Fortune Corp v. Ca
Fortune Corp v. Ca
Fortune Corp v. Ca
REGALADO, J.:
This petition impugns and seeks the review on certiorari of the decision 1 of respondent Court of
Appeals, dated September 23, 1992, which affirmed the order of the Regional Trial Court of San
Pablo City disallowing the taking of the oral deposition of Juanito S. Teope, Chairman of the
Board of Directors of herein private respondent Inter-Merchants Corporation.
Facts:
An action for breach of contract was filed by petitioner Fortune Corporation against respondent
Inter-Merchants Corporation, docketed as Civil Case No. SP-3469. After respondent corporation
had filed its Answer, petitioner served the former with written interrogatories pursuant to Rule
25 of the Rules of Court. The interrogatories were answered by respondent corporation through
its board chairman, Juanito A. Teope. Petitioner served upon private respondent a Notice to
Take Deposition Upon Oral Examination in accordance with Section 15, Rule 24.
The trial court ordered that the requested deposition shall not be taken. Its motion for
reconsideration having been denied, petitioner filed an original action for certiorari before the
Supreme Court. However, in a resolution dated May 20, 1992, this Court referred the case to the
Court of the merits. Respondent Court of Appeals promulgated a decision dismissing the
petition: Hence this petition.
Issues:
I. Whether or not availing one mode of discovery will bar the party in availing the other modes?
RULING
No. As a general rule, the scope of discovery is to be liberally construed so as to provide the
litigants with information essential to the expenditious and proper litigation of each of the facts
in dispute. Moreover, it cannot be disputed that the various methods of discovery as provided
for in the Rules are clearly intended to be cumulative, as opposed to alternative or mutually
exclusive.
Supreme Court held that under the present Rules the fact that a party has resorted to a
particular method of discovery will not bar subsequent use of other discovery devices, as long as
the party is not attempting to circumvent a ruling of the court, or to harass or oppress the other
party. As a matter of practice, it will often be desirable to resort to both interrogatories and
depositions in one or the other sequence. Additional lines of inquiry may come to light after the
deposition has been taken, as to which written interrogatories probably would be adequate, and
there is no reason why the examining party should not be entitled to obtain all the relevant
information he desires if no substantial prejudice is done to the party from whom discovery is
sought.
Petition Granted.