Judicial Ethics Cases
Judicial Ethics Cases
Judicial Ethics Cases
MTJ-11-1778
June 5, 2013
(Formerly OCA IPI No. 08-1966-MTJ)
MARICOR L. GARADO, Complainant,
vs.
JUDGE LIZABETH GUTIERREZ-TORRES, Respondent.
RESOLUTION
VILLARAMA, JR., J.:
Before us is a Verified Complaint-Affidavit,1 filed by complainant Maricor L. Garado charging respondent
Judge Lizabeth Gutierrez-Torres, Presiding Judge, Metropolitan Trial Court, Branch 60, Mandaluyong City,
with violation of the Rule 3.05,2 Canon 3 of the Code of Judicial Conduct in connection with Civil Case No.
20129 entitled "Maricor Garado v. Rose Virgie Estor."
Complainant alleges that she is the plaintiff in the aforesaid civil case for sum of money and
damages. She complaints that the case is covered by the 1991 Revised Rule on Summary
Procedure and only involves a claim for the payment of a loan amounting to P50,000 plus
interest and a claim for damages amounting to P30,000, but the case has remained unresolved
for more than 20 months from the time it was filed.
Complainant narrates that her complaint against defendant Rose Virgie Estor was filed on August 22, 2005.
After respondent judge denied defendant Estors motion to dismiss on July 3, 2006, Estor thereafter filed an
Urgent Ex-parte Motion for Extension of Time (To File Responsive Pleading) followed by a second motion to
dismiss on November 16, 2006. Complainant, meanwhile, filed a motion to render judgment with an
opposition to the second motion to dismiss on November 27, 2006. The two motions were submitted for
resolution on November 27, 2006 and January 15, 2007, respectively, but both motions remained
unresolved as of the date of the filing of the complaint on May 9, 2007.
In a 1st Indorsement3 dated May 17, 2007, the Office of the Court Administrator (OCA) directed Judge
Torres to file her Comment on the complaint within ten days. Respondent judge received the 1st
Tracer4 against respondent judge on July 24, 2007 requiring her to file the May 25, 2007, but failed to
comply with the directive. Thus, the OCA issued required Comment within five days from notice.
Respondent judge also received the 1st Indorsement on Tracer on August 3, 2007, but still failed to comply.
On March 10, 2008, this Courts Third Division issued a Resolution 5 directing respondent judge
to: (1) show cause why she should not be administratively sanctioned in view of her refusal to
submit her Comment despite the two directives, and (2) file her Comment within five days
from receipt of notice, otherwise, an administrative case will be filed against her. Respondent
judge received a copy of the Resolution on April 16, 2008, but again ignored the same.
Consequently, the Court issued another Resolution6 on July 14, 2008 imposing upon Judge
Torres a fine ofP1,000, to be paid within ten days from receipt, or imprisonment of five days if
the fine is not paid within the period of ten days. The July 14, 2008 Resolution also directed
respondent judge to comply with the Courts Show Cause Resolution dated March 10, 2008.
Despite receipt of the Resolution, however, Judge Torres neither complied with the Resolution
nor paid the fine.
Thus, on April 21, 2010, the Court issued a Resolution 7 and resolved to await the payment of the fine by
respondent judge; to consider the filing of her Comment as waived; and to refer this administrative matter
to the OCA for final evaluation, report and recommendation.
On November 11, 2010, the OCA submitted its Memorandum 8 to the Court finding respondent judge
administratively liable and recommending that the Court:
1. RE-DOCKET the case as a regular administrative matter against respondent Judge Lizabeth G. Torres;
2. DISMISS respondent Judge Lizabeth G. Torres from the service and impose upon her all the attendant
penalties; and
3. IMPOSE upon respondent Judge Lizabeth G. Torres the penalty of FIVE (5) days imprisonment for her
failure to pay the FINE of P1,000.00 within the required period, pursuant to the Courts Resolution dated 14
July 2008.9
In recommending the penalty of dismissal, the OCA noted that in five previous administrative
cases,10 respondent was found liable for undue delay in rendering a decision, resolution or
order, and sternly warned that the commission of the same or similar offense will be dealt with
more severely. The OCA also noted eight other pending administrative cases 11 filed by different
litigants against respondent judge involving offenses of similar nature. As well, the OCA noted
the four instances under the present administrative case where respondent judge failed to
comply with directives/orders issued by this Court.
We agree with the OCA that respondent judge should be held administratively liable.
At the outset, the Court notes that respondent had been given ample opportunity to address the complaint
against her. The OCA sent and respondent judge received the 1st Indorsement dated May 17, 2007 and 1st
Tracer dated July 24, 2007, both of which explicitly required her to file her Comment on the complaint.
However, up until her dismissal from the service by the Court on November 23, 2010, 12 respondent had not
complied with the OCA directives. Moreover, respondent also failed to comply, despite due notice, with the
Resolutions dated March 10, 2008 and July 14, 2008 of the Court itself.
Respondents failure to submit her Comment and compliance as required by the OCA and this
Court is tantamount to insubordination, inefficiency, and neglect of duty.14 It was respondents
duty then not only to obey the lawful orders of her superiors, but also to defend herself against
complainants charges and prove her fitness to remain a member of the bench. By her failure to comply
with the OCA and this Courts directives, respondent judge has completely lost her chance to defend
herself.
As to the merits of the administrative complaint, the pleadings and evidence on record clearly establish
respondents liability for undue delay in resolving Civil Case No. 20129.
Section 15(1), Article VIII of the 1987 Constitution, mandates that cases or matters filed with the lower
courts must be decided or resolved within three months from the date they are submitted for decision or
resolution. With respect to cases falling under the 1991 Revised Rule on Summary Procedure, first level
courts are only allowed 30 days following the receipt of the last affidavit and position paper, or the
expiration of the period for filing the same, within which to render judgment. Section 6 of the said Rule also
requires first level courts to render judgment motu proprio or upon motion of the plaintiff if the defendant
fails to file an answer to the complaint within the allowable period.
Judges are oft-reminded of their duty to act promptly upon cases and matters pending before
their courts. Rule 3.05, Canon 3 of the Code of Judicial Conduct directs judges to "dispose of
the courts business promptly and decide cases within the required periods." Canons 6 and 7
of the Canons of Judicial Ethics further exhort judges to be prompt and punctual in the
disposition and resolution of cases and matters pending before their courts:
6. PROMPTNESS
He should be prompt in disposing of all matters submitted to him, remembering that justice
delayed is often justice denied.
7. PUNCTUALITY
He should be punctual in the performance of his judicial duties, recognizing that the time of
litigants, witnesses, and attorneys is of value and that if the judge is unpunctual in his habits,
he sets a bad example to the bar and tends to create dissatisfaction with the administration of
justice.1wphi1
Administrative Circular No. 1 dated January 28, 1988 likewise reminds all judges to observe scrupulously
the periods prescribed in Section 15, Article VIII of the 1987 Constitution and to act promptly on all motions
and interlocutory matters pending before their courts.
Prompt disposition of cases is attained basically through the efficiency and dedication to duty of judges. If
judges do not possess those traits, delay in the disposition of cases is inevitable to the prejudice of
litigants. Accordingly, judges should be imbued with a high sense of duty and
responsibility in the discharge of their obligation to administer justice promptly. 15 In this case,
respondent judge failed to live up to the exacting standards of duty and responsibility that her
position required. Upon the failure of the defendant Estor to file her Answer in Civil Case No.
20129, respondent was then required under Section 6 of the 1991 Revised Rule on Summary
Procedure to render judgment in Civil Case No. 20129 within 30 days. She failed to do so
contrary to the rationale behind the said Rule, which was precisely adopted to promote a more
expeditious and inexpensive determination of cases, and to enforce the constitutional rights of
litigants to the speedy disposition of cases.16
Section 9, Rule 140 of the Rules of Court, as amended, classifies undue delay in rendering a decision and
violation of Supreme Court directives as less serious charges which are punishable with the penalty of
suspension from office without salary and other benefits for one month to three months, or a fine
of P10,000 to P20,000. Given that respondent had been previously dismissed from the service in Lugares v.
Gutierrez-Torres,17 however, the penalty of suspension is already inapplicable. Thus, the Court imposes
upon respondent for her undue delay in resolving Civil Case No. 20129 a fine in the maximum amount
of P20,000, and another fine of P10,000 for her repeated failure to obey this Courts directives, both
amounts to be deducted from her accrued leave credits.
WHEREFORE, respondent Lizabeth Gutierrez-Torres is found LIABLE of the less serious charges of undue
delay in resolving Civil Case No. No. 20129 and violation or Supreme Court directives. She is FINED the
amount or P20,000 for the first offense and another P10,000 for the second offense, both amounts to be
deducted from her accrued leave credits. To effect the penalties imposed, the Employee's Leave Division,
Office of Administrative Services-OCA, is DIRECTED to ascertain respondent Lizabeth Gutierrez-Torres's
total earned leave credits. Thereafter, the Finance Division, Fiscal Management Office-OCA, is DIRECTED to
compute the monetary value or respondent Lizabeth Gutierrez-Torres's total accrued leave credits and
deduct therefrom the amount of the fines imposed, without prejudice to whatever penalty the Court may
impose on other remaining and/or pending administrative cases against her, if any.
SO ORDERED.
April 8, 2013
Atty. Zamora : Your Honor, Your Honor, we all do not know each other, and with due respect to the judge,
there is also a hearing officer here Your Honor, and I think Your Honor the Hearing Officer here deserves
due respect. I mean, the word "So what?!", I dont think that would be proper Your Honor in this Court.
Judge Malanyaon : I am sorry your Honor, because the is out of turn, out of turn.
Atty. Nieves : This is not necessary, actually, this is not necessary. So we might as well proceed with our
hearing today. Ive already made a ruling regarding the, the query regarding PTR. Okay, at this stage it is
not proper considering that Atty. Loria only entered his appearance during the start of the hearing. Okay.
So, we have to proceed now.
Atty. Zamora : I am accepting Your Honor the delegation again of Atty. Loria. I am entering my appearance
as the lead counsel for this case, Your Honor, as counsel for the complainant.
Atty. Nieves : Okay.
Atty. Zamora : And may I be clear that the judge will be the collaborating counsel for the respondent or the
counsel of record of the respondent?
Atty. Nieves : of the judge is Im sorry?
Atty. Zamora : He manifested Your Honor that he is the counsel of the respondent.
Atty. Malanyaon : No, the counsel of the counsel of the respondent.
Atty. Nieves : He has not, he has not entered his appearance in this case.
Atty. Zamora : Would that be proper for him Your Honor, considering that he is a judge Your Honor? Would
that, ah, there will be undue influence, or whatever, Your Honor? We are just trying to avoid any bias or
undue influence in this court, Your Honor.
Atty. Nieves : Okay, it will not, considering the fact that he has not entered his appearance for the
respondent.
Judge Malanyaon : If Your Honor, please, the respondent is my wife. Counsel for the respondent is my
daughter. She just passed the bar! Im assisting her. Is it not my right, my duty to assist my daughter? And
to assist my wife defend herself? I am only sitting with my daughter! Im not acting for the respondent!
Atty. Zamora : I dont think Your Honor under the rule, the counsel needs a counsel. Only the one charged
or the one being charged needs a counsel.
Atty. Nieves : Okay, lets settle this now. Judge Malanyaon has not entered his appearance. It will not in any
way
xxxx
The complainants averred that the actuations of Judge Malanyaon during the hearing of his wifes
administrative case in the Civil Service Commission constituted violations of the New Code of Judicial
Conduct for the Philippines Judiciary.
On June 21, 2007, then Court Administrator Christopher O. Lock required Judge Malanyaon to comment on
the complaint.3
On July 15, 2007, Judge Malanyaon filed his comment, refuting the allegations of the complaint thusly:
1. Complainants are the sister and nephew of my wife, Amelita C. Malanyaon, there is bad blood between
them arising from divergent political loyalties and family differences;
2. There is no reason for complainants to take offense at my sitting beside my daughter Ma. Kristina, when
she appeared for my wife in the first hearing of the administrative case Rey C. Decena filed against my
wife; the hearing officer himself could cite no rule disallowing me from sitting beside my daughter, in the
counsels table, and he did not ask me to vacate where I sat beside my daughter; the transcript does not
support complainants claim;
3. It is true I snapped at Atty. Zamora, when she asked about my personality but she was speaking out of
turn as all I was doing was sitting beside my daughter when she came as the transcript will show, I
apologized to the hearing officer, who graciously let the matter pass;
4. My daughter is a new practitioner; her law partner and lead counsel could not make it on time, and as
her consultant, I did not speak, nor enter my appearance for my wife to lend a helping hand to a
neophyte lawyer, defending her mother in an administrative case, is not unethical, nor does it constitute
the proscribed practice of law;
5. It is petty for my sister-in-law and for my nephew to complain of my presence during the hearing; it is
my filial duty to lend my wife and daughter, moral and legal support in their time of need; indeed, it is
strange for complainants to take offense at my presence and accuse me of practicing law during my stint
as a judge when before the bad blood between my wife and her sibling and nephew erupted, I helped them
out with their legal problems gratis et amore and they did not complain of my practicing law on their
behalf, indeed, one of the crosses a judge must carry is the cross of base ingratitude. 4
On March 27, 2008, then Court Administrator Zenaida N. Elepao recommended to the Court that: (a) the
complaint be re-docketed as a regular administrative matter; (b) Judge Malanyaon be found guilty of gross
misconduct; and (c) Judge Malanyaon be fined P50,000.00.5
On September 16, 2009, the Court required the parties to manifest within 10 days from notice if they were
willing to submit the case for resolution on the basis of the records or pleadings filed. 6
The complainants complied on November 13, 2009, stating their willingness to submit the case for
resolution after a formal investigation or hearing was conducted, and after they were given time to file
their respective position papers or memoranda.7
On January 11, 2010, the Court resolved: (a) to re-docket the administrative case as a regular
administrative matter; (b) to await Judge Malanyaons compliance with the September 16, 2009 resolution;
and (c) to refer the administrative matter to the OCA for evaluation, report and recommendation. 8
After Judge Malanyaon did not submit any compliance with the September 16, 2009 resolution, the Court
ordered him on February 10, 2010 to show cause why he should not be disciplinarily dealt with or held in
contempt for such failure, and further directed him to still comply with the resolution. 9
On February 15, 2010, Judge Malanyaons counsel informed the Court that Judge Malanyaon
had meanwhile suffered a massive stroke on September 2, 2009 that had affected his mental
faculties and made him unfit to defend himself here; and prayed for the suspension of the
proceedings until Judge Malanyaon would have been found competent to comprehend and
stand the rigors of the investigation. 10
On April 12, 2010, the Court deferred action on the case, and required Judge Malanyaon to submit a
medical certificate.11
Judge Malanyaon submitted a medical certificate dated May 27, 2010, issued by the Philippine General
Hospital, certifying that he had been confined thereaft from September 2, 2009 to October 19, 2009 for the
following reason, to wit:
Cerebro Vascular disease, Hypertension Intra Cerebral Hematoma Left Thalamus with obstructive
Hydrocephalus; DM type II, Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary disease; Pneumonia; lleus (resolved);
Neurogenic bladder, Benign Prostatic Hypertrophy; Graves disease; Arthritis.
OPERATION PERFORMED:
Bilateral tube ventriculostomy12
Judge Malanyaon submitted two more medical certificates, the first dated October 5, 2010, 13 certifying
that, among others, he was undergoing regular check-up, and the other, dated January 24,
2011,14 certifying that his functional and mental status had been assessed as follows:
The severity and location of the hemorrage in the brain resulted in residual epoliptogenic focus (Post-gliotic
seizures) and significant impairment of cognition, memory judgment behavior (Vascular Dementia). He has
problems with memory recall, analysis of information, events and situations which may make defending
In her manifestation with urgent motion to dismiss, 23 Dr. Amelita stressed that proceeding against Judge
Malanyaon despite his present medical state would violate his right to due process. She stated:
3. As a consequence, my husband has permanently lost the capacity to understand the nature and object
of the administrative proceedings against him. He cannot intelligently appoint his counsel or communicate
coherently with him. He cannot testify in his own behalf, and confront and cross-examine opposing
witnesses. Indeed, he cannot properly avail himself of his rights in an adversarial administrative
investigation.24
Opposing, the complainants argued that Dr. Amelitas concern was unfounded considering that Judge
Malanyaon had not only been given the opportunity to be heard, but had been actually heard on their
complaint.
The complainants argument is well taken.
On August 3, 2007, or prior to his suffering the massive stroke that impaired his mental faculty, Judge
Malanyaon already submitted his comment containing his explanations and refutations of the charge
against him. His comment asserted that during the hearing of the administrative case of his wife in the
Regional Office of the Civil Service Commission, the hearing officer did not even cite any rule that
prohibited him from sitting beside his daughter who was then acting as the counsel of Dr. Amelita therein,
or that inhibited him from assisting his daughter in the defense of his wife. He pointed out that although he
had then lost his temper after the opposing counsel had inquired about his personality in that hearing, he
had ultimately apologized to the hearing officer, who had in turn graciously let the matter pass.
Under the circumstances, Judge Malanyaon was accorded due process. In administrative cases, the
requirement of due process is satisfied whenever the parties are afforded the fair and reasonable
opportunity to explain their side of the controversy,25 either through oral arguments or through
pleadings.26 That is what happened herein. Accordingly, Dr. Amelitas motion was bereft of basis, and
should be denied.
2.
Actuations of Judge Malanyaon
rendered him guilty of
conduct unbecoming of a judge
The following actuations of Judge Malanyaon constituted conduct unbecoming of a judge.
First was Judge Malanyaons occupying a seat beside his daughter that was reserved for the
lawyers during the hearing. Such act displayed his presumptuousness, and probably even his clear
intention to thereby exert his influence as a judge of the Regional Trial Court on the hearing officer in order
for the latter to favor his wifes cause. That impression was definitely adverse against the Judiciary, whose
every judicial officer was presumed to be a subject of strict scrutiny by the public. Being an incumbent RTC
Judge, he always represented the Judiciary, and should have acted with greater circumspection and selfrestraint, simply because the administrative hearing was unavoidably one in which he could not but be
partisan. Simple prudence should have counselled him to avoid any form of suspicion of his motives, or to
suppress any impression of impropriety on his part as an RTC judge by not going to the hearing himself.
Second was Judge Malanyaons admission that his presence in that hearing was to advise his
daughter on what to do and say during the hearing, to the point of coaching his daughter. In
the process, he unabashedly introduced himself as the "counsel of the respondents counsel" upon his
presence being challenged by the adverse counsel, stating that his daughter was still inexperienced for
having just passed her Bar Examinations. Such excuse, seemingly grounded on a "filial" duty towards his
wife and his daughter, did not furnish enough reason for him to forsake the ethical conduct expected of
him as a sitting judge. He ought to have restrained himself from sitting at that hearing, being all too aware
that his sitting would have him cross the line beyond which was the private practice of law.
Section 3527 of Rule 138 of the Rules of Court expressly prohibits sitting judges like Judge
Malanyaon from engaging in the private practice of law or giving professional advice to
clients. Section 11,28 Canon 4 (Propriety),29of the New Code of Judicial Conduct and Rule
5.0730 of the Code of Judicial Conduct reiterate the prohibition from engaging in the private
practice of law or giving professional advice to clients. The prohibition is based on sound
reasons of public policy, considering that the rights, duties, privileges and functions of the
office of an attorney are inherently incompatible with the high official functions, duties,
powers, discretion and privileges of a sitting judge. It also aims to ensure that judges give their full
time and attention to their judicial duties, prevent them from extending favors to their own private
interests, and assure the public of their impartiality in the performance of their functions. These objectives
are dictated by a sense of moral decency and desire to promote the public interest. 31
Thus, an attorney who accepts an appointment to the Bench must accept that his right to
practice law as a member of the Philippine Bar is thereby suspended, and it shall continue to
be so suspended for the entire period of his incumbency as a judge. The term practice of law is
not limited to the conduct of cases in court or to participation in court proceedings, but
extends to the preparation of pleadings or papers in anticipation of a litigation, the giving of
legal advice to clients or persons needing the same, the preparation of legal instruments and
contracts by which legal rights are secured, and the preparation of papers incident to actions
and special proceedings.32
To the Court, then, Judge Malanyaon engaged in the private practice of law by assisting his daughter at his
wifes administrative case, coaching his daughter in making manifestations or posing motions to the
hearing officer, and preparing the questions that he prompted to his daughter in order to demand that
Atty. Eduardo Loria, collaborating counsel of the complainants principal counsel, should produce his
privilege tax receipt. Judge Malanyaon did so voluntarily and knowingly, in light of his unhesitating
announcement during the hearing that he was the counsel for Atty. Katrina Malanyaon, the counsel of the
respondent, as his response to the query by the opposing counsel why he was seated next to Atty.
Malanyaon thereat.
Third was Judge Malanyaons admission that he had already engaged in the private practice of law even
before the incident now the subject of this case by his statement in his comment that "it is strange for
complainants to take offense at my presence and accuse me of practicing law during my stint as a judge
when before the bad blood between my wife and her sibling and nephew erupted, I helped them out with
their legal problems gratis et amore and they did not complain of my practicing law on their behalf." 33 He
thereby manifested his tendencies to disregard the prohibition against the private practice of law during
his incumbency on the Bench.
Any propensity on the part of a magistrate to ignore the ethical injunction to conduct himself in a manner
that would give no ground for reproach is always worthy of condemnation. 34 We should abhor any
impropriety on the part of judges, whether committed in or out of their courthouses, for they are not
judges only occasionally. The Court has fittingly emphasized in Castillo v. Calanog, Jr.: 35
The Code of Judicial Ethics mandates that the conduct of a judge must be free of a whiff of impropriety not
only with respect to his performance of his judicial duties, but also to his behavior outside his sala and as a
private individual. There is no dichotomy of morality; a public official is also judged by his private morals.
The Code dictates that a judge, in order to promote public confidence in the integrity and impartiality of
the judiciary, must behave with propriety at all times. As we have very recently explained, a judges official
life cannot simply be detached or separated from his personal existence. Thus:
Being a subject of constant public scrutiny, a judge should freely and willingly accept restrictions on
conduct that might be viewed as burdensome by the ordinary citizen.
A judge should personify judicial integrity and exemplify honest public service. The personal behavior of a
judge, both in the performance of official duties and in private life should be above suspicion.
Fourth was Judge Malanyaons display of arrogance during the hearing, as reflected by his reaction to the
opposing counsels query on his personality to sit at the counsel table at the hearing, to wit:
I am the counsel of the complainant, ah, of the respondents counsel, I am Judge Malanyaon. I am assisting
her. And so what?!!
Judge Malanyaons uttering "And so what?" towards the opposing counsel evinced his instant resentment
towards the adverse parties counsel for rightly challenging his right to be sitting on a place reserved for
counsel of the parties. The utterance, for being made in an arrogant tone just after he had introduced
himself as a judge, was unbecoming of the judge that he was, and tainted the good image of the Judiciary
that he should uphold at all times.36 It is true that the challenge of the opposing counsel might have
slighted him, but that was not enough to cause him to forget that he was still a judge expected to act with
utmost sobriety and to speak with self-restraint. He thereby ignored the presence of the hearing officer,
appearing to project that he could forsake the decorum that the time and the occasion rightly called for
from him and the others just because he was a judge and the other side was not. He should not forget that
a judge like himself should be the last person to be perceived by others as a petty and sharp-tongued
tyrant.
Judge Malanyaon has insisted that his actuations were excused by his filial obligation to assist his
daughter, then only a neophyte in the Legal Profession. We would easily understand his insistence in the
light of our culture to be always solicitous of the wellbeing of our family members and other close kin, even
risking our own safety and lives in their defense. But the situation of Judge Malanyaon was different, for he
was a judicial officer who came under the stricture that uniformly applied to all judges of all levels of the
judicial hierarchy, forbidding him from engaging in the private practice of law during his incumbency,
regardless of whether the beneficiary was his wife or daughter or other members of his own family.
3.
What is the proper penalty?
Judge Malanyaon had been previously sanctioned by the Court on the following three occasions, namely:
(a) A.M. No. RTJ-93-1090, with admonition for gross ignorance of the law and unreasonable delay in
resolving motions;37 (b) A.M. No. RTJ-99-1444, with reprimand for failure to resolve motions; 38 and (c) A.M.
No. RTJ-02-1669, with a fine ofP20,000.00 (coupled with a stern warning that a repetition of the same or
similar act would be dealt with more severely) for conduct unbecoming of a judge. 39 He had other
administrative cases that were dismissed.40 Of the three administrative cases that merited sanctions,
however, only the third should be considered as aggravating herein because it involved the similar offense
of conduct unbecoming of a judge for which he had been given the stern warning of a more severe penalty
upon a repetition.
However, our uniform treatment of administrative sanctions as having the nature of liabilities akin to those
in criminal cases now brings us to offset such aggravating circumstance with the apparent fact that the
actuations of Judge Malanyaon complained of had not been motivated by bad faith, or by any malice
towards another. Indeed, he did not intend to thereby cause any prejudice to another, having so acted
from a sincere, albeit misplaced, desire to go to the help of his wife and daughter.
