Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
163210
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, we have hereunto set our hands and affix our
signature this 28th day of September 2000, at Lepanto, Mankayan,
Benguet.8
(Emphasis supplied)
On October 24, 2000, petitioner issued a resolution finding respondents and their
co-accused guilty of the offense of highgrading and dismissing them from their
employment.9
On November 14, 2000, respondents together with the nine other miners, filed a
Complaint for illegal dismissal with the Labor Arbiter (LA), docketed as NLRC Case No.
11-0607-00 against petitioner.10 On August 21, 2001, the LA dismissed the complaint
for lack of merit.
On September 22, 2001, the miners appealed the decision of the LA to the National
Labor Relations Commission (NLRC). On August 30, 2002, the NLRC rendered a
Decision, declaring the dismissal of herein respondents as illegal, but affirming the
dismissal of the nine other complainant miners. The dispositive portion of the NLRC
Decision insofar as respondents are concerned, reads:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the DECISION dated August 21, 2001 is
hereby MODIFIED declaring the dismissal of complainants [herein
respondents] Moreno Dumapis, Elmo Tundagui and Francis Liagao illegal
and ordering respondent to pay them backwages in the total amount of
four hundred eighty thousand one hundred eighty two pesos and 63/100
(P480, 182.63) and separation pay in the total amount of four hundred
seventeen thousand two hundred thirty pesos and 32/100 (P417,230.32) as
computed in the body of the decision.
xxxx
SO ORDERED.11
Petitioner filed a motion for reconsideration which was denied for lack of merit by
the NLRC in its Resolution dated on November 22, 2002.12
Petitioner then filed a petition for certiorari under Rule 65 of the Rules of Court with
the CA assailing the aforementioned decision and resolution of the NLRC. The CA
affirmed the decision of the NLRC13 and denied petitioners Motion for
Reconsideration.
to the facts allegedly relayed to them by Chambers, Damoslog, Daguio, and Madao.
Thus, there is a need to individually scrutinize the statements and testimonies of the
four sources of the Joint Affidavit in order to determine the latters probative weight.
The Joint Affidavit states that, "Mr. Dwayne Chambers saw and surprised several
unidentified miners x x x."30 Chambers simply narrated to the Security Investigators
what he saw but did not indicate herein respondents.
Also stated in the Joint Affidavit is the alleged confession of Damoslog wherein he
named respondents Tundagui and Dumapis as his companions in the act of
highgrading .31
Records show that Damoslog submitted two sworn statements. In his first
statement,32 Damoslog claimed that he was unaware of the act of highrading, and
denied any involvement therein. However, in his second statement,33 Damoslog
claimed to have personally witnessed the act of highgrading and named the miners
involved to wit:
07. Ques - Could you narrate briefly how it transpired then?
Ans - On the first hour of this specific dated and shift at about 0800hrs,
while we were at the 8K stope, 850 level, Mr. Joel Gumatin approached me
that he could not procure some needed amount of money and if possible
we will commit highgrading for that effect to settle his problem. That
because I pity him, I just answered that if they could manage to do it then
they could do it.
08. Ques - Who was the companion of Mr. Gumatin when he approached
you?
Ans - He was alone.
09. Ques - Did Gumatin specifically informed [sic] you his problem?
Ans - I did not asked him honestly but he only insisted that he needed an
amount of money badly as I earlier said.
10. Ques - So just after telling his purpose did he started [sic] the
highgrading activity?
Ans - No, the highgrading scheme started at past 1300 Hrs.
Evidently, Damoslog does not name respondents Dumapis and Tundagui as among
the miners involved in the act of highgrading; neither does he mention respondent
Liagao.
The Joint Affidavit also states that Daguio positively confirmed the act of
highgrading. However, in his sworn statement,35 Daguio claims that he did not
recognize nor did he identify any of the miners, to wit:
11. Ques - In your own honest observation, what could be the estimate [sic]
number of this group of miners doing highgrading activities?
Ans - I dont know but obviously they were several as manifested by their
number of cap lamplights. I also speculated that some of them were hidden
at the curved inner access of the roadway enroute to the inner area.
12. Ques - Did you recognize nor [sic] identify any of them?
Ans - Honestly, no.36 (Emphasis supplied)
Lastly, the Joint Affidavit also points to the confession of Madao wherein he
particularly named respondent Liagao as one of the miners involved in the act of
highgrading.
Madao submitted two sworn statements. In his first sworn statement37 dated
September 16, 2000, Madao claimed his innocence. He did not incriminate any of
38
the respondents. However, in his second sworn statement dated September 20,
2000, Madao claimed to have knowledge of the act of highgrading and specifically
named respondent Liagao as one of the miners involved, to wit:
09. Ques - Do I understand that Mr. Suyam has companions and had drilled
first the flooring of that roadway before blasting it?
Ans - Yes, that is true I saw Suyam and Gumatin transferred [sic] their
assigned drilling machine at the said roadway and drilled the area with the
company of Garcia, Kitoyan, Arocod, Damian, Fegsar and Liagao.39
(Emphasis supplied)
Nonetheless, the second sworn statement of Madao is not sufficient to find Liagao
guilty of highgrading. In a Joint Affidavit40 which he executed with respondent
Tundagui, Madao made the following declarations:
charge of loss of confidence, and that it is sufficient that there be some basis for
such loss of confidence, is not absolute.44
The right of an employer to dismiss an employee on the ground that it has lost its
trust and confidence in him must not be exercised arbitrarily and without just
cause.45 In order that loss of trust and confidence may be considered as a valid
ground for an employees dismissal, it must be substantial and not arbitrary, and
must be founded on clearly established facts sufficient to warrant the employees
separation from work.46
In the present case, the Court reiterates that the evidence is not substantial to hold
respondents guilty of highgrading so as to warrant the dismissal of respondents.
Moreover, it is a well-settled doctrine that if doubts exist between the evidence
presented by the employer and the employee, the scales of justice must be tilted in
favor of the latter. It is a time-honored rule that in controversies between a laborer
and his master, doubts reasonably arising from the evidence, or in the interpretation
of agreements and writing, should be resolved in the formers favor. The policy is to
extend the doctrine to a greater number of employees who can avail themselves of
the benefits under the law, which is in consonance with the avowed policy of the
State to give maximum aid and protection to labor.47
Lastly, respondents prayer in their Comment48 and Memorandum,49 that the CA
Decision be modified by ordering their reinstatement to their former positions
without loss of seniority rights and with payment of full backwages from their
alleged dismissal up to date of reinstatement, deserves scant consideration.
