Writ of Preliminary Attachement Ex Parte Issuance
Writ of Preliminary Attachement Ex Parte Issuance
Writ of Preliminary Attachement Ex Parte Issuance
herein) not exempt from execution to the extent of P6,838,358.00 the amount
claimed in plaintiff's complaint. On January 29, 1985, an order of attachment
was issued and addressed to public respondents, Deputy Sheriffs Gerry C.
Duncan and Germiliano G. Tengco, who were directed to attach real and
personal properties, of the defendants not exempt from execution. On January
31, 1985, personal properties of petitioner FINANCE and the real and personal
properties of Smith, Bell & Co., Inc. were levied upon.
On January 31, 1985, petitioners filed a motion to discharge attachment and
posted a counterbond in the amount of P6,838,358.00.
ISSUE
Is the issuance of Writ of Prelimnary Attachement proper without affording
defendant the benefit of notice and hearing proper?
RULING
As correctly found by the Court of Appeals, no grave abuse of discretion can be
ascribed to respondent Judge either in the issuance of the writ of attachment
without notice to petitioner petitioners as there is nothing in the Rules of Court
which makes notice and hearing indispensable and mandatory requisites in the
issuance of a writ of attachment (Filinvest Credit Corporation vs. Relova, 117
SCRA 420) or in the failure of respondent Judge to immediately restrain the
enforcement of the writ of preliminary attachment upon petitioners' posting of
a counterbond for indeed, the rules and jurisprudence require that no
preliminary injunction shall issue without hearing. In fact the issuance of
injunction ex parte is discouraged and the Court has repeatedly held that
preliminary injunction is an extra ordinary peremptory remedy that should be
dispensed with circumspection, and both sides should first be heard whenever
possible (Ramos vs. Court of Appeals, 95 SCRA 360 [1980]; Palaman Lumber &
Plywood Co., Inc., et al. vs. Arranz, et al., L-27106, 22 SCRA 1194 [1968]).
As correctly found by the Court of Appeals, no grave abuse of discretion can be
ascribed to respondent Judge either in the issuance of the writ of attachment
without notice to petitioner petitioners as there is nothing in the Rules of Court
which makes notice and hearing indispensable and mandatory requisites in the
issuance of a writ of attachment (Filinvest Credit Corporation vs. Relova, 117
SCRA 420) or in the failure of respondent Judge to immediately restrain the
enforcement of the writ of preliminary attachment upon petitioners' posting of
a counterbond for indeed, the rules and jurisprudence require that no
preliminary injunction shall issue without hearing. In fact the issuance of
injunction ex parte is discouraged and the Court has repeatedly held that
preliminary injunction is an extra ordinary peremptory remedy that should be
dispensed with circumspection, and both sides should first be heard whenever
possible (Ramos vs. Court of Appeals, 95 SCRA 360 [1980]; Palaman Lumber &
Plywood Co., Inc., et al. vs. Arranz, et al., L-27106, 22 SCRA 1194 [1968]).
G.R. No. 93262 December 29, 1991
DAVAO LIGHT & POWER CO., INC.,
vs. THE COURT OF APPEALS, Et. al.
FACTS
1.
On May 2, 1989 Davao Light & Power Co., Inc. (hereafter, simply Davao
Light) filed a verified complaint for recovery of a sum of money and damages
against Queensland Hotel, etc. and Teodorico Adarna (docketed as Civil Case
No. 19513-89). The complaint contained an ex parte application for a writ of
preliminary attachment.
2.
On May 11, 1989 the attachment bond having been submitted by Davao
On May 12, 1989, the summons and a copy of the complaint, as well as
the writ of attachment and a copy of the attachment bond, were served on
defendants Queensland and Adarna; and pursuant to the writ, the sheriff
seized properties belonging to the latter.
discharge attachment.
7.
On September 19, 1989, the Trial Court issued an Order denying the
motion to discharge.
8. This Order of September 19, 1989 was successfully challenged by
Queensland and Adarna in a special civil action of certiorari instituted by them
in the Court of Appeals. The Order was, as aforestated, annulled by the Court
of Appeals in its Decision of May 4, 1990. The Appellate Court's decision closed
with the following disposition:
The Orders dated May 3, 1989 granting the issuance of a writ of preliminary
attachment, dated September 19, 1989 denying the motion to discharge
attachment;
dated
November
7,
1989
denying
petitioner's
motion
for
ISSUE
Whether or not a writ of preliminary attachment may issue ex parte against a
defendant before acquisition of jurisdiction of the latter's person by service of
summons or his voluntary submission to the Court's authority.
RULING
summons on the defendant. And this indeed, has been the immemorial
practice sanctioned by the courts: for the plaintiff or other proper party to
incorporate the application for attachment in the complaint or other
appropriate pleading (counter-claim, cross-claim, third-party claim) and for the
Trial Court to issue the writ ex-parte at the commencement of the action if it
finds the application otherwise sufficient in form and substance.
In Toledo v. Burgos, this Court ruled that a hearing on a motion or application
for preliminary attachment is not generally necessary unless otherwise directed
by the Trial Court in its discretion.