Accordingly, the Court deems it condign and proper to mitigate the fine of P50,000.00 recommended by
the Court Administrator by imposing on Judge Malanyaon a fine of P40,000.00. With his disability
retirement from the Judiciary having been earlier granted by the Court, the fine shall be deducted from his
remaining retirement benefits.
WHEREFORE, the Court finds and pronounces JUDGE NILO A. MALANYAON, Presiding Judge of Branch 32 of
the Regional Trial Court in Pili, Camarines Sur, administratively liable for conduct unbecoming of a Judge,
and penalizes him with a fine of P40,000.00.
SO ORDERED.
2) Corazon P. Retuya referred couples who wanted to get married to Judge Necessario. There were also
"assistants" who would go over the couples documents before these couples would be referred to Judge
Necessario. Retuya also narrated several anomalies involving foreign nationals and their acquisition of
marriage licenses from the local civil registrar of Barili, Cebu despite the fact that parties were not
residents of Barili. Those anomalous marriages were solemnized by Judge Tormis; 20
3) Rhona F. Rodriguez assisted couples and referred them to any of the available judges. She admitted that
after the payment of the solemnization fee of three hundred pesos (P300), a different amount, as agreed
upon by the parties and the judge, was paid to the latter.21 She admitted that she accepted four thousand
pesos (P4,000) for facilitating the irregular marriage of Moreil Baranggan Sebial and Maricel Albater
although she gave the payment to a certain "Mang Boy";22
4) Emma D. Valencia admitted that she assisted couples seeking to get married and that most of the
marriage licenses were obtained from the local civil registrar of Barili and Liloan, Cebu because the
registrars in those towns were not strict about couples attendance in the family planning seminar. She
also admitted that couples gave her food while the judge received five hundred pesos (P500) if the
marriage was solemnized inside the chambers. Foreigners were said to have given twice the said amount.
The judge accepted one thousand five hundred pesos (P1,500) for gasoline expenses if the marriage was
celebrated outside the chambers;23
5) Marilou Cabaez admitted that she assisted couples and referred them to Judges Tormis, Necessario, or
Rosales. However, she denied receiving any amount from these couples. She told the audit team that
during the 8th, 18th, and 28th of the month, seven (7) to eight (8) couples would go directly to Judge
Rosabella M. Tormis for a fifteen-minute marriage solemnization; 24
6) Desiderio S. Aranas admitted that he started assisting couples in 2003. He told the investigating team
that Judge Gil Acosta would talk to couples wishing to get married without a license. He would produce a
joint affidavit of cohabitation form on which he or the clerk of court would type the entries. The judge
would then receive an envelope containing money from the couple. Aranas also confirmed the existence of
"open-dated" marriage certificates;25
7) Antonio Flores, Branch 9 Process Server of RTC Cebu City, told the investigating team that couples
looked for Judge Geraldine Faith A. Econg, Presiding Judge, Regional Trial Court, Branch 9, Cebu City, "para
menos ang bayad."26 The excess of three hundred pesos (P300) that couples paid to Judge Econg as
solemnization fee went to a certain "sinking fund" of Branch 9; 27
8) Rebecca L. Alesna admitted that she usually referred couples to Judges Necessario or Tormis. Couples
who wanted to get married under Article 34 of the Family Code were advised to buy a pro-forma affidavit of
joint cohabitation for ten pesos (P10);28
9) Arvin Oca, Branch 1 Process Server of the MTCC of Cebu City, admitted that he referred couples to
Branch 2, Clerk of Court, Harrish Co. Oca declared that on 28 June 2007, he accompanied a couple to the
chambers of Judge Necessario.29 He informed the judge that the couple only had birth certificates. 30 The
respondent judge then inquired about their ages and asked them if they had been previously married then
proceeded to solemnize the marriage;31 and
10) Filomena C. Lopez, local civil registrar of Barili, Cebu, declared that she does not scrutinize marriage
applications.32 Couples who are non-Barili residents are able to obtain marriage licenses from her Barili
office because these couples have relatives residing in Barili, Cebu. 33 She also added that while couples
still need to submit a certificate of attendance in the family planning seminar, they may attend it before or
after the filing of the application for marriage license.34
Affidavits of private persons were also attached to the records. Jacqui Lou Baguio-Manera was a resident of
Panagdait, Mabolo, Cebu and on 21 May 2007, she and her then fianc wanted to set a marriage
date.35 Her younger sister who was married in a civil wedding last year gave her the number of a certain
"Meloy". After talking to Meloy on the phone, the wedding was scheduled at 2 p.m. on 23 May 2007 and
the couple were asked to bring their birth certificates. No marriage license was required from them. Meloy
asked for a fee of one thousand five hundred pesos (P1,500). According to Baguio-Manera, their marriage
certificate was marked as "No marriage license was necessary, the marriage being solemnized under Art.
34 of Executive Order No. 209". Their marriage was solemnized that day by Judge Rosabella M. Tormis.
Baguio-Manera claimed that they did not understand what that statement meant at that time. However, in
her affidavit, she declared that the situation premised under Article 34 did not apply to her and her fianc.
Mary Anne Flores-Patoc was a resident of Barrio Luz, Cebu City. In her 5 July 2007 affidavit, she recounted
how she and her boyfriend went to the Provincial Capitol to get married in February 2006. While logging in
at the entrance, they were offered assistance by the guards for a fee of one thousand five hundred pesos
(P1,500). The guard also offered to become "Ninong" or a witness to the wedding. The couple became
suspicious and did not push through with the civil wedding at that time.
On 27 November 2007, the Court En Banc issued a resolution: a) requiring Judges Anatalio S. Necessario,
Gil R. Acosta, Rosabella M. Tormis, and Edgemelo C. Rosales of the MTCC, Branches 2, 3, 4, and 8,
respectively, of Cebu City, to comment on the findings of the 14 August 2007 Supplemental Report of the
OCA, within fifteen (15) days from notice; b) directing the Process Servicing Unit to furnish the judges with
a copy of the Supplemental Report; c) requiring the court personnel listed below to show cause within
fifteen (15) days from notice why no disciplinary action should be taken against them for their alleged
grave misconduct and dishonesty and impleading them in this administrative matter:
1) Celeste P. Retuya, Clerk III, MTCC, Branch 6, Cebu City;
2) Corazon P. Retuya, Court Stenographer, MTCC, Branch 6, Cebu City;
3) Rhona F. Rodriguez, Administrative Officer I, Office of the Clerk of Court, RTC, Cebu City;
4) Emma D. Valencia, Court Stenographer III, RTC, Branch 18, Cebu City;
5) Marilou Cabaez, Court Stenographer, MTCC, Branch 4, Cebu City;
6) Desiderio S. Aranas, Process Server, MTCC, Branch 3, Cebu City;
7) Rebecca Alesna, Court Interpreter, MTCC, Branch 1, Cebu City;
8) Helen Mongaya,Court Stenographer, MTCC, Branch 4, Cebu City.
The Court in the same resolution also: a) ordered the referral to the Office of the Deputy Ombudsman for
the Visayas for appropriate action on the administrative matter involving the violation of the law on
marriage by Ms. Filomena C. Lopez, Local Civil Registrar of Barili, Cebu, and one Ms. Veronica S. Longakit,
former Local Civil Registrar of Liloan, Cebu; b) directed the Process Serving Unit to furnish the Office of the
Deputy Ombudsman for the Visayas with a copy of the Supplemental Report of the OCA; and c) required
Judge Geraldine Faith A. Econg, RTC, Branch 9, Cebu City, to comment within fifteen (15) days from notice
on the statement of staff member Antonio Flores saying that Branch 9s court personnel received an
amount in excess of the P300 solemnization fee paid by couples whose marriages were solemnized by her.
This amount goes to the courts "sinking fund".36
In their Comments and/or Answers to the Memorandum dated 5 July 2007 of the OCA and its Supplemental
Report,37 the respondent judges argued the following:
Judge Anatalio S. Necessario relies on the presumption of regularity regarding the documents presented to
him by contracting parties.38 He claims that marriages he solemnized under Article 34 of the Family Code
had the required affidavit of cohabitation. He claims that pro forma affidavits of cohabitation have been
used by other judges even before he became a judge.39 He avers that he ascertains the ages of the parties,
their relationship, and the existence of an impediment to marry. 40 He also asks the parties searching
questions and clarifies whether they understood the contents of the affidavit and the legal consequences
of its execution.41 The judge also denies knowledge of the payment of solemnization fees in batches. 42 In
addition, he argues that it was a process server who was in-charge of recording marriages on the logbook,
keeping the marriage certificates, and reporting the total number of marriages monthly. 43
Judge Gil R. Acosta argues that the law only requires a marriage license and that he is not required to
inquire whether the license was obtained from a location where one of the parties is an actual
resident.44 The judge believes that it is not his duty to verify the signature on the marriage license to
determine its authenticity because he relies on the presumption of regularity of public documents. 45 The
judge also outlines his own procedure in solemnizing marriages which involves: first, the determination
whether the solemnization fee was paid; second, the presentation of the affidavit of cohabitation and birth
certificates to ascertain identity and age of the parties; third, if one of the parties is a foreigner, the judge
asks for a certificate of legal capacity to marry, passport picture, date of arrival, and divorce papers when
the party is divorced; fourth, he then asks the parties and their witnesses questions regarding cohabitation
and interviews the children of the parties, if any. 46
Judge Rosabella M. Tormis denies the charges brought by the OCA. She calls the actions of the judicial audit
team during the investigation an "entrapment". 47 She also claims that there is nothing wrong with
solemnizing marriages on the date of the issuance of the marriage license and with the fact that the issued
marriage license was obtained from a place where neither of the parties resided. 48 As to the pro forma
affidavits of cohabitation, she argues that she cannot be faulted for accepting it as genuine as she and the
other judges are not handwriting experts.49 The affidavits also enjoy the presumption of regularity.50 Judge
Tormis also discredits the affidavit of Baguio-Manera as hearsay. 51 The respondent said that when BaguioManera and her husband were confronted with the affidavit they executed, they affirmed the veracity of
the statements, particularly the fact that they have been living together for five years. 52 The judge also
attributes the irregularity in the number of marriages solemnized in her sala to the filing clerks. 53
Judge Edgemelo C. Rosales denies violating the law on marriage. 54 He maintains that it is the local civil
registrar who evaluates the documents submitted by the parties, and he presumes the regularity of the
license issued.55 It is only when there is no marriage license given that he ascertains the qualifications of
the parties and the lack of legal impediment to marry. 56 As to the affidavits of cohabitation, the judge
believes there is nothing wrong with the fact that these are pro forma. He states that marriage certificates
are required with the marriage license attached or the affidavit of cohabitation only and the other
documents fall under the responsibility of the local civil registrar. He surmises that if the marriage
certificate did not come with the marriage license or affidavit of cohabitation, the missing document might
have been inadvertently detached, and it can be checked with the proper local civil registrar. As to the
payment of the docket fee, he contends that it should be paid after the solemnization of the marriage and
not before because judges will be pre-empted from ascertaining the qualifications of the couple. Besides,
the task of collecting the fee belongs to the Clerk of Court. 57 The judge also argues that solemnization of
marriage is not a judicial duty.58
On 12 November 2007, Judges Tormis and Rosales filed a Memorandum of Law with Plea for Early
Resolution, Lifting of Suspension and Dismissal of Case.59 This Court in a Resolution dated 11 December
2007 lifted the suspension of the respondent judges but prohibited them from solemnizing marriages until
further ordered.60
On 7 December 2007, Judges Tormis and Rosales filed a Motion for Early Resolution with Waiver of Formal
and/or Further Investigation and Motion to Dismiss.61 In a Resolution dated 15 January 2008, the Court
noted the motion and granted the prayer of Judges Tormis and Rosales for the payment of their unpaid
salaries, allowances and all other economic benefits from 9 July 2007. 62
THE REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION OF THE OCA
In its Memorandum dated 15 June 2010,63 the OCA recommended the dismissal of the respondent judges
and some court employees, and the suspension or admonition of others. The OCA summarized the
liabilities of the respondents, to wit:
JUDGE ANATALIO S. NECESSARIO is guilty of gross inefficiency or neglect of duty for solemnizing marriages
with questionable documents and wherein one of the contracting parties is a foreigner who submitted a
mere affidavit of his capacity to marry in lieu of the required certificate from his embassy. He is also guilty
of gross ignorance of the law for solemnizing marriages under Article 34 of the Family Code wherein one or
both of the contracting parties were minors during the cohabitation.
xxx
JUDGE GIL R. ACOSTA is guilty of gross inefficiency or neglect of duty for failure to make sure that the
solemnization fee has been paid. He is also guilty of gross ignorance of the law for solemnizing marriages
under Article 34 of the Family Code wherein one or both of the contracting parties were minors during the
cohabitation.
JUDGE EDGEMELO C. ROSALES is guilty of gross inefficiency or neglect of duty for solemnizing marriages
with questionable documents, for failure to make sure that the solemnization fee has been paid and for
solemnizing marriages wherein one of the contracting parties is a foreigner who submitted a mere affidavit
of his capacity to marry in lieu of the required certificate from his embassy. He is also guilty of gross
ignorance of the law for solemnizing a marriage without the requisite marriage license.
JUDGE ROSEBELLA M. TORMIS is guilty of gross inefficiency or neglect of duty for solemnizing marriages
with questionable documents, for failure to make sure that the solemnization fee has been paid, for
solemnizing marriages wherein one of the contracting parties is a foreigner who submitted a mere affidavit
of his capacity to marry in lieu of the required certificate from the embassy and for solemnizing a marriage
with an expired license.
xxx
HELEN MONGGAYA is guilty of grave misconduct for violating Section 2, Canon I of the Code of Conduct for
Court Personnel that prohibits court personnel from soliciting or accepting any gift, favor or benefit based
on any or explicit or implicit understanding that such gift, favor or benefit shall influence their official
actions and for giving false information for the purpose of perpetrating an irregular marriage.
RHONA RODRIGUEZ is guilty of gross misconduct for violating Section 2, Canon I of the Code of Conduct for
Court Personnel and for inducing Maricel Albater to falsify the application for marriage license by
instructing her to indicate her residence as Barili, Cebu.
DESIDERIO ARANAS and REBECCA ALESNA are guilty of conduct prejudicial to the best interest of the
service for providing couples who are to be married under Article 34 of the Family Code with the required
affidavit of cohabitation.
CELESTE RETUYA, EMMA VALENCIA and REBECCA ALESNA are guilty of violating Section 2(b), Canon III of
the Code of Conduct for Court Personnel which prohibits court personnel from receiving tips or other
remuneration for assisting or attending to parties engaged in transactions or involved in actions or
proceedings with the Judiciary.64
The OCA, however, recommended the DISMISSAL of the complaints against Judge Geraldine Faith A. Econg,
Corazon P. Retuya, and Marilou Cabaez, for lack of merit.
THE ISSUE
The issue now before this Court is whether the judges and personnel of the MTCC and RTC in Cebu City are
guilty of gross ignorance of the law, gross neglect of duty or gross inefficiency and gross misconduct, and
in turn, warrant the most severe penalty of dismissal from service.
THE COURTS RULING
The findings in the 2010 Memorandum of the Office of the Court Administrator are supported by the
evidence on record and applicable law and jurisprudence.
This Court has long held that court officials and employees are placed with a heavy burden and
responsibility of keeping the faith of the public.65 In Obaana, Jr. v. Ricafort, we said that:
Any impression of impropriety, misdeed or negligence in the performance of official functions must be
avoided. This Court shall not countenance any conduct, act or omission on the part of all those involved in
the administration of justice which would violate the norm of public accountability and diminish the faith of
the people in the Judiciary.66
The OCA described accurately the Palace of Justice in Cebu City as a hub of swift marriages. The
respondent judges and court personnel disregarded laws and procedure to the prejudice of the parties and
the proper administration of justice.
The OCA found that Judges Anatalio S. Necessario, Gil R. Acosta, Rosabella M. Tormis, and Edgemelo C.
Rosales are all guilty of gross inefficiency or neglect of duty when they solemnized marriages without
following the proper procedure laid down by law, particularly the Family Code of the Philippines and
existing jurisprudence. The OCA listed down aspects of the solemnization process which were disregarded
by the judges. The Court will now discuss the individual liabilities of the respondent judges and court
personnel vis--vis the evidence presented by the OCA against them.
Liability of Judge Anatalio S. Necessario
The OCA reported that Judge Necessario solemnized a total of one thousand one hundred twenty-three
(1,123) marriages from 2005 to 2007.67 However, only one hundred eighty-four (184) marriage certificates
were actually examined by the judicial audit team.68 Out of the 184 marriages, only seventy-nine (79) were
solemnized with a marriage license while one hundred five (105) were solemnized under Article 34 of the
Family Code. Out of the 79 marriages with license, forty-seven (47) of these licenses were issued by the
Local Civil Registrar of Liloan, Cebu. This translates to 42.93% of the marriages he solemnized with
marriage license coming from Liloan for over a period of years. 69 There were also twenty-two (22)
marriages solemnized by the judge with incomplete documents such missing as marriage license,
certificate of legal capacity to marry, and the joint affidavit of cohabitation. 70
Judge Necessario solemnized nine (9) marriages that had questionable supporting documents such as
marriage licenses.71 The OCA found that the place of residence of the contracting parties appearing in the
supporting documents differ from the place where they obtained their marriage license. 72 The documents
invited suspicion because of erasures and superimpositions in the entries of residence. 73 Likewise, in lieu of
the required certificate of legal capacity to marry, a mere affidavit was submitted by the
parties.74 Variations in the signatures of the contracting parties were also apparent in the documents. 75
The respondent judge solemnized forty-three (43) marriages under Article 34 of the Family Code. These
marriages appeared dubious since the joint affidavit of cohabitation of the parties show minority of one or
both of them during cohabitation.76 For example, he solemnized on 14 May 2004 the marriage of 22-yearold Harol D. Amorin and 19-year-old Dinalyn S. Paraiso who are residents of Lapu-Lapu City. 77
There are also sixteen (16) marriage licenses with attached official receipts of the solemnization fee but
the corresponding marriage certificates cannot be found. 78 The presence of the receipts implies that these
marriages were solemnized.
Liability of Judge Gil R. Acosta
Judge Acosta solemnized a total of eighty-seven (87) marriages from 2003 to 2007. 79 However, the logbook
showed that he solemnized two hundred seventy-two (272) marriages while the monthly reports of cases
showed that he solemnized five hundred twelve (512) marriages over the same period. Out of the 87
marriages, he solemnized seventy-five (75) under
Article 34 of the Family Code.80 This is equivalent to 86.21% of the marriages solemnized under Article 34
in a four-year period.81
There were forty-one (41) marriage certificates signed by Judge Tormis or Judge Necessario as solemnizing
officers found in his custody.82 There were also ten (10) marriages under Article 34 of the Family Code
where one or both of the contracting parties were minors during cohabitation. 83 To illustrate, respondent
judge solemnized on 4 May 2004 the marriage of Julieto W. Baga, 22 years old, and Esterlita P. Anlangit, 18
years old.84
There were seventeen (17) marriages under Article 34 where neither of the contracting parties were
residents of Cebu City.85 The judge solemnized three (3) marriages without the foreign partys required
certificate of legal capacity to marry. 86 Lastly, there was no proof of payment of the solemnization fee in
almost all of the marriages the judge officiated.87
Liability of Judge Rosabella M. Tormis
Judge Tormis solemnized a total of one hundred eighty-one (181) marriages from 2003 to 2007 based on
the marriage certificates actually examined.88 However, the monthly report of cases showed that she
solemnized three hundred five (305) marriages instead for the years 2004 to 2007. 89 The OCA report also
noted that it was only in July 2007 that her court started to use a logbook to keep track of marriages. 90
Respondent judge solemnized thirty-seven (37) marriages with incomplete or missing documents such as
the marriage license, certificate of legal capacity to marry, and the joint affidavit of cohabitation. 91 In
several instances, only affidavits were submitted by the foreign parties in lieu of the certificate of legal
capacity to marry.92
Judge Tormis solemnized thirteen (13) marriages despite the questionable character of the validity of the
required documents particularly the marriage license.93 The judicial audit team found numerous erasures
and superimpositions on entries with regard to the parties place of residence. 94
In one instance, the judge solemnized the marriage of Rex Randy E. Cujardo and Anselma B. Laranio on 28
December 2006 despite the marriage license containing a rubberstamp mark saying, "THIS LICENSE
EXPIRES ON" and a handwritten note saying "12/28/06" under it. 95
The judge solemnized a total of forty-seven (47) marriages under Article 34 of the Family Code wherein the
marriage requirements authenticity was doubtful due to the circumstances of the cohabitation of the
parties and the given address of the parties.96 These irregularities were evident in the case of 22-year-old
John Rey R. Tibalan and Ana Liza Secuya who were married on 25 May 2007. The residential address of the
couple in the marriage certificate is "Sitio Bamboo, Buhisan, Cebu City." However, there was an application
for marriage license attached to the marriage certificate showing that Secuyas address is "F. Lopez Comp.
Morga St., Cebu City."97
Liability of Judge Edgemelo C. Rosales
Judge Rosales solemnized a total of one hundred twenty-one (121) marriages from 2006 to 2007 based on
the marriage certificates examined by the judicial audit team. 98 However, only three (3) marriages were
reported for the same period.99 Out of the 121 marriages the judge solemnized, fifty-two (52) or 42.98%
fall under Article 34 of the Family Code.100 Thirty-eight
(38) marriage licenses out of the sixty-six (66) obtained or 57.57% were from the local civil registrar of
Barili, Cebu.101 Nineteen (19) or 28.79% were from the local civil registrar of Liloan, Cebu. 102 Nine (9) or
13.64% were from other local civil registrars.103
There were marriage documents found in his court such as marriage licenses, applications for marriage
license, certificates of legal capacity to contract marriage, affidavits in lieu of certificate of legal capacity
to contract marriage, joint affidavits of cohabitation, and other documents referring to the solemnization of
one hundred thirty-two (132) marriages, with no corresponding marriage certificates. 104 He solemnized two
marriages of Buddy Gayland Weaver, an American citizen, to two different persons within nine (9)
months.105 No copy of the required certificate of legal capacity to contract marriage or the divorce decree
was presented.106
The judge solemnized thirty-seven (37) marriages without or with incomplete supporting documents such
as the certificate of legal capacity to marry and the joint affidavit of cohabitation. 107 He solemnized nine (9)
marriages under questionable circumstances such as the submission of an affidavit or affirmation of
freedom to marry in lieu of the certificate of legal capacity to marry, the discrepancies in the residence of
the contracting parties as appearing in the marriage documents, and the solemnization of the marriage on
the same day the marriage license was issued.108
Judge Rosales also solemnized forty-three (43) marriages with no proof that the solemnization fee of P300
was paid.109 On the other hand, there were twenty-six (26) marriages whose solemnization fees were paid
late.110
To summarize, the liabilities of the judges are the following:
First, Judges Necessario, Tormis and Rosales solemnized marriages even if the requirements submitted by
the couples were incomplete and of questionable character. Most of these documents showed visible signs
of tampering, erasures, corrections or superimpositions of entries related to the parties place of
residence.111 These included indistinguishable features such as the font, font size, and ink of the computerprinted entries in the marriage certificate and marriage license. 112 These actions of the respondent judges
constitute gross inefficiency. In Vega v. Asdala,113the Court held that inefficiency implies negligence,
incompetence, ignorance, and carelessness.
Second, the judges were also found guilty of neglect of duty regarding the payment of solemnization fees.
The Court, in Rodrigo-Ebron v. Adolfo,114 defined neglect of duty as the failure to give ones attention to a
task expected of him and it is gross when, from the gravity of the offense or the frequency of instances,
the offense is so serious in its character as to endanger or threaten public welfare. The marriage
documents examined by the audit team show that corresponding official receipts for the solemnization fee
were missing115 or payment by batches was made for marriages performed on different dates. 116 The OCA
emphasizes that the payment of the solemnization fee starts off the whole marriage application process
and even puts a "stamp of regularity" on the process.
Third, Judges Necessario, Tormis, and Rosales also solemnized marriages where a contracting party is a
foreigner who did not submit a certificate of legal capacity to marry from his or her embassy. What the
foreigners submitted were mere affidavits stating their capacity to marry. The irregularity in the certificates
of legal capacity that are required under Article 21 of the Family Code 117 displayed the gross neglect of
duty of the judges. They should have been diligent in scrutinizing the documents required for the marriage
license issuance. Any irregularities would have been prevented in the qualifications of parties to contract
marriage.118
Fourth, Judges Necessario, Acosta, and Tormis are likewise guilty of gross ignorance of the law under Article
34 of the Family Code119 with respect to the marriages they solemnized where legal impediments existed
during cohabitation such as the minority status of one party. 120 The audit team cites in their Supplemental
Report that there were parties whose ages ranged from eighteen (18) to twenty-two (22) years old who
were married by mere submission of a pro forma joint affidavit of cohabitation. 121 These affidavits were
notarized by the solemnizing judge himself or herself.122
Finally, positive testimonies were also given regarding the solemnization of marriages of some couples
where no marriage license was previously issued. The contracting parties were made to fill up the
application for a license on the same day the marriage was solemnized. 123
The Court does not accept the arguments of the respondent judges that the ascertainment of the validity
of the marriage license is beyond the scope of the duty of a solemnizing officer especially when there are
glaring pieces of evidence that point to the contrary. As correctly observed by the OCA, the presumption of
regularity accorded to a marriage license disappears the moment the marriage documents do not appear
regular on its face.
