2003 Bar Examination Matter No. 1222
2003 Bar Examination Matter No. 1222
2003 Bar Examination Matter No. 1222
RESOLUTION
PER CURIAM:
On 22 September 2003, the day following the bar examination in Mercantile Law,
Justice Jose C. Vitug, Chairman of the 2003 Bar Examinations Committee, was
apprised of a rumored leakage in the examination on the subject. After making
his own inquiries, Justice Vitug reported the matter to Chief Justice Hilario G.
Davide, Jr., and to the other members of the Court, recommending that the bar
examination on the subject be nullified and that an investigation be conducted
forthwith. On 23 September 2003, the Court adopted the recommendation of
Justice Vitug, and resolved to nullify the examination in Mercantile Law and to
hold another examination on 04 October 2003 at eight oclock in the evening
(being the earliest available time and date) at the De La Salle University, Taft
Avenue, Manila. The resolution was issued without prejudice to any action that
the Court would further take on the matter.
Following the issuance of the resolution, the Court received numerous petitions
and motions from the Philippine Association of Law Schools and various other
groups and persons, expressing agreement to the nullification of the bar
examinations in Mercantile Law but voicing strong reservations against the
holding of another examination on the subject. Several reasons were advanced
by petitioners or movants, among these reasons being the physical, emotional
and financial difficulties that would be encountered by the examinees, if another
examination on the subject were to be held anew. Alternative proposals
submitted to the Court included the spreading out of the weight of Mercantile
Law among the remaining seven bar subjects, i.e., to determine and gauge the
results of the examinations on the basis only of the performance of the
examinees in the seven bar subjects. In a resolution, dated 29 September 2003,
the Court, finding merit in the submissions, resolved to cancel the scheduled
examination in Mercantile Law on 04 October 2003 and to allocate the fifteen
percentage points among the seven bar examination subjects. In the same
resolution, the Court further resolved to create a Committee composed of three
retired members of the Court that would conduct a thorough investigation of the
incident subject of the 23 September 2003 resolution.
In a resolution, dated 07 October 2003, the Court adopted the computation in the
allocation of the fifteen percentage points for Mercantile Law among the remaining seven
bar examination subjects, to wit:
In another resolution, dated 14 October 2003, the Court designated the following retired
Associate Justices of the Supreme Court to compose the Investigating Committee:
Justice Carolina C.
Chairman:
Griño-Aquino
Members: Justice Jose A.R. Melo
Justice Vicente V.
Mendoza
The Investigating Committee was tasked to determine and identify the source of
leakage, the parties responsible therefor or who might have benefited therefrom,
recommend sanctions against all those found to have been responsible for, or
who would have benefited from, the incident in question and to recommend
measures to the Court to safeguard the integrity of the bar examinations.
In the morning of September 21, 2003, the third Sunday of the 2003 bar
examinations, the examination in commercial law was held in De la Salle
University on Taft Avenue, Manila, the venue of the bar examinations since
1995. The next day, the newspapers carried news of an alleged leakage in the
said examination.1 ςrνll
Upon hearing the news and making preliminary inquiries of his own, Justice Jose
C. Vitug, chairman of the 2003 Bar Examinations Committee, reported the
matter to the Chief Justice and recommended that the examination in mercantile
law be cancelled and that a formal investigation of the leakage be undertaken.
The Court designated the following retired Associate Justices of the Supreme
Court to compose the Committee: ςηαñrοblεš νιr†υαl lαω lιbrαrÿ
The Investigating Committee was directed to determine and identify the source
of the leakage, the parties responsible therefor and those who benefited
therefrom, and to recommend measures to safeguard the integrity of the bar
examinations.
5.Atty. Danilo De Guzman, assistant lawyer in the firm of Balgos & Perez; chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
7.Eduardo J. F. Abella, reviewer in commercial law at the Lex Review Center; chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
The Committee held nine (9) meetings - six times to conduct the investigation
and three times to deliberate on its report.
However, upon perusing the questions after the examinations, Cecilia noticed
that many of them were the same questions that were asked in the just-
concluded-examination.
Justice Vitug requested Marlo to invite her friend to his office in the Supreme
Court, but Carbajosa declined the invitation. So, Justice Vitug suggested that
Marlo and Rose invite Carbajosa to meet them at Robinsons Place, Ermita. She
agreed to do that.
