Dr. Rodriguez v. CA - Digest
Dr. Rodriguez v. CA - Digest
Dr. Rodriguez v. CA - Digest
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G.R. No. 121964 June 17, 1997 DRA. ABDULIA RODRIGUEZ, LEONOR PRIETOS, LEONORA RODRIGUEZ NOLASCO, LUZVIMINDA ANTIG and JUANITA RODRIGUEZ, petitioners, vs. COURT OF APPEALS, HARRY VILORIA, MARGARITA MILAGROS VILORIA and JOHN P. YOUNG,respondents. Facts: A fire broke out which razed two apartment buildings, owned by Peititoners Abdulia Rodriguez, Leonora Rodriguez Nolasco and Juanita Rodriguez, and partially destroying a commercial building. Leonora Prietos and Luzviminda Antig who were lessees of the apartment units, filed a case for damages against Harry John Viloria, Margarita Milagros Viloria, and John P. Young (building contractor). The complaint alleged that by reason of the gross negligence and want of care of the construction workers and employees of the respondents, the bunkhouse or workers' quarters in the construction site caught fire spreading rapidly, burning the adjacent buildings owned by petitioners. Due to the negligence of respondents which resulted in the fire, respondents suffered actual damages representing the value of the buildings and other personal properties. John Young, contended that he cannot be held responsible even if there was negligence on the part of the employees for he had exercised the diligence of a good father of a family in the selection and supervision of his workers. Petitioners had no cause of action against him. Harry and Margarita Viloria also alleged that petitioners had no cause of action against them. The fire court not have been caused by gross negligence of their workers for they did not have any worker in the construction of their building. The said construction was being undertaken by the independent contractor, John Young, who hired and supervised his own workers. T After trial and reception of evidence, the trial court resolved that the fire was not caused by an instrumentality within the exclusive control of the defendants-appellants. The decision stated that plaintiffs-appellants failed to establish that the fire was the result of respondents' or their workers' negligence. The Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court. The award of damages in favor of respondents including the award of attorney's fees are hereby DELETED and SET ASIDE. Issue: WON CA erred in misapplying facts of weight and substance affecting the case. - NO
Held: IN VIEW OF THE FOREGOING, the instant petition is DENIED and the challenged decision of respondent Court of Appeals in CA-G.R CV No. 36247 is AFFIRMED in toto. The trial court discussed the doctrine of res ipsa loquitor and its requisites as follows: It is a rule of evidence whereby negligence of the alleged wrongdoing may be inferred from the mere fact that the accident happened, provided that: (1) the occurrence is the kind of thing that does not ordinarily happen without negligence; (2) the occurrence must have been caused by an agency or instrumentality within the exclusive control of the defendant; (3) the occurrence was not due to contribution or voluntary action by the plaintiff (Gifis Law Dictionary); it is used to state the fact that the situation itself implies negligence or a duty to compensate whether negligence is in fact proved or not (Radins Law Dictionary); it is [a] rebuttable presumption that defendant was negligent, which arises upon proof that [the] instrumentality causinginjury was in defendants exclusive control, and that the accident was one which ordinarily does not happen in absence of negligence (Blacks Law Dictionary). ... (OR, 150-151).found on FOOTNOTE Under the first assigned error petitioners want us to give full credit to the testimony of Noel Villarin, their principal witness, who, they claimed, "maintained his straight-forward and undisguised manner of answering the questions" despite the "intense cross-examination." The trial court, however, refused to believe Villarin. The trial court explained why it had to accept the version of defendants' witnesses in this wise: The Court needs [sic] not suffer a paralysis of analysis as it compares the two conflicting claims. Plaintiffs have relied so much on their own assessment of the integrity and weight of Villarin's testimony. But the court has found the same to be, under close scrutiny, not only less weighty but also a piece of evidence that taxes belief. Villarin said he saw Paner pour the gasoline, this while he and three other fellow-workers were sitting on the second floor of the bunkhouse and eating their supper, and Villarin elaborated by adding that he saw Paner doing this through a hole on the wall. What wall? Paner said the hole on the wall was at least four (4) meters from the floor of the bunkhouse on which they were eating, and he could "peep" through that hole which was higher than by more than double his height! And he did not reveal all this to the firemen who investigated him. The credibility of the witness may be affected where he tends to exaggerate, or displays propensity for needlessly detailed observation (People v. Wong, 23 SCRA 146). 18