In People v. Jansen,124 this Court held that:
the solemnizing officer is not duty-bound to investigate whether or not a marriage license has been duly
and regularly issued by the local civil registrar. All the solemnizing officer needs to know is that the license
has been issued by the competent official, and it may be presumed from the issuance of the license that
said official has fulfilled the duty to ascertain whether the contracting parties had fulfilled the requirements
of law.
However, this Court also said in Sevilla v. Cardenas,125 that "the presumption of regularity of official acts
may be rebutted by affirmative evidence of irregularity or failure to perform a duty." The visible
superimpositions on the marriage licenses should have alerted the solemnizing judges to the irregularity of
the issuance.
It follows also that although Article 21 of the Family Code requires the submission of the certificate from
the embassy of the foreign party to the local registrar for acquiring a marriage license, the judges should
have been more diligent in reviewing the parties documents and qualifications. As noted by the OCA, the
absence of the required certificates coupled with the presence of mere affidavits should have aroused
suspicion as to the regularity of the marriage license issuance.
The judges gross ignorance of the law is also evident when they solemnized marriages under Article 34 of
the Family Code without the required qualifications and with the existence of legal impediments such as
minority of a party. Marriages of exceptional character such as those made under Article 34 are, doubtless,
the exceptions to the rule on the indispensability of the formal requisite of a marriage license. 126 Under the
rules of statutory construction, exceptions as a general rule should be strictly but reasonably
construed.127 The affidavits of cohabitation should not be issued and accepted pro forma particularly in
view of the settled rulings of the Court on this matter. The five-year period of cohabitation should be one of
a perfect union valid under the law but rendered imperfect only by the absence of the marriage
contract.128 The parties should have been capacitated to marry each other during the entire period and not
only at the time of the marriage.129
To elaborate further on the gravity of the acts and omissions of the respondents, the Family Code provides
the requisites for a valid marriage:
Art. 3. The formal requisites of marriage are:
(1) Authority of the solemnizing officer;
(2) A valid marriage license except in the cases provided for in Chapter 2 of this Title; and
(3) A marriage ceremony which takes place with the appearance of the contracting parties before the
solemnizing officer and their personal declaration that they take each other as husband and wife in the
presence of not less than two witnesses of legal age. (53a, 55a)
Art. 4. The absence of any of the essential or formal requisites shall render the marriage void ab initio,
except as stated in Article 35 (2). A defect in any of the essential requisites shall not affect the validity of
the marriage but the party or parties responsible for the irregularity shall be civilly, criminally and
administratively liable. (n)
The absence of a marriage license will clearly render a marriage void ab initio. 130 The actions of the judges
have raised a very alarming issue regarding the validity of the marriages they solemnized since they did
not follow the proper procedure or check the required documents and qualifications. In Aranes v. Judge
Salvador Occiano,131 the Court said that a marriage solemnized without a marriage license is void and the
subsequent issuance of the license cannot render valid or add even an iota of validity to the marriage. It is
the marriage license that gives the solemnizing officer the authority to solemnize a marriage and the act of
solemnizing the marriage without a license constitutes gross ignorance of the law.
As held by this Court in Navarro v. Domagtoy:
The judiciary should be composed of persons who, if not experts are at least proficient in the law they are
sworn to apply, more than the ordinary layman. They should be skilled and competent in understanding
and applying the law. It is imperative that they be conversant with basic legal principles like the ones
involved in the instant case. It is not too much to expect them to know and apply the law intelligently. 132
It is important to note that the audit team found out that Judge Rosabella M. Tormis ordered Celerina Plaza,
a personal employee of the judge, to wait for couples outside the Hall of Justice and offer
services.133 Crisanto Dela Cerna also stated in his affidavit that Judge Tormis instructed him to get all
marriage certificates and bring them to her house when she found out about the judicial audit. 134 In the
language of the OCA, Judge Tormis considered the solemnization of marriages not as a duty but as a
business.135 The respondent judge was suspended for six (6) months in A.M. No. MTJ-071-962 for repeatedly
disregarding the directives of this Court to furnish the complainant a copy of her comment. She was also
fined the amount of five thousand pesos (P5,000) in A.M. Nos. 04-7-373-RTC and 04-7-374 RTC. 136 She was
reprimanded twice in A.M. No. MTJ-05-1609 and in A.M. No. MTJ-001337. 137Finally, in the very recent case of
Office of the Court Administrator v. Hon. Rosabella M. Tormis and Mr. Reynaldo S. Teves, A.M. No. MTJ-121817, promulgated last 12 March 2013, Judge Tormis was found guilty of gross inefficiency, violation of
Supreme Court rules, directives and circulars and gross ignorance of the law by this Court. She was
dismissed from service, with forfeiture of all benefits and privileges, except accrued leave credits, if any,
with prejudice to reemployment in any branch or instrumentality of the government, including
government-owned or controlled corporations.
The respondent judges violated Canons 2138 and 6139 of the Canons of Judicial Ethics which exact
competence, integrity and probity in the performance of their duties. This Court previously said that
"Ignorance of the law is a mark of incompetence, and where the law involved is elementary, ignorance
thereof is considered as an indication of lack of integrity." 140 In connection with this, the administration of
justice is considered a sacred task and upon assumption to office, a judge ceases to be an ordinary mortal.
He or she becomes the visible representation of the law and more importantly of justice. 141
The actuations of these judges are not only condemnable, it is outright shameful.
Liability of Other Court Personnel
The Court agrees with the recommendations of the OCA on the liability of the following employees:
Helen Mongaya, Court Interpreter of Judge Rosabella M. Tormis, MTCC, Branch 4, Cebu City, is guilty of
grave misconduct when she informed the female lawyer of the judicial audit team that she can facilitate
the marriage and the requirements on the same day of the lawyers visit. 142
What Monggaya was proposing was an open-dated marriage in exchange for a fee of P3,000. Section 2,
Canon I of the Code of Conduct for Court Personnel prohibits court personnel from soliciting or accepting
gifts, favor or benefit based on any explicit or implicit understanding that such gift, favor or benefit shall
influence their official actions.
Mongayas claim that she was merely relating to the lady lawyer what she knew from other offices as the
usual practice143 is inexcusable. As found by the OCA in its Memorandum, "Monggaya deliberately gave
false information for the purpose of perpetrating an illegal scheme. This, in itself, constitutes grave
misconduct."144 Sec. 52, Rule IV of the Uniform Rules on
Administrative Cases in the Civil Service defines grave misconduct as "a grave offense that carries the
extreme penalty of dismissal from the service even on a first offense.
In Villaceran v. Rosete, this Court held that:
Court personnel, from the lowliest employee, are involved in the dispensation of justice; parties seeking
redress from the courts for grievances look upon court personnel, irrespective of rank or position, as part of
the Judiciary. In performing their duties and responsibilities, these court personnel serve as sentinels of
justice and any act of impropriety on their part immeasurably affects the honor and dignity of the Judiciary
and the peoples trust and confidence in this institution. Therefore, they are expected to act and behave in
a manner that should uphold the honor and dignity of the Judiciary, if only to maintain the people's
confidence in the Judiciary.145
Mongaya acted improperly and in a manner opposite of what is expected of court personnel. Her actions
placed doubts on the integrity of the courts.
Rhona Rodriguez, Administrative Officer I of the Office of the Clerk of Court of the MTCC, Cebu City, is
guilty of gross misconduct. She assisted the couple, Moreil Sebial and Maricel Albater, and demanded and
accepted P4,000 from them.146 The act was a violation of Section 2, Canon I of the Code of Conduct for
Court Personnel. As found by the OCA and adopted by this Court, Rodriguez induced Albater to falsify the
application for marriage license by instructing her to indicate her residence as Barili, Cebu. 147 The claim
that she gave the amount to a certain Borces who was allegedly the real facilitator belies her participation
in facilitating the marriage. According to the OCA, when the couple went back for their marriage certificate,
they approached Rodriguez and not Borces.148 When Borces told Rodriguez that the marriage certificate
had been misplaced, it was Rodriguez who instructed Sebial to fill up another marriage certificate. 149
This Court has held that improper solicitations prohibited by Section 2, Canon I of the Code of Conduct for
Court Personnel, merits a grave penalty.150 Such penalty can be dismissal from service.
Desiderio Aranas, Branch 3 Process Server, MTCC, Cebu City and Rebecca Alesna are guilty of conduct
prejudicial to the best of interest of the service. Aranas provided couples who were to be married under
Article 34 of the Family Code with the required affidavit of cohabitation. 151 On the other hand, Alesna refers
such couples to Aranas to acquire the said affidavit which according to Alesna costs P10. As aptly put by
the OCA, even if the amount involved in the transaction is minimal, the act of soliciting money still gives
the public the wrong impression that court personnel are making money out of judicial transactions. 152
The Court said in Roque v. Grimaldo153 that acts of court personnel outside their official functions constitute
conduct prejudicial to the best interest of the service because these acts violate what is prescribed for
court personnel. The purpose of this is to maintain the integrity of the Court and free court personnel from
suspicion of any misconduct.
Celeste P. Retuya, Clerk III of Branch 6 of the MTCC, Cebu City, Emma Valencia, Stenographer III of Branch
18, RTC, Cebu City, and Rebecca Alesna, Court Interpreter of Branch 1, MTCC, Cebu City, admitted to the
audit team that they received food from couples they assisted.154 This is in violation of Section 2(b), Canon
III of the Code of Conduct for Court Personnel which prohibits court personnel from receiving tips or other
remuneration for assisting or attending to parties engaged in transactions or involved in actions or
proceedings with the Judiciary. As recommended by the OCA, they are admonished considering that this is
their first offense and the tips were of minimal value. In Reyes-Domingo v. Morales, this Court held that
commission of an administrative offense for the first time is an extenuating circumstance. 155
The Court finds that there is insufficient evidence against Corazon P. Retuya. The OCA reports that Corazon
Retuya admitted initially that she received P5,000 from spouses Ichiro Kamiaya and Mary Grace Gabiana to
secure necessary documents.156 The information was volunteered by Corazon Retuya with no supporting
sworn statement from the couple. However, she denies this fact later on in her Comment. 157 Finding the
earlier statement of Corazon Retuya as unclear and lacking support from evidence, the Court adopts the
findings of the OCA and decides to give her the benefit of the doubt.
The Court also finds insufficient evidence to support the claims against Marilou Cabaez. Cabaez was only
implicated in this case through the sworn statement of Jacqui Lou Baguio-Manera who attested that they
paid a certain "Meloy" P1,200 for the wedding under Article 34 of the Family through the assistance of
Cabaez.158Cabaez denies that she was the one who assisted the couple and explained that it may have
been Celerina Plaza, the personal assistant of Judge Rosabella M. Tormis. Baguio-Manera got the nickname
"Meloy" not from Cabaez herself but from Baguio-Maneras younger sister. 159 When Baguio-Manera met
the said "Meloy" at the Hall of Justice, she did not obtain confirmation that the said "Meloy" is Cabaez.
The Court adopts the findings of the OCA that there is lack of positive identification of Cabaez and finds
merit in her denial.160
The Court accepts the recommendation of the OCA as to the dismissal of the case against Judge Geraldine
Faith A. Econg. The judge was only implicated through the statement of Process Server Antonio Flores
about an "alleged sinking fund". No evidence was presented as to the collection of an excess of the
solemnization fee. Neither was it proven that Judge Econg or her staff had knowledge of such fund.
WHEREFORE, the Court finds respondents:
1. Judge Anatalio S. Necessario, Presiding Judge, Municipal Trial Court in Cities, Branch 2, Cebu City, GUILTY
of gross inefficiency or neglect of duty and of gross ignorance of the law and that he be DISMISSED FROM
THE SERVICE with forfeiture of his retirement benefits, except leave credits, if any, and that he be
disqualified from reinstatement or appointment to any public office, including government-owned or
-controlled corporation;
2. Judge Gil R. Acosta, Presiding Judge, Municipal Trial Court in Cities, Branch 3, Cebu City, GUILTY of gross
inefficiency or neglect of duty and of gross ignorance of the law and that he be DISMISSED FROM THE
SERVICE with forfeiture of his retirement benefits, except leave credits, if any, and that he be disqualified
from reinstatement or appointment to any public office, including government-owned or -controlled
corporation;
3. Judge Rosabella M. Tormis, Presiding Judge, Municipal Trial Court in Cities, Branch 4, Cebu City, GUILTY of
gross inefficiency or neglect of duty and of gross ignorance of the law and that she would have been
DISMISSED FROM THE SERVICE with forfeiture of her retirement benefits, except leave credits, if any, and
disqualified from reinstatement or appointment to any public office, including government-owned or
-controlled corporation, had she not been previously dismissed from service in A.M. No. MTJ-12-1817
(Formerly A.M. No. 09-2-30-MTCC);
4. Judge Edgemelo C. Rosales, Presiding Judge, Municipal Trial Court in Cities, Branch 8, Cebu City, GUILTY
of gross inefficiency or neglect of duty and of gross ignorance of the law and that he be DISMISSED FROM
THE SERVICE with forfeiture of his retirement benefits, except leave credits, if any, and that he be
disqualified from reinstatement or appointment to any public office, including government-owned or
-controlled corporation;
5. Helen Mongaya, Court Interpreter, Municipal Trial Court in Cities, Branch 4, Cebu City, GUILTY of violating
Section 2, Canon I of the Code of Conduct for Court Personnel and that she be DISMISSED FROM THE
SERVICE with forfeiture of her retirement benefits, except leave credits, if any, and that she be disqualified
from reinstatement or appointment to any public office, including government-owned or -controlled
corporation;
6. Rhona F. Rodriguez, Administrative Officer I, Office of the Clerk of Court, Regional Trial Court, Cebu City,
GUILTY of gross misconduct for Section 2, Canon I of the Code of Conduct for Court Personnel and for
inducing Maricel Albater to falsify the application for marriage and that she be DISMISSED FROM THE
SERVICE with forfeiture of her retirement benefits, except leave credits, if any, and that she be disqualified
from reinstatement or appointment to any public office, including government-owned or -controlled
corporation;
7. Desiderio S. Aranas, Process Server, Municipal Trial Court in Cities, Branch 3, Cebu City, GUILTY of
conduct prejudicial to the best interest of the service and that he be SUSPENDED without pay for a period
of six (6) months with a warning that a similar offense shall be dealt with more severely;
8. Rebecca Alesna, Court Interpreter, Municipal Trial Court in Cities, Branch 1, Cebu City, GUILTY of conduct
prejudicial to the best interest of the service and of violating Section 2(b), Canon III of the Code of Conduct
for Court Personnel and that she be SUSPENDED without pay for a period of six (6) months with a warning
that a similar offense shall be dealt with more severely;
9. Celeste Retuya, Clerk III, Municipal Trial Court in Cities, Branch 6, Cebu City, and Emma Valencia,
Stenographer III, Regional Trial Court, Branch 18, Cebu City, GUILTY of conduct prejudicial to the best
interest of the service and of violating Section 2(b), Canon III of the Code of Conduct for Court Personnel
and that they be ADMONISHED with a warning that a similar offense shall be dealt with more severely;
The complaints against Judge Geraldine Faith A. Econg, Presiding Judge, Regional Trial Court, Branch 9,
Cebu City; Corazon P. Retuya, Court Stenographer, Municipal Trial Court in Cities, Branch 6, Cebu City; and
Marilou Cabaez, Court Stenographer, Municipal Trial Court in Cities, are DISMISSED for lack of merit.
The case against Judge Rosabella M. Tormis, including the sworn statements of Celerina Plaza and Crisanto
dela Cerna, should be REFERRED to the Office of the Bar Confidant for the purpose of initiating disbarment
proceedings against the judge.
The Honorable Mayors of Barili, Cebu and Liloan, Cebu, are to be furnished copies of the Supplemental
Report dated 14 August 2007 and are ADVISED to conduct an investigation with respect to the statements
of Filomena C. Lopez, Civil Registrar of Barili, Cebu, and Bonita I. Pilones, Civil Registrar of Liloan, Cebu,
regarding the processing of marriage licenses and to take the necessary action as the findings of the
investigation may warrant.
Let a copy of this Decision be included in the respondents files that are with the Office of the Bar
Confidant and distributed to all courts and to the Integrated Bar of the Philippines.
SO ORDERED.
ANONYMOUS, Complainant,
vs.
JUDGE RIO C. ACHAS, Municipal Trial Court in Cities, Branch 2, Ozamiz City, Misamis
Occidental,Respondent.
RESOLUTION
MENDOZA, J.:
Before the Court is an anonymous letter-complaint, 1 dated August 2, 2010, alleging immorality and
conduct unbecoming of a judge against respondent Judge Rio C. Achas (Judge Achas), Presiding Judge,
Municipal Trial Court in Cities, Branch 2, Ozamiz City, Misamis Occidental.
The letter calls on the Court to look into the morality of respondent Judge Achas and alleges
that: (1) it is of public knowledge in the city that Judge Achas is living scandalously with a
woman who is not his wife; (2) he lives beyond his means; (3) he is involved with illegal
activities through his connection with bad elements, the kuratongs; ( 4) he comes to court
very untidy and dirty; (5) he decides his cases unfairly in exchange for material and monetary
consideration; and (6) he is involved with cockfighting/gambling.
In the Indorsement,2 dated September 30, 2010, the Office of the Court Administrator (OCA) referred the
matter to Executive Judge Miriam Orquieza-Angot (Judge Angot) for Discreet Investigation and Report.
In her Report,3 dated November 26, 2010, Judge Angot found that Judge Achas had been separated from
his legal wife for quite some time and they are living apart; and that he found for himself a young woman
with whom he would occasionally go out with in public and it was not a secret around town. Anent the
allegations that Judge Achas was living beyond his means and was involved in illegal activities, Judge
Angot reported that she could not be certain whether such were true, and only ascertained that he had
established friendships or alliances with people of different social standings from around the city. Judge
Angot opined that the allegation that Judge Achas would come to court untidy and dirty was a matter of
personal hygiene and in the eye of the beholder. Lastly, she found the charge that Judge Achas decided
cases unfairly in exchange for consideration to be vague and unsubstantiated.
In his Comment,4 dated February 4, 2011, Judge Achas denied all the allegations against him and claimed
that they were hatched to harass him, pointing to disgruntled professionals, supporters and local
candidates who lost during the May 2010 elections. He asserted that after 28 years in the government
service, he had remained loyal to his work and conducted himself in a righteous manner.
In the Resolution, dated December 14, 2011, the Court resolved to redocket the case as a regular
administrative matter and to refer the same to the Executive Judge of the Regional Trial Court of Ozamiz
City for investigation, report and recommendation.
In her Report,5 dated April 4, 2012, Executive Judge Salome P. Dungog (Judge Dungog) stated that an
investigation was conducted. Judge Achas and his two witnesses testified in his defense, namely, his
Branch Clerk of Court, Renato Zapatos; and his Process Server, Michael Del Rosario. The anonymous
complainant never appeared to testify. During the investigation, Judge Achas again denied all the charges
but admitted that he was married and only separated de facto from his legal wife for 26 years, and that he
reared game cocks for leisure and extra income, having inherited such from his forefathers. Judge Dungog
found that "it is not commendable, proper or moral per Canons of Judicial Ethics to be perceived as going
out with a woman not his wife,"6 and for him to be involved in rearing game cocks.
In its Memorandum, dated December 17, 2012, the OCA recommended that Judge Achas be reprimanded
as to the charge of immorality. It was further recommended that he be ordered to refrain from going to
cockpits or avoid such places altogether, with a warning that the same or similar complaint in the future
shall be dealt with more severely. The other charges were recommended to be dismissed for lack of merit.
The Court agrees, with modification.
Under Section 1 of Rule 140 of the Rules of Court, anonymous complaints may be filed against
judges, but they must be supported by public records of indubitable integrity. Courts have
acted in such instances needing no corroboration by evidence to be offered by the
complainant. Thus, for anonymous complaints, the burden of proof in administrative
proceedings which usually rests with the complainant, must be buttressed by indubitable
public records and by what is sufficiently proven during the investigation. If the burden of
proof is not overcome, the respondent is under no obligation to prove his defense. 7
In the present case, no evidence was attached to the letter-complaint. The complainant never appeared,
and no public records were brought forth during the investigation. Respondent Judge Achas denied all the
charges made against him, only admitting that he was separated de facto from his wife and that he reared
fighting cocks.
The charges that he (1) lives beyond his means, (2) is involved with illegal activities through his connection
with thekuratongs, (3) comes to court very untidy and dirty, and (4) decides his cases unfairly in exchange
for material and monetary consideration were, therefore, properly recommended dismissed by the OCA for
lack of evidence.
The charges that (1) it is of public knowledge that he is living scandalously with a woman not his wife and
that (2) he is involved with cockfighting/gambling are, however, another matter.
The New Code of Judicial Conduct for the Philippine Judiciary pertinently provides:
CANON 2
INTEGRITY
Integrity is essential not only to the proper discharge of the judicial office but also to the personal
demeanor of judges.
SEC. 1. Judges shall ensure that not only is their conduct above reproach, but that it is perceived to be so
in the view of a reasonable observer.
SEC. 2. The behavior and conduct of judges must reaffirm the peoples faith in the integrity of the judiciary.
Justice must not merely be done but must also be seen to be done.
xxx
xxx
xxx
CANON 4
PROPRIETY
Propriety and the appearance of propriety are essential to the performance of all the activities of a judge.
SEC. 1. Judges shall avoid impropriety and the appearance of impropriety in all of their activities.
SEC. 2. As a subject of constant public scrutiny, judges must accept personal restrictions that might be
viewed as burdensome by the ordinary citizen and should do so freely and willingly. In particular, judges
shall conduct themselves in a way that is consistent with the dignity of the judicial office.
xxx
xxx
xxx
Judge Angots discreet investigation revealed that the respondent judge found "for himself a
suitable young lass whom he occasionally goes out with in public and such a fact is not a
secret around town."8 Judge Achas denied this and no evidence was presented to prove the
contrary. He did admit, however, that he had been estranged from his wife for the last 26
years. Notwithstanding his admission, the fact remains that he is still legally married to his
wife. The Court, therefore, agrees with Judge Dungog in finding that it is not commendable,
proper or moral for a judge to be perceived as going out with a woman not his wife. Such is a
blemish to his integrity and propriety, as well as to that of the Judiciary.
For going out in public with a woman not his wife, Judge Achas has clearly failed to abide by
the above-cited Canons of the New Code of Judicial Conduct for Philippine Judiciary.
Regarding his involvement in cockfighting, however, there is no clear evidence.1wphi1 Judge Achas
denied engaging in cockfighting and betting. He admitted, however, that he reared fighting cocks for
leisure, having inherited the practice from his forefathers. While gamecocks are bred and kept primarily for
gambling, there is no proof that he goes to cockpits and gambles. While rearing fighting cocks is not illegal,
Judge Achas should avoid mingling with a crowd of cockfighting enthusiasts and bettors as it undoubtedly
impairs the respect due him. As a judge, he must impose upon himself personal restrictions that might be
viewed as burdensome by the ordinary citizen and should do so freely and willingly.
The Court further notes that in A.M. No. MTJ-04-1564,9 Judge Achas was charged with immorality for
cohabiting with a woman not his wife, and with gross misconduct and dishonesty for personally accepting
a cash bond in relation to a case and not depositing it with the clerk of court, and for maintaining a flock of
fighting cocks and actively participating in cockfights. The Court, in 2005, found him guilty of gross
misconduct for personally receiving the cash bond and fined him in the amount of P15,000.00 with a stern
warning. The charge of immorality was dismissed for lack of evidence. Although the Court, at the same
time, noted that the charge of maintaining a flock of fighting cocks and participating in cockfights was
denied by the respondent judge, it made no ruling on the charge.
Seven years later, similar charges of immoral cohabitation and cockfighting have again been levelled
against Judge Achas. Considering that his immoral behaviour is not a secret around town, it is apparent
that respondent judge has failed to ensure that his conduct is perceived to be above reproach by the
reasonable observer, and has failed toavoid the appearance of impropriety in his activities, to the
detriment of the judiciary as a whole.
No position demands greater moral righteousness and uprightness from its occupant than
does the judicial office. Judges in particular must be individuals of competence, honesty and
probity, charged as they are with safeguarding the integrity of the court and its proceedings.
He should behave at all times so as to promote public confidence in the integrity and
impartiality of the judiciary, and avoid impropriety and the appearance of impropriety in all his
activities. His personal behaviour outside the court, and not only while in the performance of
his official duties, must be beyond reproach, for he is perceived to be the personification of
law and justice. Thus, any demeaning act of a judge degrades the institution he represents. 10
Under Section 10 in relation to Section 11 C (1) of Rule 140 of the Rules of Court, as amended,
"unbecoming conduct" is classified as a light charge, punishable by any of the following sanctions: (1) a
fine of not less than Pl,000.00 but not exceeding P10,000.00; and/or (2) censure; (3) reprimand; ( 4)
admonition with warning. The Court, thus, finds that the penalty of a fine in the amount of P5,000.00 and
reprimand are proper under the circumstances.
