FIRST DIVISION
[G.R. No. 102184. April 12, 2000]
CAGAYAN
ELECTRIC POWER AND LIGHT COMPANY, INC., petitioner, vs. CONSTANCIO F.
COLLERA, SANDRA R. A. GOPEZ, ERASTO SALCEDO, VICENTE F. COLLERA, JOSE BIBAL,
VICENTE C. SUNIEL, ENECITA OBLIOSCA, ESARIA AMAMIO, DANTE SUAZO, NESTOR
ABONITALIA, FAVIO TURNO, JR., FELY MATA, LEILA MACARAMBON, ALFONSO ERFE,
CATALINO A. RANARIO, SR., ROCKY & EDNA CHAN, PASTOR APEROCHO, ANTONIO
RAMOS, FRANCISCO MAGTO, ERROL VILLANUEVA (c/o PLACIDO PACTURAN), CASIANA ACEBU,
ANTONIO BUAL, AIDA ROSCO and WILLIAM ROSCO, PEDRO and FE SUANGCO, RAYMUNDO
RECONALLA, MODESTO LOYOLA, LUCIANO NACALABNA, MOISES AQUINO, PAZ ACEBU,
FRANCISCO SIMPLICIO, MAXIMO GAABUCAYAN, NELA CAACBAY, VISMINDA STAPNO, MAMERTA
ALIMPOS, CORAZON CALUB, FLORENCIO MANAYA, CARMELITA MABALOT, MARIA RAAGAS,
SOFIA VIAJAR, REUBEN NERI, GENARO DE LA PEÑA, REBECCA HUERA, ROMEO ESPENOSA,
JOEL ARROYO, RUFINO JAVIER, ARTURO GUIRAL, URBANA BUAL, LUISA AGUILAR,
PACIENCIO AGUILAR, MARICHU CUBOS, JESUS INSO, ROSENA REYES, LUCIANO NACALABAN,
ALEJANDRITO ESCABANTE, PEDRITO ABAN, MARK DIAZ, AIDA MENDOZA, LUCIA MANDURO,
ELSA RAMON SALCEDO, MYRNA PABUALAN, ROSA UAYAN, ANITA FORTEZA, AURELIA
ABROGUEÑA, DIOSCORO ABONITALLA, JOSE ROA, PAAYAS PRIMITIVO, DON DIMATULAC, and
others similarly situated. respondents.
D E C I S I O N
PARDO, J.:
Which government agency has jurisdiction to
hear and decide a dispute involving recovery of sums of money collected by
electric power plants from consumers, the regular courts or the Energy
Regulatory Board (ERB)?
Before the Court is an appeal via
certiorari from a decision of the Court of Appeals[1] and its resolution[2] denying reconsideration, ruling that it is the
regular courts that have jurisdiction over an action for recovery of excess
payments for electric consumption since 1977 until October 1985.
Respondents were customers of petitioner
Cagayan Electric Power and Light Company, Inc.
Since 1977, petitioner had been collecting
payments for electric consumption from respondents under the so-called Power
Adjustment Clause without deducting the discounts and other credit adjustments
granted by the National Power Corporation.
Respondents allege that on October 1, 1985,
they tendered payments for their individual bills less charges for power cost
adjustment, currency exchange rate adjustment and surcharge, which petitioner
refused to accept. Because of petitioner’s refusal, respondents consigned their
payments to the court.
On the same date, respondents filed with the
Regional Trial Court, Misamis Oriental, Branch 24, Cagayan de Oro City a
complaint[3] against petitioner for unjust enrichment, recovery
of sums of money, recovery of customers’ deposits, breach of contract,
consignation, injunction and damages with prayer for preliminary injunction.
On November 8, 1985, the City of Cagayan de
Oro filed with the trial court a complaint in intervention.[4]
By an order dated December 20, 1985, the
trial court denied respondents’ application for preliminary injunction.