Respondents are estopped from claiming their right to reinstatement. Records show
that respondents along with their co-accused, filed an appeal with the CA docketed
as CA-G.R. SP No. 75457 questioning the decision of the NLRC. The said appeal was
denied by the CA. The case was then elevated to this Court through a petition for
review, entitled Thomas Garcia v. Court of Appeals, docketed as G.R. No. 162554.
However, the same was denied with finality for having been filed out of time.50 In
effect, it serves to estop the respondents from praying for their reinstatement in the
present case. Under the doctrine of conclusiveness of judgment, which is also known
as "reclusion of issues" or "collateral estoppel," issues actually and directly resolved
in a former suit cannot again be raised in any future case between the same parties
involving a different cause of action.51 Applied to the present case, the "former suit"
refers to CA-G.R. SP No. 75457 wherein the CA ordered separation pay instead of
reinstatement and G.R. No. 162554 wherein this Court denied the petition for review
filed by respondents together with other dismissed workers. The "future case" is the
present case in which the petitioner is Lepanto Consolidated Mining Company
assailing the validity of the CA Decision declaring the dismissal of respondents to be
illegal. Reinstatement was not an issue raised by herein petitioner. Respondents
cannot now be allowed to raise the same in the petition filed by petitioner, for that
would circumvent the finality of judgment as to separation pay insofar as
respondents are concerned.
WHEREFORE, the petition is DENIED. The Decision of the Court of Appeals dated
November 7, 2003 and its Resolution dated April 15, 2004 in CA-G.R. SP No. 75860
are AFFIRMED.
Double costs against petitioner.
SO ORDERED.
Appellants defense was bare denial. He claimed that private complainant had
fabricated the rape charges against him since he and his daughter, "had a quarrel
when he accordingly reprimanded her for going out whenever he was not at home."3
Appellant did not present any witness to reinforce his testimony.
On August 31, 1998, the trial court rendered its decision, thus:
WHEREFORE, foregoing premises considered, Joint Judgment is hereby rendered, to
wit:
I. In Criminal Case No. DU-6186 a) Finding the herein accused TOMAS TUNDAG guilty beyond
reasonable doubt for the crime of rape, said accused is hereby
sentenced to the penalty of death;
b) To indemnify the offended party Mary Ann Tundag the following
amounts:
(1) P50,000.00 by reason of the commission of the
offense of rape upon her; and
(2) Another P50,000.00 as moral and exemplary damages
under Article 2219 in relation to Articles 2217 and 2230 of
the New Civil Code for the pain and moral shock suffered
by her and for the commission of the crime of rape with
one qualifying aggravating circumstance; and
c) To pay the costs.
II. In Criminal Case No. DU-6203 a) Finding the herein accused TOMAS TUNDAG guilty beyond
reasonable doubt for the crime of rape, said accused is hereby
sentenced to the penalty of death;
b) To indemnify the offended party Mary Ann Tundag the following
amounts:
That after removing his penis from her vagina and after telling her that she could not
go to heaven if she did not get married, her father just stayed there and continued
smoking while she cried.
That in the evening of November 7, 1997, she was at home washing the dishes while
her father was just smoking and squatting. That after she finished washing the
dishes, she lied (sic) down to sleep when her father embraced her and since she
does not like what he did to her, she placed a stool between them but he just
brushed it aside and laid down with her and was able to take her womanhood again
by using a very sharp knife which he was holding and was pointing it at the right side
of her neck which made her afraid.
That in the early morning of the following day, she left her fathers place and went to
her neighbor by the name of Bebie Cabahug and told her what had happened to her,
who, in turn, advised her to report the matter to the police, which she did and
accompanied by the policemen, she went to the Southern Islands Hospital where she
was examined and after her medical examination, she was brought back by the
police and was investigated by them."5
Appellants claim that the complainants charges were manufactured did not impress
the trial court, which found him twice guilty of rape. Now before us, appellant assails
his double conviction, simply contending that:6
THE TRIAL COURT HAS COMMITTED AN ERROR IN NOT ABSOLVING THE ACCUSEDAPPELLANT OF THE CRIMES CHARGED IN THE INFORMATIONS DESPITE THE
PRESENCE OF REASONABLE DOUBT TO EXCULPATE HIM OF THE SAME.
Appellant flatly denies that the incidents complained of ever took place. He contends
that on September 5, 1997, he was working as a watch repairman near Gals Bakery
in Mandaue City Market and went home tired and sleepy at around 11:00 oclock
that evening. On November 7, 1997, he claims he was at work. In his brief, he argues
that it was impossible for him to have raped his daughter because when the
incidents allegedly transpired, "he went to work and naturally, being exhausted and
tired, it is impossible for him to do such wrongdoings."7
The Office of the Solicitor General disagrees with appellant and urges the Court to
affirm the trial courts decision, with the recommendation that the award of
damages and indemnity ex delicto be modified to conform to prevailing
jurisprudence.
Considering the gravity of the offense charged as a heinous crime and the
irreversibility of the penalty of death imposed in each of these cases before us, the
Court leaves no stone unturned in its review of the records, including the evidence
presented by both the prosecution and the defense. Conviction must rest on nothing
less than a moral certainty of guilt.8 But here we find no room to disturb the trial
courts judgment concerning appellants guilt, because his defense is utterly
untenable.