WHEREFORE, for violation of the New Code of Judicial Conduct, respondent Judge Rio Concepcion Achas
isREPRlMANDED and FINED in the amount of FIVE THOUSAND PESOS (P5,000.00), ADMONISHED not to
socially mingle with cockfighting enthusiasts and bettors, and STERNLY WARNED that a repetition of the
same or similar acts shall be dealt with more severely.
SO ORDERED.
February 8, 2011
IN THE MATTER OF THE CHARGES OF PLAGIARISM, ETC., AGAINST ASSOCIATE JUSTICE MARIANO
C. DEL CASTILLO.
RESOLUTION
PER CURIAM:
Petitioners Isabelita C. Vinuya, et al., all members of the Malaya Lolas Organization, seek reconsideration
of the decision of the Court dated October 12, 2010 that dismissed their charges of plagiarism, twisting of
cited materials, and gross neglect against Justice Mariano Del Castillo in connection with the decision he
wrote for the Court in G.R. No. 162230, entitled Vinuya v. Romulo. 1
Mainly, petitioners claim that the Court has by its decision legalized or approved of the
commission of plagiarism in the Philippines. This claim is absurd. The Court, like everyone
else, condemns plagiarism as the world in general understands and uses the term.
Plagiarism, a term not defined by statute, has a popular or common definition. To plagiarize, says Webster,
is "to steal and pass off as ones own" the ideas or words of another. Stealing implies malicious taking.
Blacks Law Dictionary, the worlds leading English law dictionary quoted by the Court in its decision,
defines plagiarism as the "deliberate and knowing presentation of another person's original ideas or
creative expressions as ones own."2 The presentation of another persons ideas as ones own must be
deliberate or premeditateda taking with ill intent.
There is no commonly-used dictionary in the world that embraces in the meaning of plagiarism
errors in attribution by mere accident or in good faith.
Certain educational institutions of course assume different norms in its application. For instance, the
Loyola Schools Code of Academic Integrity ordains that "plagiarism is identified not through intent but
through the act itself. The objective act of falsely attributing to ones self what is not ones work, whether
intentional or out of neglect, is sufficient to conclude that plagiarism has occurred. Students who plead
ignorance or appeal to lack of malice are not excused."3
But the Courts decision in the present case does not set aside such norm. The decision makes this clear,
thus:
To paraphrase Bast and Samuels, while the academic publishing model is based on the
originality of the writers thesis, the judicial system is based on the doctrine of stare decisis,
which encourages courts to cite historical legal data, precedents, and related studies in their
decisions. The judge is not expected to produce original scholarship in every respect. The
strength of a decision lies in the soundness and general acceptance of the precedents and long held legal
opinions it draws from.4
Original scholarship is highly valued in the academe and rightly so. A college thesis, for instance, should
contain dissertations embodying results of original research, substantiating a specific view. 5 This must be
so since the writing is intended to earn for the student an academic degree, honor, or distinction. He earns
no credit nor deserves it who takes the research of others, copies their dissertations, and proclaims these
as his own. There should be no question that a cheat deserves neither reward nor sympathy.
But the policy adopted by schools of disregarding the element of malicious intent found in dictionaries is
evidently more in the nature of establishing what evidence is sufficient to prove the commission of such
dishonest conduct than in rewriting the meaning of plagiarism. Since it would be easy enough for a student
to plead ignorance or lack of malice even as he has copied the work of others, certain schools have
adopted the policy of treating the mere presence of such copied work in his paper sufficient objective
evidence of plagiarism. Surely, however, if on its face the students work shows as a whole that he has but
committed an obvious mistake or a clerical error in one of hundreds of citations in his thesis, the school will
not be so unreasonable as to cancel his diploma.
In contrast, decisions of courts are not written to earn merit, accolade, or prize as an original piece of work
or art. Deciding disputes is a service rendered by the government for the public good. Judges issue
decisions to resolve everyday conflicts involving people of flesh and blood who ache for speedy justice or
juridical beings which have rights and obligations in law that need to be protected. The interest of
society in written decisions is not that they are originally crafted but that they are fair and
correct in the context of the particular disputes involved. Justice, not originality, form, and
style, is the object of every decision of a court of law.
There is a basic reason for individual judges of whatever level of courts, including the
Supreme Court, not to use original or unique language when reinstating the laws involved in
the cases they decide. Their duty is to apply the laws as these are written. But laws include,
under the doctrine of stare decisis, judicial interpretations of such laws as are applied to specific situations.
Under this doctrine, Courts are "to stand by precedent and not to disturb settled point." Once the Court
has "laid down a principle of law as applicable to a certain state of facts, it will adhere to that
principle, and apply it to all future cases, where facts are substantially the same; regardless of
whether the parties or property are the same."6
And because judicial precedents are not always clearly delineated, they are quite often entangled in
apparent inconsistencies or even in contradictions, prompting experts in the law to build up regarding such
matters a large body of commentaries or annotations that, in themselves, often become part of legal
writings upon which lawyers and judges draw materials for their theories or solutions in particular cases.
And, because of the need to be precise and correct, judges and practitioners alike, by practice and
tradition, usually lift passages from such precedents and writings, at times omitting, without malicious
intent, attributions to the originators.
Is this dishonest? No. Duncan Webb, writing for the International Bar Association puts it succinctly. When
practicing lawyers (which include judges) write about the law, they effectively place their
ideas, their language, and their work in the public domain, to be affirmed, adopted, criticized,
or rejected. Being in the public domain, other lawyers can thus freely use these without fear of
committing some wrong or incurring some liability. Thus:
The tendency to copy in law is readily explicable. In law accuracy of words is everything. Legal
disputes often centre round the way in which obligations have been expressed in legal
documents and how the facts of the real world fit the meaning of the words in which the
obligation is contained. This, in conjunction with the risk-aversion of lawyers means that refuge will
often be sought in articulations that have been tried and tested. In a sense therefore the community of
lawyers have together contributed to this body of knowledge, language, and expression which is common
property and may be utilized, developed and bettered by anyone. 7
The implicit right of judges to use legal materials regarded as belonging to the public domain is not unique
to the Philippines. As Joyce C. George, whom Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno cites in her dissenting opinion,
observed in her Judicial Opinion Writing Handbook:
A judge writing to resolve a dispute, whether trial or appellate, is exempted from a charge of
plagiarism even if ideas, words or phrases from a law review article, novel thoughts published
in a legal periodical or language from a partys brief are used without giving attribution. Thus
judges are free to use whatever sources they deem appropriate to resolve the matter before
them, without fear of reprisal. This exemption applies to judicial writings intended to decide
cases for two reasons: the judge is not writing a literary work and, more importantly, the
purpose of the writing is to resolve a dispute. As a result, judges adjudicating cases are not
subject to a claim of legal plagiarism.8
If the Court were to inquire into the issue of plagiarism respecting its past decisions from the time of Chief
Justice Cayetano S. Arellano to the present, it is likely to discover that it has not on occasion acknowledged
the originators of passages and views found in its decisions. These omissions are true for many of the
decisions that have been penned and are being penned daily by magistrates from the Court of Appeals,
the Sandiganbayan, the Court of Tax Appeals, the Regional Trial Courts nationwide and with them, the
municipal trial courts and other first level courts. Never in the judiciarys more than 100 years of history
has the lack of attribution been regarded and demeaned as plagiarism.
This is not to say that the magistrates of our courts are mere copycats. They are not. Their decisions
analyze the often conflicting facts of each case and sort out the relevant from the irrelevant. They identify
and formulate the issue or issues that need to be resolved and evaluate each of the laws, rulings,
principles, or authorities that the parties to the case invoke. The decisions then draw their apt
conclusions regarding whether or not such laws, rulings, principles, or authorities apply to the
particular cases before the Court. These efforts, reduced in writing, are the product of the
judges creativity. It is hereactually the substance of their decisionsthat their genius,
originality, and honest labor can be found, of which they should be proud.
In Vinuya, Justice Del Castillo examined and summarized the facts as seen by the opposing
sides in a way that no one has ever done. He identified and formulated the core of the issues
that the parties raised. And when he had done this, he discussed the state of the law relevant
to their resolution. It was here that he drew materials from various sources, including the
three foreign authors cited in the charges against him. He compared the divergent views these
present as they developed in history. He then explained why the Court must reject some views
in light of the peculiar facts of the case and applied those that suit such facts. Finally, he drew
from his discussions of the facts and the law the right solution to the dispute in the case. On
the whole, his work was original. He had but done an honest work.
The Court will not, therefore, consistent with established practice in the Philippines and
elsewhere, dare permit the filing of actions to annul the decisions promulgated by its judges
or expose them to charges of plagiarism for honest work done.
This rule should apply to practicing lawyers as well. Counsels for the petitioners, like all
lawyers handling cases before courts and administrative tribunals, cannot object to this.
Although as a rule they receive compensation for every pleading or paper they file in court or for every
opinion they render to clients, lawyers also need to strive for technical accuracy in their writings. They
should not be exposed to charges of plagiarism in what they write so long as they do not depart, as
officers of the court, from the objective of assisting the Court in the administration of justice.
As Duncan Webb said:
In presenting legal argument most lawyers will have recourse to either previous decisions of the courts,
frequently lifting whole sections of a judges words to lend weight to a particular point either with or
without attribution. The words of scholars are also sometimes given weight, depending on reputation.
Some encyclopaedic works are given particular authority. In England this place is given to Halsburys Laws
of England which is widely considered authoritative. A lawyer can do little better than to frame an
argument or claim to fit with the articulation of the law in Halsburys. While in many cases the very
purpose of the citation is to claim the authority of the author, this is not always the case. Frequently
commentary or dicta of lesser standing will be adopted by legal authors, largely without attribution.
xxxx
The converse point is that originality in the law is viewed with skepticism. It is only the
arrogant fool or the truly gifted who will depart entirely from the established template and
reformulate an existing idea in the belief that in doing so they will improve it. While over time
incremental changes occur, the wholesale abandonment of established expression is generally
considered foolhardy.9
The Court probably should not have entertained at all the charges of plagiarism against Justice Del Castillo,
coming from the losing party. But it is a case of first impression and petitioners, joined by some faculty
members of the University of the Philippines school of law, have unfairly maligned him with the charges of
plagiarism, twisting of cited materials, and gross neglect for failing to attribute lifted passages from three
foreign authors. These charges as already stated are false, applying the meaning of plagiarism as the
world in general knows it.
True, Justice Del Castillo failed to attribute to the foreign authors materials that he lifted from their works
and used in writing the decision for the Court in the Vinuya case. But, as the Court said, the evidence
as found by its Ethics Committee shows that the attribution to these authors appeared in the
beginning drafts of the decision. Unfortunately, as testified to by a highly qualified and
experienced court-employed researcher, she accidentally deleted the same at the time she was
cleaning up the final draft. The Court believed her since, among other reasons, she had no
motive for omitting the attribution. The foreign authors concerned, like the dozens of other sources
she cited in her research, had high reputations in international law.1awphi1
Notably, those foreign authors expressly attributed the controversial passages found in their works to
earlier writings by others. The authors concerned were not themselves the originators. As it happened,
although the ponencia of Justice Del Castillo accidentally deleted the attribution to them,
there remained in the final draft of the decision attributions of the same passages to the
earlier writings from which those authors borrowed their ideas in the first place. In short, with
the remaining attributions after the erroneous clean-up, the passages as it finally appeared in the Vinuya
decision still showed on their face that the lifted ideas did not belong to Justice Del Castillo but to others.
He did not pass them off as his own.
With our ruling, the Court need not dwell long on petitioners allegations that Justice Del Castillo had also
committed plagiarism in writing for the Court his decision in another case, Ang Ladlad v. Commission on
Elections.10 Petitioners are nit-picking. Upon close examination and as Justice Del Castillo amply
demonstrated in his comment to the motion for reconsideration, he in fact made attributions to passages
in such decision that he borrowed from his sources although they at times suffered in formatting lapses.
Considering its above ruling, the Court sees no point in further passing upon the motion of the Integrated
Bar of the Philippines for leave to file and admit motion for reconsideration-in-intervention dated January 5,
2011 and Dr. Peter Payoyos claim of other instances of alleged plagiarism in the Vinuya decision.
ACCORDINGLY, the Court DENIES petitioners motion for reconsideration for lack of merit.
SO ORDERED.
March 8, 2011
RE: LETTER OF THE UP LAW FACULTY ENTITLED "RESTORING INTEGRITY: A STATEMENT BY THE
FACULTY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF THE PHILIPPINES COLLEGE OF LAW ON THE ALLEGATIONS OF
PLAGIARISM AND MISREPRESENTATION IN THE SUPREME COURT"
DECISION
LEONARDO-DE CASTRO, J.:
For disposition of the Court are the various submissions of the 37 respondent law professors 1 in response
to the Resolution dated October 19, 2010 (the Show Cause Resolution), directing them to show cause why
they should not be disciplined as members of the Bar for violation of specific provisions of the Code of
Professional Responsibility enumerated therein.
At the outset, it must be stressed that the Show Cause Resolution clearly dockets this as an administrative
matter, not a special civil action for indirect contempt under Rule 71 of the Rules of Court, contrary to the
dissenting opinion of Associate Justice Maria Lourdes P. A. Sereno (Justice Sereno) to the said October 19,
2010 Show Cause Resolution. Neither is this a disciplinary proceeding grounded on an allegedly irregularly
concluded finding of indirect contempt as intimated by Associate Justice Conchita Carpio Morales (Justice
Morales) in her dissenting opinions to both the October 19, 2010 Show Cause Resolution and the present
decision.
With the nature of this case as purely a bar disciplinary proceeding firmly in mind, the Court finds that with
the exception of one respondent whose compliance was adequate and another who manifested he was not
a member of the Philippine Bar, the submitted explanations, being mere denials and/or tangential to the
issues at hand, are decidedly unsatisfactory. The proffered defenses even more urgently behoove this
Court to call the attention of respondent law professors, who are members of the Bar, to the relationship of
their duties as such under the Code of Professional Responsibility to their civil rights as citizens and
academics in our free and democratic republic.
The provisions of the Code of Professional Responsibility involved in this case are as follows:
CANON 1 A lawyer shall uphold the constitution, obey the laws of the land and promote respect for law
and legal processes.
RULE 1.02 - A lawyer shall not counsel or abet activities aimed at defiance of the law or at
lessening confidence in the legal system.
CANON 10 - A lawyer owes candor, fairness and good faith to the court.
Rule 10.01 - A lawyer shall not do any falsehood, nor consent to the doing of any in court;
nor shall he mislead, or allow the Court to be misled by any artifice.
Rule 10.02 - A lawyer shall not knowingly misquote or misrepresent the contents of paper,
the language or the argument of opposing counsel, or the text of a decision or authority, or
knowingly cite as law a provision already rendered inoperative by repeal or amendment, or
assert as a fact that which has not been proved.
Rule 10.03 - A lawyer shall observe the rules of procedure and shall not misuse them to
defeat the ends of justice.
CANON 11 A lawyer shall observe and maintain the respect due to the courts and to judicial officers and
should insist on similar conduct by others.
RULE 11.05 A lawyer shall submit grievances against a Judge to the proper authorities only.
CANON 13 A lawyer shall rely upon the merits of his cause and refrain from any impropriety which tends
to influence, or gives the appearance of influencing the court.
Established jurisprudence will undeniably support our view that when lawyers speak their
minds, they must ever be mindful of their sworn oath to observe ethical standards of their
profession, and in particular, avoid foul and abusive language to condemn the Supreme Court,
or any court for that matter, for a decision it has rendered, especially during the pendency of a
motion for such decisions reconsideration. The accusation of plagiarism against a member of this
Court is not the real issue here but rather this plagiarism issue has been used to deflect everyones
attention from the actual concern of this Court to determine by respondents explanations whether or not
respondent members of the Bar have crossed the line of decency and acceptable professional conduct and
speech and violated the Rules of Court through improper intervention or interference as third parties to a
pending case. Preliminarily, it should be stressed that it was respondents themselves who called upon the
Supreme Court to act on their Statement,2 which they formally submitted, through Dean Marvic M.V.F.
Leonen (Dean Leonen), for the Courts proper disposition. Considering the defenses of freedom of speech
and academic freedom invoked by the respondents, it is worth discussing here that the legal reasoning
used in the past by this Court to rule that freedom of expression is not a defense in administrative cases
against lawyers for using intemperate speech in open court or in court submissions can similarly be
applied to respondents invocation of academic freedom. Indeed, it is precisely because respondents are
not merely lawyers but lawyers who teach law and mould the minds of young aspiring attorneys that
respondents own non-observance of the Code of Professional Responsibility, even if purportedly motivated
by the purest of intentions, cannot be ignored nor glossed over by this Court.
To fully appreciate the grave repercussions of respondents actuations, it is apropos to revisit the factual
antecedents of this case.
BACKGROUND OF THE CASE
Antecedent Facts and Proceedings
On April 28, 2010, the ponencia of Associate Justice Mariano del Castillo (Justice Del Castillo) in Vinuya, et
al. v. Executive Secretary (G.R. No. 162230) was promulgated. On May 31, 2010, the counsel 3 for
Vinuya, et al. (the "Malaya Lolas"), filed a Motion for Reconsideration of the Vinuya decision, raising solely
the following grounds:
I. Our own constitutional and jurisprudential histories reject this Honorable Courts (sic) assertion
that the Executives foreign policy prerogatives are virtually unlimited; precisely, under the relevant
jurisprudence and constitutional provisions, such prerogatives are proscribed by international
human rights and humanitarian standards, including those provided for in the relevant international
conventions of which the Philippines is a party.4
II. This Honorable Court has confused diplomatic protection with the broader, if fundamental,
responsibility of states to protect the human rights of its citizens especially where the rights
asserted are subject of erga omnes obligations and pertain to jus cogens norms. 5
On July 19, 2010,6 counsel for the Malaya Lolas, Attys. H. Harry L. Roque, Jr. (Atty. Roque) and Romel
Regalado Bagares (Atty. Bagares), filed a Supplemental Motion for Reconsideration in G.R. No. 162230,
where they posited for the first time their charge of plagiarism as one of the grounds for reconsideration of
the Vinuya decision. Among other arguments, Attys. Roque and Bagares asserted that:
I.
IN THE FIRST PLACE, IT IS HIGHLY IMPROPER FOR THIS HONORABLE COURTS JUDGMENT OF APRIL 28, 2010
TO PLAGIARIZE AT LEAST THREE SOURCES AN ARTICLE PUBLISHED IN 2009 IN THE YALE LAW JOURNAL OF
INTERNATIONAL LAW, A BOOK PUBLISHED BY THE CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS IN 2005 AND AN
ARTICLE PUBLISHED IN 2006 IN THE CASE WESTERN RESERVE JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW AND
MAKE IT APPEAR THAT THESE SOURCES SUPPORT THE JUDGMENTS ARGUMENTS FOR DISMISSING THE
INSTANT PETITION WHEN IN TRUTH, THE PLAGIARIZED SOURCES EVEN MAKE A STRONG CASE FOR THE
PETITIONS CLAIMS.7
They also claimed that "[i]n this controversy, the evidence bears out the fact not only of extensive
plagiarism but of (sic) also of twisting the true intents of the plagiarized sources by the ponencia to suit the
arguments of the assailed Judgment for denying the Petition."8
According to Attys. Roque and Bagares, the works allegedly plagiarized in the Vinuya decision were
namely: (1) Evan J. Criddle and Evan Fox-Decents article "A Fiduciary Theory of Jus Cogens;" 9 (2) Christian
J. Tams book Enforcing Erga Omnes Obligations in International Law; 10 and (3) Mark Ellis article "Breaking
the Silence: On Rape as an International Crime."11
On the same day as the filing of the Supplemental Motion for Reconsideration on July 19, 2010, journalists
Aries C. Rufo and Purple S. Romero posted an article, entitled "SC justice plagiarized parts of ruling on
comfort women," on the Newsbreak website.12 The same article appeared on the GMA News TV website
also on July 19, 2010.13
On July 22, 2010, Atty. Roques column, entitled "Plagiarized and Twisted," appeared in the Manila Standard
Today.14 In the said column, Atty. Roque claimed that Prof. Evan Criddle, one of the authors purportedly not
properly acknowledged in the Vinuya decision, confirmed that his work, co-authored with Prof. Evan FoxDecent, had been plagiarized. Atty. Roque quoted Prof. Criddles response to the post by Julian Ku
regarding the news report15 on the alleged plagiarism in the international law blog, Opinio Juris. Prof.
Criddle responded to Kus blog entry in this wise:
The newspapers16 [plagiarism] claims are based on a motion for reconsideration filed yesterday with the
Philippine Supreme Court yesterday. The motion is available here:
http://harryroque.com/2010/07/18/supplemental-motion-alleging-plagiarism-in-the-supreme-court/
The motion suggests that the Courts decision contains thirty-four sentences and citations that are
identical to sentences and citations in my 2009 YJIL article (co-authored with Evan Fox-Decent). Professor
Fox-Decent and I were unaware of the petitioners [plagiarism] allegations until after the motion was filed
today.
Speaking for myself, the most troubling aspect of the courts jus cogens discussion is that it implies that
the prohibitions against crimes against humanity, sexual slavery, and torture are not jus cogens norms.
Our article emphatically asserts the opposite. The Supreme Courts decision is available
here:http://sc.judiciary.gov.ph/jurisprudence/2010/april2010/162230.htm17
On even date, July 22, 2010, Justice Del Castillo wrote to his colleagues on the Court in reply to the charge
of plagiarism contained in the Supplemental Motion for Reconsideration. 18
In a letter dated July 23, 2010, another purportedly plagiarized author in the Vinuya decision, Dr. Mark Ellis,
wrote the Court, to wit:
Your Honours:
I write concerning a most delicate issue that has come to my attention in the last few days.
Much as I regret to raise this matter before your esteemed Court, I am compelled, as a question of the
integrity of my work as an academic and as an advocate of human rights and humanitarian law, to take
exception to the possible unauthorized use of my law review article on rape as an international crime in
your esteemed Courts Judgment in the case of Vinuya et al. v. Executive Secretary et al. (G.R. No. 162230,
Judgment of 28 April 2010).
My attention was called to the Judgment and the issue of possible plagiarism by the Philippine chapter of
the Southeast Asia Media Legal Defence Initiative (SEAMLDI),19 an affiliate of the London-based Media
Legal Defence Initiative (MLDI), where I sit as trustee.
In particular, I am concerned about a large part of the extensive discussion in footnote 65, pp. 27-28, of
the said Judgment of your esteemed Court. I am also concerned that your esteemed Court may have
misread the arguments I made in the article and employed them for cross purposes. This would be ironic
since the article was written precisely to argue for the appropriate legal remedy for victims of war crimes,
genocide, and crimes against humanity.
I believe a full copy of my article as published in the Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law in
2006 has been made available to your esteemed Court. I trust that your esteemed Court will take the time
to carefully study the arguments I made in the article.
I would appreciate receiving a response from your esteemed Court as to the issues raised by this letter.
With respect,
(Sgd.)
Dr. Mark Ellis20
In Memorandum Order No. 35-2010 issued on July 27, 2010, the Court formed the Committee on Ethics and
Ethical Standards (the Ethics Committee) pursuant to Section 13, Rule 2 of the Internal Rules of the
Supreme Court. In an En Banc Resolution also dated July 27, 2010, the Court referred the July 22, 2010
letter of Justice Del Castillo to the Ethics Committee. The matter was subsequently docketed as A.M. No.
10-7-17-SC.
On August 2, 2010, the Ethics Committee required Attys. Roque and Bagares to comment on the letter of
Justice Del Castillo.21
On August 9, 2010, a statement dated July 27, 2010, entitled "Restoring Integrity: A Statement by the
Faculty of the University of the Philippines College of Law on the Allegations of Plagiarism and
Misrepresentation in the Supreme Court" (the Statement), was posted in Newsbreaks website 22 and on
Atty. Roques blog.23 A report regarding the statement also appeared on various on-line news sites, such as
the GMA News TV24 and the Sun Star25 sites, on the same date. The statement was likewise posted at the
University of the Philippines College of Laws bulletin board allegedly on August 10, 2010 26 and at said
colleges website.27
On August 11, 2010, Dean Leonen submitted a copy of the Statement of the University of the Philippines
College of Law Faculty (UP Law faculty) to the Court, through Chief Justice Renato C. Corona (Chief Justice
Corona). The cover letter dated August 10, 2010 of Dean Leonen read:
The Honorable
Supreme Court of the Republic of the Philippines
Through:
Subject:
Statement of faculty
from the UP College of Law
on the Plagiarism in the case of
Vinuya v Executive Secretary
Your Honors:
We attach for your information and proper disposition a statement signed by thirty[-]eight (38) 28members
of the faculty of the UP College of Law. We hope that its points could be considered by the Supreme Court
en banc.
Respectfully,
(Sgd.)
Marvic M.V.F. Leonen
Dean and Professor of Law
(Emphases supplied.)