Cecilia Carbajosa arrived at Robinsons Place at the appointed time and showed
the test questions to Rose and Marlo. Rose obtained a xerox copy of the leaked
questions and compared them with the bar questions in mercantile law. On the
back of the pages, she wrote, in her own hand, the differences she noted
between the leaked questions and the bar examination questions.
Rose and Marlo delivered the copy of the leaked questions to Justice Vitug who
compared them with the bar examination questions in mercantile law. He found
the leaked questions to be the exact same questions which the examiner in
mercantile law, Attorney Marcial O. T. Balgos, had prepared and submitted to
him as chairman of the Bar Examinations Committee. However, not all of those
questions were asked in the bar examination. According to Justice Vitug, only
75% of the final bar questions were questions prepared by Atty. Balgos; 25%
prepared by Justice Vitug himself, were included in the final bar examination.
The questions prepared by Justice Vitug were not among the leaked test
questions.
Apart from the published news stories about the leakage, Chief Justice Hilario G.
Davide, Jr. and Justice Vitug received, by telephone and mail, reports of the
leakage from Dean Mariano F. Magsalin, Jr. of the Arellano Law Foundation (Exh.
H) and a certain Dale Philip R. De los Reyes (Exh. B -B-3), attaching copies of
the leaked questions and the fax transmittal sheet showing that the source of
the questions was Danny De Guzman who faxed them to Ronan Garvida on
September 17, 2003, four days before the examination in mercantile law on
September 21, 2003 (Exh. B-1).
Atty. Balgos admitted that he does not know how to operate a computer except
to type on it. He does not know how to open and close his own computer which
has a password for that purpose. In fact, he did not know, as he still does, the
password. It is his secretary, Cheryl Palma, who opened and closed his computer
for him (p. 45, tsn, Oct. 24, 2003).
Atty. Balgos testified that he did not devise the password himself. It was Cheryl
Palma who devised it (Id., p. 71).
His computer is exclusively for his own use. It is located inside his room which is
locked when he is not in the office. He comes to the office every other day only.
He thought that his computer was safely insulated from third parties, and that he
alone had access to it. He was surprised to discover, when reports of the bar
leakage broke out, that his computer was in fact interconnected with the
computers of his nine (9) assistant attorneys (tsn, pp. 30,45). As a matter of
fact, the employees - Jovito M. Salonga and Benjamin R. Katly - of the Courts
Management Information Systems Office (MISO) who, upon the request of Atty.
Balgos, were directed by the Investigating Committee to inspect the computer
system in his office, reported that there were 16, not 9, computers connected to
each other via Local Area Network (LAN) and one (1) stand-alone computer
connected to the internet (Exh. M). Atty. Balgos law partner, former Justice
Secretary Hernando Perez, also had a computer, but Perez took it away when he
became the Secretary of Justice.
The nine (9) assistant attorneys with computers, connected to Attorney Balgos
computer, are: ςηαñrοblεš νιr†υαl lαω lιbrαrÿ
2.Claravel Javier
3. Rolynne Torio
5. Charlynne Subia
Upon learning from Justice Vitug of the leakage of the bar questions prepared by
him in mercantile law, Atty. Balgos immediately called together and questioned
his office staff. He interrogated all of them except Atty. Danilo De Guzman who
was absent then. All of them professed to know nothing about the bar leakage.
The next day, Attorney Balgos questioned Attorney Danilo De Guzman, also a
member of the Beta Sigma Lambda fraternity, FEU chapter. De Guzman
admitted to him that he downloaded the test questions from Attorney Balgos
computer and faxed a copy to a fraternity brother. Attorney Balgos was
convinced that De Guzman was the source of the leakage of his test questions in
mercantile law (Tsn, p. 52, Oct. 24, 2003).
CHERYL PALMA, 34 years old, private secretary of Attorney Balgos for the past
six years, testified that she did not type the test questions. She admitted,
however, that it was she who formatted the questions and printed one copy as
directed by her employer. She confirmed Atty. Balgos testimony regarding her
participation in the operation of his personal computer. She disclosed that what
appears in Atty. Balgos computer can be seen in the neighborhood network if the
other computers are open and not in use; that Silvestre Atienza of the
accounting section, can access Atty. Balgos computer when the latter is open
and not in use.