Appellants defense of alibi and denial is negative and self-serving. It hardly counts as
a worthy and weighty ground for exculpation in a trial involving his freedom and his
life. Against the testimony of private complainant who testified on affirmative
matters,9 such defense is not only trite but pathetic. Denial is an inherently weak
defense, which becomes even weaker in the face of the positive identification by the
victim of the appellant as the violator of her honor.10 Indeed, we find that private
complainant was unequivocal in charging appellant with ravishing her. The victims
account of the rapes complained of was straightforward, detailed, and consistent.11
Her testimony never wavered even after it had been explained to her that her father
could be meted out the death penalty if found guilty by the court.12
Walls: pinkish
Ruganities: prominent
Uterus: small
Cervix: closed
Discharges: Mucoid, minimal
In a prosecution for rape, the complainants credibility is the single most important
issue.13 The determination of the credibility of witnesses is primarily the function of
the trial court. The rationale for this is that the trial court has the advantage of
having observed at first hand the demeanor of the witnesses on the stand and,
therefore, is in a better position to form an accurate impression and conclusion.14
Absent any showing that certain facts of value have clearly been overlooked, which if
considered could affect the result of the case, or that the trial courts finding are
clearly arbitrary, the conclusions reached by the court of origin must be respected
and the judgment rendered affirmed.15
Moreover, we note here that private complainants testimony is corroborated by
medical findings that lacerations were present in her hymen. The examination
conducted by Dr. Bessie Acebes upon the private complainant yielded the following
results:
Genitalia: grossly female
Pubic Hairs: scanty
Labia Majora: coaptated
Labia Minora: -doFourchette: U-shaped
Vestibule: pinkish
Smears:
Conclusions: sperm identification (-)
Gram staining of vaginal disc.16
Dr. Acebes testified that her findings of healed hymenal lacerations in the
complainants private parts meant a history of sexual congress on her part.17
According to her, the lacerations may have been caused by the entry of an erect
male organ into complainants genitals. The examining physician likewise pointed out
that previous coitus may be inferred from complainants U-shaped fourchette since
the fourchette of a female who has not yet experienced sexual intercourse is Vshaped.18 While Dr. Acebes conceded under cross-examination, that the existence of
the datum "U-shape(d) fourchette does not conclusively and absolutely mean that
there was sexual intercourse or contact because it can be caused by masturbation of
19
fingers or other things," nonetheless, the presence of the hymenal lacerations
tends to support private complainants claim that she was raped by appellant.
Appellant next contends that his daughter pressed the rape charges against him
because she had quarreled with him after he had castigated her for misbehavior. He
stresses that the prosecution did not rebut his testimony regarding his quarrel or
misunderstanding with private complainant. He urges us to consider the charges
filed against him as the result of his frequent castigation of her delinquent
behavior.20
Such allegation of a family feud, however, does not explain the charges away. Filing a
case for incestuous rape is of such a nature that a daughters accusation must be
taken seriously. It goes against human experience that a girl would fabricate a story
which would drag herself as well as her family to a lifetime of dishonor, unless that is
the truth, for it is her natural instinct to protect her honor.21 More so, where her
charges could mean the death of her own father, as in this case.
Appellant likewise points out that it was very unlikely for him to have committed the
crimes imputed to him considering that he and his wife had ten children to attend to
and care for. This argument, however, is impertinent and immaterial. Appellant was
estranged from his wife, and private complainant was the only child who lived with
him.22 As pointed out by the Solicitor General, appellant was thus "free to do as he
wished to satisfy his bestial lust on his daughter."23
Nor does appellants assertion that private complainant has some psychological
problems and a low IQ of 76 in any way favor his defense. These matters did not
affect the credibility of her testimony that appellant raped her twice. We note that
the victim understood the consequences of prosecuting the rape charges against her
own father, as shown by the following testimony of the victim on cross-examination:
Section 335 of the Revised Penal Code, as amended by Section 11 of R.A. No. 7659,25
penalizes rape of a minor daughter by her father as qualified rape26 and a heinous
crime. In proving such felony, the prosecution must allege and prove the elements of
rape: (1) sexual congress; (2) with woman; (3) by force or without her consent27 and
in order to warrant the imposition of capital punishment, the additional elements
that: (4) the victim is under 18 years of age at the time of the rape and (5) the
offender is a parent of the victim.28
In this case, it was sufficiently alleged and proven that the offender was the victims
father.29 But the victims age was not properly and sufficiently proved beyond
reasonable doubt. She testified that she was thirteen years old at the time of the
rapes. However, she admitted that she did not know exactly when she was born
because her mother did not tell her. She further said that her birth certificate was
likewise with her mother. In her own words, the victim testified - 30
COURT TO WITNESS
Q: When were you born?
A: I do not know.
Q : Were you informed that if, and when your father will be found guilty, your father
will be sentenced to death?
A : Yes.
Q : Until now you wanted that your father will be sentenced by death?
COURT: Proceed.
A (Witness nodding.)
FISCAL PEREZ: For our failure to secure the Birth Certificate Your Honor, may we just
request for judicial notice that the victim here is below 18 years old.
xxx
ATTY. SURALTA: Admitted.
Q : I will inform you, Miss Witness, that you have filed two cases against your father
and in case your father would be found guilty, two death sentences will be imposed
against him?
A: Yes.
Q: With that information, do you still want this case would proceed?
A: I want this to proceed.24
Indeed, appellant is guilty. But is the penalty of death imposed on him correct?
Judicial notice is the cognizance of certain facts which judges may properly take and
act on without proof because they already know them.31 Under the Rules of Court,
judicial notice may either be mandatory or discretionary. Section 1 of Rule 129 of the
Rules of Court provides when court shall take mandatory judicial notice of facts SECTION 1. Judicial notice, when mandatory. - A court shall take judicial notice
without the introduction of evidence, of the existence and territorial extent of states,
their political history, forms of government and symbols of nationality, the law of
nations, the admiralty and maritime courts of the world and their seals, the political
constitution and history of the Philippines, the official acts of the legislative,
executive and judicial departments of the Philippines, the laws of nature, the
measure of time, and the geographical divisions.
the parties to be heard thereon if such matter is decisive of a material issue in the
case.
Section 2 of Rule 129 enumerates the instances when courts may take discretionary
judicial notice of facts -
In this case, judicial notice of the age of the victim is improper, despite the defense
counsels admission, thereof acceding to the prosecutions motion. As required by
Section 3 of Rule 129, as to any other matters such as age, a hearing is required
before courts can take judicial notice of such fact. Generally, the age of the victim
may be proven by the birth or baptismal certificate of the victim, or in the absence
thereof, upon showing that said documents were lost or destroyed, by other
documentary or oral evidence sufficient for the purpose.
SEC. 2. Judicial notice, when discretionary. - A court may take judicial notice of
matters which are of public knowledge, or are capable of unquestionable
demonstration or ought to be known to judges because of their judicial functions.
