership over the foreclosed property.  Consequently, TCT No. 44668 was issued by the Register of Deeds in its name.  On July 23, 1999, the respondent filed a Petition for Writ of Possession before the RTC of Mandaue City (Branch 56), docketed as LRC Case No. 3.[8]

The petitioners, citing the ruling of this Court in Belisario v. The Intermediate Appellate Court,[9] opposed the petition on the ground that the core issue in their complaint in Civil Case No. MAN-3454 constituted a prejudicial question, which warranted a suspension of the proceedings before  the  court.  The petitioners averred that the filing of their complaint within the period to redeem the foreclosed property was equivalent to an offer to redeem the same, and had the effect of preserving such right.  They also asserted that the respondent acted in bad faith in procuring the title over the property despite the pendency of their complaint in Civil Case No. MAN-3454.

On March 28, 2000, the RTC of Mandaue City, Branch 56, rendered a decision in LRC Case No. 3 granting the petition and ordering the issuance of a writ of possession in favor of the respondent.[10]

Citing the case of Javelosa v. Court of Appeals,[11] and Gawaran v. Court of Appeals,[12] the RTC ruled that since the petitioners failed to redeem the property within one year from the foreclosure, the respondent was entitled to a writ of possession as a necessary consequence of the readjudication of ownership and the corresponding issuance of the original certificate.[13] The petitioners filed a motion for reconsideration of the decision, but the court issued an order denying the motion, stating that it was merely its ministerial function to issue a writ of possession.[14]

The petitioners filed a petition for certiorari before the Court of Appeals, docketed as CA-G.R. SP No. 59157 for the nullification of the March 28, 2000 Decision and the May 19, 2000 Order of the RTC.  Thepetitioners alleged that the RTC committed a grave abuse of its discretion amounting to excess or lack of jurisdiction in granting the petition of the respondent bank for a writ of possession in LRC Case No. 3 instead of suspending the proceedings therein based on the ruling of this Court in Belisario vs. The Intermediate Appellate Court.[15]

The Ruling of the Court of Appeals

Finding that the RTC did not act with grave abuse of discretion in ordering the issuance of the writ of possession, the CA rendered a decision on March 2, 2001, dismissing the petition.[16] Citing the rulings of this Court in Vda. de Jacob v. Court of Appeals[17] and Navarra v. Court of Appeals,[18] the CA explained that the pendency of a separate proceeding questioning the validity of the mortgage and the extrajudicial foreclosure thereof cannot bar the issuance of a writ of possession in favor of the purchaser at public auction.  The appellate court ruled that after a title on the property has been consolidated in the mortgagee, the issuance of a writ of possession becomes a ministerial act of the trial court. Furthermore, the right of the respondent bank to possess the property was based on its right of ownership as a purchaser of the properties in the foreclosure sale.  The CA explained that the ruling in the Belisario case was inapplicable because it involved a complaint to enforce  the  repurchase of  the  foreclosed property  within  the period of redemption, whereas, the complaint filed by the petitioners in Civil Case No. MAN-3454 was for the annulment of the mortgage or extrajudicial sale which was not equivalent to an offer to redeem the property.[19]

The Present Petition

The motion for reconsideration of the petitioners of the decision, having been denied by the appellate court, the petitioners filed this instant petition, assigning the following errors:

1.     THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN FINDING PETITIONERS’ RIGHT OF REDEMPTION OVER THEIR FORECLOSED PROPERTY AS HAVING EXPIRED ON JANUARY 26, 1999, IN THE LIGHT OF THEIR PENDING COMPLAINT TO ANNUL THE FORECLOSURE FILED BEFORE THE EXPIRATION OF THE ONE-YEAR REDEMPTION PERIOD, ON THE GROUND OF FRAUD, AND CONSIDERING FURTHER THEIR SPECIFIC PRAYER THEREOF FOR DETERMINATION OF THEIR TRUE OBLIGATION WITH  PRIVATE  RESPONDENT,  AND TO  ALLOW THEM TO PAY THE SAME AND/OR TO REDEEM THEIR FORECLOSED PROPERTY.[20]

2.     PETITIONERS’ COMPLAINT FOR ANNULMENT OF THE FORECLOSURE OF THEIR PROPERTY WITH A PRAYER FOR TEMPORARY RESTRAINING ORDER AND INJUNCTION TO STOP THE ISSUANCE OF A DEFINITE DEED OF SALE AND CONSOLIDATION OF TITLE OF THEIR PROPERTY IN FAVOR OF PRIVATE RESPONDENT, WHILE GIVING PREFERENCE AND ACTING WITH DISPATCH ON PRIVATE RESPONDENT’S PETITION FOR ISSUANCE OF WRIT OF POSSESSION ON THE SAME PROPERTY, BY GRANTING THE WRIT OF POSSESSION THEREON THEREBY RENDERING MOOT AND ACADEMIC PETITIONERS’ PRAYERS IN THEIR COMPLAINT FOR ANNULMENT OF FORECLOSURE.[21]

