The Philippine Star

Dagupan-owned property buyer wants to intervene in case

- By EVA VISPERAS

DAGUPAN CITY – The winning bidder in the controvers­ial sale of the city-owned MC Adore Hotel here has asked the court to give it a “level playing field” by allowing it to intervene in the declarator­y relief case seeking the annulment of a resolution that authorized the outgoing mayor to initiate the sale of the once five-star hotel property.

Lawyer Ferdinand Topacio, counsel of AMB ALC Holdings and Management Inc. headed by former Philippine ambassador to Laos Antonio Cabangon Chua, said they asked the Regional Trial Court Branch 40 on Thursday to become a party to the case.

Topacio said AMB ALC was “directly affected” by the case as it is now the “registered owner” of the MC Adore property “and therefore, more than anyone else, it enjoys not only direct and unmistakab­le, but in fact superior rights” over it.

Topacio and lawyer Joselito Lomangaya told reporters that the sale of MC Adore Hotel was consummate­d after AMB ALC won the bidding for P119 million on Jan. 7 and the titles of the property were transferre­d to the company.

They said the company has taken over the property after it paid P8,925,000 in capital gains and documentar­y stamp tax to the Bureau of Internal Revenue.

They said AMB ALC also paid a local transfer tax of P892,500 to the Dagupan City treasurer’s office and P554.135 as registrati­on fee for the property’s titles.

City legal officer Roy Laforteza, allegedly without consulting the incoming city administra­tion of mayor-elect Belen Fernandez, earlier had filed a motion for reconsider­ation in behalf of respondent­s that included outgoing Mayor Benjamin Lim on the May 20 decision of RTC Branch 40 Judge Mervin Jovito Samadan voiding a city council resolution authorizin­g the mayor to negotiate the sale of the property. Lim has been in the hospital since May 12.

The lawyers of AMB ALC are asking the court to reverse its decision and to issue a new ruling dismissing the petition that sought its nullificat­ion.

Lawyer Borromeo Bustamante, legal counsel of petitioner Ryan Ravanzo, secretary to the city council, said he made a reply comment and submitted it Thursday.

“They have no standing in court because if ever they bought the property, they are buyers in bad faith,” Bustamante told The STAR.

He said “the action is declarator­y relief whose purpose is to declare or not the resolution authorizin­g Lim to sell MC Adore and the Calasiao property as valid or not.”

The five-story MC Adore Hotel, built in the 1970s, has a total land area of 5,113.99 square meters. Its helipad at the roof deck comprises 12,673 square meters.

The city government bought the property from the government’s Asset Privatizat­ion Trust which took over the property from the Developmen­t Bank of the Philippine­s. It was originally intended as the site of a new city hall.

But Fernandez has been firm in her stand that the property’s sale was allegedly disadvanta­geous to the city and wanted its recovery.

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