Thus, it can be considered of public knowledge and judicially noticed that the scene
of the rape is not always nor necessarily isolated or secluded for lust is no respecter
of time or place. The offense of rape can and has been committed in places where
people congregate, e.g. inside a house where there are occupants, a five (5) meter
room with five (5) people inside, or even in the same room which the victim is
sharing with the accuseds sister.32
The Court has likewise taken judicial notice of the Filipinas inbred modesty and
shyness and her antipathy in publicly airing acts which blemish her honor and
33
virtue.
On the other hand, matters which are capable of unquestionable demonstration
pertain to fields of professional and scientific knowledge. For example, in People v.
Alicante,34 the trial court took judicial notice of the clinical records of the attending
physicians concerning the birth of twin baby boys as "premature" since one of the
alleged rapes had occurred 6 to 7 months earlier.
As to matters which ought to be known to judges because of their judicial functions,
an example would be facts which are ascertainable from the record of court
proceedings, e.g. as to when court notices were received by a party.
With respect to other matters not falling within the mandatory or discretionary
judicial notice, the court can take judicial notice of a fact pursuant to the procedure
in Section 3 of Rule 129 of the Rules of Court which requires that SEC. 3. Judicial notice, when hearing necessary. - During the trial, the court, on its
own initiative, or on request of a party, may announce its intention to take judicial
notice of any matter and allow the parties to be heard thereon.
After the trial, and before judgment or on appeal, the proper court, on its own
initiative or on request of a party, may take judicial notice of any matter and allow
Thus, in People v. Rebancos, 172 SCRA 426 (1989), the victim was below 12 and we
found that the rape committed was statutory rape. The mother testified that her
daughter was born on October 26, 1974, and so was only 9 years old at the time of
the rape on February 12, 1984. Although no birth certificate was presented because
the victims birth had allegedly not been registered, her baptismal certificate was
duly presented. Hence, we ruled that the mothers testimony coupled with the
presentation of the baptismal certificate was sufficient to establish that the victim
was below 12 at the time of the rape.
However, in People v. Vargas, 257 SCRA 603 (1996), we ruled that appellant can only
be convicted of simple rape, and not statutory rape, because of failure of the
prosecution to prove the minority of the victim, who was allegedly 10 years old at
the time of the rape.1wphi1 The prosecution failed to present either the birth or
baptismal certificate of the victim. Also there was no showing that the said
documents were lost or destroyed to justify their non-presentation. We held that
testimony of the victim and her aunt were hearsay, and that it was not correct for
the trial court to judge the age of the victim by her appearance.
In several recent cases, we have emphasized the need for independent proof of the
age of the victim, aside from testimonial evidence from the victim or her relatives. In
People v. Javier,35 we stressed that the prosecution must present independent proof
of the age of the victim, even though it is not contested by the defense. The minority
of the victim must be proved with equal certainty and clearness as the crime itself. In
People v. Cula,36 we reiterated that it is the burden of the prosecution to prove with
certainty the fact that the victim was below 18 when the rape was committed in
order to justify the imposition of the death penalty. Since the record of the case was
bereft of any independent evidence thereon, such as the victims duly certified
Certificate of Live Birth, accurately showing private complainants age, appellant
could not be convicted of rape in its qualified form. In People v. Veloso,37 the victim
was alleged to have been only 9 years of age at the time of the rape. It held that the
trial court was correct when it ruled that the prosecution failed to prove the victims
age other than through the testimony of her father and herself.
Considering the statutory requirement in Section 335 of the Revised Penal Code as
amended by R.A. No. 7659 and R.A. No. 8353, we reiterate here what the Court has
held in Javier without any dissent, that the failure to sufficiently establish victims
age by independent proof is a bar to conviction for rape in its qualified form. For, in
the words of Melo, J., "independent proof of the actual age of a rape victim becomes
vital and essential so as to remove an iota of doubt that the case falls under the
qualifying circumstances" for the imposition of the death penalty set by the law.
WHEREFORE, the judgment of the Regional Trial Court of Mandaue City, Branch 28,
in Criminal Case Nos. DU-6186 and DU-6203, is hereby MODIFIED as follows:
appellant Tomas Tundag is found guilty of two (2) counts of simple rape; and for
each count, sentenced to reclusion perpetua and ordered to pay the victim the
amount of P50,000.00 as indemnity, P50,000.00 as moral damages, and P25,000.00
as exemplary damages.
No pronouncement as to costs.
In this case, the first rape was committed on September 5, 1997 and is therefore
governed by the death penalty law, R.A. 7659. The penalty for the crime of simple
rape or rape in its unqualified form under Art. 335 of the Revised Penal Code, as
amended by Sec. 11 of R.A. 7659, is reclusion perpetua. The second rape was
committed on November 7, 1997, after the effectivity of R.A. 8353, also known as
the Anti-Rape Law of 1997, which took effect on October 22, 1997. The penalty for
rape in its unqualified form remains the same.
As to civil indemnity, the trial court correctly awarded P50,000.00 for each count of
rape as civil indemnity. However, the award of another P50,000.00 as "moral and
exemplary damages under Article 2219 in relation to Articles 2217 and 2230 of the
Civil Code" for each count is imprecise. In rape cases, the prevailing jurisprudence
permits the award of moral damages without need for pleading or proof as to the
basis thereof.38 Thus, pursuant to current jurisprudence, we award the amount of
P50,000.00 as moral damages for each count of rape.
The award of exemplary damages separately is also in order, but on a different basis
and for a different amount. Appellant being the father of the victim, a fact duly
proved during trial, we find that the alternative circumstance of relationship should
be appreciated here as an aggravating circumstance. Under Article 2230 of the New
Civil Code, exemplary damages may be imposed when the crime was committed
with one or more aggravating circumstances. Hence, we find an award of exemplary
damages in the amount of P25,000.00 proper. Note that generally, in rape cases
imposing the death penalty, the rule is that relationship is no longer appreciated as a
generic aggravating circumstance in view of the amendments introduced by R.A.
Nos. 7659 and 8353. The father-daughter relationship has been treated by Congress
in the nature of a special circumstance which makes the imposition of the death
penalty mandatory.39 However, in this case, the special qualifying circumstance of
relationship was proved but not the minority of the victim, taking the case out of the
ambit of mandatory death sentence. Hence, relationship can be appreciated as a
generic aggravating circumstance in this instance so that exemplary damages are
called for. In rapes committed by fathers on their own daughters, exemplary
damages may be imposed to deter other fathers with perverse tendency or aberrant
sexual behavior from sexually abusing their own daughters.40
SO ORDERED.