3.     THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN FINDING THE DECISION OF THIS HONORABLE SUPREME COURT IN THE CASE OF BELISARIO VS. THE INTERMEDIATE APPELLATE COURT, G.R. NO. L-73503, WHEREBY “THE FILING OF THE COMPLAINT TO ENFORCE REPURCHASE WITHIN THE PERIOD FOR REDEMPTION IS EQUIVALENT TO AN OFFER TO REDEEM AND HAS THE EFFECT OF PRESERVING THE RIGHT OF REDEMPTION” INAPPLICABLE TO THE CASE OF PETITIONERS.[22]

4.     THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN NOT APPRECIATING THE FACT THAT THE ISSUE OR ISSUES JOINED IN THE COMPLAINT FOR ANNULMENT BEFORE RESPONDENT JUDGE DOCKETED AS CIVIL CASE NO. MAN-4353 (sic) IS A PREJUDICIAL QUESTION TO THE ISSUE RAISED IN THE PETITION FOR WRIT OF POSSESSION IN LRC CASE NO. 3.[23]

5.     THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN HAVING FAILED TO CONSIDER THE VALID CAUSES OF ACTION OF PETITIONERS IN THEIR COMPLAINT FOR ANNULMENT IN CIVIL CASE NO. MAN-4354 (sic).[24]

The threshold issues are as follows: (a) whether or not the complaint of the petitioners in Civil Case No. MAN-3454 for annulment of extrajudicial sale is a prejudicial question to the petition of the respondent bank for the issuance of a writ of possession in LRC Case No. 3; and, (b) whether or not the RTC committed a grave abuse of its discretion amounting to excess or lack of jurisdiction in granting the petition of the respondent in LRC Case No. 3 and in issuing the writ of possession in its favor.

The issues being interrelated, the Court shall resolve the same simultaneously.

The petitioners contend that their complaint in Civil Case No. MAN-3454 and the respondent’s petition for a writ of possession in LRC Case No. 3 were raffled to Branch 56 of the RTC.  Although their complaint in Civil Case No. MAN-3454 was for the nullification of the extrajudicial sale at public auction on the ground of fraud, they also prayed, as an alternative remedy, that they be allowed to redeem the property based on the amount to be determined by the court after trial.  Hence, they assert, the filing of their complaint before the expiry of the redemption period to enforce their right of redemption was equivalent to a formal offer to redeem the property and had the effect of preserving their right of redemption. They argue that the RTC should have suspended the proceedings in LRC Case No. 3 pending the final resolution of Civil Case No. MAN-3454 so as not to render moot and academic the latter case, conformably with the ruling of the Court in Belisario vs. The Intermediate Appellate Court,[25] after all, the two cases were pending before the same court.  The petitioners, thus, aver that the trial court committed grave abuse of discretion amounting to excess or lack of jurisdiction in granting the petition of the respondent bank for a writ of possession in LRC Case No. 3.  They, likewise, aver that the Court of Appeals erred when it affirmed the decision of the trial court and declared, thus:

Further, as to the applicability of the case of Belisario vs. Intermediate Appellate Court (G.R. No. L-73503, Aug. 30, 1988, 165 SCRA 101, 108), suffice it to say, that the cause of action therein was to enforce the repurchase of the foreclosed property within the period of redemption, which the Supreme Court held that it has the effect of preserving the right of redemption. Whereas, Civil Case No. MAN-3454 filed by the petitioners is for the annulment of mortgage or extrajudicial sale, which is not in effect an offer to redeem. Verily, the pendency of said civil case does not preserve the right of redemption of the petitioners after the period of redemption.[26]

The Court’s Ruling

The contentions of the petitioners have no merit.