The copy of the Statement attached to the above-quoted letter did not contain the actual signatures of the
alleged signatories but only stated the names of 37 UP Law professors with the notation (SGD.) appearing
beside each name. For convenient reference, the text of the UP Law faculty Statement is reproduced here:
RESTORING INTEGRITY
A STATEMENT BY THE FACULTY OF
THE UNIVERSITY OF THE PHILIPPINES COLLEGE OF LAW
ON THE ALLEGATIONS OF PLAGIARISM AND MISREPRESENTATION
IN THE SUPREME COURT
An extraordinary act of injustice has again been committed against the brave Filipinas who had suffered
abuse during a time of war. After they courageously came out with their very personal stories of abuse and
suffering as "comfort women", waited for almost two decades for any meaningful relief from their own
government as well as from the government of Japan, got their hopes up for a semblance of judicial
recourse in the case of Vinuya v. Executive Secretary, G.R. No. 162230 (28 April 2010), they only had
these hopes crushed by a singularly reprehensible act of dishonesty and misrepresentation by the Highest
Court of the land.
It is within this frame that the Faculty of the University of the Philippines College of Law views the charge
that an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court committed plagiarism and misrepresentation in Vinuya v.
Executive Secretary. The plagiarism and misrepresentation are not only affronts to the individual scholars
whose work have been appropriated without correct attribution, but also a serious threat to the integrity
and credibility of the Philippine Judicial System.
In common parlance, plagiarism is the appropriation and misrepresentation of another persons work as
ones own. In the field of writing, it is cheating at best, and stealing at worst. It constitutes a taking of
someone elses ideas and expressions, including all the effort and creativity that went into committing
such ideas and expressions into writing, and then making it appear that such ideas and expressions were
originally created by the taker. It is dishonesty, pure and simple. A judicial system that allows plagiarism in
any form is one that allows dishonesty. Since all judicial decisions form part of the law of the land, to allow
plagiarism in the Supreme Court is to allow the production of laws by dishonest means. Evidently, this is a
complete perversion and falsification of the ends of justice.
A comparison of the Vinuya decision and the original source material shows that the ponente merely
copied select portions of other legal writers works and interspersed them into the decision as if they were
his own, original work. Under the circumstances, however, because the Decision has been promulgated by
the Court, the Decision now becomes the Courts and no longer just the ponentes. Thus the Court also
bears the responsibility for the Decision. In the absence of any mention of the original writers names and
the publications from which they came, the thing speaks for itself.
So far there have been unsatisfactory responses from the ponente of this case and the spokesman of the
Court.
It is argued, for example, that the inclusion of the footnotes from the original articles is a reference to the
primary sources relied upon. This cursory explanation is not acceptable, because the original authors
writings and the effort they put into finding and summarizing those primary sources are precisely the
subject of plagiarism. The inclusion of the footnotes together with portions of their writings in fact
aggravates, instead of mitigates, the plagiarism since it provides additional evidence of a deliberate
intention to appropriate the original authors work of organizing and analyzing those primary sources.
It is also argued that the Members of the Court cannot be expected to be familiar with all legal and
scholarly journals. This is also not acceptable, because personal unfamiliarity with sources all the more
demands correct and careful attribution and citation of the material relied upon. It is a matter of diligence
and competence expected of all Magistrates of the Highest Court of the Land.
But a far more serious matter is the objection of the original writers, Professors Evan Criddle and Evan FoxDescent, that the High Court actually misrepresents the conclusions of their work entitled "A Fiduciary
Theory of Jus Cogens," the main source of the plagiarized text. In this article they argue that the
classification of the crimes of rape, torture, and sexual slavery as crimes against humanity have attained
the status of jus cogens, making it obligatory upon the State to seek remedies on behalf of its aggrieved
citizens. Yet, the Vinuya decision uses parts of the same article to arrive at the contrary conclusion. This
exacerbates the intellectual dishonesty of copying works without attribution bytransforming it into an act
of intellectual fraud by copying works in order to mislead and deceive.
The case is a potential landmark decision in International Law, because it deals with State liability and
responsibility for personal injury and damage suffered in a time of war, and the role of the injured parties
home States in the pursuit of remedies against such injury or damage. National courts rarely have such
opportunities to make an international impact. That the petitioners were Filipino "comfort women" who
suffered from horrific abuse during the Second World War made it incumbent on the Court of last resort to
afford them every solicitude. But instead of acting with urgency on this case, the Court delayed its
resolution for almost seven years, oblivious to the deaths of many of the petitioners seeking justice from
the Court. When it dismissed the Vinuya petition based on misrepresented and plagiarized materials, the
Court decided this case based on polluted sources. By so doing, the Supreme Court added insult to
injury by failing to actually exercise its "power to urge and exhort the Executive Department to take up the
claims of the Vinuya petitioners. Its callous disposition, coupled with false sympathy and nonchalance,
belies a more alarming lack of concern for even the most basic values of decency and respect. The
reputation of the Philippine Supreme Court and the standing of the Philippine legal profession before other
Judiciaries and legal systems are truly at stake.
The High Court cannot accommodate less than absolute honesty in its decisions and cannot accept
excuses for failure to attain the highest standards of conduct imposed upon all members of the Bench and
Bar because these undermine the very foundation of its authority and power in a democratic society. Given
the Courts recent history and the controversy that surrounded it, it cannot allow the charges of such clear
and obvious plagiarism to pass without sanction as this would only further erode faith and confidence in
the judicial system. And in light of the significance of this decision to the quest for justice not only of
Filipino women, but of women elsewhere in the world who have suffered the horrors of sexual abuse and
exploitation in times of war, the Court cannot coldly deny relief and justice to the petitioners on the basis
of pilfered and misinterpreted texts.
The Court cannot regain its credibility and maintain its moral authority without ensuring that its own
conduct, whether collectively or through its Members, is beyond reproach. This necessarily includes
ensuring that not only the content, but also the processes of preparing and writing its own decisions, are
credible and beyond question. The Vinuya Decision must be conscientiously reviewed and not casually cast
aside, if not for the purpose of sanction, then at least for the purpose of reflection and guidance. It is an
absolutely essential step toward the establishment of a higher standard of professional care and practical
scholarship in the Bench and Bar, which are critical to improving the system of administration of justice in
the Philippines. It is also a very crucial step in ensuring the position of the Supreme Court as the Final
Arbiter of all controversies: a position that requires competence and integrity completely above any and all
reproach, in accordance with the exacting demands of judicial and professional ethics.
With these considerations, and bearing in mind the solemn duties and trust reposed upon them as
teachers in the profession of Law, it is the opinion of the Faculty of the University of the Philippine College
of Law that:
(1) The plagiarism committed in the case of Vinuya v. Executive Secretary is unacceptable,
unethical and in breach of the high standards of moral conduct and judicial and professional
competence expected of the Supreme Court;
(2) Such a fundamental breach endangers the integrity and credibility of the entire Supreme
Court and undermines the foundations of the Philippine judicial system by allowing implicitly
the decision of cases and the establishment of legal precedents through dubious means;
(3) The same breach and consequent disposition of the Vinuya case does violence to the
primordial function of the Supreme Court as the ultimate dispenser of justice to all those
who have been left without legal or equitable recourse, such as the petitioners therein;
(4) In light of the extremely serious and far-reaching nature of the dishonesty and to save
the honor and dignity of the Supreme Court as an institution, it is necessary for
the ponente of Vinuya v. Executive Secretary to resign his position, without prejudice to any
other sanctions that the Court may consider appropriate;
(5) The Supreme Court must take this opportunity to review the manner by which it conducts
research, prepares drafts, reaches and finalizes decisions in order to prevent a recurrence of
similar acts, and to provide clear and concise guidance to the Bench and Bar to ensure only
the highest quality of legal research and writing in pleadings, practice, and adjudication.
Malcolm Hall, University of the Philippines College of Law, Quezon City, 27 July 2010.
(SGD.) MARVIC M.V.F. LEONEN
Dean and Professor of Law
(SGD.) FROILAN M. BACUNGAN
Dean (1978-1983)
REGULAR FACULTY
(SGD.) CARMELO V. SISON
Professor
(SGD.) THEODORE O. TE
Assistant Professor
Meanwhile, in a letter dated August 18, 2010, Prof. Christian J. Tams made known his sentiments on the
alleged plagiarism issue to the Court.30 We quote Prof. Tams letter here:
Glasgow, 18 August 2010
Vinuya, et al. v. Executive Secretary et al. (G.R. No. 162230)
Hon. Renato C. Corona, Chief Justice
Your Excellency,
My name is Christian J. Tams, and I am a professor of international law at the University of Glasgow. I am
writing to you in relation to the use of one of my publications in the above-mentioned judgment of your
Honourable Court.
The relevant passage of the judgment is to be found on p. 30 of your Courts Judgment, in the section
addressing the concept of obligations erga omnes. As the table annexed to this letter shows, the relevant
sentences were taken almost word by word from the introductory chapter of my book Enforcing Obligations
Erga Omnes in International Law (Cambridge University Press 2005). I note that there is a generic
reference to my work in footnote 69 of the Judgment, but as this is in relation to a citation from another
author (Bruno Simma) rather than with respect to the substantive passages reproduced in the Judgment, I
do not think it can be considered an appropriate form of referencing.
I am particularly concerned that my work should have been used to support the Judgments cautious
approach to the erga omnes concept. In fact, a most cursory reading shows that my books central thesis is
precisely the opposite: namely that the erga omnes concept has been widely accepted and has a firm
place in contemporary international law. Hence the introductory chapter notes that "[t]he present study
attempts to demystify aspects of the very mysterious concept and thereby to facilitate its
implementation" (p. 5). In the same vein, the concluding section notes that "the preceding chapters show
that the concept is now a part of the reality of international law, established in the jurisprudence of courts
and the practice of States" (p. 309).
With due respect to your Honourable Court, I am at a loss to see how my work should have been cited to
support as it seemingly has the opposite approach. More generally, I am concerned at the way in which
your Honourable Courts Judgment has drawn on scholarly work without properly acknowledging it.
On both aspects, I would appreciate a prompt response from your Honourable Court.
I remain
Sincerely yours
(Sgd.)
Christian J. Tams31
In the course of the submission of Atty. Roque and Atty. Bagares exhibits during the August 26, 2010
hearing in the ethics case against Justice Del Castillo, the Ethics Committee noted that Exhibit "J" (a copy
of the Restoring Integrity Statement) was not signed but merely reflected the names of certain faculty
members with the letters (SGD.) beside the names. Thus, the Ethics Committee directed Atty. Roque to
present the signed copy of the said Statement within three days from the August 26 hearing. 32
It was upon compliance with this directive that the Ethics Committee was given a copy of the signed UP
Law Faculty Statement that showed on the signature pages the names of the full roster of the UP Law
Faculty, 81 faculty members in all. Indubitable from the actual signed copy of the Statement was that only
37 of the 81 faculty members appeared to have signed the same. However, the 37 actual signatories to
the Statement did not include former Supreme Court Associate Justice Vicente V. Mendoza (Justice
Mendoza) as represented in the previous copies of the Statement submitted by Dean Leonen and Atty.
Roque. It also appeared that Atty. Miguel R. Armovit (Atty. Armovit) signed the Statement although his
name was not included among the signatories in the previous copies submitted to the Court. Thus, the
total number of ostensible signatories to the Statement remained at 37.
The Ethics Committee referred this matter to the Court en banc since the same Statement, having been
formally submitted by Dean Leonen on August 11, 2010, was already under consideration by the Court. 33
In a Resolution dated October 19, 2010, the Court en banc made the following observations regarding the
UP Law Faculty Statement:
Notably, while the statement was meant to reflect the educators opinion on the allegations of plagiarism
against Justice Del Castillo, they treated such allegation not only as an established fact, but a truth. In
particular, they expressed dissatisfaction over Justice Del Castillos explanation on how he cited the
primary sources of the quoted portions and yet arrived at a contrary conclusion to those of the authors of
the articles supposedly plagiarized.
Beyond this, however, the statement bore certain remarks which raise concern for the Court. The opening
sentence alone is a grim preamble to the institutional attack that lay ahead. It reads:
An extraordinary act of injustice has again been committed against the brave Filipinas who had suffered
abuse during a time of war.
The first paragraph concludes with a reference to the decision in Vinuya v. Executive Secretary as
a reprehensible act of dishonesty and misrepresentation by the Highest Court of the land. x x x.
The insult to the members of the Court was aggravated by imputations of deliberately delaying the
resolution of the said case, its dismissal on the basis of "polluted sources," the Courts alleged
indifference to the cause of petitioners [in the Vinuya case], as well as the supposed alarming lack of
concern of the members of the Court for even the most basic values of decency and respect.34 x x x.
(Underscoring ours.)
In the same Resolution, the Court went on to state that:
While most agree that the right to criticize the judiciary is critical to maintaining a free and democratic
society, there is also a general consensus that healthy criticism only goes so far. Many types of criticism
leveled at the judiciary cross the line to become harmful and irresponsible attacks. These potentially
devastating attacks and unjust criticism can threaten the independence of the judiciary. The court must
"insist on being permitted to proceed to the disposition of its business in an orderly manner, free from
outside interference obstructive of its functions and tending to embarrass the administration of justice."
The Court could hardly perceive any reasonable purpose for the facultys less than objective comments
except to discredit the April 28, 2010 Decision in the Vinuya case and undermine the Courts honesty,
integrity and competence in addressing the motion for its reconsideration. As if the case on the comfort
womens claims is not controversial enough, the UP Law faculty would fan the flames and invite
resentment against a resolution that would not reverse the said decision. This runs contrary to their
obligation as law professors and officers of the Court to be the first to uphold the dignity and authority of
this Court, to which they owe fidelity according to the oath they have taken as attorneys, and not to
promote distrust in the administration of justice.35 x x x. (Citations omitted; emphases and underscoring
supplied.)
Thus, the Court directed Attys. Marvic M.V.F. Leonen, Froilan M. Bacungan, Pacifico A. Agabin, Merlin M.
Magallona, Salvador T. Carlota, Carmelo V. Sison, Patricia R.P. Salvador Daway, Dante B. Gatmaytan,
Theodore O. Te, Florin T. Hilbay, Jay L. Batongbacal, Evelyn (Leo) D. Battad, Gwen G. De Vera, Solomon F.
Lumba, Rommel J. Casis, Jose Gerardo A. Alampay, Miguel R. Armovit, Arthur P. Autea, Rosa Maria J.
Bautista, Mark R. Bocobo, Dan P. Calica, Tristan A. Catindig, Sandra Marie O. Coronel, Rosario O. Gallo,
Concepcion L. Jardeleza, Antonio G.M. La Via, Carina C. Laforteza, Jose C. Laureta, Owen J. Lynch, Rodolfo
Noel S. Quimbo, Antonio M. Santos, Gmeleen Faye B. Tomboc, Nicholas Felix L. Ty, Evalyn G. Ursua, Raul T.
Vasquez, Susan D. Villanueva and Dina D. Lucenario to show cause, within ten (10) days from receipt of the
copy of the Resolution, why they should not be disciplined as members of the Bar for violation of Canons
1,36 11 and 13 and Rules 1.02 and 11.05 of the Code of Professional Responsibility. 37
Dean Leonen was likewise directed to show cause within the same period why he should not be
disciplinarily dealt with for violation of Canon 10, Rules 10.01, 10.02 and 10.03 for submitting through his
letter dated August 10, 2010, during the pendency of G.R. No. 162230 and of the investigation before the
Ethics Committee, for the consideration of the Court en banc, a dummy which is not a true and faithful
reproduction of the UP Law Faculty Statement.38
In the same Resolution, the present controversy was docketed as a regular administrative matter.
Summaries of the Pleadings Filed by Respondents in Response to the October 19, 2010 Show Cause
Resolution
On November 19, 2010, within the extension for filing granted by the Court, respondents filed the following
pleadings:
(1) Compliance dated November 18, 2010 by counsels for 35 of the 37 respondents, excluding Prof.
Owen Lynch and Prof. Raul T. Vasquez, in relation to the charge of violation of Canons 1, 11 and 13
and Rules 1.02 and 11.05 of the Code of Professional Responsibility;
(2) Compliance and Reservation dated November 18, 2010 by Prof. Rosa Maria T. Juan-Bautista in
relation to the same charge in par. (1);
(3) Compliance dated November 19, 2010 by counsel for Prof. Raul T. Vasquez in relation to the
same charge in par. (1);
(4) Compliance dated November 19, 2010 by counsels for Dean Leonen, in relation to the charge of
violation of Canon 10, Rules 10.01, 10.02 and 10.03; and
(5) Manifestation dated November 19, 2010 by counsel for Prof. Owen Lynch.
Common Compliance of 35 Respondents (Excluding Prof. Owen Lynch and Prof. Raul Vasquez)
Thirty-five (35) of the respondent UP Law professors filed on November 19, 2010 a common compliance
which was signed by their respective counsels (the Common Compliance). In the "Preface" of said Common
Compliance, respondents stressed that "[they] issued the Restoring Integrity Statement in the discharge of
the solemn duties and trust reposed upon them as teachers in the profession of law, and as members of
the Bar to speak out on a matter of public concern and one that is of vital interest to them." 39 They likewise
alleged that "they acted with the purest of intentions" and pointed out that "none of them was involved
either as party or counsel"40 in the Vinuya case. Further, respondents "note with concern" that the Show
Cause Resolutions findings and conclusions were "a prejudgment that respondents indeed are in
contempt, have breached their obligations as law professors and officers of the Court, and have violated
Canons [1], 11 and 13 and Rules 1.02 and 11.05 of the Code of Professional Responsibility." 41
By way of explanation, the respondents emphasized the following points:
(a) Respondents alleged noble intentions
In response to the charges of failure to observe due respect to legal processes 42 and the
courts43 and of tending to influence, or giving the appearance of influencing the Court 44 in the
issuance of their Statement, respondents assert that their intention was not to malign the Court but
rather to defend its integrity and credibility and to ensure continued confidence in the legal system.
Their noble motive was purportedly evidenced by the portion of their Statement "focusing on
constructive action."45 Respondents call in the Statement for the Court "to provide clear and
concise guidance to the Bench and Bar to ensure only the highest quality of legal research and
writing in adjudication," was reputedly "in keeping with strictures enjoining lawyers to participate in
the development of the legal system by initiating or supporting efforts in law reform and in the
improvement of the administration of justice" (under Canon 4 of the Code of Professional
Responsibility) and to "promote respect for the law and legal processes" (under Canon 1,
id.).46 Furthermore, as academics, they allegedly have a "special interest and duty to vigilantly
guard against plagiarism and misrepresentation because these unwelcome occurrences have a
profound impact in the academe, especially in our law schools." 47
Respondents further "[called] on this Court not to misconstrue the Restoring Integrity Statement as
an institutional attack x x x on the basis of its first and ninth paragraphs." 48 They further clarified
that at the time the Statement was allegedly drafted and agreed upon, it appeared to them the
Court "was not going to take any action on the grave and startling allegations of plagiarism and
misrepresentation."49 According to respondents, the bases for their belief were (i) the news article
published on July 21, 2010 in the Philippine Daily Inquirer wherein Court Administrator Jose Midas P.
Marquez was reported to have said that Chief Justice Corona would not order an inquiry into the
matter;50 and (ii) the July 22, 2010 letter of Justice Del Castillo which they claimed "did nothing but
to downplay the gravity of the plagiarism and misrepresentation charges." 51 Respondents claimed
that it was their perception of the Courts indifference to the dangers posed by the plagiarism
allegations against Justice Del Castillo that impelled them to urgently take a public stand on the
issue.
(b) The "correctness" of respondents position that Justice Del Castillo committed plagiarism and
should be held accountable in accordance with the standards of academic writing
A significant portion of the Common Compliance is devoted to a discussion of the merits of
respondents charge of plagiarism against Justice Del Castillo. Relying on University of the
Philippines Board of Regents v. Court of Appeals52 and foreign materials and jurisprudence,
respondents essentially argue that their position regarding the plagiarism charge against Justice Del
Castillo is the correct view and that they are therefore justified in issuing their Restoring Integrity
Statement. Attachments to the Common Compliance included, among others: (i) the letter dated
October 28, 2010 of Peter B. Payoyo, LL.M, Ph.D.,53 sent to Chief Justice Corona through Justice
Sereno, alleging that the Vinuya decision likewise lifted without proper attribution the text from a
legal article by Mariana Salazar Albornoz that appeared in the Anuario Mexicano De Derecho
Internacional and from an International Court of Justice decision; and (ii) a 2008 Human Rights Law
Review Article entitled "Sexual Orientation, Gender Identity and International Human Rights Law"
by Michael OFlaherty and John Fisher, in support of their charge that Justice Del Castillo also lifted
passages from said article without proper attribution, but this time, in his ponencia in Ang Ladlad
LGBT Party v. Commission on Elections.54
(c) Respondents belief that they are being "singled out" by the Court when others have likewise
spoken on the "plagiarism issue"
In the Common Compliance, respondents likewise asserted that "the plagiarism and
misrepresentation allegations are legitimate public issues."55 They identified various published
reports and opinions, in agreement with and in opposition to the stance of respondents, on the
issue of plagiarism, specifically:
(i) Newsbreak report on July 19, 2010 by Aries Rufo and Purple Romero; 56
(ii) Column of Ramon Tulfo which appeared in the Philippine Daily Inquirer on July 24, 2010; 57
(iii) Editorial of the Philippine Daily Inquirer published on July 25, 2010; 58
(iv) Letter dated July 22, 2010 of Justice Del Castillo published in the Philippine Star on July
30, 2010;59
(v) Column of Former Intellectual Property Office Director General Adrian Cristobal, Jr.
published in the Business Mirror on August 5, 2010;60
(vi) Column of Former Chief Justice Artemio Panganiban published in the Philippine Daily
Inquirer on August 8, 2010;61
(vii) News report regarding Senator Francis Pangilinans call for the resignation of Justice Del
Castillo published in the Daily Tribune and the Manila Standard Today on July 31, 2010; 62
(viii) News reports regarding the statement of Dean Cesar Villanueva of the Ateneo de
Manila University School of Law on the calls for the resignation of Justice Del Castillo
published in The Manila Bulletin, the Philippine Star and the Business Mirror on August 11,
2010;63
(ix) News report on expressions of support for Justice Del Castillo from a former dean of the
Pamantasan ng Lungsod ng Maynila, the Philippine Constitutional Association, the Judges
Association of Bulacan and the Integrated Bar of the Philippines Bulacan Chapter published
in the Philippine Star on August 16, 2010;64 and
(x) Letter of the Dean of the Liceo de Cagayan University College of Law published in the
Philippine Daily Inquirer on August 10, 2010.65
In view of the foregoing, respondents alleged that this Court has singled them out for sanctions and
the charge in the Show Cause Resolution dated October 19, 2010 that they may have violated
specific canons of the Code of Professional Responsibility is unfair and without basis.
(d) Freedom of expression
In paragraphs 28 to 30 of the Common Compliance, respondents briefly discussed their position
that in issuing their Statement, "they should be seen as not only to be performing their duties as
members of the Bar, officers of the court, and teachers of law, but also as citizens of a democracy
who are constitutionally protected in the exercise of free speech." 66 In support of this contention,
they cited United States v. Bustos,67 In re: Atty. Vicente Raul Almacen, 68 and In the Matter of
Petition for Declaratory Relief Re: Constitutionality of Republic Act 4880, Gonzales v. Commission on
Elections.69
(e) Academic freedom
In paragraphs 31 to 34 of the Common Compliance, respondents asserted that their Statement was also
issued in the exercise of their academic freedom as teachers in an institution of higher learning. They
relied on Section 5 of the University of the Philippines Charter of 2008 which provided that "[t]he national
university has the right and responsibility to exercise academic freedom." They likewise adverted to Garcia
v. The Faculty Admission Committee, Loyola School of Theology 70 which they claimed recognized the extent
and breadth of such freedom as to encourage a free and healthy discussion and communication of a
faculty members field of study without fear of reprisal. It is respondents view that had they remained
silent on the plagiarism issue in the Vinuya decision they would have "compromised [their] integrity and
credibility as teachers; [their silence] would have created a culture and generation of students,
professionals, even lawyers, who would lack the competence and discipline for research and pleading; or,
worse, [that] their silence would have communicated to the public that plagiarism and misrepresentation
are inconsequential matters and that intellectual integrity has no bearing or relevance to ones conduct." 71
In closing, respondents Common Compliance exhorted this Court to consider the following portion of the
dissenting opinion of Justice George A. Malcolm in Salcedo v. Hernandez, 72 to wit:
Respect for the courts can better be obtained by following a calm and impartial course from the bench
than by an attempt to compel respect for the judiciary by chastising a lawyer for a too vigorous or
injudicious exposition of his side of a case. The Philippines needs lawyers of independent thought and
courageous bearing, jealous of the interests of their clients and unafraid of any court, high or low, and the
courts will do well tolerantly to overlook occasional intemperate language soon to be regretted by the
lawyer which affects in no way the outcome of a case.73
On the matter of the reliefs to which respondents believe they are entitled, the Common Compliance
stated, thus:
WHEREFORE:
A. Respondents, as citizens of a democracy, professors of law, members of the Bar and officers of
the Court, respectfully pray that:
1. the foregoing be noted; and
2. the Court reconsider and reverse its adverse findings in the Show Cause Resolution,
including its conclusions that respondents have: [a] breached their "obligation as law
professors and officers of the Court to be the first to uphold the dignity and authority of this
Court, and not to promote distrust in the administration of justice;" and [b] committed
"violations of Canons 10, 11, and 13 and Rules 1.02 and 11.05 of the Code of Professional
Responsibility."