On 28 June 1996, the trial court received a telegram6 from the NCMH stating that
PRUNA was in "fair condition." The NCMH later submitted to the trial court a report7
on the psychiatric evaluation of PRUNA with a recommendation to put him back to
jail for the resumption of court proceedings. The report also stated that PRUNA
narrated that while he and his friends were under the bridge sniffing rugby and
drinking alcohol, they saw a 3-year-old girl defecating in the river bank; that they
called her; and, upon the order of his friends he placed her on his lap and attempted
to caress her sensitive parts. Said report was not, however, offered in evidence by
the prosecution or the defense.
The prosecution presented five witnesses, whose testimonies can be summed up as
follows:
Jacqueline Gonzales, the mother of LIZETTE, testified that on 3 January 1995, at 9:30
a.m., she was fetching water from the artesian well located ten meters away from
her house, while LIZETTE was defecating at the back of the house of their neighbor
Gloria Tolentino. Jacqueline then carried her pail of water and went back to her
house. Since LIZETTE was not home yet, Jacqueline headed toward the place where
the former was moving her bowel. She looked for LIZETTE but did not find her. It was
when Jacqueline was already returning to her house that she saw LIZETTE from
behind -- red-faced, crying, and appeared to be very frightened. When asked where
she came from, LIZETTE answered that she was brought by a certain "Boy" to the
grassy area at the back of Glorias house where she was sexually molested (or
"kinantot" in the Tagalog dialect). LIZETTE then pulled her mother and led her to the
house of PRUNA, which was about eight meters away from their house. PRUNA, the
only one known in their community as "Boy," was not there. Jacqueline forthwith
requested her mother-in-law to report the matter to the police, while Jacqueline and
LIZETTE went to the Bataan Provincial Hospital.8
Jacqueline further declared that at the time of the alleged rape, LIZETTE was 3 years
old, but at the time Jacqueline testified on 17 October 1995, LIZETTE was 4 years old.
LIZETTEs last birthday was on 19 April 1995.9
LIZETTE testified that she knew PRUNA whom he called "Boy." She pointed to him
inside the courtroom. According to her, PRUNA laid her down in a grassy area and
inserted his penis into her vagina. When the presiding judge asked her whether she
knew that it is a sin to tell a lie, she answered in the affirmative.10
Dr. Emelita Quiroz, an obstetrician and gynecologist at the Bataan Provincial
Hospital, testified that on 3 January 1995, she conducted a complete physical
examination on LIZETTE and took wet smear specimen from her vaginal wall through
scraping. The specimen was sent to the laboratory for analysis by a medical
SPO2 Romeo D. Bunsoy, a member of the Philippine National Police assigned at the
Pilar Municipal Station, testified that on 3 January 1995 the parent of the minor rape
victim filed a complaint against PRUNA. He referred the matter to the desk officer to
have it blottered. Upon his advise, the minor was brought to the hospital for
examination. When they returned from the hospital, he took their statements. Later,
he conducted an ocular inspection and investigation at the alleged place of the
incident and caused the place to be photographed, which showed that the grasses
were flattened. He inquired from the people in the neighborhood, and one of them
answered that he saw the minor being brought by PRUNA to the place where the
minor was found. When PRUNA was brought to their station by four barangay
tanods of Panilao, Pilar, Bataan, SPO2 Bunsoy tried to converse with him, but the
former did not give any reply.17
On the part of the defense, Carlito Bondoc and PRUNA took the witness stand.
Carlito testified that on 3 January 1995, he fetched water at the public artesian well
together with Jacqueline. After having drawn water from the well, Jacqueline called
her daughter, who was then defecating on the road near the river; and they both
went home. After a while, the parents of LIZETTE shouted that their daughter was
raped, and then they proceeded to the house of PRUNA and accused him of having
raped the child. Carlito asserted that PRUNA could not have raped LIZETTE because
he (PRUNA) was in his house from the time that LIZETTE was moving her bowel up to
the time that her mother went to the house of PRUNA. Carlito knew that PRUNA was
at home because the former was also in the latters house to have coffee. Carlito and
the Sulit family thereafter brought PRUNA to the barangay hall. Since the barangay
captain was not around, they brought PRUNA to the municipal building to prove that
he was innocent.18
PRUNA denied having raped LIZETTE. He claimed that in the morning of 3 January
1995, he was in his house preparing coffee for Carlito. After Carlito left, several men
arrived and boxed him for reasons not known to him. Carlito and the latters friend
then brought him to the barangay hall. There, LIZETTEs father boxed him. He was
thereafter brought to the Pilar Municipal Jail. There, the mother of the child threw at
him the lid cover of a kettle. He was also asked by the police to take off his clothes
and lie flat; then he was mauled. Thereafter, he was told to put his feet between the
grills, and he was made to masturbate. Worse, his testes were burned with cigarette
butts. Every night, he was asked to kneel on a chair and was hit with a 2"x 2" piece of
wood.19
After trial, PRUNA was convicted by the trial court of the crime of rape in its qualified
form and sentenced to suffer the supreme penalty of death and to indemnify the
victim in the sum of P50,000, plus costs.20 Hence, this automatic review.
In his Appellants Brief,21 PRUNA attributed to the trial court the following errors:
(5) Whether the qualifying circumstance of minority has been duly proved
as to justify the imposition of the death penalty.
I
We shall resolve these issues in seriatim.
IN RELYING ON THE TESTIMONY OF JACQUELINE S. GONZALES, THE MOTHER OF
THE CHILD, THAT THE LATTER WAS THREE (3) YEARS OLD WHEN THE ALLEGED RAPE
OCCURRED WHEN THE BEST EVIDENCE THEREFOR IS THE BIRTH CERTIFICATE OF THE
CHILD.
II
IN RELYING ON THE HEARSAY TESTIMONY OF JACQUELINE S. GONZALES AS TO THE
ALLEGED RAPE OF HER CHILD.
III
IN ADMITTING AND RELYING ON THE TESTIMONY OF COMPLAINANT* + CHILD
WHO WAS ONLY THREE (3) YEARS OLD WHEN THE ALLEGED RAPE OCCURRED EVEN
AS SHE WAS ONLY FIVE (5) YEARS OLD WHEN SHE TESTIFIED.