On January 6, 1986,[5] the trial court dismissed the complaint and
complaint in intervention on the ground that the court had no jurisdiction over
the subject matter of the complaint which was within the jurisdiction of the
Board of Energy, now the ERB under Section 9 (c), Presidential Decree No. 1206.
On March 26, 1986, the trial court denied
respondents’ motion for reconsideration of its Order of January 6, 1986.
In due time, respondents appealed to the
Court of Appeals.
On November 28, 1990, the Court of Appeals
rendered a decision the dispositive portion of which reads:
"WHEREFORE,
the Orders of January 6, 1986, dismissing the complaint and complaint in
intervention, and of March 26, 1986 denying the appellants’ Motion for
Reconsideration of the previous order, are hereby set aside, while the Order of
December 20, 1985 denying the issuance of a writ of preliminary injunction is
hereby affirmed. The case is hereby remanded to the court a quo for
proceedings appropriate hereto, including the trial on the merits. No
costs."[6]
Hence, this petition.[7]
The issue raised is whether jurisdiction
over the subject matter of the complaint in the case below is vested with
regular courts or the Energy Regulatory Board.
The complaint does not charge any violation
of either currency exchange rate adjustment (CERA) or power cost adjustment
(PCA). Respondents only allege that petitioner charged them with the full rate
of electric consumption despite absence of any increases in the cost of energy.
We rule that the subject matter of the
complaint is within the jurisdiction of the regional trial court.
The regional trial court is a court of
general jurisdiction.[8] On the other hand, Republic Act No. 6173, as amended
by Presidential Decree No. 1206 empowered the ERB[9] to regulate and fix the power rates to be charged by
electric companies. The power to fix rates of electric consumption does not
carry with it the power to determine whether or not petitioner is guilty of
overcharging customers for consumption of electric power. This falls within the
jurisdiction of the regular courts.
We have ruled that the question of
determining the breakdown and itemization of the power adjustment billed by an
electric power company to its customers is not a matter that pertains to the
ERB’s supervision, control or jurisdiction to regulate and fix power rate but
falls within the jurisdiction of the regular courts.[10]
Petitioner is a public utility company. If,
indeed, petitioner used the deposits, discounts, surcharges, PCA, and CERA
rates as instruments to obtain undue profits through various loan activities
and benefits provided to petitioner’s employees, then respondents may have
causes of action against petitioner to be litigated before the regular courts
and decided on the basis of evidence which the parties may present during the trial.
WHEREFORE, the Court DISMISSES the petition for lack of merit,
and AFFIRMS the decision of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 09601. The
Court DIRECTS the trial court to expedite proceedings in Civil Case No. 10364.
No costs.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr., C.J., (Chairman), Puno,
Kapunan, and Ynares-Santiago,
JJ., concur.
[1] In CA-G.R. CV No. 09601 promulgated on November 28,
1990, Rollo, pp. 50-65.
[2] Resolution issued on September 23, 1991, Rollo,
pp. 67-73.
[3] Docketed as Civil Case No. 10364, Constancio Collera,
et al. versus Cagayan Electric Power and Light Company, Inc.
[4] Original Records, pp. 155-164.
[5] Regional Trial Court Order, Civil Case No. 10364, Rollo,
pp. 74-77.
[6] Court of Appeals Decision in CA-G.R. CV No. 09601, de
Pano, J., ponente, Imperial and Rasul, JJ., concurring, Rollo,
pp. 49-65.
[7] Filed on November 22, 1991, Rollo, pp. 10-47.
[8] Quiroz vs. Manalo, 210 SCRA 60 [1992]; Abalos vs.
Court of Appeals, 223 SCRA 551 [1993]; Ignacio vs. Court of Appeals, 246
SCRA 242 [1995]; Ligon vs. Court of Appeals, 244 SCRA 693 [1995].
[9] Executive Order No. 172 [1987].
[10] Manila Electric Company vs. Court of Appeals,
271 SCRA 417 [1997].