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TORTS
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One of the highly revered dicta in our jurisprudence is that this Court will not interfere with the judgment of the trial court in passing on the credibility of opposing witnesses unless there appears in the record some facts or circumstances of weight and influence which have been overlooked, which, if considered, could affect the result of the case. The reason therefor is founded on practical and empirical considerations. The trial judge is in a better position to decide the question of credibility since he personally heard the witnesses and observed their deportment and manner of testifying. 19Petitioners have offered no convincing arguments to accommodate their case within the exception; they did not even dare to refute the above observations and findings of the trial court. When Major Enriquez took the witness stand, testified for petitioners on his Report and made himself available for cross-examination by the adverse party, the Report, insofar as it proved that certain utterances were made (but not their truth), was effectively removed from the ambit of the aforementioned Section 44 of Rule 130. Properly understood, this section does away with the testimony in open court of the officer who made the official record, considers the matter as an exception to the hearsay rule and makes the entries in said official record admissible in evidence asprima facie evidence of the facts therein stated. The underlying reasons for this exceptionary rule are necessity and trustworthiness. It would have been an entirely different matter if Major Enriquez was not presented to testify on his report. In that case the applicability of Section 44 of Rule 130 would have been ripe for determination, and this Court would have agreed with the Court of Appeals that said report was inadmissible since the aforementioned third requisite was not satisfied. The statements given by the sources of information of Major Enriquez failed to qualify as "official information," there being no showing that, at the very least, they were under a duty to give the statements for record. What appears to us to be the underlying purpose of petitioners in soliciting affirmance of their thesis that the Report of Major Enriquez should be admitted as an exception to the hearsay rule, is to shift the burden of evidence to private respondents under the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur in negligence cases. They claim, as stated in their offer of Exhibits, that "the fire started at the generator. . . within the construction site." This quotation is based on the penultimate paragraph of page 4 of the Report of Major Enriquez and is obviously misleading as there is nothing in said paragraph that unequivocally asserts that the generator was located within the construction site. The paragraph reads: After analyzing the evidences [sic] and the circumstances underlying the situation, one can easily came [sic] to the conclusion that the fire started at the generator and extended to the bunkhouse and spread among the combustible stored materials within the construction site. Among the combustible materials were the plastic (PVC) pipes and plywoods [sic].
Clearly, the phrase within the construction site could only refer to the immediately preceding term "combustible stored materials." The trial court itself concluded that the fire could not have started at the generator and that the bunkhouse was not burned, thus: All the defendants's witness testified that the generator never caught fire, and no one at all had heard any explosion anywhere before the fire was discerned. Exhibit 1 (a photograph of the fire while it was raging reveals that the bunkhouse was intact. 30 (emphasis supplied) It then declared that "the fire was not caused by an instrumentality within the exclusive control of defendants," 31 which is one of the requisites for the application of the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur in the law of negligence. 32 It may further be emphasized that this doctrine is not intended to and does not dispense with the requirement of proof of culpable negligence on the party charged. It merely determines and regulates what shall be prima facie evidence thereof and facilitates the burden of plaintiff of proving a breach of the duty of due care. The doctrine can be invoked when and only when, under the circumstances involved, direct evidence is absent or not readily available. 33 More damaging to petitioners, which could have been enough reason for them to desist from insisting that the Report of Major Enriquez be admitted as an exception to the hearsay rule, are the officer's conclusion and recommendation in his report, viz.: V. CONCLUSION: From the foregoing facts and all other evidences [sic] on hand, the investigator discerned that the cause of the fire was ACCIDENTAL in nature. VI. RECOMMENDATION: It is hereby recommended that the investigation of the case shall be closed. Obviously then, the second and third assigned errors are likewise without merit.
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