IV
A Boy, sir.
The Office of the Solicitor General (hereafter OSG) seeks the affirmation of the trial
courts decision with the modification that an additional award of P50,000 as moral
damages be granted in favor of the offended party.
Q Where is he?
As culled from the arguments of the parties, the issues to be resolved in this case are
as follows:
(1) Whether LIZETTE was a competent and credible witness considering that
she was allegedly only 3 years old when the alleged rape occurred and 5
years old when she testified;
(2) Whether Jacquelines testimony as to the declarations of LIZETTE is
hearsay;
(3) Whether the failure of the prosecution to present Gloria Tolentino as a
witness is fatal;
(4) Whether appellants guilt has been proved beyond reasonable doubt;
A There, sir. (Witness pointing to a person wearing blue T-shirt, who when
asked, gave his name as Manuel Pruna)
PROS. LUMABAS:
What did Manuel Pruna or Boy do to you?
A "Inihiga niya ako" and inserted his penis to my vagina, sir.
Q And in what place did he do this to you?
A In the grassy area, sir.
ATTY. BALUYOT:
A Yes, sir.
The witness for quite sometime could not answer the question.
Q Then while removing your bowel you saw your mother pass[ ] by, is it
not?
PROS. LUMABAS:
A Yes, sir.
I think that will be all for the witness.22
Q She was then carrying a pail to fetch some water, is it not?
After which, the defense counsel manifested that he would not crossexamine her and that he intended to file a motion for her disqualification as
23
a witness. The court then proceeded to ask her a few questions, thus:
A Yes, sir.
COURT :
Q The water from where she will fetch is *sic+ a few meter*s+ away from
you, is it not?
Do you know what will happen to a child if she is not telling the truth?
A Near, sir.
A "Sa lupa."
ATTY. BALUYOT:
A Yes, sir.
Considering that the grassy place where you were then discharging your
bowel is beside a street?
A Yes, sir.
Q And you saw your mother bringing a pail of water towards your house
after her pumping from the well, is it not?
A Yes, sir.
ATTY. BALUYOT:
Q When she passed by she likewise saw you, is it not?
On January 3, 1995, in the morning where were you?
A Yes, sir.
A I was in the grassy area, sir.
Q In that grassy area there were other children with you playing?
Q Then how far were you from your house when you were discharging your
bowel? Please demonstrate the distance?
A None, sir.
Q From that position you were at the grass you could see your house, is it
not?
A Yes, sir.
Q Could you tell the Honorable Court how long did it take you to discharge
your bowel?
25
As a general rule, when a witness takes the witness stand, the law, on ground of
public policy, presumes that he is competent. The court cannot reject the witness in
the absence of proof of his incompetency. The burden is, therefore, upon the party
objecting to the competency of a witness to establish the ground of incompetency.26
Section 21 of Rule 130 of the Rules on Evidence enumerates the persons who are
disqualified to be witnesses. Among those disqualified are "[c]hildren whose mental
maturity is such as to render them incapable of perceiving the facts respecting which
they are examined and relating them truthfully."lawphil.net
No precise minimum age can be fixed at which children shall be excluded from
testifying. The intelligence, not the age, of a young child is the test of the
competency as a witness.27 It is settled that a child, regardless of age, can be a
competent witness if he can perceive and, in perceiving, can make known his
perception to others and that he is capable of relating truthfully the facts for which
he is examined.28
In determining the competency of a child witness, the court must consider his
capacity (a) at the time the fact to be testified to occurred such that he could receive
correct impressions thereof; (b) to comprehend the obligation of an oath; and (c) to
relate those facts truly to the court at the time he is offered as a witness.29 The
examination should show that the child has some understanding of the punishment
which may result from false swearing. The requisite appreciation of consequences is
disclosed where the child states that he knows that it is wrong to tell a lie, and that
he would be punished if he does so, or that he uses language which is equivalent to
saying that he would be sent to hell for false swearing.30 A child can be disqualified
only if it can be shown that his mental maturity renders him incapable of perceiving
facts respecting which he is being examined and of relating them truthfully.31
When LIZETTE was put in the witness stand, she unhesitatingly identified PRUNA,
their neighbor, as the one who defiled her. A rape victim can easily identify her
assailant especially if he is known to her because during the rape, she is physically
close to her assailant that enables her to have a good look at the latters physical
features.43
LIZETTE testified that on 3 January 1995 PRUNA, whom she called Boy, laid her in a
grassy area and inserted his penis into her genitalia. When a girl or a woman says
that she has been raped she says in effect all that is necessary to show that rape was
truly committed.44 She is not expected to remember all the ugly details of the
outrage committed against her.45 And when her testimony passes the test of
credibility, the accused can be convicted on the basis thereof, for in most cases it is
the only evidence that can be offered to establish his guilt.46
Likewise, LIZETTEs mother testified that right after the incident LIZETTE disclosed
what happened to her and readily identified PRUNA as the culprit. She even led her
mother to the house of PRUNA.47 Thereafter, the two went to the police authorities
to report the incident, and then to the hospital for LIZETTEs medical examination.
By and large, the medical evidence lends credence to LIZETTEs testimony that
PRUNA inserted his penis into her vagina. The Medico-Legal Report shows that there
was hyperemia or reddening of the vaginal opening of LIZETTE. As opined by Dr.
Quiroz, who was presented as an expert witness, hyperemia can be caused by the
insertion of a hard object like penis and finger.48 The presence of sperm cells in the
vaginal canal and urine of LIZETTE is also a mute testimony of the sexual contact that
further strengthens LIZETTEs claim of rape.
This Court is not oblivious of the finding that no laceration was found in LIZETTEs
organ despite the fact that she was examined immediately after she was raped. We
have already ruled, however, that the absence of fresh lacerations does not preclude
the finding of rape,49 especially when the victim is of tender age.50 Well- settled is
the rule that rape is consummated by the slightest penile penetration of the labia or
51
pudendum of the female. The presence of hyperemia in LIZETTEs vaginal opening
and the existence of sperm cells in her vaginal canal and urine are clear indications
that PRUNAs organ indeed touched the labia or pudendum of LIZETTE.
