G.R. No. 166519, March 31,
2009
Nieves Plasabas and Marcos
Malazarte
vs Court of Appeals,
Dominador Lumen and Aurora Aunzo
Ponente: Nachura
Facts:
In 1074, Plasabas and
Malazarte filed a complaint for recovery of title to property with damages
before CFI Maasin, Leyte. The subject property was a parcel of coconut land
declared in the name of Plasabas. They pray for their rights over the land be
confirmed and for Lumen and Aunzo to vacate the land.
Aunzo and Lumen interposed
that they inherited the land from their common ancestor, Francisco Plasabas. In
the course of trial, it was found out that Nieves was not the absolute owner of
the land.
Aunzo and Lumen then raised
the argument that the case should have been terminated at inception for
petitioner's failure to implead indispensable parties (Jose, Victor and
Victoria).
CFI dismissed the case. The
instant case should have been dismissed without prejudice a long time ago for
lack of cause of action as the plaintiffs spouses Marcos Malazarte and Nieves
Plasabas Malazarte have no complete legal personality to sue by themselves
alone without joining the brothers and sisters of Nieves who are as
INDISPENSABLE as the latter in the final determination of the case. Not
impleading them, any judgment would have no effectiveness.
Petitioners then elevated
the case to the CA. CA affirmed the ruling of the CFI. CA declared that the
non-joinder of the indispensable parties would violate the principle of due
process, and that Article 487 of the Civil Code could not be applied
considering that the complaint was not for ejectment, but for recovery of title
or a reivindicatory action.
Held:
With a motion to reconsider,
SC grants the petition and remands the case to the CFI for disposition on the
merits, citing Article 487 that provides any one of the co-owners may bring an
action for ejectment.
In any event, the trial and
appellate courts committed reversible error when they summarily dismissed the
case, after both parties had rested their cases following a protracted trial
commencing in 1974, on the sole ground of failure to implead indispensable
parties. The rule is settled that the non-joinder of indispensable parties is
not a ground for the dismissal of an action. The remedy is to implead the
non-party claimed to be indispensable.
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