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The judgment or final order of a Municipal Trial court may be taken via ordinary appeal to the Regional Trial Court exercising jurisdiction over the area to which the former pertains (Sec. 1, Rule 40).
The appeal is taken by filing a notice of appeal with the court that rendered the judgment or final order appealed from.
Rules:
I. Timeliness of the Appeal to the RTC
1.) An appeal may be taken within fifteen (15) days after notice to the appellant of the judgment or final order appealed from. Where a record on appeal is required, the appellant shall file a notice of appeal and a record on appeal within thirty (30) days after notice of the judgment or final order.
2.) The period of appeal shall be interrupted by a timely motion for new trial or reconsideration. No motion for extension of time to file a motion for new trial or reconsideration shall be allowed.
II.) Format of the Notice of Appeal
(1) The title of the case shall remain as it was in the court of origin, but the party appealing the case shall be further referred to as the appellant and the adverse party as the appellee.
(2) The notice of appeal shall indicate the parties to the appeal, the judgment or final order or part thereof appealed from, and state the material dates showing the timeliness of the appeal.
(3) If record of appeal is required ( only in special proceedings and in other cases of multiple or separate appeals). The form and contents of the record on appeal shall be as provided in section 6, Rule 41.
(4) Copies of the notice of appeal, and the record on appeal where required, shall be served on the adverse party
III.) Perfection of the Appeal
(1) A party’s appeal by notice of appeal is deemed perfected as to him upon the filing of the notice of appeal in due time.
(2) A party’s appeal by record on appeal is deemed perfected as to him with respect to the subject matter thereof upon the approval of the record on appeal filed in due time.
(3) In appeals by notice of appeal, the court loses jurisdiction over the case upon the perfection of the appeals filed in due time and the expiration of the time to appeal of the other parties.
(4) In appeals by record on appeal, the court loses jurisdiction only over the subject matter thereof upon the approval of the records on appeal filed in due time and the expiration of the appeal of the other parties.
(5) In either case, prior to the transmittal of the original record or the record on appeal, the court may issue orders for the protection and preservation of the rights of the parties which do not involve any matter litigated by the appeal, approve compromises, permit appeals of indigent litigants, order execution pending appeal in accordance with 2 of Rule 39, and allow withdrawal of the appeal. (9a)
III. ) Execution pending appeal in Ejectment cases.
Section 19, Rule 70 of the 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure reads:
Section 19. Immediate execution of judgment; how to stay same. — If judgment is rendered against the defendant, execution shall issue immediately upon motion unless an appeal has been perfected and the defendant to stay execution files a sufficient supersedeas bond, approved by the Municipal Trial Court and executed in favor of the plaintiff to pay the rents, damages, and costs accruing down to the time of the judgment appealed from, and unless, during the pendency of the appeal, he deposits with the appellate court the amount of rent due from time to time under the contract, if any, as determined by the judgment of the Municipal Trial Court. In the absence of a contract, he shall deposit with the Regional Trial Court the reasonable value of the use and occupation of the premises for the preceding month or period at the rate determined by the judgment of the lower court on or before the tenth day of each succeeding month or period. The supersedeas bond shall be transmitted by the Municipal Trial Court, with the papers, to the clerk of the Regional Trial Court to which the action is appealed.
All amounts so paid to the appellate court shall be deposited with said court or authorized government depositary bank, and shall be held there until the final disposition of the appeal, unless the court, by agreement of the interested parties, or in the absence of reasonable grounds of opposition to a motion to withdraw, or for justifiable reasons, shall decree otherwise. Should the defendant fail to make the payments above prescribed from time to time during the pendency of the appeal, the appellate court, upon motion of the plaintiff, and upon proof of such failure, shall order the execution of the judgment appealed from with respect to the restoration of possession, but such execution shall not be a bar to the appeal taking its course until the final disposition thereof on the merits.
After the case is decided by the Regional Trial Court, any money paid to the court by the defendant for purposes of the stay of execution shall be disposed of in accordance with the provisions of the judgment of the Regional Trial Court. In any case wherein it appears that the defendant has been deprived of the lawful possession of land or building pending the appeal by virtue of the execution of the judgment of the Municipal Trial Court, damages for such deprivation of possession and restoration of possession and restoration of possession may be allowed the defendant in the judgment of the Regional Trial Court disposing of the appeal.
The ruling in Chua v. Court of Appeals12 is instructive on the means of staying the immediate execution of a judgment in an ejectment case, to wit:
As a general rule, a judgment in favor of the plaintiff in an ejectment suit is immediately executory, in order to prevent further damage to him arising from the loss of possession of the property in question. To stay the immediate execution of the said judgment while the appeal is pending the foregoing provision requires that the following requisites must concur: (1) the defendant perfects his appeal; (2) he files a supersedeas bond; and (3) he periodically deposits the rentals which become due during the pendency of the appeal. The failure of the defendant to comply with any of these conditions is a ground for the outright execution of the judgment, the duty of the court in this respect being “ministerial and imperative.” Hence, if the defendant-appellant perfected the appeal but failed to file a supersedeas bond, the immediate execution of the judgment would automatically follow. Conversely, the filing of a supersedeas bond will not stay the execution of the judgment if the appeal is not perfected. Necessarily then, the supersedeas bond should be filed within the period for the perfection of the appeal.
In short, a judgment in favor of the plaintiff in an ejectment suit is immediately executory, but the defendant, to stay its immediate execution, must: (1) perfect an appeal; (2) file a supersede s bond; and (3) periodically deposit the rentals becoming due during the pendency of the appeal. Although the petitioner correctly states that the Spouses Lopez should file a motion for execution pending appeal before the court may issue an order for the immediate execution of the judgment, the spouses Lopez are equally correct in pointing out that they were entitled to the immediate execution of the judgment in view of the Ac bangs failure to comply with all of the three abovementioned requisites for staying the immediate execution. The filing of the notice of appeal alone perfected the appeal but did not suffice to stay the immediate execution without the filing of the sufficient supersede s bond and the deposit of the accruing rentals.