A prejudicial question is one that arises in a case the resolution of which is a logical antecedent of the issue involved therein, and the cognizance of which pertains to another tribunal.  It generally comes into play in a situation where a civil action and a criminal action are both pending and there exists in the former an issue that must be preemptively resolved before the criminal action may proceed, because howsoever the issue raised in the civil action is resolved would be determinative juris et de jure of the guilt or innocence of the accused in the criminal case.  The rationale behind the principle of prejudicial question is to avoid two conflicting decisions.[27]

In the present case, the complaint of the petitioners for Annulment of Extrajudicial Sale is a civil action and the respondent’s petition for the issuance of a writ of possession of Lot No. 3-A, Block 1, Psd-07-021410, TCT No. 44668 is but an incident in the land registration case and, therefore, no prejudicial question can arise from the existence of the two actions.[28] A similar issue was raised in Manalo vs. Court of Appeals,[29] where we held that:

At any rate, it taxes our imagination why the questions raised in Case No. 98-0868 must be considered determinative of Case No. 9011.  The basic issue in the former is whether the respondent, as the purchaser in the extrajudicial foreclosure proceedings, may be compelled to have the property repurchased or resold to a mortgagor’s successor-in-interest (petitioner); while that in the latter is merely whether the respondent, as the purchaser in the extrajudicial foreclosure proceedings, is entitled to a writ of possession after the statutory period for redemption has expired.  The two cases, assuming both are pending, can proceed separately and take their own direction independent of each other.[30]

The focal issue in Civil Case No. MAN-3454 was whether the extrajudicial foreclosure of the real estate mortgage executed by the petitioners in favor of the respondent bank and the sale of their property at public auction for P2,403,770.73 are null and void, whereas, the issue in LRC Case No. 3 was whether the respondent bank was entitled to the possession of the property after the statutory period for redemption had lapsed and title was issued .

Our ruling in Belisario has no application in this case because in the said case, no prejudicial question was involved.  We merely held therein that the filing of an action to enforce redemption within the period of redemption is equivalent to a formal offer to redeem, and should the Court allow the redemption, the redemptioner should then pay the amount already determined.  In fine, the filing of an action by the redemptioner to enforce his right to redeem does not suspend the running of the statutory period to redeem the property, nor bar the purchaser at public auction from procuring a writ of possession after the statutory period of redemption had lapsed, without prejudice to the final outcome of such complaint to enforce the right of redemption.[31]

The remedy of the petitioners from the assailed decision of the RTC in LRC Case No. 3 was to appeal by writ of error to the Court of Appeals.[32] However, instead of appealing by writ of error, the petitioners filed their petition for certiorari.  Certiorari is not proper where the aggrieved party has a plain, speedy and adequate remedy at law.  Moreover, the error of the trial court in granting the respondent bank a writ of possession, if at all, was an error of judgment correctible only by an ordinary appeal.

It bears stressing that the proceedings in a petition and/or motion for the issuance of a writ of possession, after the lapse of the statutory period for redemption, is summary in nature.[33] The trial court is mandated to issue a writ of possession upon a finding of the lapse of the statutory period for redemption without the redemptioner having redeemed the property.  It cannot be validly argued that the trial court abused its discretion when it merely complied with its ministerial duty to issue the said writ of possession.[34]

IN LIGHT OF ALL THE FOREGOING, the petition is DENIED DUE COURSE.  The assailed decision of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP No. 59157 is AFFIRMED.

Cost against the petitioners.

SO ORDERED.

Puno, (Chairman), Quisumbing, Austria-Martinez, and Tinga, JJ., concur.



[1] Penned by Associate Justice Bienvenido L. Reyes, with Associate Justices Marina L. Buzon and Elvi John S. Asuncion, concurring.

[2] Rollo, pp. 38-39.

[3] Id. at 111.

[4] Id. at 112.

[5] CA Rollo, p. 42.

[6] Rollo, p. 41.

[7] Id. at 51.

[8] Id. at 73-76.

[9] 165 SCRA 101 (1988).

[10] Rollo, pp. 40-42.

[11] 265 SCRA 493 (1996).

[12] 162 SCRA 154 (1988).

[13] Rollo, p. 42.

[14] Id. at 43.

[15] Supra.

[16] Rollo, pp. 31-37.

[17] 184 SCRA 294, 302 (1990).

[18] 204 SCRA 850, 853 (1991).

[19] Rollo, p. 36.

[20] Id at 18.

[21] Id. at 20.

[22] Id. at 21.

[23] Id. at 23.

[24] Id. at 24.

[25] Supra.

[26] Rollo, p. 36.

[27] Manalo vs. Court of Appeals, 366 SCRA 752 (2001); Yulienco vs. Court of Appeals, 393 SCRA 143 (2002).

[28] Ibid.

[29] Supra.

[30] Id. at 766.

[31] Ong vs. Court of Appeals, 333 SCRA 189 (2000).

[32] Government Service Insurance System vs. Court of Appeals, 169 SCRA 244 (1989).

[33] Ibid.

[34] Yulienco vs. Court of  Appeals, supra.; Government Service Insurance System vs. Court of Appeals, supra.