B. In the event the Honorable Court declines to grant the foregoing prayer, respondents respectfully
pray, in the alternative, and in assertion of their due process rights, that before final judgment be
rendered:
1. the Show Cause Resolution be set for hearing;
2. respondents be given a fair and full opportunity to refute and/or address the findings and
conclusions of fact in the Show Cause Resolution (including especially the finding and
conclusion of a lack of malicious intent), and in that connection, that appropriate procedures
and schedules for hearing be adopted and defined that will allow them the full and fair
opportunity to require the production of and to present testimonial, documentary, and object
evidence bearing on the plagiarism and misrepresentation issues in Vinuya v. Executive
Secretary (G.R. No. 162230, April 28, 2010) and In the Matter of the Charges of Plagiarism,
etc. Against Associate Justice Mariano C. Del Castillo (A.M. No. 10-7-17-SC); and
3. respondents be given fair and full access to the transcripts, records, drafts, reports and
submissions in or relating to, and accorded the opportunity to cross-examine the witnesses
who were or could have been called in In The Matter of the Charges of Plagiarism, etc.
Against Associate Justice Mariano C. Del Castillo (A.M. No. 10-7-17-SC). 74
Compliance and Reservation of Prof. Rosa Maria T. Juan-Bautista
Although already included in the Common Compliance, Prof. Rosa Maria T. Juan-Bautista (Prof. JuanBautista) filed a separate Compliance and Reservation (the Bautista Compliance), wherein she adopted the
allegations in the Common Compliance with some additional averments.
Prof. Juan-Bautista reiterated that her due process rights allegedly entitled her to challenge the findings
and conclusions in the Show Cause Resolution. Furthermore, "[i]f the Restoring Integrity Statement can be
considered indirect contempt, under Section 3 of Rule 71 of the Rules of Court, such may be punished only
after charge and hearing."75
Prof. Juan-Bautista stressed that respondents signed the Statement "in good faith and with the best
intentions to protect the Supreme Court by asking one member to resign." 76 For her part, Prof. JuanBautista intimated that her deep disappointment and sadness for the plight of the Malaya Lolas were what
motivated her to sign the Statement.
On the point of academic freedom, Prof. Juan-Bautista cited jurisprudence 77 which in her view highlighted
that academic freedom is constitutionally guaranteed to institutions of higher learning such that schools
have the freedom to determine for themselves who may teach, what may be taught, how lessons shall be
taught and who may be admitted to study and that courts have no authority to interfere in the schools
exercise of discretion in these matters in the absence of grave abuse of discretion. She claims the Court
has encroached on the academic freedom of the University of the Philippines and other universities on
their right to determine how lessons shall be taught.
Lastly, Prof. Juan-Bautista asserted that the Statement was an exercise of respondents constitutional right
to freedom of expression that can only be curtailed when there is grave and imminent danger to public
safety, public morale, public health or other legitimate public interest. 78
Compliance of Prof. Raul T. Vasquez
On November 19, 2010, Prof. Raul T. Vasquez (Prof. Vasquez) filed a separate Compliance by registered
mail (the Vasquez Compliance). In said Compliance, Prof. Vasquez narrated the circumstances surrounding
his signing of the Statement. He alleged that the Vinuya decision was a topic of conversation among the
UP Law faculty early in the first semester (of academic year 2010-11) because it reportedly contained
citations not properly attributed to the sources; that he was shown a copy of the Statement by a clerk of
the Office of the Dean on his way to his class; and that, agreeing in principle with the main theme
advanced by the Statement, he signed the same in utmost good faith. 79
In response to the directive from this Court to explain why he should not be disciplined as a member of the
Bar under the Show Cause Resolution, Prof. Vasquez also took the position that a lawyer has the right, like
all citizens in a democratic society, to comment on acts of public officers. He invited the attention of the
Court to the following authorities: (a) In re: Vicente Sotto; 80 (b) In re: Atty. Vicente Raul Almacen; 81 and (c) a
discussion appearing in American Jurisprudence (AmJur) 2d.82 He claims that he "never had any intention
to unduly influence, nor entertained any illusion that he could or should influence, [the Court] in its
disposition of the Vinuya case"83 and that "attacking the integrity of [the Court] was the farthest thing on
respondents mind when he signed the Statement."84Unlike his colleagues, who wish to impress upon this
Court the purported homogeneity of the views on what constitutes plagiarism, Prof. Vasquez stated in his
Compliance that:
13. Before this Honorable Court rendered its Decision dated 12 October 2010, some espoused the view
that willful and deliberate intent to commit plagiarism is an essential element of the same. Others, like
respondent, were of the opinion that plagiarism is committed regardless of the intent of the perpetrator,
the way it has always been viewed in the academe. This uncertainty made the issue a fair topic for
academic discussion in the College. Now, this Honorable Court has ruled that plagiarism presupposes
deliberate intent to steal anothers work and to pass it off as ones own. 85 (Emphases supplied.)
Also in contrast to his colleagues, Prof. Vasquez was willing to concede that he "might have been remiss in
correctly assessing the effects of such language [in the Statement] and could have been more
careful."86 He ends his discussion with a respectful submission that with his explanation, he has faithfully
complied with the Show Cause Resolution and that the Court will rule that he had not in any manner
violated his oath as a lawyer and officer of the Court.
Separate Compliance of Dean Leonen regarding the charge of violation of Canon 10 in relation to his
submission of a "dummy" of the UP Law Faculty Statement to this Court
In his Compliance, Dean Leonen claimed that there were three drafts/versions of the UP Law Faculty
Statement, which he described as follows:
"Restoring Integrity I" which bears the entire roster of the faculty of the UP College of Law in its
signing pages, and the actual signatures of the thirty-seven (37) faculty members subject of the
Show Cause Resolution. A copy was filed with the Honorable Court by Roque and Butuyan on 31
August 2010 in A.M. No. 10-7-17-SC.
"Restoring Integrity II" which does not bear any actual physical signature, but which reflects as
signatories the names of thirty-seven (37) members of the faculty with the notation "(SGD.)". A
copy of Restoring Integrity II was publicly and physically posted in the UP College of Law on 10
August 2010. Another copy of Restoring Integrity II was also officially received by the Honorable
Court from the Dean of the UP College of Law on 11 August 2010, almost three weeks before the
filing of Restoring Integrity I.
"Restoring Integrity III" which is a reprinting of Restoring Integrity II, and which presently serves
as the official file copy of the Deans Office in the UP College of Law that may be signed by other
faculty members who still wish to. It bears the actual signatures of the thirty- seven original
signatories to Restoring Integrity I above their printed names and the notation "(SGD.") and, in
addition, the actual signatures of eight (8) other members of the faculty above their handwritten or
typewritten names.87
For purposes of this discussion, only Restoring Integrity I and Restoring Integrity II are relevant since what
Dean Leonen has been directed to explain are the discrepancies in the signature pages of these two
documents. Restoring Integrity III was never submitted to this Court.
On how Restoring Integrity I and Restoring Integrity II were prepared and came about, Dean Leonen
alleged, thus:
2.2 On 27 July 2010, sensing the emergence of a relatively broad agreement in the faculty on a
draft statement, Dean Leonen instructed his staff to print the draft and circulate it among the
faculty members so that those who wished to may sign. For this purpose, the staff encoded the law
faculty roster to serve as the printed drafts signing pages. Thus did the first printed draft of the
Restoring Integrity Statement, Restoring Integrity I, come into being.
2.3. As of 27 July 2010, the date of the Restoring Integrity Statement, Dean Leonen was unaware
that a Motion for Reconsideration of the Honorable Courts Decision in Vinuya vs. Executive
Secretary (G.R. No. 162230, 28 April 2010) had already been filed, or that the Honorable Court was
in the process of convening its Committee on Ethics and Ethical Standards in A.M. No. 10-7-17-SC.
2.4. Dean Leonens staff then circulated Restoring Integrity I among the members of the faculty.
Some faculty members visited the Deans Office to sign the document or had it brought to their
classrooms in the College of Law, or to their offices or residences. Still other faculty members who,
for one reason or another, were unable to sign Restoring Integrity I at that time, nevertheless
conveyed to Dean Leonen their assurances that they would sign as soon as they could manage.
2.5. Sometime in the second week of August, judging that Restoring Integrity I had been circulated
long enough, Dean Leonen instructed his staff to reproduce the statement in a style and manner
appropriate for posting in the College of Law. Following his own established practice in relation to
significant public issuances, he directed them to reformat the signing pages so that only the names
of those who signed the first printed draft would appear, together with the corresponding "(SGD.)"
note following each name. Restoring Integrity II thus came into being. 88
According to Dean Leonen, the "practice of eliminating blanks opposite or above the names of nonsignatories in the final draft of significant public issuances, is meant not so much for aesthetic
considerations as to secure the integrity of such documents."89 He likewise claimed that "[p]osting
statements with blanks would be an open invitation to vandals and pranksters." 90
With respect to the inclusion of Justice Mendozas name as among the signatories in Restoring Integrity II
when in fact he did not sign Restoring Integrity I, Dean Leonen attributed the mistake to a
miscommunication involving his administrative officer. In his Compliance, he narrated that:
2.7. Upon being presented with a draft of Restoring Integrity II with the reformatted signing pages,
Dean Leonen noticed the inclusion of the name of Justice Mendoza among the "(SGD.)" signatories.
As Justice Mendoza was not among those who had physically signed Restoring Integrity I when it
was previously circulated, Dean Leonen called the attention of his staff to the inclusion of the
Justices name among the "(SGD.)" signatories in Restoring Integrity II.
2.8. Dean Leonen was told by his administrative officer that she had spoken to Justice Mendoza
over the phone on Friday, 06 August 2010. According to her, Justice Mendoza had authorized the
dean to sign the Restoring Integrity Statement for him as he agreed fundamentally with its
contents. Also according to her, Justice Mendoza was unable at that time to sign the Restoring
Integrity Statement himself as he was leaving for the United States the following week. It would
later turn out that this account was not entirely accurate.91(Underscoring and italics supplied.)
Dean Leonen claimed that he "had no reason to doubt his administrative officer, however, and so placed
full reliance on her account"92 as "[t]here were indeed other faculty members who had also authorized the
Dean to indicate that they were signatories, even though they were at that time unable to affix their
signatures physically to the document."93
However, after receiving the Show Cause Resolution, Dean Leonen and his staff reviewed the
circumstances surrounding their effort to secure Justice Mendozas signature. It would turn out that this
was what actually transpired:
2.22.1. On Friday, 06 August 2010, when the deans staff talked to Justice Mendoza on the phone,
he [Justice Mendoza] indeed initially agreed to sign the Restoring Integrity Statement as he
fundamentally agreed with its contents. However, Justice Mendoza did not exactly say that he
authorized the dean to sign the Restoring Integrity Statement. Rather, he inquired if he could
authorize the dean to sign it for him as he was about to leave for the United States. The deans staff
informed him that they would, at any rate, still try to bring the Restoring Integrity Statement to him.
2.22.2. Due to some administrative difficulties, Justice Mendoza was unable to sign the Restoring
Integrity Statement before he left for the U.S. the following week.
2.22.3. The staff was able to bring Restoring Integrity III to Justice Mendoza when he went to the
College to teach on 24 September 2010, a day after his arrival from the U.S. This time, Justice
Mendoza declined to sign.94
According to the Dean:
2.23. It was only at this time that Dean Leonen realized the true import of the call he received from Justice
Mendoza in late September. Indeed, Justice Mendoza confirmed that by the time the hard copy of the
Restoring Integrity Statement was brought to him shortly after his arrival from the U.S., he declined to sign
it because it had already become controversial. At that time, he predicted that the Court would take some
form of action against the faculty. By then, and under those circumstances, he wanted to show due
deference to the Honorable Court, being a former Associate Justice and not wishing to unduly aggravate
the situation by signing the Statement.95 (Emphases supplied.)
With respect to the omission of Atty. Armovits name in the signature page of Restoring Integrity II when he
was one of the signatories of Restoring Integrity I and the erroneous description in Dean Leonens August
10, 2010 letter that the version of the Statement submitted to the Court was signed by 38 members of the
UP Law Faculty, it was explained in the Compliance that:
Respondent Atty. Miguel Armovit physically signed Restoring Integrity I when it was circulated to him.
However, his name was inadvertently left out by Dean Leonens staff in the reformatting of the signing
pages in Restoring Integrity II. The dean assumed that his name was still included in the reformatted
signing pages, and so mentioned in his cover note to Chief Justice Corona that 38 members of the law
faculty signed (the original 37 plus Justice Mendoza.)96
Dean Leonen argues that he should not be deemed to have submitted a dummy of the Statement that was
not a true and faithful reproduction of the same. He emphasized that the main body of the Statement was
unchanged in all its three versions and only the signature pages were not the same. This purportedly is
merely "reflective of [the Statements] essential nature as a live public manifesto meant to continuously
draw adherents to its message, its signatory portion is necessarily evolving and dynamic x x x many other
printings of [the Statement] may be made in the future, each one reflecting the same text but with more
and more signatories."97 Adverting to criminal law by analogy, Dean Leonen claims that "this is not an
instance where it has been made to appear in a document that a person has participated in an act when
the latter did not in fact so participate"98 for he "did not misrepresent which members of the faculty of the
UP College of Law had agreed with the Restoring Integrity Statement proper and/or had expressed their
desire to be signatories thereto."99
In this regard, Dean Leonen believes that he had not committed any violation of Canon 10 or Rules 10.01
and 10.02 for he did not mislead nor misrepresent to the Court the contents of the Statement or the
identities of the UP Law faculty members who agreed with, or expressed their desire to be signatories to,
the Statement. He also asserts that he did not commit any violation of Rule 10.03 as he "coursed [the
Statement] through the appropriate channels by transmitting the same to Honorable Chief Justice Corona
for the latters information and proper disposition with the hope that its points would be duly considered by
the Honorable Court en banc."100 Citing Rudecon Management Corporation v. Camacho,101 Dean Leonen
posits that the required quantum of proof has not been met in this case and that no dubious character or
motivation for the act complained of existed to warrant an administrative sanction for violation of the
standard of honesty provided for by the Code of Professional Responsibility. 102
Dean Leonen ends his Compliance with an enumeration of nearly identical reliefs as the Common
Compliance, including the prayers for a hearing and for access to the records, evidence and witnesses
allegedly relevant not only in this case but also in A.M. No. 10-7-17-SC, the ethical investigation involving
Justice Del Castillo.
Manifestation of Prof. Owen Lynch (Lynch Manifestation)
For his part, Prof. Owen Lynch (Prof. Lynch) manifests to this Court that he is not a member of the Philippine
bar; but he is a member of the bar of the State of Minnesota. He alleges that he first taught as a visiting
professor at the UP College of Law in 1981 to 1988 and returned in the same capacity in 2010. He further
alleges that "[h]e subscribes to the principle, espoused by this Court and the Supreme Court of the United
States, that [d]ebate on public issues should be uninhibited, robust and wide open and that it may well
include vehement, caustic, and sometimes unpleasantly sharp attacks on government and public
officials."103 In signing the Statement, he believes that "the right to speak means the right to speak
effectively."104 Citing the dissenting opinions in Manila Public School Teachers Association v. Laguio,
Jr.,105 Prof. Lynch argued that "[f]or speech to be effective, it must be forceful enough to make the intended
recipients listen"106 and "[t]he quality of education would deteriorate in an atmosphere of repression, when
the very teachers who are supposed to provide an example of courage and self-assertiveness to their
pupils can speak only in timorous whispers."107 Relying on the doctrine in In the Matter of Petition for
Declaratory Relief Re: Constitutionality of Republic Act 4880, Gonzales v. Commission on Elections, 108Prof.
Lynch believed that the Statement did not pose any danger, clear or present, of any substantive evil so as
to remove it from the protective mantle of the Bill of Rights (i.e., referring to the constitutional guarantee
on free speech).109 He also stated that he "has read the Compliance of the other respondents to the Show
Cause Resolution" and that "he signed the Restoring Integrity Statement for the same reasons they did." 110
ISSUES
Based on the Show Cause Resolution and a perusal of the submissions of respondents, the material issues
to be resolved in this case are as follows:
1.) Does the Show Cause Resolution deny respondents their freedom of expression?
2.) Does the Show Cause Resolution violate respondents academic freedom as law professors?
3.) Do the submissions of respondents satisfactorily explain why they should not be disciplined as
Members of the Bar under Canons 1, 11, and 13 and Rules 1.02 and 11.05 of the Code of
Professional Responsibility?
4.) Does the separate Compliance of Dean Leonen satisfactorily explain why he should not be
disciplined as a Member of the Bar under Canon 10, Rules 10.01, 10.02 and 10.03?
5.) Are respondents entitled to have the Show Cause Resolution set for hearing and in relation to
such hearing, are respondents entitled to require the production or presentation of evidence
bearing on the plagiarism and misrepresentation issues in the Vinuya case (G.R. No. 162230) and
the ethics case against Justice Del Castillo (A.M. No. 10-7-17-SC) and to have access to the records
and transcripts of, and the witnesses and evidence presented, or could have been presented, in the
ethics case against Justice Del Castillo (A.M. No. 10-7-17-SC)?
DISCUSSION
The Show Cause Resolution does not deny respondents their freedom of expression.
It is respondents collective claim that the Court, with the issuance of the Show Cause Resolution, has
interfered with respondents constitutionally mandated right to free speech and expression. It appears that
the underlying assumption behind respondents assertion is the misconception that this Court is denying
them the right to criticize the Courts decisions and actions, and that this Court seeks to "silence"
respondent law professors dissenting view on what they characterize as a "legitimate public issue."
This is far from the truth. A reading of the Show Cause Resolution will plainly show that it was neither the
fact that respondents had criticized a decision of the Court nor that they had charged one of its members
of plagiarism that motivated the said Resolution. It was the manner of the criticism and the contumacious
language by which respondents, who are not parties nor counsels in the Vinuya case, have expressed their
opinion in favor of the petitioners in the said pending case for the "proper disposition" and consideration of
the Court that gave rise to said Resolution. The Show Cause Resolution painstakingly enumerated the
statements that the Court considered excessive and uncalled for under the circumstances surrounding the
issuance, publication, and later submission to this Court of the UP Law facultys Restoring Integrity
Statement.
To reiterate, it was not the circumstance that respondents expressed a belief that Justice Del Castillo was
guilty of plagiarism but rather their expression of that belief as "not only as an established fact, but a
truth"111 when it was "[o]f public knowledge [that there was] an ongoing investigation precisely to
determine the truth of such allegations."112 It was also pointed out in the Show Cause Resolution that there
was a pending motion for reconsideration of the Vinuya decision. 113 The Show Cause Resolution made no
objections to the portions of the Restoring Integrity Statement that respondents claimed to be
"constructive" but only asked respondents to explain those portions of the said Statement that by no
stretch of the imagination could be considered as fair or constructive, to wit:
Beyond this, however, the statement bore certain remarks which raise concern for the Court. The opening
sentence alone is a grim preamble to the institutional attack that lay ahead. It reads:
An extraordinary act of injustice has again been committed against the brave Filipinas who had suffered
abuse during a time of war.
The first paragraph concludes with a reference to the decision in Vinuya v. Executive Secretary as
a reprehensible act of dishonesty and misrepresentation by the Highest Court of the land. x x x.
The insult to the members of the Court was aggravated by imputations of deliberately delaying the
resolution of the said case, its dismissal on the basis of "polluted sources," the Courts alleged
indifference to the cause of petitioners [in the Vinuya case], as well as the supposed alarming lack of
concern of the members of the Court for even the most basic values of decency and respect.114 x x x.
(Underscoring ours.)
To be sure, the Show Cause Resolution itself recognized respondents freedom of expression when it stated
that:
While most agree that the right to criticize the judiciary is critical to maintaining a free and
democratic society, there is also a general consensus that healthy criticism only goes so far.
Many types of criticism leveled at the judiciary cross the line to become harmful and
irresponsible attacks. These potentially devastating attacks and unjust criticism can threaten
the independence of the judiciary. The court must "insist on being permitted to proceed to the
disposition of its business in an orderly manner, free from outside interference obstructive of
its functions and tending to embarrass the administration of justice."
The Court could hardly perceive any reasonable purpose for the facultys less than objective comments
except to discredit the April 28, 2010 Decision in the Vinuya case and undermine the Courts honesty,
integrity and competence in addressing the motion for its reconsideration. As if the case on the comfort
womens claims is not controversial enough, the UP Law faculty would fan the flames and invite
resentment against a resolution that would not reverse the said decision. This runs contrary to their
obligation as law professors and officers of the Court to be the first to uphold the dignity and authority of
this Court, to which they owe fidelity according to the oath they have taken as attorneys, and not to
promote distrust in the administration of justice.115 x x x. (Citations omitted; emphases and underscoring
supplied.)
Indeed, in a long line of cases, including those cited in respondents submissions, this Court has held that
the right to criticize the courts and judicial officers must be balanced against the equally primordial
concern that the independence of the Judiciary be protected from due influence or interference. In cases
where the critics are not only citizens but members of the Bar, jurisprudence has repeatedly affirmed the
authority of this Court to discipline lawyers whose statements regarding the courts and fellow lawyers,
whether judicial or extrajudicial, have exceeded the limits of fair comment and common decency.
As early as the 1935 case of Salcedo v. Hernandez,116 the Court found Atty. Vicente J. Francisco both guilty
of contempt and liable administratively for the following paragraph in his second motion for
reconsideration:
We should like frankly and respectfully to make it of record that the resolution of this court, denying our
motion for reconsideration, is absolutely erroneous and constitutes an outrage to the rights of the
petitioner Felipe Salcedo and a mockery of the popular will expressed at the polls in the municipality of
Tiaong, Tayabas. We wish to exhaust all the means within our power in order that this error may be
corrected by the very court which has committed it, because we should not want that some citizen,
particularly some voter of the municipality of Tiaong, Tayabas, resort to the press publicly to denounce, as
he has a right to do, the judicial outrage of which the herein petitioner has been the victim, and because it
is our utmost desire to safeguard the prestige of this honorable court and of each and every member
thereof in the eyes of the public. But, at the same time we wish to state sincerely that erroneous decisions
like these, which the affected party and his thousands of voters will necessarily consider unjust, increase
the proselytes of 'sakdalism' and make the public lose confidence in the administration of
justice.117 (Emphases supplied.)
The highlighted phrases were considered by the Court as neither justified nor necessary and further held
that:
[I]n order to call the attention of the court in a special way to the essential points relied upon in his
argument and to emphasize the force thereof, the many reasons stated in his said motion were sufficient
and the phrases in question were superfluous. In order to appeal to reason and justice, it is highly improper
and amiss to make trouble and resort to threats, as Attorney Vicente J. Francisco has done, because both
means are annoying and good practice can never sanction them by reason of their natural tendency to
disturb and hinder the free exercise of a serene and impartial judgment, particularly in judicial matters, in
the consideration of questions submitted for resolution.
There is no question that said paragraph of Attorney Vicente J. Francisco's motion contains a more or less
veiled threat to the court because it is insinuated therein, after the author shows the course which the
voters of Tiaong should follow in case he fails in his attempt, that they will resort to the press for the
purpose of denouncing, what he claims to be a judicial outrage of which his client has been the victim; and
because he states in a threatening manner with the intention of predisposing the mind of the reader
against the court, thus creating an atmosphere of prejudices against it in order to make it odious in the
public eye, that decisions of the nature of that referred to in his motion promote distrust in the
administration of justice and increase the proselytes of sakdalism, a movement with seditious and
revolutionary tendencies the activities of which, as is of public knowledge, occurred in this country a few
days ago. This cannot mean otherwise than contempt of the dignity of the court and disrespect of the
authority thereof on the part of Attorney Vicente J. Francisco, because he presumes that the court is so
devoid of the sense of justice that, if he did not resort to intimidation, it would maintain its error
notwithstanding the fact that it may be proven, with good reasons, that it has acted
erroneously.118 (Emphases supplied.)
Significantly, Salcedo is the decision from which respondents culled their quote from the minority view of
Justice Malcolm. Moreover, Salcedo concerned statements made in a pleading filed by a counsel in a case,
unlike the respondents here, who are neither parties nor counsels in the Vinuya case and therefore, do not
have any standing at all to interfere in the Vinuya case. Instead of supporting respondents theory, Salcedo
is authority for the following principle:
As a member of the bar and an officer of this court, Attorney Vicente J. Francisco, as any attorney, is in
duty bound to uphold its dignity and authority and to defend its integrity, not only because it has conferred
upon him the high privilege, not a right (Malcolm, Legal Ethics, 158 and 160), of being what he now is:
a priest of justice (In re Thatcher, 80 Ohio St. Rep., 492, 669), but also because in so doing, he neither
creates nor promotes distrust in the administration of justice, and prevents anybody from harboring and
encouraging discontent which, in many cases, is the source of disorder, thus undermining the foundation
upon which rests that bulwark called judicial power to which those who are aggrieved turn for protection
and relief.119 (Emphases supplied.)
Thus, the lawyer in Salcedo was fined and reprimanded for his injudicious statements in his pleading, by
accusing the Court of "erroneous ruling." Here, the respondents Statement goes way beyond merely
ascribing error to the Court.
Other cases cited by respondents likewise espouse rulings contrary to their position. In re: Atty. Vicente
Raul Almacen,120 cited in the Common Compliance and the Vasquez Compliance, was an instance where
the Courtindefinitely suspended a member of the Bar for filing and releasing to the press a "Petition to
Surrender Lawyers Certificate of Title" in protest of what he claimed was a great injustice to his client
committed by the Supreme Court. In the decision, the petition was described, thus:
He indicts this Court, in his own phrase, as a tribunal "peopled by men who are calloused to our pleas for
justice, who ignore without reasons their own applicable decisions and commit culpable violations of the
Constitution with impunity." His client's he continues, who was deeply aggrieved by this Court's "unjust
judgment," has become "one of the sacrificial victims before the altar of hypocrisy." In the same breath
that he alludes to the classic symbol of justice, he ridicules the members of this Court, saying "that justice
as administered by the present members of the Supreme Court is not only blind, but also deaf and dumb."
He then vows to argue the cause of his client "in the people's forum," so that "the people may know of the
silent injustices committed by this Court," and that "whatever mistakes, wrongs and injustices that were
committed must never be repeated." He ends his petition with a prayer that
"x x x a resolution issue ordering the Clerk of Court to receive the certificate of the undersigned attorney
and counsellor-at-law IN TRUST with reservation that at any time in the future and in the event we regain
our faith and confidence, we may retrieve our title to assume the practice of the noblest profession." 121
It is true that in Almacen the Court extensively discussed foreign jurisprudence on the principle that a
lawyer, just like any citizen, has the right to criticize and comment upon actuations of public officers,
including judicial authority. However, the real doctrine in Almacen is that such criticism of the courts,
whether done in court or outside of it, must conform to standards of fairness and propriety. This case
engaged in an even more extensive discussion of the legal authorities sustaining this view.1awphi1 To
quote from that decision:
But it is the cardinal condition of all such criticism that it shall be bona fide, and shall not spill
over the walls of decency and propriety. A wide chasm exists between fair criticism, on the one
hand, and abuse and slander of courts and the judges thereof, on the other. Intemperate and
unfair criticism is a gross violation of the duty of respect to courts. It is such a misconduct that
subjects a lawyer to disciplinary action.
For, membership in the Bar imposes upon a person obligations and duties which are not mere flux and
ferment. His investiture into the legal profession places upon his shoulders no burden more basic, more
exacting and more imperative than that of respectful behavior toward the courts. He vows solemnly to
conduct himself "with all good fidelity x x x to the courts;" and the Rules of Court constantly remind him
"to observe and maintain the respect due to courts of justice and judicial officers." The first canon of legal
ethics enjoins him "to maintain towards the courts a respectful attitude, not for the sake of the temporary
incumbent of the judicial office, but for the maintenance of its supreme importance."
As Mr. Justice Field puts it:
"x x x the obligation which attorneys impliedly assume, if they do not by express declaration take upon
themselves, when they are admitted to the Bar, is not merely to be obedient to the Constitution and laws,
but to maintain at all times the respect due to courts of justice and judicial officers. This obligation is not
discharged by merely observing the rules of courteous demeanor in open court, but includes abstaining
out of court from all insulting language and offensive conduct toward judges personally for their judicial
acts." (Bradley, v. Fisher, 20 Law. 4d. 647, 652)
The lawyer's duty to render respectful subordination to the courts is essential to the orderly administration
of justice. Hence, in the assertion of their clients' rights, lawyers even those gifted with superior intellect
are enjoined to rein up their tempers.
"The counsel in any case may or may not be an abler or more learned lawyer than the judge, and it may
tax his patience and temper to submit to rulings which he regards as incorrect, but discipline and selfrespect are as necessary to the orderly administration of justice as they are to the effectiveness of an
army. The decisions of the judge must be obeyed, because he is the tribunal appointed to decide, and the
bar should at all times be the foremost in rendering respectful submission." (In Re Scouten, 40 Atl. 481)
xxxx
In his relations with the courts, a lawyer may not divide his personality so as to be an attorney at one time
and a mere citizen at another. Thus, statements made by an attorney in private conversations or
communications or in the course of a political campaign, if couched in insulting language as to bring into
scorn and disrepute the administration of justice, may subject the attorney to disciplinary
action.122 (Emphases and underscoring supplied.)
In a similar vein, In re: Vicente Sotto,123 cited in the Vasquez Compliance, observed that:
[T]his Court, in In re Kelly, held the following:
The publication of a criticism of a party or of the court to a pending cause, respecting the same, has
always been considered as misbehavior, tending to obstruct the administration of justice, and subjects
such persons to contempt proceedings. Parties have a constitutional right to have their causes tried fairly
in court, by an impartial tribunal, uninfluenced by publications or public clamor. Every citizen has a
profound personal interest in the enforcement of the fundamental right to have justice administered by the
courts, under the protection and forms of law, free from outside coercion or interference. x x x.
Mere criticism or comment on the correctness or wrongness, soundness or unsoundness of the decision of
the court in a pending case made in good faith may be tolerated; because if well founded it may enlighten
the court and contribute to the correction of an error if committed; but if it is not well taken and obviously
erroneous, it should, in no way, influence the court in reversing or modifying its decision. x x x.
xxxx
To hurl the false charge that this Court has been for the last years committing deliberately "so many
blunders and injustices," that is to say, that it has been deciding in favor of one party knowing that the law
and justice is on the part of the adverse party and not on the one in whose favor the decision was
rendered, in many cases decided during the last years, would tend necessarily to undermine the
confidence of the people in the honesty and integrity of the members of this Court, and consequently to
lower or degrade the administration of justice by this Court. The Supreme Court of the Philippines is, under
the Constitution, the last bulwark to which the Filipino people may repair to obtain relief for their
grievances or protection of their rights when these are trampled upon, and if the people lose their
confidence in the honesty and integrity of the members of this Court and believe that they cannot expect
justice therefrom, they might be driven to take the law into their own hands, and disorder and perhaps
chaos might be the result. As a member of the bar and an officer of the courts Atty. Vicente Sotto, like any
other, is in duty bound to uphold the dignity and authority of this Court, to which he owes fidelity according
to the oath he has taken as such attorney, and not to promote distrust in the administration of
justice. Respect to the courts guarantees the stability of other institutions, which without such guaranty
would be resting on a very shaky foundation. 124 (Emphases and underscoring supplied.)
That the doctrinal pronouncements in these early cases are still good law can be easily gleaned even from
more recent jurisprudence.
In Choa v. Chiongson,125 the Court administratively disciplined a lawyer, through the imposition of a fine,
for making malicious and unfounded criticisms of a judge in the guise of an administrative complaint and
held, thus:
As an officer of the court and its indispensable partner in the sacred task of administering justice, graver
responsibility is imposed upon a lawyer than any other to uphold the integrity of the courts and to show
respect to its officers. This does not mean, however, that a lawyer cannot criticize a judge. As we stated in
Tiongco vs. Hon. Aguilar:
It does not, however, follow that just because a lawyer is an officer of the court, he cannot criticize the
courts. That is his right as a citizen, and it is even his duty as an officer of the court to avail of such right.
Thus, in In Re: Almacen (31 SCRA 562, 579-580 [1970]), this Court explicitly declared:
Hence, as a citizen and as officer of the court, a lawyer is expected not only to exercise the right, but also
to consider it his duty to avail of such right. No law may abridge this right. Nor is he "professionally
answerable to a scrutiny into the official conduct of the judges, which would not expose him to legal
animadversion as a citizen." (Case of Austin, 28 Am Dec. 657, 665).
xxxx
Nevertheless, such a right is not without limit. For, as this Court warned in Almacen:
But it is a cardinal condition of all such criticism that it shall be bona fide, and shall not spill over the walls
of decency and propriety. A wide chasm exists between fair criticism, on the one hand, and abuse and
slander of courts and the judges thereof, on the other. Intemperate and unfair criticism is a gross violation
of the duty of respect to courts. It is such a misconduct, that subjects a lawyer to disciplinary action.
xxxx
Elsewise stated, the right to criticize, which is guaranteed by the freedom of speech and of expression in
the Bill of Rights of the Constitution, must be exercised responsibly, for every right carries with it a
corresponding obligation.Freedom is not freedom from responsibility, but freedom with responsibility. x x x.
xxxx
Proscribed then are, inter alia, the use of unnecessary language which jeopardizes high esteem in courts,
creates or promotes distrust in judicial administration (Rheem, supra), or tends necessarily to undermine
the confidence of people in the integrity of the members of this Court and to degrade the administration of
justice by this Court (In re: Sotto, 82 Phil. 595 [1949]); or of offensive and abusive language (In re: Rafael
Climaco, 55 SCRA 107 [1974]); or abrasive and offensive language (Yangson vs. Salandanan, 68 SCRA 42
The Show Cause Resolution does not interfere with respondents academic freedom.
It is not contested that respondents herein are, by law and jurisprudence, guaranteed academic freedom
and undisputably, they are free to determine what they will teach their students and how they will teach.
We must point out that there is nothing in the Show Cause Resolution that dictates upon respondents the
subject matter they can teach and the manner of their instruction. Moreover, it is not inconsistent with the
principle of academic freedom for this Court to subject lawyers who teach law to disciplinary action for
contumacious conduct and speech, coupled with undue intervention in favor of a party in a pending case,
without observing proper procedure, even if purportedly done in their capacity as teachers.
A novel issue involved in the present controversy, for it has not been passed upon in any previous case
before this Court, is the question of whether lawyers who are also law professors can invoke academic
freedom as a defense in an administrative proceeding for intemperate statements tending to pressure the
Court or influence the outcome of a case or degrade the courts.
Applying by analogy the Courts past treatment of the "free speech" defense in other bar discipline cases,
academic freedom cannot be successfully invoked by respondents in this case. The implicit ruling in the
jurisprudence discussed above is that the constitutional right to freedom of expression of members of the
Bar may be circumscribed by their ethical duties as lawyers to give due respect to the courts and to uphold
the publics faith in the legal profession and the justice system. To our mind, the reason that freedom of
expression may be so delimited in the case of lawyers applies with greater force to the academic freedom
of law professors.
It would do well for the Court to remind respondents that, in view of the broad definition in Cayetano v.
Monsod,134lawyers when they teach law are considered engaged in the practice of law. Unlike professors in
other disciplines and more than lawyers who do not teach law, respondents are bound by their oath to
uphold the ethical standards of the legal profession. Thus, their actions as law professors must be
measured against the same canons of professional responsibility applicable to acts of members of the Bar
as the fact of their being law professors is inextricably entwined with the fact that they are lawyers.
Even if the Court was willing to accept respondents proposition in the Common Compliance that their
issuance of the Statement was in keeping with their duty to "participate in the development of the legal
system by initiating or supporting efforts in law reform and in the improvement of the administration of
justice" under Canon 4 of the Code of Professional Responsibility, we cannot agree that they have fulfilled
that same duty in keeping with the demands of Canons 1, 11 and 13 to give due respect to legal processes
and the courts, and to avoid conduct that tends to influence the courts. Members of the Bar cannot be
selective regarding which canons to abide by given particular situations. With more reason that law
professors are not allowed this indulgence, since they are expected to provide their students exemplars of
the Code of Professional Responsibility as a whole and not just their preferred portions thereof.
The Courts rulings on the submissions regarding the charge of violation of Canons 1, 11 and 13.
Having disposed of respondents main arguments of freedom of expression and academic freedom, the
Court considers here the other averments in their submissions.
With respect to good faith, respondents allegations presented two main ideas: (a) the validity of their
position regarding the plagiarism charge against Justice Del Castillo, and (b) their pure motive to spur this
Court to take the correct action on said issue.
The Court has already clarified that it is not the expression of respondents staunch belief that Justice Del
Castillo has committed a misconduct that the majority of this Court has found so unbecoming in the Show
Cause Resolution. No matter how firm a lawyers conviction in the righteousness of his cause there is
simply no excuse for denigrating the courts and engaging in public behavior that tends to put the courts
and the legal profession into disrepute. This doctrine, which we have repeatedly upheld in such cases as
Salcedo, In re Almacen and Saberong, should be applied in this case with more reason, as the respondents,
not parties to the Vinuya case, denounced the Court and urged it to change its decision therein, in a public
statement using contumacious language, which with temerity they subsequently submitted to the Court
for "proper disposition."
That humiliating the Court into reconsidering the Vinuya Decision in favor of the Malaya Lolas was one of
the objectives of the Statement could be seen in the following paragraphs from the same:
And in light of the significance of this decision to the quest for justice not only of Filipino women, but of
women elsewhere in the world who have suffered the horrors of sexual abuse and exploitation in times of
war, the Court cannot coldly deny relief and justice to the petitioners on the basis of pilfered and
misinterpreted texts.
xxxx
(3) The same breach and consequent disposition of the Vinuya case does violence to the primordial
function of the Supreme Court as the ultimate dispenser of justice to all those who have been left without
legal or equitable recourse, such as the petitioners therein. 135 (Emphases and underscoring supplied.)
Whether or not respondents views regarding the plagiarism issue in the Vinuya case had valid
basis was wholly immaterial to their liability for contumacious speech and conduct. These are
two separate matters to be properly threshed out in separate proceedings. The Court
considers it highly inappropriate, if not tantamount to dissembling, the discussion devoted in
one of the compliances arguing the guilt of Justice Del Castillo. In the Common Compliance,
respondents even go so far as to attach documentary evidence to support the plagiarism
charges against Justice Del Castillo in the present controversy. The ethics case of Justice Del
Castillo (A.M. No. 10-7-17-SC), with the filing of a motion for reconsideration, was still pending
at the time of the filing of respondents submissions in this administrative case. As
respondents themselves admit, they are neither parties nor counsels in the ethics case against
Justice Del Castillo. Notwithstanding their professed overriding interest in said ethics case, it
is not proper procedure for respondents to bring up their plagiarism arguments here
especially when it has no bearing on their own administrative case.
Still on motive, it is also proposed that the choice of language in the Statement was intended for effective
speech; that speech must be "forceful enough to make the intended recipients listen." 136 One wonders
what sort of effect respondents were hoping for in branding this Court as, among others, callous, dishonest
and lacking in concern for the basic values of decency and respect. The Court fails to see how it can
ennoble the profession if we allow respondents to send a signal to their students that the only way to
effectively plead their cases and persuade others to their point of view is to be offensive.
This brings to our mind the letters of Dr. Ellis and Prof. Tams which were deliberately quoted in full in the
narration of background facts to illustrate the sharp contrast between the civil tenor of these letters and
the antagonistic irreverence of the Statement. In truth, these foreign authors are the ones who would
expectedly be affected by any perception of misuse of their works. Notwithstanding that they are beyond
the disciplinary reach of this Court, they still obviously took pains to convey their objections in a deferential
and scholarly manner. It is unfathomable to the Court why respondents could not do the same. These
foreign authors letters underscore the universality of the tenet that legal professionals must deal with
each other in good faith and due respect. The mark of the true intellectual is one who can express his
opinions logically and soberly without resort to exaggerated rhetoric and unproductive recriminations.
As for the claim that the respondents noble intention is to spur the Court to take "constructive action" on
the plagiarism issue, the Court has some doubts as to its veracity. For if the Statement was primarily
meant for this Courts consideration, why was the same published and reported in the media first before it
was submitted to this Court? It is more plausible that the Statement was prepared for consumption by the
general public and designed to capture media attention as part of the effort to generate interest in the
most controversial ground in the Supplemental Motion for Reconsideration filed in the Vinuya case by Atty.
Roque, who is respondents colleague on the UP Law faculty.
In this regard, the Court finds that there was indeed a lack of observance of fidelity and due respect to the
Court, particularly when respondents knew fully well that the matter of plagiarism in the Vinuya decision
and the merits of the Vinuya decision itself, at the time of the Statements issuance, were still both sub
judice or pending final disposition of the Court. These facts have been widely publicized. On this point,
respondents allege that at the time the Statement was first drafted on July 27, 2010, they did not know of
the constitution of the Ethics Committee and they had issued the Statement under the belief that this
Court intended to take no action on the ethics charge against Justice Del Castillo. Still, there was a
significant lapse of time from the drafting and printing of the Statement on July 27, 2010 and its
publication and submission to this Court in early August when the Ethics Committee had already been
convened. If it is true that the respondents outrage was fueled by their perception of indifference on the
part of the Court then, when it became known that the Court did intend to take action, there was nothing
to prevent respondents from recalibrating the Statement to take this supervening event into account in the
interest of fairness.
Speaking of the publicity this case has generated, we likewise find no merit in the respondents reliance on
various news reports and commentaries in the print media and the internet as proof that they are being
unfairly "singled out." On the contrary, these same annexes to the Common Compliance show that it is not
enough for one to criticize the Court to warrant the institution of disciplinary 137 or contempt138 action. This
Court takes into account the nature of the criticism and weighs the possible repercussions of the same on
the Judiciary. When the criticism comes from persons outside the profession who may not have a full grasp
of legal issues or from individuals whose personal or other interests in making the criticism are obvious,
the Court may perhaps tolerate or ignore them. However, when law professors are the ones who appear to
have lost sight of the boundaries of fair commentary and worse, would justify the same as an exercise of
civil liberties, this Court cannot remain silent for such silence would have a grave implication on legal
education in our country.
With respect to the 35 respondents named in the Common Compliance, considering that this appears to be
the first time these respondents have been involved in disciplinary proceedings of this sort, the Court is
willing to give them the benefit of the doubt that they were for the most part well-intentioned in the
issuance of the Statement. However, it is established in jurisprudence that where the excessive and
contumacious language used is plain and undeniable, then good intent can only be mitigating. As this
Court expounded in Salcedo:
In his defense, Attorney Vicente J. Francisco states that it was not his intention to offend the court or to be
recreant to the respect thereto but, unfortunately, there are his phrases which need no further comment.
Furthermore, it is a well settled rule in all places where the same conditions and practice as those in this
jurisdiction obtain, that want of intention is no excuse from liability (13 C. J., 45). Neither is the fact that
the phrases employed are justified by the facts a valid defense:
"Where the matter is abusive or insulting, evidence that the language used was justified by the facts is not
admissible as a defense. Respect for the judicial office should always be observed and enforced." (In re
Stewart, 118 La., 827; 43 S., 455.) Said lack or want of intention constitutes at most an extenuation of
liability in this case, taking into consideration Attorney Vicente J. Francisco's state of mind, according to
him when he prepared said motion. This court is disposed to make such concession. However, in order to
avoid a recurrence thereof and to prevent others, by following the bad example, from taking the same
course, this court considers it imperative to treat the case of said attorney with the justice it
deserves.139 (Emphases supplied.)
Thus, the 35 respondents named in the Common Compliance should, notwithstanding their claim of good
faith, be reminded of their lawyerly duty, under Canons 1, 11 and 13, to give due respect to the courts and
to refrain from intemperate and offensive language tending to influence the Court on pending matters or
to denigrate the courts and the administration of justice.
With respect to Prof. Vasquez, the Court favorably notes the differences in his Compliance compared to his
colleagues. In our view, he was the only one among the respondents who showed true candor and sincere
deference to the Court. He was able to give a straightforward account of how he came to sign the
Statement. He was candid enough to state that his agreement to the Statement was in principle and that
the reason plagiarism was a "fair topic of discussion" among the UP Law faculty prior to the promulgation
of the October 12, 2010 Decision in A.M. No. 10-7-17-SC was the uncertainty brought about by a division of
opinion on whether or not willful or deliberate intent was an element of plagiarism. He was likewise willing
to acknowledge that he may have been remiss in failing to assess the effect of the language of the
Statement and could have used more care. He did all this without having to retract his position on the
plagiarism issue, without demands for undeserved reliefs (as will be discussed below) and without baseless
insinuations of deprivation of due process or of prejudgment. This is all that this Court expected from
respondents, not for them to sacrifice their principles but only that they recognize that they themselves
may have committed some ethical lapse in this affair. We commend Prof. Vaquez for showing that at least
one of the respondents can grasp the true import of the Show Cause Resolution involving them. For these
reasons, the Court finds Prof. Vasquezs Compliance satisfactory.
As for Prof. Lynch, in view of his Manifestation that he is a member of the Bar of the State of Minnesota
and, therefore, not under the disciplinary authority of this Court, he should be excused from these
proceedings. However, he should be reminded that while he is engaged as a professor in a Philippine law
school he should strive to be a model of responsible and professional conduct to his students even without
the threat of sanction from this Court. For even if one is not bound by the Code of Professional
Responsibility for members of the Philippine Bar, civility and respect among legal professionals of any
nationality should be aspired for under universal standards of decency and fairness.
The Courts ruling on Dean Leonens Compliance regarding the charge of violation of Canon 10.
To recall, the Show Cause Resolution directed Dean Leonen to show cause why he should not be
disciplinary dealt with for violation of Canon 10, Rules 10.01, 10.02 and 10.03 and for submitting a
"dummy" that was not a true and faithful reproduction of the signed Statement.
In his Compliance, Dean Leonen essentially denies that Restoring Integrity II was not a true and faithful
reproduction of the actual signed copy, Restoring Integrity I, because looking at the text or the body,
there were no differences between the two. He attempts to downplay the discrepancies in the signature
pages of the two versions of the Statement (i.e., Restoring Integrity I and Restoring Integrity II) by
claiming that it is but expected in "live" public manifestos with dynamic and evolving pages as more and
more signatories add their imprimatur thereto. He likewise stresses that he is not administratively liable
because he did not misrepresent the members of the UP Law faculty who "had agreed with the Restoring
Integrity Statement proper and/or who had expressed their desire to be signatories thereto." 140
To begin with, the Court cannot subscribe to Dean Leonens implied view that the signatures in the
Statement are not as significant as its contents. Live public manifesto or not, the Statement was formally
submitted to this Court at a specific point in time and it should reflect accurately its signatories at that
point. The value of the Statement as a UP Law Faculty Statement lies precisely in the identities of the
persons who have signed it, since the Statements persuasive authority mainly depends on the reputation
and stature of the persons who have endorsed the same. Indeed, it is apparent from respondents
explanations that their own belief in the "importance" of their positions as UP law professors prompted
them to publicly speak out on the matter of the plagiarism issue in the Vinuya case.
Further, in our assessment, the true cause of Dean Leonens predicament is the fact that he did not from
the beginning submit the signed copy, Restoring Integrity I, to this Court on August 11, 2010 and, instead,
submitted Restoring Integrity II with its retyped or "reformatted" signature pages. It would turn out,
according to Dean Leonens account, that there were errors in the retyping of the signature pages due to
lapses of his unnamed staff. First, an unnamed administrative officer in the deans office gave the dean
inaccurate information that led him to allow the inclusion of Justice Mendoza as among the signatories of
Restoring Integrity II. Second, an unnamed staff also failed to type the name of Atty. Armovit when
encoding the signature pages of Restoring Integrity II when in fact he had signed Restoring Integrity I.
The Court can understand why for purposes of posting on a bulletin board or a website a signed document
may have to be reformatted and signatures may be indicated by the notation (SGD). This is not unusual.
We are willing to accept that the reformatting of documents meant for posting to eliminate blanks is
necessitated by vandalism concerns.
However, what is unusual is the submission to a court, especially this Court, of a signed document for the
Courts consideration that did not contain the actual signatures of its authors. In most cases, it is
the original signed document that is transmitted to the Court or at the very least a photocopy of the actual
signed document. Dean Leonen has not offered any explanation why he deviated from this practice with
his submission to the Court of Restoring Integrity II on August 11, 2010. There was nothing to prevent the
dean from submitting Restoring Integrity I to this Court even with its blanks and unsigned portions. Dean
Leonen cannot claim fears of vandalism with respect to court submissions for court employees are
accountable for the care of documents and records that may come into their custody. Yet, Dean Leonen
deliberately chose to submit to this Court the facsimile that did not contain the actual signatures and his
silence on the reason therefor is in itself a display of lack of candor.
Still, a careful reading of Dean Leonens explanations yield the answer. In the course of his explanation of
his willingness to accept his administrative officers claim that Justice Mendoza agreed to be indicated as a
signatory, Dean Leonen admits in a footnote that other professors had likewise only authorized him to
indicate them as signatories and had not in fact signed the Statement. Thus, at around the time Restoring
Integrity II was printed, posted and submitted to this Court, at least one purported signatory thereto had
not actually signed the same. Contrary to Dean Leonens proposition, that is precisely tantamount to
making it appear to this Court that a person or persons participated in an act when such person or persons
did not.
We are surprised that someone like Dean Leonen, with his reputation for perfection and stringent
standards of intellectual honesty, could proffer the explanation that there was no misrepresentation when
he allowed at least one person to be indicated as having actually signed the Statement when all he had
was a verbal communication of an intent to sign. In the case of Justice Mendoza, what he had was only
hearsay information that the former intended to sign the Statement. If Dean Leonen was truly determined
to observe candor and truthfulness in his dealings with the Court, we see no reason why he could not have
waited until all the professors who indicated their desire to sign the Statement had in fact signed before
transmitting the Statement to the Court as a duly signed document. If it was truly impossible to secure
some signatures, such as that of Justice Mendoza who had to leave for abroad, then Dean Leonen should
have just resigned himself to the signatures that he was able to secure.
We cannot imagine what urgent concern there was that he could not wait for actual signatures before
submission of the Statement to this Court. As respondents all asserted, they were neither parties to nor
counsels in the Vinuya case and the ethics case against Justice Del Castillo. The Statement was neither a
pleading with a deadline nor a required submission to the Court; rather, it was a voluntary submission that
Dean Leonen could do at any time.
In sum, the Court likewise finds Dean Leonens Compliance unsatisfactory. However, the Court is willing to
ascribe these isolated lapses in judgment of Dean Leonen to his misplaced zeal in pursuit of his objectives.
In due consideration of Dean Leonens professed good intentions, the Court deems it sufficient to
admonish Dean Leonen for failing to observe full candor and honesty in his dealings with the Court as
required under Canon 10.
Respondents requests for a hearing, for production/presentation of evidence bearing on the plagiarism
and misrepresentation issues in G.R. No. 162230 and A.M. No. 10-7-17-SC, and for access to the records of
A.M. No. 10-7-17-SC are unmeritorious.
In the Common Compliance, respondents named therein asked for alternative reliefs should the Court find
their Compliance unsatisfactory, that is, that the Show Cause Resolution be set for hearing and for that
purpose, they be allowed to require the production or presentation of witnesses and evidence bearing on
the plagiarism and misrepresentation issues in the Vinuya case (G.R. No. 162230) and the plagiarism case
against Justice Del Castillo (A.M. No. 10-7-17-SC) and to have access to the records of, and evidence that
were presented or may be presented in the ethics case against Justice Del Castillo. The prayer for a
hearing and for access to the records of A.M. No. 10-7-17-SC was substantially echoed in Dean Leonens
separate Compliance. In Prof. Juan-Bautistas Compliance, she similarly expressed the sentiment that "[i]f
the Restoring Integrity Statement can be considered indirect contempt, under Section 3 of Rule 71 of the
Rules of Court, such may be punished only after charge and hearing."141 It is this group of respondents
premise that these reliefs are necessary for them to be accorded full due process.
Also on the basis of this principle, we ruled in Richards v. Asoy, that no evidentiary hearing is required
before the respondent may be disciplined for professional misconduct already established by the facts on
record.
xxxx
These cases clearly show that the absence of any formal charge against and/or formal investigation of an
errant lawyer do not preclude the Court from immediately exercising its disciplining authority, as long as
the errant lawyer or judge has been given the opportunity to be heard. As we stated earlier, Atty. Buffe has
been afforded the opportunity to be heard on the present matter through her letter-query and
Manifestation filed before this Court.146(Emphases supplied.)
Under the rules and jurisprudence, respondents clearly had no right to a hearing and their reservation of a
right they do not have has no effect on these proceedings. Neither have they shown in their pleadings any
justification for this Court to call for a hearing in this instance. They have not specifically stated
what relevant evidence, documentary or testimonial, they intend to present in their defense that will
necessitate a formal hearing.
Instead, it would appear that they intend to present records, evidence, and witnesses bearing on the
plagiarism and misrepresentation issues in the Vinuya case and in A.M. No. 10-7-17-SC on the assumption
that the findings of this Court which were the bases of the Show Cause Resolution were made in A.M. No.
10-7-17-SC, or were related to the conclusions of the Court in the Decision in that case. This is the primary
reason for their request for access to the records and evidence presented in A.M. No. 10-7-17-SC.
This assumption on the part of respondents is erroneous. To illustrate, the only incident in A.M. No. 10-717-SC that is relevant to the case at bar is the fact that the submission of the actual signed copy of the
Statement (or Restoring Integrity I, as Dean Leonen referred to it) happened there. Apart from that fact, it
bears repeating that the proceedings in A.M. No. 10-7-17-SC, the ethics case against Justice Del Castillo, is
a separate and independent matter from this case.
To find the bases of the statements of the Court in the Show Cause Resolution that the respondents issued
a Statement with language that the Court deems objectionable during the pendency of the Vinuya case
and the ethics case against Justice Del Castillo, respondents need to go no further than the four corners of
the Statement itself, its various versions, news reports/columns (many of which respondents themselves
supplied to this Court in their Common Compliance) and internet sources that are already of public
knowledge.
Considering that what respondents are chiefly required to explain are the language of the Statement and
the circumstances surrounding the drafting, printing, signing, dissemination, etc., of its various versions,
the Court does not see how any witness or evidence in the ethics case of Justice Del Castillo could possibly
shed light on these facts. To be sure, these facts are within the knowledge of respondents and if there is
any evidence on these matters the same would be in their possession.
We find it significant that in Dean Leonens Compliance he narrated how as early as September 2010, i.e.,
before the Decision of this Court in the ethics case of Justice Del Castillo on October 12, 2010 and before
the October 19, 2010 Show Cause Resolution, retired Supreme Court Justice Vicente V. Mendoza, after
being shown a copy of the Statement upon his return from abroad, predicted that the Court would take
some form of action on the Statement. By simply reading a hard copy of the Statement, a reasonable
person, even one who "fundamentally agreed" with the Statements principles, could foresee the
possibility of court action on the same on an implicit recognition that the Statement, as worded, is not a
matter this Court should simply let pass. This belies respondents claim that it is necessary for them to
refer to any record or evidence in A.M. No. 10-7-17-SC in order to divine the bases for the Show Cause
Resolution.
If respondents have chosen not to include certain pieces of evidence in their respective compliances or
chosen not to make a full defense at this time, because they were counting on being granted a hearing,
that is respondents own look-out. Indeed, law professors of their stature are supposed to be aware of the
above jurisprudential doctrines regarding the non-necessity of a hearing in disciplinary cases. They should
bear the consequence of the risk they have taken.
Thus, respondents requests for a hearing and for access to the records of, and evidence presented in, A.M.
No. 10-7-17-SC should be denied for lack of merit.
A final word
In a democracy, members of the legal community are hardly expected to have monolithic views on any
subject, be it a legal, political or social issue. Even as lawyers passionately and vigorously propound their
points of view they are bound by certain rules of conduct for the legal profession. This Court is certainly
not claiming that it should be shielded from criticism. All the Court demands is the same respect and
courtesy that one lawyer owes to another under established ethical standards. All lawyers, whether they
are judges, court employees, professors or private practitioners, are officers of the Court and have
voluntarily taken an oath, as an indispensable qualification for admission to the Bar, to conduct themselves
with good fidelity towards the courts. There is no exemption from this sworn duty for law professors,
regardless of their status in the academic community or the law school to which they belong.
WHEREFORE, this administrative matter is decided as follows:
(1) With respect to Prof. Vasquez, after favorably noting his submission, the Court finds his
Compliance to be satisfactory.
(2) The Common Compliance of 35 respondents, namely, Attys. Marvic M.V.F. Leonen, Froilan M.
Bacungan, Pacifico A. Agabin, Merlin M. Magallona, Salvador T. Carlota, Carmelo V. Sison, Patricia
R.P. Salvador Daway, Dante B. Gatmaytan, Theodore O. Te, Florin T. Hilbay, Jay L. Batongbacal,
Evelyn (Leo) D. Battad, Gwen G. De Vera, Solomon F. Lumba, Rommel J. Casis, Jose Gerardo A.
Alampay, Miguel R. Armovit, Arthur P. Autea, Rosa Maria J. Bautista, Mark R. Bocobo, Dan P. Calica,
Tristan A. Catindig, Sandra Marie O. Coronel, Rosario O. Gallo, Concepcion L. Jardeleza, Antonio G.M.
La Via, Carina C. Laforteza, Jose C. Laureta, Rodolfo Noel S. Quimbo, Antonio M. Santos, Gmeleen
Faye B. Tomboc, Nicholas Felix L. Ty, Evalyn G. Ursua, Susan D. Villanueva and Dina D. Lucenario, is
found UNSATISFACTORY. These 35 respondent law professors are reminded of their lawyerly duty,
under Canons 1, 11 and 13 of the Code of Professional Responsibility, to give due respect to the
Court and to refrain from intemperate and offensive language tending to influence the Court on
pending matters or to denigrate the Court and the administration of justice and warned that the
same or similar act in the future shall be dealt with more severely.
(3) The separate Compliance of Dean Marvic M.V.F. Leonen regarding the charge of violation of
Canon 10 is found UNSATISFACTORY. He is further ADMONISHED to be more mindful of his duty, as a
member of the Bar, an officer of the Court, and a Dean and professor of law, to observe full candor
and honesty in his dealings with the Court and warned that the same or similar act in the future
shall be dealt with more severely.
(4) Prof. Lynch, who is not a member of the Philippine bar, is excused from these proceedings.
However, he is reminded that while he is engaged as a professor in a Philippine law school he
should strive to be a model of responsible and professional conduct to his students even without
the threat of sanction from this Court.
(5) Finally, respondents requests for a hearing and for access to the records of A.M. No. 10-7-17-SC
are denied for lack of merit.
SO ORDERED.
RE: VERIFIED COMPLAINT OF THOMAS S. MERDEGIA AGAINST HON. VICENTE S.E. VELOSO,
ASSOCIATE JUSTICE OF THE COURT OF APPEALS, RELATIVE TO CA G.R. SP No. 119461.
x---------------x
A.C. No.: 10300
RE: RESOLUTION DATED OCTOBER 8, 2013 IN OCA IPI No. 12-205-CA-J AGAINST ATTY.
HOMOBONO ADAZA II.
RESOLUTION
BRION, J.:
On October 8, 2013, we issued a Resolution 1 dismissing the administrative complaint of Tomas
S. Merdegia against Court of Appeals Associate Justice Vicente S.E. Veloso. In this same
Resolution, we also directed Atty. Homobono Adaza II, Merdegias counsel, to show cause why
he should not be cited for contempt.
After considering Atty. Adazas explanation,2 we find his account insufficient, and find him
guilty of indirect contempt.
According to Atty. Adaza, he should not bepunished for indirect contemptas he was merely
performing his duty as Merdegias counsel when he assisted him in preparing the
administrative complaint against Justice Veloso. Atty. Adaza asserted that both he and his
client observed Justice Velosos partiality during the oral arguments, but instead of
immediately filing an administrative complaint against him, he counseled Merdegia to first file
a Motion to Inhibit Justice Veloso from the case. However, upon finding that Justice Veloso
refused to inhibit himself, Merdegia repeated his request to file an administrative complaint
against Justice Veloso, to which Atty. Adaza acceded. Thus, Atty. Adaza pleaded that he should
not be faulted for assisting his client, especially when heal so believes in the merits of his
clients case.
Atty. Adazas explanation, read together with the totality of the facts of the case, fails to
convince us of his innocence from the contempt charge.
As Atty. Adaza himself admitted, he prepared the administrative complaint after Justice Veloso
refused to inhibit himself from a case he was handling. The complaint and the motion for
inhibition were both based on the same main cause: the alleged partiality of Justice Veloso
during the oral arguments of Merdegias case. The resolution dismissing the motion for
inhibition should have disposed of the issue of Justice Velosos bias. While we do not discount
the fact that it was Justice Veloso who penned the resolution denying the motion for inhibition,
we note that he was allowed to do this under the 2009 Internal Rules of the Court of
Appeals.3 Had Merdegia and Atty. Adaza doubted the legality of this resolution, the proper
remedy would have been to file a petition for certiorari assailing the order denying the motion
for inhibition. The settled rule is that administrative complaints against justices cannot and
should not substitute for appeal and other judicial remedies against an assailed decision or
ruling.4 While a lawyer has a duty to represent his client with zeal, he must do so within the
bounds provided by law.5 He is also duty-bound to impress upon his client the propriety of the
legal action the latter wants to undertake, and to encourage compliance with the law and legal
processes.6
A reading of Merdegias administrative complaint7 shows an apparent failure to understand that cases are
not always decided in ones favor, and that an allegation of bias must stem from an extrajudicial source
other than those attendant to the merits and the developments in the case. 8 In this light, we cannot but
attribute to Atty. Adaza the failure to impress upon his client the features of our adversarial system, the
substance of the law on ethics and respect for the judicial system, and his own failure to heed what his
duties as a professional and as an officer of the Court demand of him in acting for his client before our
courts.
To be sure, deciding administrative cases against erring judges is not an easy task. We have to strike a
balance between the need for accountability and integrity in the Judiciary, on the one hand, with the need
to protect the independence and efficiency of the Judiciary from vindictive and enterprising litigants, on the
other. Courts should not be made to bow down to the wiles of litigants who bully judges into
inhibiting from cases or deciding cases in their favor, but neither should we shut our doors
from litigants brave enough to call out the corrupt practices of people who decide the outcome
of their cases. Indeed, litigants who feel unjustly injured by malicious and corrupt acts of erring judges
and officials should not be punished for filing administrative cases against them; neither should these
litigants be unjustly deterred from doing sobya wrong signal from this Court that they would be made to
explain why they should not be cited for contempt when the complaints they filed prove to be without
sufficient cause.
What tipped the balance against Atty. Adaza, in this case, is the totality of the facts of the
case that, when read together with the administrative complaint he prepared, shows that his
complaint is merely an attempt to malign the administration of justice. We note Atty. Adazas
penchantfor filing motions for inhibition throughout the case:first, against Judge Ma. Theresa
Dolores C. Gomez Estoesta of the Regional Trial Court of Manila, who issued an order
unfavorable to his client; and second, against all the justices of the Court of Appeals division
hearing his appeal, for alleged bias during the oral arguments onhiscase. Theseindicators,
taken together with the baseless administrative complaint against Justice Veloso after he
penned an order adverseto Atty. Adazas client, disclosethat there was more to the
administrative complaint than the report of legitimate grievances against members of the
Judiciary.
In Re: Verified Complaint of Engr. Oscar L. Ongjoco, etc.,9 we cited a litigant in indirect
contempt of court for his predisposition to indiscriminately file administrative complaints
against members of the Judiciary. We held that this conduct degrades the judicial office,
interferes with the due performance of their work for the Judiciary, and thus constitutes
indirect contempt of court. Applying this principle to the present case, we hold that Atty.
Adazas acts constitute an improper conduct that tends to degrade the administration of
justice, and is thus punishable for indirect contempt under Section 3(d), Rule 71 of the Rules
of Court.
As a final note, Atty. Adazas contemptuous conduct may also be subject to disciplinary
sanction as a member of the bar.10 If we do not now proceed at all against Atty. Adaza to
discipline him, we are prevented from doing so by our concern for his due process rights. Our
Resolution of October 8, 2013 only asked him to show cause why he should not be cited in
contempt, and not why he should not be administratively penalized. To our mind, imposing a
disciplinary sanction against Atty. Adaza through a contempt proceeding violates the basic
tenets of due process as a disciplinary action is independent and separate from a proceeding
for contempt. A person charged of an offense, whether in an administrative or criminal
proceeding, must be informed of the nature of the charge against him, and given ample
opportunity to explain his side.11
While the two proceedings can proceed simultaneously with each other, 12 a contempt
proceeding cannot substitute for a disciplinary proceeding for erring lawyers, 13 and vice versa.
There can be no substitution between the two proceedings, as contempt proceedings against
lawyers, as officers of the Court, are different in nature and purpose from the discipline of
lawyers as legal professionals. The two proceedings spring from two different powers of the
Court. The Court, in exercising its power of contempt, exercises an implied and inherent power
granted to courts in general.14 Its existence is essential to the preservation of order in judicial
proceedings; to the enforcement of judgments, orders and mandates of courts; and,
consequently, in the administration of justice; 15 thus, it may be instituted against any person
guilty of acts that constitute contempt of court.16 Further, jurisprudence describes a contempt
proceeding as penal and summary in nature; hence, legal principles applicable to criminal
proceedings also apply to contempt proceedings. A judgment dismissing the charge of
contempt, for instance, may no longer be appealed in the same manner that the prohibition
against double jeopardy bars the appeal of an accuseds acquittal. 17
In contrast, a disciplinary proceeding against an erring lawyer is sui generis in nature; it is
neither purely civil nor purely criminal. Unlike a criminal prosecution, a disciplinary proceeding
is not intended to inflict punishment, but to determine whether a lawyer is still fit to be
allowed the privilege of practicing law. It involves an investigation by the Court of the conduct
of its officers, and has, for its primary objective, public interest. 18 Thus, unlike a contempt
proceeding, the acquittal of the lawyer from a disciplinary proceeding cannot bar an
interested party from seeking reconsideration of the ruling. Neither does the imposition of a
penalty for contempt operate as res judicata to a subsequent charge for unprofessional
conduct.19
Contempt proceedings and disciplinary actions are also governed by different procedures.
Contempt of court is governed by the procedures under Rule 71 of the Rules of Court, whereas
disciplinary actions in the practice of law are governed by Rules138 and 139 thereof. 20
IN THESE LIGHTS, the Court finds Atty. Homobomo Adaza II GUILTY OF INDIRECT CONTEMPT for
filing a frivolous suit against Court of Appeals Associate Justice Vicente S.E. Veloso, and
hereby sentences him to pay, within the period of fifteen days from the promulgation of this
judgment, a fine of P5,000.00. The respondent is also WARNED that further similar
misbehavior on his part may be a ground for the institution of disciplinary proceedings against
him.
SO ORDERED.
On April 19, 2010, Carbajosa manifested his objection to the foregoing order and insisted on the issuance
of a writ of execution averring that in the absence of any restraining order, its issuance is imperative so as
not to unduly delay the administration of justice.13
On May 24, 2010, Judge Patricio issued an Order14 reiterating his previous stance that there is a necessity
to await the result of the referral made by the Chief Justice to the Third Division Clerk of Court, thus:
Wherefore, the previous order of this Court granting the holding in abeyance of the issuance of a writ of
execution still stands.
Furnish copy of this order to the offended party, the private prosecutor, as well as [Bieles] and their
counsel for their information.
SO ORDERED.15
Bieles thereafter moved that the property bond she initially posted be substituted by a cash bond because
the former was already needed by her bondsman. The motion was vehemently opposed by Carbajosa. On
May31, 2011, Judge Patricio issued an Order16 granting Bieles motion explaining that the same is not
covered by Section 4, Rule 114 of the Rules of Court prohibiting an accused to put up a bail bond when
there is already a final and executory judgment. Judge Patricio clarified that this is not a case for the
posting of a bond but rather, the substitution of one posted at the beginning stage of the case.
In the same Order, Judge Patricio disclosed that he sent a query to the OCA regarding the effect of the
Chief Justices endorsement of Bieles letter to the implementation of the final judgment of her conviction.
In an endorsement dated September 29, 2010, Deputy Court Administrator (DCA)Raul Villanueva referred
his query to Atty. Wilhelmina Geronga (Atty.Geronga), Chief of the OCA-Legal Office for comment.
In a letter17 dated September 5, 2011, Atty. Geronga informed Judge Patricio that the subject matter of his
query is judicial in nature hence, beyond the mandate of the OCA. Also, as a matter of policy, the OCA
refrains from rendering an opinion on matters that may later on be brought to the Court for judicial
determination. Atty. Geronga suggested that the issue be resolved based on pertinent jurisprudence and
relevant laws.
In the meantime, two (2) motions were awaiting Judge Patricios ruling, viz: (a) Carbajosas motion to recall
the Order dated May 31, 2011approving the substitution of Bieles property bond by a cash bond; and (b)
motion to suspend proceedings filed by Bieles.
Both motions were resolved in an Order18 dated January 6, 2012.Carbajosas motion was denied for being
filed out of time while Bieles motion to suspend proceedings was granted.
In so ruling, Judge Patricio ratiocinated that the motion to recall the Order dated May 31, 2011 can be
likened to a motion for reconsideration that must be filed within fifteen (15) days from receipt of the Order
sought to be reviewed. Having been filed two (2) months after June 17, 2011, the date Carbajosa received
the Order dated May 31, 2011, the motion to recall is considered filed out of time.
Anent the granting of Bieles motion to suspend proceedings, Judge Patricio again reasoned that any action
on the issuance of the writ of execution should await the resolution by the Third Division of the Supreme
Court on Bieles letter as endorsed by the Chief Justice, thus:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the court hereby grants the instant motion to suspend proceedings
filed by [Bieles] until the indorsement made by the then Chief Justice Reynato Puno for the review of this
case had been resolved by said Division.
Furnish copy of this order to the parties and counsels.
SO ORDERED.19
These circumstances prompted Carbajosa to institute the herein administrative
complaint20 imputing gross ignorance of the law, manifest partiality and evident bad faith
against Judge Patricio in continuously deferring the issuance of a writ of execution for the final
and executory judgment in Criminal Case No. 2540.
In his Comment21, Judge Patricio admitted postponing the resolution of Carbajosas motion for the issuance
of a writ of execution but he denied that he acted in bad faith and/or with partiality. He claimed that he
was merely abiding by the endorsement made by the Chief Justice that the letter of accused Bieles be
referred to the Third Division for action.
The administrative case was referred to the OCA for evaluation. In its Report 22 dated July 24, 2013, the OCA
accorded merit to the complaint. The OCA found Judge Patricio guilty of gross ignorance of the law and
recommended that he should be fined in the amount of P21,000.00.
We agree with the OCAs findings and recommendation.
Any delay in the full execution of a final and executory decision is repugnant to the ideal
administration of justice. Hence the rule that once a judgment attains finality, it thereby
becomes immutable and unalterable. The enforcement of such judgment should not be
hampered or evaded; for the immediate enforcement of the parties rights, confirmed by final
judgment, is a major component of the ideal administration of justice. 23 Our penal laws and
rules of procedure, in particular, enjoin that when the judgment of conviction is already final
and executory its execution is ministerial.24
Respondent Judge Patricio, however, demonstrated ignorance of the above rule by repeatedly refusing to
execute the final and executory judgment of conviction against Bieles.
The justification proffered by Judge Patricio is not well-taken. As correctly observed by the OCA, the
Courts Resolution dated August 13,2008 in G.R. No. 182956 affirming the conviction of Bieles
and the Entry of Judgment dated January 15, 2009 evidently carried more legal and procedural
significance and effect in Criminal Case No. 2540, as against the endorsement referring the
letter of Bieles to the Third Division for Agenda. The endorsement did not result in a definite
action on the part of the Court as it did not even remotely suggest that G.R. No. 182956 will be
re-opened. Hence, there was absolutely no justifiable reason for Judge Patricio to rely on the
latter and thereby thwart the basic rules on execution of judgment.
The rules on execution are comprehensive enough for a judge not to know how to apply them or to be
confused by any auxiliary incidents. The issuance of a writ of execution for a final and executory judgment
is ministerial. In other words, a judge is not given the discretion whether or not to implement the
judgment. He is to effect execution without delay and supervise implementation strictly in
accordance with the judgment. Judge Patricios actuations unmistakably exhibit gross
ignorance of the law.
Apropos are the following pronouncements in Spouses Monterola v. Judge Caoibes, Jr. 25 where the Court
found a judge administratively liablefor gross ignorance of the law when he unreasonably delayed and
refused the issuance of a writ of execution for a final judgment, viz:
Observance of the law, which respondent ought to know, is required of every judge. When the law is
sufficiently basic, a judge owe sit to his office to simply apply it; anything less than that is either deliberate
disregard thereof or gross ignorance of the law. It is a continuing pressing responsibility of judges to keep
abreast with the law and changes therein. Ignorance of the law, which everyone is bound to know, excuses
no one not even judges from compliance therewith. We cannot expect a judge to deliberately
disregard an unequivocal rule on execution and a doctrine laid down by the Supreme Court. Canon 4 of the
Canons of Judicial Ethics requires that the judge should be studious of the principles of
law.1wphi1 Canon18 mandates that he should administer his office with due regard to the integrity of the
system of the law itself, remembering that he is not a depository of arbitrary power, but a judge under the
sanction of law. Indeed, it has been said that when the inefficiency springs from a failure to consider a
basic and elemental rule, a law or principle in the discharge of his duties, a judge is either too incompetent
and undeserving of the position and the title he holds or is too vicious that the oversight or omission was
deliberately done in bad faith and in grave abuse of judicial authority x x x.
While judges should not be disciplined for inefficiency on account merely of occasional
mistakes or errors of judgments, it is highly imperative that they should be conversant with
fundamental and basic legal principles in order to merit the confidence of the citizenry.
Respondent Judge has shown lack of familiarity with our laws, rules and regulations as to
undermine the public confidence in the integrity of the courts x x x. 26 (Citations omitted)
Under A.M. No. 01-8-1 0-SC or the Amendment to Rule 140 of the Rules of Court Re: Discipline of Justices
and Judges, gross ignorance of the law is a serious charge, punishable by a tine of more than P20,000.00,
but not exceeding P40,000.00, suspension from office without salary and other benefits for more than
three (3) months but not exceeding six ( 6) months, or dismissal from the service. Based on the attendant
circumstances of this case, a fine of P21 ,000.00 is the appropriate penalty.
WHEREFORE, premises considered, respondent Judge Hannibal R. Patricio, Presiding Judge, Municipal
Circuit Trial Court, President Roxas-Pilar, President Roxas, Capiz is hereby FOUND GUILTY of Gross
Ignorance of the Law and FINED in the amount of P21 ,000.00, with a stern WARNING that a repetition of
the same will be dealt with more severely.
SO ORDERED.