Mijares vs Ranada GR 139325 April 12, 2005
Incorporation Clause
Foreign Judgment
Mijares vs Ranada GR 139325 April 12, 2005
FACTS:
Ten Filipino
citizens who each alleged having suffered human rights abuses such as arbitrary
detention, torture and rape in the hands of police or military forces during
the Marcos regime, filed with the US District Court, Hawaii, against the Estate
Ferdinand E. Marcos.
Trial ensued, and
subsequently a jury rendered a Final Judgment and an award of compensatory and
exemplary damages in favor of the plaintiff class with an award of a total of
One Billion Nine Hundred Sixty Four Million Five Thousand Eight Hundred Fifty
Nine Dollars and Ninety Cents ($1,964,005,859.90)
The present
petitioners filed Complaint with the Makati RTC for the enforcement of the
Final Judgment.
Respondent Judge
Ranada of the Makati RTC issued the subject Order dismissing the complaint
without prejudice. He opined that the subject matter of the complaint was
capable of pecuniary estimation, as it involved a judgment rendered by a
foreign court ordering the payment of definite sums of money, allowing for easy
determination of the value of the foreign judgment.
The RTC estimated
the proper amount of filing fees was approximately Four Hundred Seventy Two
Million Pesos, which obviously had not been paid.
Petitioners submit
that their action is incapable of pecuniary estimation as the subject matter of
the suit is the enforcement of a foreign judgment, and not an action for the
collection of a sum of money or recovery of damages. They also point out that
to require the class plaintiffs to pay Four Hundred Seventy Two Million Pesos
(P472,000,000.00) in filing fees would negate and render inutile the liberal
construction ordained by the Rules of Court, particularly the inexpensive
disposition of every action.
ISSUE:
What provision, if
any, then should apply in determining the filing fees for an action to enforce
a foreign judgment?
RULING:
Respondent judge
was in clear and serious error when he concluded that the filing fees should be
computed on the basis of the schematic table of Section 7(a), as the action
involved pertains to a claim against an estate based on judgment.
A proper
understanding is required on the nature and effects of a foreign judgment in
this jurisdiction.
The rules of
comity, utility and convenience of nations have established a usage among
civilized states by which final judgments of foreign courts of competent
jurisdiction are reciprocally respected and rendered efficacious under certain
conditions that may vary in different countries.
The conditions
required by the Philippines for recognition and enforcement of a foreign
judgment has remained unchanged.
SEC. 48. Effect of
foreign judgments. The effect of a judgment of a tribunal of a foreign country,
having jurisdiction to pronounce the judgment is as follows:
(a) In case of a
judgment upon a specific thing, the judgment is conclusive upon the title to
the thing;
(b) In case of a
judgment against a person, the judgment is presumptive evidence of a right as
between the parties and their successors in interest by a subsequent title;
In either case, the
judgment or final order may be repelled by evidence of a want of jurisdiction,
want of notice to the party, collusion, fraud, or clear mistake of law or fact.
There is an evident
distinction between a foreign judgment in an action in rem and one in personam.
For an action in rem, the foreign judgment is deemed conclusive upon the title
to the thing, while in an action in personam, the foreign judgment is presumptive,
and not conclusive, of a right as between the parties and their successors in
interest by a subsequent title.
Thus, the party
aggrieved by the foreign judgment is entitled to defend against the enforcement
of such decision in the local forum. It is essential that there should be an
opportunity to challenge the foreign judgment, in order for the court in this
jurisdiction to properly determine its efficacy.
Consequently, the
party attacking a foreign judgment has the burden of overcoming the presumption
of its validity.
Petition is
GRANTED.
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