Navarro VS Solidum

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NAVARRO VS. SOLIDUM, JR.

A.C. No. 9872, January 28, 2014

Facts:
Complainant Presbitero engaged the services of respondent to follow up the release of the
payment for the former’s property which was the subject of a Voluntary Offer to Sell (VOS)
to the Department of Agrarian Reform and to represent her in a case against PNB who
has a claim on the property. Presbitero’s daughter, Ma. Theresa P. Yulo (Yulo), also
engaged respondent’s services to handle the registration of her 18.85-hectare lot. Yulo
convinced her sister, Navarro, to finance the expenses for the registration of the property.

Respondent also obtained loans from Navarro and Presbitero on different occasions. For
each loan they executed a MOA which provides that the obligation must be secured by a
particular real estate mortgage owned by respondent. They also agreed that respondent
shall issue postdated checks to cover the principal amount of the loan as well as the
interest thereon. Respondent delivered checks to them.

However, respondent failed to pay the obligation. The checks issued could no longer be
negotiated because the accounts against which they were drawn were already closed.

Issue: Whether respondent violated the Code of Professional Responsibility.

Held: Yes.

Canon 16 and Rule 16.01 of the Code of Professional Responsibility provide:


CANON 16. - A LAWYER SHALL HOLD IN TRUST ALL MONEYS AND PROPERTIES
OF HIS CLIENT THAT MAY COME INTO HIS POSSESSION.

Rule 16.01 – A lawyer shall account for all money or property collected or received for or
from the client.
In this case, the IBP-CBD pointed out that respondent received various amounts from
complainants but he could not account for all of them. Navarro, who financed the
registration of Yulo’s 18.85- hectare lot, claimed that respondent received P265,000 from
her. Respondent countered that P105,000 was paid for real estate taxes but he could not
present any receipt to prove his claim. Respondent also claimed that he paid P70,000 to
the surveyor but the receipt was only for P15,000. Respondent claimed that he paid
P50,000 for filing fee, publication fee, and other expenses but again, he could not
substantiate his claims with any receipt. As pointed out by the IBP-CBD, respondent had
been less than diligent in accounting for the funds he received from Navarro for the
registration of Yulo’s property. As regards Presbitero, it was established during the
clarificatory hearing that respondent received P50,000 from Presbitero. As the IBP-CBD
pointed out, the records do not show how respondent spent the funds because he was not
transparent in liquidating the money he received from Presbitero.

Indeed, his failure to return the excess money in his possession gives rise to the
presumption that he has misappropriated it for his own use to the prejudice of, and in
violation of the trust reposed in him by, the client.

Rule 16.04 of the Code of Professional Responsibility provides:


Rule 16.04. - A lawyer shall not borrow money from his client unless the client’s interests
are fully protected by the nature of the case or by independent advice. Neither shall a
lawyer lend money to a client except, when in the interest of justice, he has to advance
necessary expenses in a legal matter he is handling for the client.
While respondent’s loan from Presbitero was secured by a MOA, postdated checks and real
estate mortgage, it turned out that respondent misrepresented the value of the property he
mortgaged and that the checks he issued were not drawn from his account but from that of his
son. Respondent eventually

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