ABSENCE OF DEFENDANT ON THE PRE-TRIAL: Under Section 7 of the 1991 Revised Rules on Summary Procedure, if a sole defendant shall fail to appear in the preliminary conference, the plaintiff shall be entitled to judgment in accordance with Section 6 of the Rule, that is, the court shall render judgment as may be warranted by the facts alleged in the Complaint and limited to what is prayed for therein. However, "[t]his Rule (Sec. 7) shall not apply where one of two or more defendants sued under a common cause of action, who had pleaded a common defense, shall appear at the preliminary conference." xxxxxx The Court holds that the italized provision above does not apply in the case where petitioner is not a co-defendant in the same case but actually sued in a separate case for ejectment. Therefore, petitioner’s failure to appear in the preliminary conference entitled respondent to the rendition of judgment by the trial court on the ejectment case filed against petitioner, in accordance with Section 7 of the 1991 Revised Rules on Summary Procedure (SORIENTE vs. THE ESTATE OF ARSENIO E. CONCEPCION, G.R. No. 160239, November 25, 2009, Third Division, Peralta, J.).
MOTION FOR EXTENSION NOT ALLOWED: By its express terms, the purpose of the RSP is to "achieve an expeditious and inexpensive determination" of the cases they cover, among them, forcible entry and unlawful detainer cases. To achieve this objective, the RSP expressly prohibit certain motions and pleadings that could cause delay, among them, a motion for extension of time to file pleadings, affidavits or any other paper. If the extension for the filing of these submissions cannot be allowed, we believe it illogical and incongruous to admit a pleading that is already filed late. Effectively, we would then allow indirectly what we prohibit to be done directly. It is for this reason that in Don Tino Realty Development Corporation v. Florentino,(G.R. No. 134222, September 10, 1999, 314 SCRA 197) albeit on the issue of late filing of an answer in a summary proceeding, the Supreme Court stated that "[t]o admit a late answer is to put a premium on dilatory measures, the very mischief that the rules seek to redress" (TERAÑA vs. DESAGUN, G.R. No. 152131, April 29, 2009, Second Division, Brion, J.).
A POSITION PAPER IS NOT INDISPENSABLE FOR THE COURT TO RENDER A JUDGMENT: The failure of one party to submit his position paper does not bar at all the MTC from issuing a judgment on the ejectment complaint. A position paper is not indispensable to the court’s authority to render judgment. xxxx In such a case, what would be extant in the record and the bases for the judgment would be the complaint, answer, and the record of the preliminary conference (TERAÑA vs. DESAGUN, G.R. No. 152131, April 29, 2009, Second Division, Brion, J.).
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