Pursuant to Section 5-A of MEMORANDUM CIRCULAR No. 18 (Series of 2002), a lawyer connected with the Public Attorney’s Office (PAO) can only represent immediate members of his family and relatives provided that these are within the 4th civil degree of consanguinity and with approval of the Regional Director. Section 5-A is quoted below in toto:
Sec. 5-A. Other Persons Qualified for Assistance. – Immediate members of the
family and relatives within the 4th civil degree of consanguinity or affinity of PAO
lawyers may avail of his services regardless of qualification under the indigency test,
with the approval of the Regional Director, if the case is within the his region or the
Chief Public Attorney, if the case is outside of his region and provided further that the
lawyer files a leave of absence on the day of the hearing. (Memorandum Circular
No. 1, series of 1998, dated February 20, 1998)

Good news! Under Supreme Court Administrative Matter (AM) No. 20-12-01, Overseas Filipino Workers (OFWs) and Filipinos residing abroad can now avail of video conferencing to testify in court hearings. PDF copy of AM 20-12-01 can be downloaded from this site: https://sc.judiciary.gov.ph/16099/?fbclid=IwAR0LWNGwldByYVsQ0zWR2kygpFLirxy9O9tsQTW6iMttTqrjOLG8qoiXhQU.
This makes it convenient and safe for OFWs and Filipinos residing abroad to file cases or testify in pending cases even when they are outside the country.For more information about AM No. 20-12-01, kindly email at causingdelacruzlaw@gmail.com.
All online consultations are free of charge.


It is common nowadays that individuals received over-aggressive messages from credit collection agencies and their collectors. This is after they missed paying their credit card, mortgage loans or installment payments on purchases with credit card or consumer mortgage financing arrangement.
To curb these incidents of harassments by collection agencies, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) issued SEC Memo Circular No. 18 Series of 2019.
MANILA, Philippines — The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has issued a memorandum circular preventing unfair debt collection practices such as the use of insults or profane language, violent threats or false representation.
In the new circular, the SEC said that financing companies, lending companies and their third-party service providers could no longer harass borrowers and employ unfair means to collect debt.
“Financing companies, lending companies and third party service providers hired by them may resort to all reasonable and legally permissible means to collect amounts due them under the loan agreement provided that, in the exercise of their rights and performance of their duties, they must observe good faith and reasonable conduct and refrain from engaging in unscrupulous and untoward acts,” the SEC said in the circular issued Aug. 19.
The SEC said such unfair debt practices include the use of obscenities, insults or profane language; publication of the names and other personal information of the borrowers; and the use of any false representation or deceptive means to collect or attempt to collect any debt or to obtain information concerning a borrower.
Furthermore, the corporate regulator said that making contact at unreasonable or inconvenient times or hours – before 6 a.m. or after 10 p.m. – is not allowed. This is unless the account is past due for more than 15 days or the borrower has given express consent that the said times are the only reasonable or convenient opportunities for contact, the SEC said.
Financing and lending companies found to be violating the circular face penalties ranging from P25,000 for lending companies and P50,000 for financing companies for the first offense to P50,000 to up to P1 million for both for the third offense and possible suspension or revocation of their license.
The SEC issued the circular because it has been receiving numerous complaints against financing and lending companies that allegedly harass borrowers and employ abusive, unethical and unfair means to collect debts. It said the SEC has regulatory and supervisory jurisdiction over these companies by virtue of Republic Act 8556 or the Financing Company Act of 1998 and Republic Act 9474 or the Lending Company Regulation Act of 2007.
Last May, the National Privacy Commission (NPC) said it also looked into 48 online lending applications that allegedly shamed borrowers who failed to settle their obligations on time. The agency has received over 400 complaints from borrowers over alleged misuse of their personal information, including disclosure of their unpaid balances to other people, it said.
Source: Philstar
A.M. No. 15-06-10-SC, or the Revised Guidelines for Continuous Trial of Criminal Cases provides that: ” In criminal cases before First Level Courts (i.e. Municipal and Metropolitan Trial Courts, etc.), witness testimonies shall consist of (i) duly subscribed written statements given to law enforcement officers; or (ii) affidavits or counter-affidavits submitted during preliminary investigation; or (iii) if (i) and (ii) are not available, judicial affidavits.”
In cases where only the civil liability is being prosecuted by a private prosecutor, the head of the prosecution office must issue in favor of the private prosecutor a written authority to try the case even in the absence of the public prosecutor. The written authority must be submitted to the court prior to the presentation of evidence by the private prosecutor in accordance with Sec. 5, Rule 110. With this authority on record, the court may set the trial in the case and in other cases tried by private prosecutors with delegated authority on separate days when the presence of the public prosecutor may be dispensed with.