Alfonso vs. Villamor Case Digest

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LEGAL FORMS

Digest of Cases (Week 1)


Summer Class 2019
Jazztine Artizuela

ELADIO ALFONSO VS. TOMAS VILLAMOR

Summary of the case. This is an action to recover the value of certain articles taken from a Roman Catholic
Church located in the municipality of Placer, and the rental value of the church and its appurtenances,
including the church cemetery, from the 11 December 1901, until the month of April 1904. The lower court
gave judgment in favor of the plaintiff. From this judgment the defendants appealed to this court.

Facts. Defendants are members of the municipal board of the municipality of Placer.

On 11 December 1901, defendants sent a letter to the plaintiff saying that they have received an order dated
5 December 1901 from the provincial fiscal, stating that "The cemeteries, convents, and the other buildings
erected on land belonging to the town at the expense of the town and preserved by it belong to the town, and
for this reason the municipality is under the obligation of administering them and of collecting the revenues
therefrom, and for this reason we notify you that from this date all of the revenues and products therefrom
must be turned into the treasury of the municipality in order that the people may properly preserve them.”

On the 13 December 1901, the defendants took possession of the church and its appurtenances, and also of
all of the personal property contained therein. The plaintiff protested against the occupation thereof by the
defendants, but he was still removed from possession of the church, its appurtenances and contents.

The only defense presented by the defendants, except the one that the plaintiff was not the real party in
interest, was that the church and other buildings had been erected by funds voluntarily contributed by the
people of that municipality, and that the articles within the church had been purchased with funds raised in
like manner, and that, therefore, the municipality was the owner thereof.

The question as to the ownership of the church and its appurtenances was decided by the Court in a case
before it entitled "The Roman Catholic Apostolic Church against the municipality of Placer” dated 23
September 1908. In that case, the defendants claimed that according to Spanish law the Roman Catholic
Apostolic Church was not the owner of such property, having only the use thereof for ordinary ecclesiastical
and religious purposes, and that the true owner thereof was the municipality or the State by reason of the
contributions by them, or by the people, of the land and of the funds with which the buildings were constructed
or repaired.

The court decided in that case that the claim of the defendants was not well founded and that the property
belonged to the Roman Catholic Church.

One of the assignments of error made by counsel for defendants on this appeal is that the lower court erred
in permitting the action to be brought and continued in the name of the plaintiff instead of in the name of the
bishop of the diocese within which the church was located, or in the name of the Roman Catholic Apostolic
Church, as the real party in interest.

Issue. Whether or not the lower Court erred in permitting the action to be brought and continued in the name
of the plaintiff instead of in the name of the bishop of the diocese.

Ruling. NO.

It is undoubted the bishop of the diocese or the Roman Catholic Apostic Church itself is the real party in
interest. The plaintiff personally has no interest in the cause of action. Section 114 of the Code of Civil
Procedure requires that every action must be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest. The plaintiff
is not such party.

However, the Court ruled that under Section 110 and Section 503 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the Court
has full power, apart from that power and authority which is inherent, to amend the process, pleadings,
proceedings, and decision in this case by substituting, as party plaintiff, the real party in interest.

Not only is the Court confident that it may do so, but it is convinced that it should do so. Such an amendment
does not constitute, really a change in the identity of the parties.

The plaintiff asserts in his complaint, and maintains that assertion all through the record, that he is engaged
in the prosecution of this case, not for himself, but for the bishop of the diocese—not by his own right, but by
right of another.

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He seeks merely to do for the bishop what the bishop might do for himself. His own personality is not involved.
His own rights are not presented. He claims no interest whatever in the litigation. He seeks only the welfare
of the great church whose servant he is. Gladly permits his identity to be wholly swallowed up in that of his
superior.

The substitution, then, of the name of the bishop of the diocese, or the Roman Catholic Apostolic Church, for
that of Padre Alonso, as party plaintiff, is not in reality the substitution of one identity for another, of one party
for another, but is simply to make the form express the substance. The substance is there. It appears all
through the proceedings. No one is deceived for an instant as to whose interest are at stake. The form of its
expression is alone defective.

The substitution, then, is not substantial but formal. Defect in mere form cannot possibly so long as the
substantial is clearly evident. Form is a method of speech used to express substance and make it clearly
appear. It is the means by which the substance reveals itself. If the form be faulty and still the substance shows
plainly through no, harm can come by making the form accurately expressive of the substance.

No one has been misled by the error in the name of the party plaintiff. If we should by reason of this error send
this back for amendment and new trial, there would be on the retrial the same complaint, the same answer,
the same defense, the same interests, the same witnesses, and the same evidence. The name of the plaintiff
would constitute the only difference between the old trial and the new. In our judgment there is not enough in
a name to justify such action.

There is nothing sacred about processes or pleadings, their forms or contents. Their sole purpose is to facilitate
the application of justice to the rival claims of contending parties. They were created, not to hinder and delay,
but to facilitate and promote, the administration of justice. They do not constitute the thing itself, which courts
are always striving to secure to litigants. They are designed as the means best adapted to obtain that thing.
In other words, they are a means to an end. When they lose the character of the one and become the other,
the administration of justice is at fault and courts are correspondingly remiss in the performance of their
obvious duty.

The error in this case is purely technical. To take advantage of it for other purposes than to cure it, does
not appeal to a fair sense of justice. Its presentation as fatal to the plaintiff's case smacks of skill rather than
right. A litigation is not a game of technicalities in which one, more deeply schooled and skilled in the subtle
art of movement and position, entraps and destroys the other. It is, rather, a contest in which each contending
party fully and fairly lays before the court the facts in issue and then, brushing aside as wholly trivial and
indecisive all imperfections of form and technicalities of procedure, asks that justice be done upon the merits.
Lawsuits, unlike duels, are not to be won by a rapier's thrust. Technicality, when it desserts its proper office
as an aid to justice and becomes its great hindrance and chief enemy, deserves scant consideration from
courts. There should be no vested rights in technicalities. No litigant should be permitted to challenge a record
of a court of these Islands for defect of form when his substantial rights have not been prejudiced thereby.

In ordering this substitution, we are in accord with the best judicial thought. It is therefore, ordered and decreed
that the process, pleadings, proceedings and decision in this action be, and the same are hereby, amended
by substituting the Roman Catholic Apostolic Church in the place and stead of Eladio Alonso as party plaintiff,
that the complaint be considered as though originally filed by the Catholic Church, the answer thereto made,
the decision rendered and all proceedings in this case had, as if the said institution which Father Eladio Alonso
undertook to represent were the party plaintiff, and that said decision of the court below, so amended, is
affirmed, without special finding as to the costs.

(end)

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