REPUBLIC v. COURT OF APPEALS
GR Nos. 103882, 105276 November 25, 1998
FACTS:
On June 22, 1957, RA 1899 was
approved granting authority to all municipalities and chartered cities to
undertake and carry out at their own expense the reclamation by dredging,
filling, or other means, of any foreshore lands bordering them, and to
establish, provide, construct, maintain and repair proper and adequate docking
and harbor facilities as such municipalities and chartered cities may determine
in consultation with the Secretary of Finance and the Secretary of Public Works
and Communications.
Pursuant to the said law, Ordinance No. 121 was passed
by the city of Pasay for the reclamation of foreshore lands within their
jurisdiction and entered into an agreement with Republic Real Estate
Corporation for the said project.
Republic questioned the agreement. It contended, among
others, that the agreement between RREC and the City of Pasay was void for the
object of the contract is outside the commerce of man, it being a foreshore
land.
Pasay City and
RREC countered that the object in question is within the commerce of man
because RA 1899 gives a broader meaning on the term “foreshore land” than that
in the definition provided by the dictionary.
RTC rendered judgment in favour of Pasay City and
RREC, and the decision was affirmed by the CA with modifications.
ISSUE:
I.
Whether
or not the term “foreshore land” includes the submerged area.
II. Whether or not “foreshore
land” and the reclaimed area is within the commerce of man.
HELD:
The Court ruled that it is erroneous
and unsustainable to uphold the opinion of the respondent court that the term
“foreshore land” includes the submerged areas. To repeat, the term
"foreshore lands" refers to:
The strip of land that lies between the high and low
water marks and that is alternately wet and dry according to the flow of the
tide.
A strip of land margining a body of water (as a lake
or stream); the part of a seashore between the low-water line usually at the
seaward margin of a low-tide terrace and the upper limit of wave wash at high
tide usually marked by a beach scarp or berm. (Webster's Third New International
Dictionary)
The
duty of the court is to interpret the enabling Act, RA 1899. In so doing, we
cannot broaden its meaning; much less widen the coverage thereof. If the
intention of Congress were to include submerged areas, it should have provided
expressly. That Congress did not so provide could only signify the exclusion of
submerged areas from the term “foreshore lands.”
It
bears stressing that the subject matter of Pasay City Ordinance No. 121, as
amended by Ordinance No. 158, and the Agreement under attack, have been found
to be outside the intendment and scope of RA 1899, and therefore ultra vires
and null and void.
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