Declaratory
relief
is defined as an action by any person interested in a deed, will, contract or
other written instrument, executive order or resolution, to determine any
question of construction or validity arising from the instrument, executive
order or regulation, or statute, and for a declaration of his rights and duties
thereunder. The only issue that may be raised in such a petition is the
question of construction or validity of provisions in an instrument or statute.
Corollary is the general rule that such an action must be justified, as no
other adequate relief or remedy is available under the circumstances.
Decisional
law enumerates the requisites of an action for declaratory relief, as follows:
1) the subject matter of the controversy must be a deed, will, contract or
other written instrument, statute, executive order or regulation, or ordinance;
2) the terms of said documents and the validity thereof are doubtful and
require judicial construction; 3) there must have been no breach of the
documents in question; 4) there must be an actual justiciable controversy or
the "ripening seeds" of one between persons whose interests are
adverse; 5) the issue must be ripe for judicial determination; and 6) adequate
relief is not available through other means or other forms of action or
proceeding. (EUFEMIA ALMEDA vs. BATHALA MARKETING INDUSTRIES, INC., G.R. No. 150806, January 28, 2008, NACHURA, J.).
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.