In a nutshell, the following overwhelmingly establish the truth of the charge of rape:
(a) the spontaneity of the identification by LIZETTE of PRUNA as the rapist; (b) her
immediate revelation to her mother of the dastard act committed against her; (c)
her act of leading her mother to appellants house right after the incident; (d) the
prompt filing of the complaint before the authorities; (e) LIZETTEs submission to
medical examination; (f) the hyperemia in her private part; and (g) the presence of
sperm cells in her vaginal canal and urine.
The trial court correctly disregarded the defense of alibi raised by the accused. We
have consistently held that for alibi to prosper, it must be proved that during the
commission of the crime, the accused was in another place and that it was physically
impossible for him to be at the crime scene. Just like denial, alibi is an inherently
weak defense; and unless supported by clear and convincing evidence, the same
cannot prevail over the positive declaration of the victim.52 We have also held that
when alibi is established only by the accused, his relatives, or close friends, the same
should be treated with strictest scrutiny.53
Carlito, who was admittedly a close friend of appellants parents, corroborated
PRUNAs testimony that he (PRUNA) was in his house during the time that LIZETTE
was raped. It is, however, an established fact that the place where the rape occurred
was just a few meters away from the house of PRUNA. Thus, there was no physical
impossibility for PRUNA to be in the grassy area to consummate the crime of rape.
The defense, through Carlito, attempted to impute motive to Jacqueline in filing
against PRUNA the charge of rape. According to him, LIZETTEs grandparents, the
Sulits, wanted to buy the place of the PRUNA family, but the latter refused.54 Aside
from the fact that such testimony was not corroborated, said motive, if at all, is too
flimsy to be even considered. No mother in her right mind would use her offspring as
an engine of malice. She would not subject her child to the humiliation, disgrace, and
even the stigma attendant to a prosecution for rape unless she is motivated by the
desire to bring to justice the person responsible for her childs defilement.55
V. Sufficiency of Evidence of LIZETTEs Minority and Propriety of the Imposition of
the Death Penalty
The commission of the crime of rape by PRUNA having been duly established by the
prosecution, we now come to the question of the penalty to be meted upon him.
Article 335, seventh paragraph, no. 4, of the Revised Penal Code, as amended by
Republic Act No. 7659, provides that the death penalty shall be imposed if the crime
of rape is committed against a "child below seven (7) years old." We have held that
in such a case the minority of the victim must be proved with equal certainty and
clearness as the crime itself. The failure to sufficiently establish the victims age is
fatal and consequently bars conviction for rape in its qualified form.56
A persons age is best proved by the birth certificate. But is the presentation of the
victims birth certificate a sine qua non requirement to prove her age for the
appreciation of minority either as an element of the crime or as a qualifying
circumstance? Recent jurisprudence has conflicting pronouncements.
In the following cases, no birth certificate was presented and this Court ruled that
the age of the victim was not duly proved by the prosecution:
1. In People v. Vargas,57 the testimonies of the victim and her aunt that the
former was 10 years old at the time of the rape were not considered proof
of her age for being hearsay. This Court also observed that the victim could
easily be mistaken for a child below 12 years of age, and hence it was not
correct to judge the victims age by her appearance. We held: "The
difference of two or three years in age may not always be readily apparent
by mere physical manifestations or appearance."
2. In People v. Javier,58 the victim was alleged to be 16 years old, and the
accused did not contest her age. Ratiocinating that in this age of
modernism, there is hardly any difference between a 16-year-old girl and an
18-year-old one insofar as physical features and attributes are concerned,
this Court held that an independent proof of the actual age of a rape victim
is vital and essential so as to remove an iota of doubt that the victim is
indeed under 18 years of age as to fall under the qualifying circumstances
enumerated in R.A. No. 7659.
3. In People v. Brigildo,59 aside from the failure of the prosecution to
present the offended partys birth certificate or other equally acceptable
official document concerning her age, the testimonies on record were not
clear as to her exact age. The victim declared that she was 11 years old
when she testified in court a year after the incident, while her mother
claimed that she was around 15 years old at the time of the commission of
the crime. The informations even alleged a different age. Hence, this Court
refused to appreciate the qualifying circumstance of minority because of
the uncertainty regarding her age.
4. In People v. Tipay,60 the offended party was alleged in the information to
be under 16 years of age. No "independent" evidence was presented to
prove it. This Court recognized that the minority of a victim who may be
below the age of 10 is quite manifest and may be taken judicial notice of by
the court. But when the victim is between the crucial years of 15 and 17
where minority may seem to be dubitable due to one's physical
appearance, the prosecution should prove the fact of minority with
certainty. The lack of objection on the part of the accused concerning the
victims age does not excuse the prosecution from discharging its burden.
5. In People v. Cula,61 the victim was alleged in the complaint to be 16 years
old when the rape was committed, but no evidence at all was presented to
prove her age. We held that the failure of the accused to deny such
allegation cannot make up for the failure of the prosecution to prove with
certainty the victims minority. Because of the lacuna in the prosecutions
evidence, coupled with the trial courts failure to make a categorical finding
of minority of the victim, we declined to consider the qualifying
circumstance of minority.
62
8. In People v. Tundag, the victim testified that she was 13 years of age
when she was raped, but she did not know exactly when she was born.
Unable to secure a copy of her birth certificate, the prosecution moved that
judicial notice be taken of the fact that she was below 18 years old at the
time of the rape. Despite the admission by the defense of such fact, this
Court held that the age of the victim is not a matter of judicial notice,
whether mandatory or discretionary. Under Section 3, Rule 129 of the Rules
on Evidence, a hearing is required before such fact can be taken judicial
notice of by courts.
9. In People v. Geraban,66 the victims testimony was categorical in declaring
that she was 15, but her mothers testimony regarding her age was not
clear. We thus declared that the prosecution failed to discharge the burden
of proving minority.
10. In People v. Liban67 and People v. Llandelar,68 the only evidence
adduced to prove the minority of the victims was the victims bare
testimony that they were 10 and 16 years old, respectively. This Court held
that while the declaration of a victim as to her age, being an exception to
the hearsay proscription, would be admissible under the rule on pedigree,
the question on the relative weight that may be accorded to it is another
matter. The prosecution should present the victims birth certificate or, in
lieu thereof, any other documentary evidence, like a baptismal certificate,
school records, and documents of similar nature, or credible testimonial
evidence that can help establish the age of the victim. Neither the obvious
minority of the victim nor the absence any contrary assertion from the
defense can exonerate the prosecution from its burden. Judicial notice of
the issue of age without the requisite hearing under Section 3 of Rule 129
of the Rules on Evidence would not be sufficient compliance with the law.
