Civproday 1
Civproday 1
Civproday 1
6. hierarchy of courts
As a matter of policy, direct resort to the Supreme Court will no longer be entertained unless the redress
cannot be obtained in the appropriate lower courts, and exceptional and compelling circumstances, such
as in the case of involving national interest and those of serious implications, justify the availment of the
extraordinary remedy of the writ of certiorari, calling for the exercise of its primary jurisdiction. (Yee vs.
Bernabe, 487 SCRA 385 [2006]).
The doctrine states that where courts have concurrent jurisdiction over a subject matter, a case
mustbe filed before the lowest court possible having the appropriate jurisdiction. The principle
of hierarchy ofcourts requires that recourse should be made to the lower courts before they are
made to the highercourts. The exceptions to this doctrine are as follows:
1)Where there are special and important reasons clearly stated in the petition;
2)When dictated by public welfare and the advancement of public policy;
3)When demanded by the broader interest of justice;
4)When the challenged orders are patent nullities
5)When analogous exceptional and compelling circumstances call for and justify the
immediateand direct handling by the Court [Republic v. Caguioa, G.R. No. 174385 (2013)
7. stages in civil action
The main stages in civil proceedings are:
(1) the filing of the complaint, issuance of summons and exchange of other operative pleadings,
which generally takes three to six months;
(2) referral to two-stage mediation, pre-trial and discovery, which could take six months to one
year;
(3) trial proper, which, depending on the complexity of the case, number of witnesses and other
exigencies, could take anywhere from six months to three years; and
(4) rendition of judgment, which could take from six months to two years. While the ROC
prescribes periods for both litigants and the court throughout the process, these are very
seldom observed in view of docket congestion and general inefficiencies of Philippine courts.
There are expedited trial procedures for small claims cases and summary proceedings. Small
claims cases involve payment of money where the value of the claim does not exceed
PhP200,000, exclusive of interest and costs. Summary procedure is applied in all other civil
cases, except probate proceedings, where the total amount of the claim does not exceed
PhP100,000 or PhP200,000 depending on the territorial jurisdiction of the court. 1.4 What is
your jurisdiction’s local judiciary’