And in Filinvest Credit Corporation v. Relova,the Court declared that "(n)othing
in the Rules of Court makes notice and hearing indispensable and mandatory
requisites for the issuance of a writ of attachment." The only pre-requisite is
that the Court be satisfied, upon consideration of "the affidavit of the applicant
or of some other person who personally knows the facts, that a sufficient cause
of action exists, that the case is one of those mentioned in Section 1 . . . (Rule
57), that there is no other sufficient security for the claim sought to be
enforced by the action, and that the amount due to the applicant, or the value
of the property the possession of which he is entitled to recover, is as much as
the sum for which the order (of attachment) is granted above all legal
counterclaims." If the court be so satisfied, the "order of attachment shall be
granted,"
and the writ shall issue upon the applicant's posting of "a bond
simultaneously with the writs implementation, petitioner claims that the trial
court had not acquired jurisdiction over her person and thus the service of the
writ is void.
As a preliminary note, a distinction should be made between issuance and
implementation of the writ of attachment. It is necessary to distinguish
between the two to determine when jurisdiction over the person of the
defendant should be acquired to validly implement the writ. This distinction is
crucial in resolving whether there is merit in petitioners argument.
This Court has long settled the issue of when jurisdiction over the person of
the defendant should be acquired in cases where a party resorts to provisional
remedies. A party to a suit may, at any time after filing the complaint, avail of
the provisional remedies under the Rules of Court. Specifically, Rule 57 on
preliminary attachment speaks of the grant of the remedy at the
commencement of the action or at any time thereafter. This phrase refers
to the date of filing of the complaint which is the moment that marks the
commencement of the action. The reference plainly is to a time before
summons is served on the defendant, or even before summons issues.
In Davao Light & Power Co., Inc. v. Court of Appeals, this Court clarified the
actual time when jurisdiction should be had:
It goes without saying that whatever be the acts done by the Court
prior to the acquisition of jurisdiction over the person of defendant
- issuance of summons, order of attachment and writ of
attachment - these do not and cannot bind and affect the
defendant until and unless jurisdiction over his person is
eventually obtained by the court, either by service on him of
summons or other coercive process or his voluntary submission to
the courts authority. Hence, when the sheriff or other proper
officer commencesimplementation of the writ of attachment, it is
essential that he serve on the defendant not only a copy of the
applicants affidavit and attachment bond, and of the order of
attachment, as explicitly required by Section 5 of Rule 57, but also
the summons addressed to said defendant as well as a copy of the
complaint xxx. (Emphasis supplied.)
day,
Deputy
Sheriff
Arturo
C.
Flores,
accompanied
by
On
January
21,
1992,
petitioners
filed
an
"Urgent
Motion
to
RULING
petition is unmeritorious.
Petitioners argue that the enforcement of the writ was invalid since it
undisputedly preceded the actual service of summons by six days at most.
Petitioners cite the decisions in Sievert vs. Court of Appeals, et al. 6 and BAC
Manufacturing and Sales Corp. vs. Court of Appeals, et al., 7 wherein this
Court held that enforcement of the writ of attachment can not bind the
defendant in view of the failure of the trial court to acquire jurisdiction over the
defendant through either summons or his voluntary appearance.
We do not agree entirely with petitioners. True, this Court had held in a
recent decision that the enforcement of writ of attachment may not
validly be effected until and unless proceeded or contemporaneously
accompanied by service of summons.
But we must distinguish the case at bar from the Sievert and BAC
Manufacturing cases. In those two cases, summons was never served upon
the defendants. The plaintiffs therein did not even attempt to cause
service of summons upon the defendants, right up to the time the cases
went up to this Court. This is not true in the case at bar. The records
reveal that Sheriff Flores and Sun Life did attempt a contemporaneous
service of both summons and the writ of attachment on January 3, 1992,
but we stymied by the absence of a responsible officer in petitioners'
offices. Note is taken of the fact that petitioners Oate and Econ Holdings
admitted in their answer
Corporation and Econ Holdings were located at the same address and that
petitioner Oate is the President of Econ Holdings while petitioner Dio is the
President of Brunner Development Corporation as well as a stockholder and
director of Econ Holdings.
Thus, an exception to the established rule on the enforcement of the writ
of attachment can be made where a previous attempt to serve the
summons and the writ of attachment failed due to factors beyond the
control of either the plaintiff or the process server, provided that such
service is effected within a reasonable period thereafter.
Several reasons can be given for the exception. First, there is a possibility
that a defendant, having been alerted of plaintiffs action by the attempted
service of summons and the writ of attachment, would put his properties
beyond the reach of the plaintiff while the latter is trying to serve the summons
and the writ anew. By the time the plaintiff may have caused the service of
summons and the writ, there might not be any property of the defendant left to
attach.
Second, the court eventually acquired jurisdiction over the petitioners six days
later. To nullify the notices of garnishment issued prior thereto would again
open the possibility that petitioners would transfer the garnished monies while
Sun Life applied for new notices of garnishment.
Third, the ease by which a writ of attachment can be obtained is counterbalanced by the ease by which the same can be discharged: the defendant can
either make a cash deposit or post a counter-bond equivalent to the value of
the property attached. 10 The petitioners herein tried to have the writ of
attachment discharged by posting a counter-bond, the same was denied by
respondent Judge on the ground that the amount of the counter-bond was less
than that of Sun Life's bond.