Barangay Preliminary Injunction
Barangay Preliminary Injunction
While there is no dispute herein that the present case was never referred to the Barangay
Lupon for conciliation before petitioner instituted Civil Case No. 34, 742-2012, there is
likewise no quibbling that his Complaint was coupled with a prayer for the issuance of a
preliminary injunction.20 Hence, it falls among the exceptions to the rule requiring the
referral to baranggay conciliation.
As good faith is always presumed, in the absence of proof of improper motive on the part
of the petitioner, the Court cannot countenance the appellate court's assumption that
petitioner was solely intent on evading the requirements of the LGC in applying for a
preliminary injunction. This Court cannot sustain a dismissal of an action on account of
an unproven assertion of bad faith. [Racpan v. Barroga-Haigh, G.R. No. 234499, June 6,
2018.]
---------------------------------------------
In the case at bar, the complaint for ejectment filed by the private respondent contained
an application for the issuance of a writ of preliminary mandatory injunction, as allowed
under Section 33 of BP 129. The suit would, therefore, ostensibly fall under the exception
mentioned in Section 412 (b) of the Katarungang Pambarangay Law. A different
conclusion must be reached, however, after a closer look at the attendant circumstances
in light of the following allegations made by the private respondent in his complaint:
As correctly pointed out by the petitioner, the issue of the subdividing and subleasing of
the property may no longer be raised again in this case because it had already been
adjudicated in the antecedent case between the petitioner and the private respondent. This
was Civil Case No. 3031, where it was held:
Whether or not the court acted correctly in proceeding with the case even without the
prior barangay proceeding is a procedural question that could not be reviewed in a special
civil action for certiorari but only in an ordinary appeal. A similar observation is made on
its declaration that it was incumbent upon the petitioner to prove that the private
respondent's allegations in support of the prayer for preliminary injunction was false and
that compensation or set-off was not a proper defense. These conclusions would at most
constitute errors of judgment reviewable only on appeal and not errors of jurisdiction
reviewable by certiorari.