Causing the firm, its partners and members to suffer from undeserved
condemnation and humiliation is not only farthest from, but totally out of, my
mind. It is just unfortunate that the incident subject matter of your
memorandum occurred. Rest assured, though, that I have never been part of
any deliberate scheme to malign the good reputation and integrity of the firm, its
partners and members. (Exh. D)
DANILO DE GUZMAN testified that he joined Balgos & Perez in April 2000. He
obtained his LLB degree from FEU in 1998. As a student, he was an awardee for
academic excellence. He passed the 1998 bar examinations with a grade of
86.4%. In FEU, he joined the Beta Sigma Lambda law fraternity which has
chapters in MLQU, UE and MSU (Mindanao State University). As a member of the
fraternity, he was active during bar examinations and participated in the
fraternitys bar ops.
He testified that sometime in May 2003, when he was exploring Atty. Balgos
computer, (which he often did without the owners knowledge or permission), to
download materials which he thought might be useful to save for future use, he
found and downloaded the test questions in mercantile law consisting of 12
pages. He allegedly thought they were quizzers for a book that Atty. Balgos
might be preparing. He saved them in his hard disk.
He thought of faxing the test questions to one of his fraternity brods, a certain
Ronan Garvida who, De Guzman thought, was taking the 2003 bar examinations.
Garvida is also a law graduate from FEU. He had taken the 2002 bar
examinations, but did not pass.
On September 17, 2003, four days before the mercantile law bar examination,
DeGuzman faxed a copy of the 12-page-test questions (Exhs. I, I-1, I-2, I-3) to
Garvida because earlier he was informed by Garvida that he was retaking the bar
examinations. He advised Garvida to share the questions with other Betan
examinees. He allegedly did not charge anything for the test questions. Later,
after the examination was over, Garvida texted (sent a text message on his cell
phone) him (De Guzman), that he did not take the bar examination.
Besides Garvida, De Guzman faxed the mercantile law bar questions to another
fraternity brother named Arlan (surname unknown), through Reynita (Nanette)
Villasis, his secretary (Tsn, pp. 20-28, Oct. 29, 2003). But he himself faxed the
questions to still another brod named Erwin Tan who had helped him during the
bar ops in 1998 when he (De Guzman) took the bar examinations (Id., p. 28).
He obtained the cell phone numbers of Arlan and Erwin Tan from Gabby
Tanpiengco whom he informed by text message, that they were guide questions,
not tips, in the mercantile law examination.
De Guzman also contacted Garvida who informed him that he gave copies of the
test questions to Betans Randy Iigo and James Bugain.
Arlan also texted De Guzman that almost all the questions were asked in the
examination. Erwin Tan commented that many of the leaked questions were
asked in the examination, pero hindi exacto; mi binago (they were not exactly
the same; there were some changes).
Garvida had intended to take the 2003 bar examinations. He enrolled in the
Consortium Review Center in FEU, paying P10,000.00 as enrollment fee.
However, on his way to the Supreme Court to file his application to take the bar
examination, he suffered pains in his wrist - symptoms that his MS had recurred.
His physician advised him to go to the National Orthopedic Hospital in Quezon
City for treatment. This he did.
Upon receipt of the test questions, Garvida faxed a copy to his brod Randy Iigo
who was reviewing at the Consortium Review Center. Randy photocopied them
for distribution to other fraternity brods. Some of the brods doubted the
usefulness of the test questions, but Randy who has a high regard for De
Guzman, believed that the questions were tips. Garvida did not fax the questions
to any other person than Randy Iigo. He allegedly did not sell the questions to
Randy. I could not do that to a brod, he explained.
In view of the fact that one of the copies of the leaked test questions (Exh. H)
bore on the left margin a rubber stamp composed of the Greek initials BEA-
MLQU, indicating that the source of that copy was the Beta Sigma Lambda
chapter at MLQU, the Committee subpoenaed Ronald Collado, the Most
Illustrious Brother of the Beta Sigma Lambda fraternity of MLQU.
