Nenita Sanchez V Atty. Aguilos

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Nenita Sanchez v Atty.

Romeo Aguilos
A.C. No. 10781
March 16, 2016

Facts: Complainant Nenita D. Sanchez has charged respondent Atty. Romeo G. Aguilos (respondent)
with misconduct for the latter's refusal to return the amount of P70,000.00 she had paid for his
professional services despite his not having performed the contemplated professional services.

She avers that in March 2005, she sought the legal services of the respondent to represent her in the
annulment of her marriage with her estranged husband, Jovencio C. Sanchez. Complainant claims to
have given him an initial amount of P90,000 but upon following up the status of the case, she was
advised by Atty. Aguilos that he would only start working on the case upon full payment of acceptance
fee (P150,000). Furthermore, she had only learned then that what he had contemplated to file for her
was a petition for legal separation, not one for the annulment of her marriage; that he further told her
that she would have to pay a higher acceptance fee for the annulment of her marriage.

She subsequently withdrew the case from him, and requested the refund of the amounts already paid,
but he refused to do the same as he had already started working on the case; that she had sent him a
letter, through Atty. Isidro S.C. Martinez, to demand the return of her payment less whatever amount
corresponded to the legal services he had already performed; that the respondent did not heed her
demand letter despite his not having rendered any appreciable legal services to her; and that his
constant refusal to return the amounts prompted her to bring an administrative complaint against him
in the Integrated Bar of the Philippines (IBP) on March 20, 2007.

Respondent, in his answer, alleges that the complainant and her British fiancee sought his legal services
to bring the petition for the annulment of her marriage; that based on his evaluation of her situation,
the more appropriate case would be one for legal separation anchored on the psychological incapacity
of her husband; that she and her British fiancee agreed on P150,000.00 for his legal services to bring the
action for legal separation, with the fiancee paying him P70,000.00, as evidenced by his handwritten
receipt.

The respondent admits that he received the demand letter from Atty. Martinez, but states that he
dismissed the letter as a mere scrap of paper because the demand lacked basis in law. It is noted that he
wrote in the last part of his answer dated May 21, 2007 in relation to the demand letter the following:
Hence, respondent accordingly treated the said letter demand for refund dated 15 August 2005 (Annex
"B" of the complaint) as a mere scrap of paper or should have been addressed by her counsel ATTY.
ISIDRO S.C. MARTINEZ, who unskillfully relied on an unverified information furnished him, to the urinal
project of the MMDA where it may serve its rightful purpose

Findings of the IBP

IBP Investigating Commissioner Jose I. De La Rama, Jr. declared that the respondent's insistence that he
could have brought a petition for legal separation based on the psychological incapacity of the
complainant's husband was sanctionable because he himself was apparently not conversant with the
grounds for legal separation; that because he rendered some legal services to the complainant, he was
entitled to receive only P40,000.00 out of the P70,000.00 paid to him as acceptance fee, the P40,000.00
being the value of the services rendered under the principle of quantum meruit; and that, accordingly,
he should be made to return to her the amount of P30,000.00.
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, it is most respectfully recommended that Atty. Romeo G. Aguilos
be ordered to return to complainant Nenita D. Sanchez the amount of P30,000.00 which the former
received as payment for his services because it is excessive.

IBP Board of Governors affirmed the findings of the Investigating Commissioner but modified the
recommended penalty.

RESOLVED to ADOPT and APPROVE, as it is hereby unanimously ADOPTED AND APPROVED, with
modification, the Report and Recommendation of the Investigating Commissioner of the above entitled
case, herein made part of this Resolution as Annex "A", and, finding the recommendation fully
supported by the evidence on record and the applicable laws and rules, and considering respondent's
failure to show respect to his fellow lawyer and for showing offensive and improper words in his
pleadings, Atty. Romeo G. Aguilos, is hereby WARNED and Ordered to Return the Thirty Thousand
(P30,000.00) Pesos to complainant within thirty (30) days from receipt of notice.

Issue: WON he should be ordered to return the atty’s fees paid.

Held: We can easily agree that every attorney is entitled to have and receive a just and reasonable
compensation for services performed at the special instance and request of his client. As long as the
attorney is in good faith and honestly trying to represent and serve the interests of the client, he should
have a reasonable compensation for such services.

