Lapus v. United States

145 Ct. Cl. 660, 1959 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 111, 1959 WL 7628
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedMay 6, 1959
DocketNo. 49701
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 145 Ct. Cl. 660 (Lapus v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lapus v. United States, 145 Ct. Cl. 660, 1959 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 111, 1959 WL 7628 (cc 1959).

Opinion

Opinion

per curiam:

The narrative necessary to the

understanding of this case is given in our findings. The evidence proves, to a moral certainty, that the plaintiff’s claim is vitiated by fraud. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 2514 of Title 28 of the United States Code, the plaintiff’s [661]*661claim is forfeited to the United States. The plaintiff’s petition will be dismissed.

It is so ordered.

FINDINGS OP PACT

The court, having considered the evidence, the report of Trial Commissioner Geo. H. Foster, and the briefs and argument of counsel, makes findings of fact as follows:

1. The plaintiff, Jose K. Lapus, is a native-born Filipino, and brings this suit as such. United States citizens may bring action against the Government of the Philippines in the Philippine courts.

2. At the beginning of World War II plaintiff was general sales, manager for Twentieth Century-Fox in Manila. He had previously considerable experience in the moving picture business in Manila. After the Japanese occupied Manila, a Japanese civilian administration took over all the American companies in Manila and plaintiff became unemployed.

3. Plaintiff began buying movable properties and selling them to Chinese merchants who in turn sold them to the Japanese. He stopped selling to the Chinese merchants about October 1942 and began selling direct to the Japanese. He continued to do so up until the time the Japanese purchasing agents fled Manila.

4. In December 1944 plaintiff was living at 1026 and 1028 Anacleto Street in Manila. He had rented these properties after they were built in 1943. The partition between 1026 and 1028 was removed by him in part and thereafter the door to 1028 was closed and access to 1028 was only from 1026. At that time he had an office on the ground floor of 1026 and another office for office help on the ground floor of 1028.

These premises are what in the Philippines are called accessories and they are comparable to row houses in the United States. Each is about 13 feet wide, 2y2 stories high, and about 35 or 40 feet deep. Each has two doors opening on the sidewalk, one for the upstairs apartment and one for the street floor apartment.

The premises abut on the sidewalk and have a small yard behind them. They are of rather light construction, having been built by the owner from lumber salvaged when a Philip[662]*662pine club bouse, situated on the same street, was demolished. Later, two additional apartments were built between 1028 and the site of the demolished club house, numbered 1080 and 1032. These were also constructed from the salvaged lumber and additional salvaged lumber was stored on the site of the club house.

5. Some time after Lapus began occupying the premises at 1026 and 1028, he brought a Filipina to live with him there as his “querida” (paramour). Lapus and she had previously lived together in the Santa Ana district of Manila since the latter part of 1943. While living at the Anacleto address, he brought his three children there who had been living with his mother and sister about a block from 1026 Anacleto Street. Some time prior to December 13, 1944, plaintiff and his family moved to a location some four blocks north of Anacleto Street.

Two weeks or ten days before the American Army entered Manila, about February 4, 1945, plaintiff moved his querida and one of his children to the south side of Manila to the Paco district.

6. The plaintiff Lapus left his querida and his child at the home of his querida’s aunt in Paco, explaining that he was going to the hills to join the guerrillas. He indicated the vicinity as being Montalban which was about 20 or 25 miles east of Manila.

This was not the direction from which the American Army was then approaching Manila. Plaintiff’s whereabouts from that date to March 2,1945, remain in doubt. On the witness stand in this case in 1952 he related a story about having been arrested by guerrillas the latter part of February 1945, and tortured by them for days until he was rescued by an officer and turned over to the American Counter Intelligence Corps. In an affidavit filed with a claim which he later filed with the Claims Service in 1948, plaintiff stated that he was in Laguna Province on business in January 1945 when he was captured and tortured by the Japanese and later placed in a truck by his captors. While the truck, along with others, was proceeding on the National Highway, several American planes came overhead and strafed the trucks, killing several Japanese. He then, according to this affidavit, with the assist-[663]*663anee of other Filipinos, killed the remaining Japanese and later joined American soldiers who were among those who constituted the spearhead of the attacking forces. He claims he fought his way with them back to Manila. After staying with these forces for months, he became ill and was placed in a hospital, later returning to his home. He then found to his surprise that the contents of his home had been taken by the American Army. He also testified in this case that he was at the Anacleto address in late January 1945, at which time he changed the combination on one of his safes.

7. Plaintiff was arrested as a collaborator with the Japanese on March 2, 1945, and placed in confinement by the American Army or the Philippine Government. He was confined there until he was released on September 28, 1945, on bail.

Plaintiff was formally charged by the Philippine Government in Criminal Case No. 6972 for treason on five counts. The first two counts related to military treason and the last three related to economic collaboration. The three counts relating to economic collaboration were dropped following Amnesty Proclamation No. 21, issued January 28, 1948, by President Rosas of the Philippines. The first two counts were dropped sometime after September 1950 for insufficiency of evidence.

8. Shortly after the arrival in Manila of the American Forces and about the middle of February 1945, the commanding officer of the 37th Counter Intelligence Corps of the 37th Infantry Division, received information that the plaintiff was a Japanese collaborator who had served as a purchasing officer for the Japanese forces, and that he had a warehouse in Manila where he had stored a number of items which belonged to the Japanese. About a week later this officer located the supposed warehouse at 1026 Anacleto Street, and opened and searched both apartments of this house for documentary evidence of plaintiff’s collaboration with the Japanese. While the upstairs had the appearance of being living quarters, the rest of the two apartments appeared to this officer to be offices and storerooms. Among the articles stored there were a number of safes. The safes were locked and the search for documents was confined to [664]*664open drawers in the large number of desks and in other cabinets. Upon completion of the search, with such evidence as he found, he left one of his men at the house and reported this information to his superior. intelligence officer. The information was then given to the division supply officer. Arrangements were made at that time to have the military police of the 37th Infantry Division post a guard on the premises. A 24-hour Army guard was maintained on the premises numbered 1026 and 1028, thereafter, for about a week or ten days.

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Bluebook (online)
145 Ct. Cl. 660, 1959 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 111, 1959 WL 7628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lapus-v-united-states-cc-1959.