RONALD COLLADO is a senior law student at the MLQU. He admitted that his
fraternity conducted Bar Ops for the 2003 bar exams. Bar Ops are the biggest
activity of the fraternity every year. They start as soon as new officers of the
fraternity are elected in June, and they continue until the bar examinations are
over. The bar operations consist of soliciting funds from alumni brods and friends
to be spent in reproducing bar review materials for the use of their barristers
(bar candidates) in the various review centers, providing meals for their brod-
barristers on examination days; and to rent a bar site or place near De la Salle
University where the examinees and the frat members can convene and take
their meals during the break time. The Betans bar site for the 2003 bar
examinations was located on Leon Guinto Street, Malate. On September 19 and
21, before [the] start of the examination, Collados fraternity distributed bar
review materials for the mercantile law examination to the examinees who came
to the bar site. The test questions (Exh. H) were received by Collado from a
brod, Alan Guiapal, who had received them from Randy Iigo.
Collado caused 30 copies of the test questions to be printed with the logo and
initials of the fraternity (BEA-MLQU) for distribution to the 30 MLQU examinees
taking the bar exams. Because of time constraints, frat members were unable to
answer the test questions despite the clamor for answers, so, they were given
out as is - without answers.
FINDINGS
The Committee finds that the leaked test questions in Mercantile Law were the
questions which the examiner, Attorney Marcial O. T. Balgos, had prepared and
submitted to Justice Jose C. Vitug, as chairman of the 2003 Bar Examinations
Committee. The questions constituted 82% of the questions asked in the
examination in Mercantile Law in the morning of September 21, 2003, Sunday,
in some cases with slight changes which were not substantial and in other cases
exactly as proposed by Atty. Balgos. Hence, any bar examinee who was able to
get hold of the leaked questions before the mercantile law examination and
answered them correctly, would have been assured of passing the examination
with at least a grade of 82%!
The circumstance that the leaked test questions consisted entirely of test
questions prepared by Atty. Balgos, proves conclusively that the leakage
originated from his office, not from the Office of Justice Vitug, the Bar
Examinations Chairman.
Atty. Balgos claimed that the leaked test questions were prepared by him on his
computer. Without any doubt,the source of the leaked test questions was Atty.
Balgos computer. The culprit who stole or downloaded them from Atty. Balgos
computer without the latters knowledge and consent, and who faxed them to
other persons, was Atty. Balgos legal assistant, Attorney Danilo De Guzman, who
voluntarily confessed the deed to the Investigating Committee. De Guzman
revealed that he faxed the test questions, with the help of his secretary Reynita
Villasis, to his fraternity brods, namely, Ronan Garvida, Arlan (whose surname
he could not recall), and Erwin Tan.
In turn, Ronan Garvida faxed the test questions to Betans Randy Iigo and James
Bugain.
Randy Iigo passed a copy or copies of the same questions to another Betan, Alan
Guiapal, who gave a copy to the MLQU-Beta Sigma [Lambdas] Most Illustrious
Brother, Ronald F. Collado, who ordered the printing and distribution of 30 copies
to the MLQUs 30 bar candidates.
Attorney Danilo De Guzmans act of downloading Attorney Balgos test questions
in mercantile law from the latters computer, without his knowledge and
permission, was a criminal act of larceny. It was theft of intellectual property;
the test questions were intellectual property of Attorney Balgos, being the
product of his intellect and legal knowledge.
However, the Investigating Committee does not believe that De Guzman was
solely responsible for the leakage of Atty. Balgos proposed test questions in the
mercantile law examination. The Committee does not believe that he acted
alone, or did not have the assistance and cooperation of other persons, such
as:ςηαñrοblεš νιr†υαl lαω lιbrαrÿ
Cheryl Palma, Atty. Balgos private secretary, who, according to Atty. Balgos
himself, was the only person who knew the password, who could open and close
his computer; and who had the key to his office where his computer was kept.
Since a computer may not be accessed or downloaded unless it is opened,
someone must have opened Atty. Balgos computer in order for De Guzman to
retrieve the test questions stored therein.
Silvestre Atienza, also a fraternity brod of De Guzman, who was responsible for
interconnecting Atty. Balgos computer with the other computers outside Atty.
Balgos room or office, and who was the only other person, besides Cheryl Palma,
who knew the password of Atty. Balgos computer.