The attorney's fees shall be those stipulated in the retainer's agreement between the client and the
attorney, which constitutes the law between the parties for as long as it is not contrary to law, good
morals, good customs, public policy or public order. The underlying theory is that the retainer's
agreement between them gives to the client the reasonable notice of the arrangement on the fees.
Once the attorney has performed the task assigned to him in a valid agreement, his compensation is
determined on the basis of what he and the client agreed. In the absence of the written agreement, the
lawyer's compensation shall be based on quantum meruit, which means "as much as he deserved." The
determination of attorney's fees on the basis of quantum meruit is also authorized "when the counsel,
for justifiable cause, was not able to finish the case to its conclusion."Moreover, quantum meruit
becomes the basis of recovery of compensation by the attorney where the circumstances of the
engagement indicate that it will be contrary to the parties' expectation to deprive the attorney of all
compensation.

Nevertheless, the court shall determine in every case what is reasonable compensation based on the
obtaining circumstances, provided that the attorney does not receive more than what is reasonable, in
keeping with Section 24 of Rule 138 of the Rules of Court, to wit:

Section 24. Compensation of attorneys; agreement as to fees - An attorney shall be entitled to have and
recover from his client no more than a reasonable compensation for his services, with a view to the
importance of the subject matter of the controversy, the extent of the services rendered, and the
professional standing of the attorney. No court shall be bound by the opinion of attorneys as expert
witnesses as to the proper compensation, but may disregard such testimony and base its conclusion on
its own professional knowledge. A written contract for services shall control the amount to be paid
therefor unless found by the court to be unconscionable or unreasonable.
The courts supervision of the lawyer's compensation for legal services rendered is not only for the
purpose of ensuring the reasonableness of the amount of attorney's fees charged, but also for the
purpose of preserving the dignity and integrity of the legal profession.

The respondent should not have accepted the engagement because as it was later revealed, it was way
above his ability and competence to handle the case for annulment of marriage. As a consequence, he
had no basis to accept any amount as attorney's fees from the complainant. He did not even begin to
perform the contemplated task he undertook for the complainant because it was improbable that the
agreement with her was to bring the action for legal separation. His having supposedly prepared the
petition for legal separation instead of the petition for annulment of marriage was either his way of
covering up for his incompetence, or his means of charging her more. Either way did not entitle him to
retain the amount he had already received.

The written receipt dated March 10, 2005 shows that the respondent received P70,000.00 as
acceptance fee. His refusal to return the amount to the complainant rested on his claim of having
already completed the first phase of the preparation of the petition for legal separation after having
held conferences with the complainant and her British fiancee. In this respect, IBP Investigating
Commission De la Rama, Jr. opined that the respondent could retain P40,000.00 of the P70,000.00
because the respondent had rendered some legal services to the complainant, specifically: (a) having
the complainant undergo further interviews towards establishing the ground for legal separation; (b)
reducing into writing the grounds discussed during the interviews based on her statement in her own
dialect (Annexes 1 and 2) after he could not understand the written statement prepared for the purpose
by her British fiancee; (c) requiring her to submit her marriage contract with her husband Jovencio C.
Sanchez (Annex 3), and the certificates of live birth of her four children: Mary Joy, Timothy, Christine,
and Janette Anne, all surnamed Sanchez (Annexes 4, 5, 6 and 7); and (d) finalizing her petition for legal
separation (Annex 8) in the later part of April, 2007.

The opinion of IBP Investigating Commission De la Rama, Jr. in favor of the respondent was too
generous. We cannot see how the respondent deserved any compensation because he did not really
begin to perform the contemplated tasks if, even based on his version, he would prepare the petition for
legal separation instead of the petition for annulment of marriage. The attorney who fails to accomplish
the tasks he should naturally and expectedly perform during his professional engagement does not
discharge his professional responsibility and ethical duty toward his client. The respondent was thus
guilty of misconduct, and may be sanctioned according to the degree of the misconduct. As a
consequence, he may be ordered to restitute to the client the amount received from the latter in
consideration of the professional engagement, subject to the rule on quantum meruit, if warranted.

Accordingly, the respondent shall be fined in the amount of P10,000.00 for his misrepresentation of his
professional competence, and he is further to be ordered to return the entire amount of P70,000.00
received from the client, plus legal interest of 6% per annum reckoned from the date of this decision
until full payment.

Dispositive Portion: WHEREFORE, the Court AFFIRMS the Resolution No. XVIII-2008-476 dated
September 20, 2008 of the Integrated Bar of the Philippines Board of Governors, with the
MODIFICATION that Atty. Romeo G. Aguilos is hereby FINED P10,000.00 for misrepresenting his
professional competence to the client, and REPRIMANDS him for his use of offensive and improper
language towards his fellow attorney, with the stern warning that a repetition of the offense shall be
severely punished.
The Court ORDERS Atty. Romeo G. Aguilos to RETURN to the complainant within thirty (30) days from
notice the sum of P70,000.00, plus legal interest of 6% per annum reckoned from the date of this
decision until full payment.

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