11. In People v. Alvarado,69 the victim testified that she was 14 years old at
the time of the rape, and this was confirmed by the accused, who was
victims father. The victims mother, however, testified as to her date of
birth which showed that she was 13 years of age at the time of the
commission of the crime. For this doubt as to the victims age, the accused
was held guilty of simple rape only and meted the penalty of reclusion
perpetua, and not death penalty.
On the other hand, in the following cases, we ruled that the age of the rape victim
was sufficiently established despite the failure of the prosecution to present the
birth certificate of the offended party to prove her age:
1. In People v. Rafales,70 the testimony of the victim and her mother that the former
was only 10 years old when she was raped, which was not denied by the accused,
was deemed sufficient to prove her age for the purpose of determining whether the
accused could be held guilty of statutory rape, which is carnal knowledge of a
woman below 12 years of age.
2. In People v. De la Cruz,71 the testimony of the mother alone that her two
daughters were both 14 years old at the time of the rape incidents was deemed
sufficient because there was no reason to doubt the testimony of the mother, who
had personal knowledge of the ages of her children. Moreover, said testimony was
never challenged by the accused and stood unrebutted by any other evidence.
3. In People v. Bali-balita,72 the victims testimony as to her age, which was
corroborated by her half-sister, was deemed sufficient. We noted that the victim
testified in court four months after the rape, and hence it was not difficult for the
trial court to take judicial notice that she was under 18 years of age.
4. In People v. Velasco,73 the minority of the victim was deemed established by (a)
the complainant herself, who was held to be competent to testify on her age, as it
constituted family tradition; (b) the open admission of the accused that the victim
was a 12-year-old minor; and (c) the categorical finding of the trial court that she
was "a minor of a little over twelve years."
5. In People v. Remudo,74 the trial court appreciated the qualifying circumstance of
minority on the strength of (a) the offended partys testimony as to the date of her
birth, which showed that she was 13 years old at the time of the rape, and (b) the
admission of said date of birth by the accused who was the victims brother.
7. In People v. Agustin,76 the victims testimony that she was 14 years old at the time
of the rape incidents, coupled with the express admission of her age by the accused
who was her father, sufficiently proved her minority.
8. In People v. Esuela,77 the testimony of the victims mother that the victim was 13
years of age at the time of the rape was held sufficient to establish minority for the
reason that as a mother she was in the best position to know when she delivered her
child. Also considered were the victims own testimony regarding her age, as well as
the observation of the trial court that she could not have been more than 18 years
old when she testified.
In order to remove any confusion that may be engendered by the foregoing cases,
we hereby set the following guidelines in appreciating age, either as an element of
the crime or as a qualifying circumstance.
1. The best evidence to prove the age of the offended party is an original or
certified true copy of the certificate of live birth of such party.
2. In the absence of a certificate of live birth, similar authentic documents
such as baptismal certificate and school records which show the date of
birth of the victim would suffice to prove age.
3. If the certificate of live birth or authentic document is shown to have
been lost or destroyed or otherwise unavailable, the testimony, if clear and
credible, of the victims mother or a member of the family either by affinity
or consanguinity who is qualified to testify on matters respecting pedigree
such as the exact age or date of birth of the offended party pursuant to
Section 40, Rule 130 of the Rules on Evidence shall be sufficient under the
following circumstances:
Q. Now, on January 3, 1995 at about 9:30 in the morning, do you still recall
where you were?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Where were you at that particular date and time?
A. I was fetching water from an artesian well beside the house of my
neighbor, sir.
Q. Where was this daughter of yours then when you were fetching water?
A. My daughter was discharging her bowel who was then at the back of the
house of our neighbor, sir.
How old is your daughter Lizette Arabelle Gonzales?
A. Three years old, sir.
Q. At the time that she was discharging her bowel, how old [was] she?
A. Three years old, sir. She is four years old now.
Q. When was her last birthday?
A. April 19, 1995, sir.80
Likewise, LIZETTE testified on 20 November 1996, or almost two years after the
incident, that she was 5 years old.81 However, when the defense counsel asked her
how old she was on 3 January 1995, or at the time of the rape, she replied that she
was 5 years old. Upon further question as to the date she was born, she could not
answer.82
For PRUNA to be convicted of rape in its qualified form and meted the supreme
penalty of death, it must be established with certainty that LIZETTE was below 7
years old at the time of the commission of the crime. It must be stressed that the
severity of the death penalty, especially its irreversible and final nature once carried
out, makes the decision-making process in capital offenses aptly subject to the most
exacting rules of procedure and evidence.83
In view of the uncertainty of LIZETTEs exact age, corroborative evidence such as her
birth certificate, baptismal certificate or any other authentic document should be
introduced in evidence84 in order that the qualifying circumstance of "below seven
(7) years old" is appreciated against the appellant. The lack of objection on the part
of the defense as to her age did not excuse the prosecution from discharging its
burden. That the defense invoked LIZETTEs tender age for purposes of questioning
her competency to testify is not necessarily an admission that she was below 7 years
of age when PRUNA raped her on 3 January 1995. Such being the case, PRUNA
cannot be convicted of qualified rape, and hence the death penalty cannot be
imposed on him.
However, conformably with no. 3(b) of the foregoing guidelines, the testimony of
LIZETTEs mother that she was 3 years old at the time of the commission of the crime
is sufficient for purposes of holding PRUNA liable for statutory rape, or rape of a girl
below 12 years of age. Under the second paragraph of Article 335, as amended by
R.A. No. 7659, in relation to no. 3 of the first paragraph thereof, having carnal
knowledge of a woman under 12 years of age is punishable by reclusion perpetua.
Thus, the penalty to be imposed on PRUNA should be reclusion perpetua, and not
death penalty.
As regards the civil liability of PRUNA, the indemnity in the amount of P50,000
awarded by the trial court is not sufficient. In accordance with recent jurisprudence,
LIZETTE should also be awarded moral damages in the amount of P50,000 without
need of pleading or proof because the mental, physical and psychological trauma
suffered by her is too obvious.85
WHEREFORE, the decision of the Regional Trial Court, