3 Cosmos Foundry Shop Workers Union vs. Lo Bu, 63 SCRA 321
3 Cosmos Foundry Shop Workers Union vs. Lo Bu, 63 SCRA 321
FERNANDO, J.:ñé+.£ªwph!1
1
Industrial Relations the third alias writ of execution for the
satisfaction and enforcement of the judgment in its
favor.1 Thereafter, Deputy Sheriff Mario Abiog of Manila, who was
especially deputized to serve the writ, did so on January 17 and 18,
1973 levying on the personal properties of the Cosmos Foundry
Shop or the New Century Foundry Shop for the purpose of
conducting the public auction sale.2 It was then that respondent Lo
Bu filed an urgent motion to recall writ of execution, asserting lack
of jurisdiction of the Court of Industrial Relations, a point stressed
in another motion dated February 2, 1973, on the further ground
that petitioner Cosmos Foundry Shop Workers Union failed to put
up an indemnity bond. The Court of Industrial Relations in its order
dated February 23, 1973 denied his motions. So likewise was the
motion for reconsideration, as shown in its order dated March 23,
1973. Private respondent appealed by certiorari such order to this
Court. It was docketed as G.R. No. L-36636.3This Court, in its
resolution dated July 17, 1973, denied the petition for certiorari of
private respondent.4 In the meanwhile, there was a replevin suit by
private respondent in the Court of First Instance of Manila covering
the same properties. Upon receipt of the order from this Court
denying certiorari, petitioner labor union filed a second motion to
dismiss the complaint. It was therein alleged that private
respondent has no cause of action, he being a fictitious buyer
based on the findings of the Court of Industrial Relations in its order
dated June 22, 1970 and affirmed by the Supreme Court in its
resolution dated July 17, 1973. The lower court dismissed the
complaint.5 That is the decision elevated to the Court of Appeals,
and it is precisely because of its obvious character as a further
delaying tactic that this petition is filed.
Petitioner labor union has made out a case for certiorari and
prohibition.
2
enforcement of which the third alias writ of execution was issued in
favor of petitioner labor union starts with the following: "This
concerns complainant's motion for the issuance of an alias writ of
execution, dated March 12, 1970, "allowing the Sheriff to serve the
Writ and returnable within 60 days and the said writ should be
directed to Cosmos Foundry Shop or New Foundry Shop which is
the firm name use(d) by the respondent in lieu of the Cosmos
Foundry Shop ... The original writ of execution had been returned
wholly unsatisfied as respondents had no visible properties found
in their names, and the foundry shop where Mrs. Ong Ting and her
family reside at Maisan, Valenzuela, Bulacan, is the "New Century
Foundry Shop" (return of the Deputy Provincial Sheriff of Bulacan,
dated March 11, 1970). Consequently, in its Order of March 19,
1970, the Court directed the examination of Mrs. Ong Ting and the
Cosmos Foundry Shop concerning the latter's and Ong Ting's
property and income. Extensive hearings were conducted."7
Then comes this relevant portion: "From the evidence and the
records, the Court finds that after the Cosmos Foundry Shop was
burned, Ong Ting established the New Century Foundry Shop. He
and his family resided in the premises of the shop at 118 Maisan
Road, Valenzuela, Bulacan. After his proposals to settle the
present case for P5,000.00 in September 1968, for P25,000.00 in
October 1968, and for P40,000.00 on December 22, 1968, were
successively rejected by complainant's counsel, Ong Ting, after
hinting of taking measures to avoid liability, soon executed a deed
of absolute sale on December 31, 1968, selling all his business,
including equipment, machineries, improvements, materials,
supplies and rights, in the New Century Foundry Shop, to his
compadre Lo Bu, for P20,000.00, which he acknowledged so fully
paid ... The deed does not bear the conformity of Mrs. Ong Ting.
On January 7, 1969, when Lo Bu applied for the original registration
of the firm name, he gave his name as the manager and the capital
of the business as P30,000.00 ... Notwithstanding such sale to Lo
Bu, Ong Ting filed a verified urgent motion to reopen the case on
3
January 25, 1969, and a verified motion for reconsideration of the
Decision on May 12, 1969. In the latter motion, it was alleged that
as a result of the fire, "Ong Ting lost everything; we cannot squeeze
blood out of nothing ... " This allegation was made despite the
recent alleged sale to Lo Bu, from which he realized
P20,000.00."8 The absence of good faith on the part of respondent
Lo Bu as the alleged vendee was made clear thus: "There was no
actual turn over of the business to Lo Bu, the alleged manager in
absentia. At the time Ong Ting died, he was still residing in the
premises of the shop ... His family continued to reside therein
without paying any rental to Lo Bu. His young 19-year-old son
Delfin Ong became in-charge of the shop and the workers. His
daughter Gloria Ong became the cashier. Mrs. Ong Ting became
the manager and she supervised the work. .. The alleged sale was
no doubt intended to circumvent any judgment this Court might
render unfavorable to respondents. It is clearly fictitious. And such
a declaration by this Court is well within its jurisdiction because
what is being sought is the enforcement or implementation of its
order. Having acquired jurisdiction, the Court may employ means
to carry it into effect (Sec. 6, Rule 135, Rules of Court)." 9
4
2. To all intents and purposes then, that is the law of the case. What
is worse, private respondent Lo Bu certainly cannot plead
ignorance, as he himself was the petitioner in the certiorari
proceeding before this Court. He failed, and ii was not surprising,
for on the facts as found, he was a principal in the nefarious
scheme to frustrate the award in favor of petitioner labor union.
There was thus a ruling as to the bad faith that characterized his
pretension of being the alleged vendee. In Cruz v. Philippine
Association of Free Labor Unions 11 it was shown that to avoid the
legal consequences of an unfair labor practice, there was a
fictitious sale resorted to, as in this case. Under the circumstances,
the bad faith being evident, the ostensible vendee was precluded
from taking advantage of the situation. So it must be here.
Moreover, that is merely, as stated earlier, to accord deference to
the fundamental principle of the law of the case, his petition for
certiorari having been dismissed by this Court. There is this excerpt
from the recent decision of Mangayao v. De Guzman: 12 "The latest
case in point as of the time the order complained of was issued
is Kabigting v. Acting Director of Prisons, a 1962 decision. As
emphasized by the ponente, the then Justice, now Chief Justice,
Makalintal: 'It need not be stated that the Supreme Court, being the
court of last resort, is the final arbiter of all legal questions properly
brought before it and that its decision in any give case constitutes
the law of that particular case. Once its judgment becomes final it
is binding on all inferior courts, and hence beyond their power and
authority to alter or modify. If petitioner had any ground to believe
that the decision of this Court in Special Proceeding No. 12276
should further be reviewed his remedy was to ask for a
reconsideration thereof. In fact he did file two motions for that
purpose, both of which were denied. A new petition before an
inferior court on the same grounds was unjustified. As much,
indeed, was clearly indicated by this Court in its resolution of April
3, 1959, herein above reproduced in its entirety. The import of the
resolution is too plain to be misunderstood.' So it has been from
1919, when in Compagnie Franco-Indochinoise v. Deutsche-
5
Australische Dampschiffs Gesellschaft, this Court, through Justice
Street, categorically declared that a decision that has become the
law of the case "is not subject to review or reversal in any court."
What is more, in 1967, there is a reaffirmation of the doctrine by
this Tribunal in People v. Olarte where it was stressed by Justice
J.B.L. Reyes that a ruling constituting the law of the case, "even if
erroneous, ... may no longer be disturbed or modified since it has
become final ... " Then, in Sanchez v. Court of Industrial Relations,
promulgated in 1969, there is the pronouncement that the law of
the case 'does not apply solely to what is embodied in [this Court's]
decision but likewise to its implementation carried out in fealty to
what has been ... decreed.'" 13
4. One last point. It was set forth in the Petition 16 that respondent
Lo Bu filed an urgent motion with the Court of Industrial Relations
to recall the writ of execution alleging as one of his grounds lack of
jurisdiction to pass upon the validity of the sale of the New Century
Foundry Shop, followed by another motion praying for the return of
the levied properties this time asserting that petitioner labor union
failed to put up an indemnity bond and then a third, this time to
6
allow the sheriff to keep the levied properties at his factory, all of
which were denied by the Court en banc in its order of March 23,
1973, assailed in the certiorari proceeding, dismissed by this Court
for lack of merit. 17 Counsel Yolando F. Busmente in his Answer to
this petition, filed on February 20, 1975, had the temerity to deny
such allegations. He simply ignored the fact that as counsel for
respondent Lo Bu, petitioner in L-36636, he did specifically
maintain: "On January 26, 1973, in order to vindicate his rights over
the levied properties, in an expeditious or less expensive manner,
herein appellant voluntarily submitted himself, as a forced
intervenor, to the jurisdiction of respondent CIR, by filing an urgent
'Motion to Recall Writ of Execution,' precisely questioning the
jurisdiction of said Court to pass upon the validity and legality of the
sale of the 'New Century Foundry Shop' to him, without the latter
being made a party to the case, as well as the jurisdiction of said
Court to enforce the Decision rendered against the respondents in
Case No. 3021-ULP, by means of an alias writ of execution against
his properties found at the 'New Century Foundry Shop;' ... ;
Petitioner appellant's urgent motion aforesaid was set for hearing
on February 5, 1973, and inasmuch as the auction sale of his
properties was set for January 31, 1973, the CIR issued an order
on January 30, 1973, one day before the schedule sale, ordering
the Sheriff of Manila not to proceed with the auction sale; ... ; On
February 3, 1973, herein petitioner-appellant [Lo Bu] filed another
urgent motion dated February 2, 1973, praying for the return of his
properties on the ground that the judgment creditor (respondent-
appellee) failed to put up an indemnity bond, pursuant to the
provision of Section 17, Rule 39 of the Rules of Court; ... On
February 10, 1973 respondent-appellee Cosmos Foundry Workers
Union interposed its opposition to herein petitioner-appellant's
urgent motions dated January 26, 1973 and February 2, 1973, ... ;
On February 27, 1973, herein petitioner-appellant received an
order from respondent CIR, dated February 25, 1973, denying his
urgent motions and ordering the Sheriff of Manila to proceed with
the auction sale of his properties "in accordance with law;" ...
7
" 18 Such conduct on the part of counsel is far from commendable.
He could, of course, be casuistic and take refuge in the fact that
the paragraph of the petition, which he denied, was, in addition to
being rather poorly and awkwardly worded, also prolix, with
unnecessary matter being included therein without due regard to
logic or coherence or even rules of grammar. He could add that his
denial was to be correlated with his special defenses, where he
concentrated on points not previously admitted. That is the most
that can be said of his performance, and it is not enough. For even
if such be the case, Attorney Busmente had not exculpated himself.
He was of course expected to defend his client's cause with zeal,
but not at the disregard of the truth and in defiance of the clear
purpose of labor statutes. He ought to remember that his obligation
as an officer of the court, no less than the dignity of the profession,
requires that he should not act like an errand-boy at the beck and
call of his client, ready and eager to do his every bidding. If he fails
to keep that admonition in mind, then he puts into serious question
his good standing in the bar.
9
in the order of the Industrial Court denying respondent's motion to
recall the writ of execution against Cosmos Foundry Shop, the
court found said Shop and respondent to have indulged in a
simulated transaction covering the properties in question purposely
to avoid satisfaction of the judgment in favor of petitioners.
10
in Kaisahan ng Mga Manggagawa sa La Campana vs. De los
Angeles, 36 SCRA 142, holding that the power of control over the
Sheriff in relation to the implementation of writ of execution issued
by the Industrial Court belongs to that court and not to any Court of
First Instance. (at pp. 155-6.) But even assuming there could be in
truth some doubt on the matter, the fact is that issue was actually
included in the previous proceeding in that court sustained by this
Court in G.R. No. L-36636. If that ruling is in anyway erroneous,
We cannot change it anymore. As far as the parties are concerned
that is the law of the case. Even a ruling on jurisdiction has the
effect of res adjudicata. Much less then could any other court
disregard it. And inasmuch as the trial court simply adhered to this
view, its order of dismissal can hardly be assailed as erroneous.
Footnotestêñ.£îhqwâ£
1 Petition, par 2 .
2 Ibid, par. 3.
3 Ibid, par. 7.
5 Ibid, par. 6.
11
7 Order, Annex A to Petition, 1.
8 Ibid, 4.
9 Ibid, 5.
12
humane conditions of work. The State may provide for
compulsory arbitration."
16 Petition, par. 4.
13