The following persons who received from De Guzman, and distributed copies of
the leaked test questions, appear to have conspired with him to steal and profit
from the sale of the test questions. They could not have been motivated solely
by a desire to help the fraternity, for the leakage was widespread (kalat na
kalat) according to Erwin Tan. The possible co-conspirators were: ςηαñrοblεš νιr†υαl lαω lιbrαrà ¿
Ronan Garvida,
Arlan,
Erwin Tan,
Randy Iigo,
Allan Guiapal
The Committee does not believe that De Guzman recklessly broke the law and
risked his job and future as a lawyer, out of love for the Beta Sigma Lambda
fraternity. There must have been an ulterior material consideration for his
breaking the law and tearing the shroud of secrecy that, he very well knows,
covers the bar examinations.
On the other hand, the Committee finds that the theft of the test questions from
Atty. Balgos computer could have been avoided if Atty. Balgos had exercised due
diligence in safeguarding the secrecy of the test questions which he prepared. As
the computer is a powerful modern machine which he admittedly is not fairly
familiar with, he should not have trusted it to deep secret the test questions that
he stored in its hard disk. He admittedly did not know the password of his
computer. He relied on his secretary to use the password to open and close his
computer. He kept his computer in a room to which other persons had access.
Unfamiliar with the use of the machine whose potential for mischief he could not
have been totally unaware of, he should have avoided its use for so sensitive an
undertaking as typing the questions in the bar examination. After all he knew
how to use the typewriter in the use of which he is quite proficient. Atty. Balgos
should therefore have prepared the test questions in his trusty typewriter, in the
privacy of his home, (instead of his law office), where they would have been safe
from the prying eyes of secretaries and assistant attorneys. Atty. Balgos
negligence in the preparation and safekeeping of his proposed test questions for
the bar examination in mercantile law, was not the proximate cause of the bar
leakage; it was, in fact, the root cause. For, if he had taken those simple
precautions to protect the secrecy of his papers, nobody could have stolen them
and copied and circulated them. The integrity of the bar examinations would not
have been sullied by the scandal. He admitted that Mali siguro ako, but that was
what happened (43 tsn, Oct. 24, 2003).
RECOMMENDATION
This Honorable court in the case of Burbe v. Magulta, A.C. No. 5713, June 10,
2002, 383 SCRA 276, pronounced the following reminder for lawyers: Members
of the bar must do nothing that may tend to lessen in any degree the confidence
of the public in the fidelity, the honesty and integrity of the profession. In
another case, it likewise intoned: We cannot overstress the duty of a lawyer to at
all times uphold the integrity and dignity of the legal profession. He can do this
by faithfully performing his duties to society, to the bar, to the courts, and to his
clients. (Reyes v. Javier, A.C. No. 5574, February 2, 2002, 375 SCRA 538). It
goes without saying that a lawyer who violates this precept of the profession by
committing a gross misconduct which dishonors and diminishes the publics
respect for the legal profession, should be disciplined.
After careful deliberation, the Investigating Committee recommends that: ςηαñrοblεš νιr†υαl lαω lιbrαrÿ
The Court also takes note that Mr. Jovito M. Salonga and Mr. Benjamin R. Katly,
two of its employees assigned to the Management Information Systems Office
(MISO), who were tasked by the Investigating Committee to inspect the
computer system in the office of Atty. Balgos, found that the Courts Computer-
Assisted Legal Research (CALR) database 4 was installed in the computer used by
Atty. Balgos. Mr. Salonga and Mr. Katly reported that the system, which was
developed by the MISO, was intended for the exclusive use of the Court. The
installation thereof to any external computer would be unauthorized without the
permission of the Court. Atty. Velasco informed the two Court employees that
the CALR database was installed by Atty. De Guzman on the computer being
used by Atty. Balgos. The matter would also need further investigation to
determine how Atty. De Guzman was able to obtain a copy of the Courts CALR
database.
(1) DISBAR Atty. DANILO DE GUZMAN from the practice of law effective upon his
receipt of this RESOLUTION; chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
(2) REPRIMAND Atty. MARCIAL O.T. BALGOS and DISENTITLE him from
receiving any honorarium as an Examiner in Mercantile Law; chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
Let a copy of this Resolution be made part of the records of Danilo De Guzman in
the Office of the Bar Confidant, Supreme Court of the Philippines, and copies to
be furnished the Integrated Bar of the Philippines and circulated by the Office of
the Court Administrator to all courts.
SO ORDERED.
Digest:
In re: 2003 Bar Examinations
Per Curiam
FACTS:
ISSUE:
RULING: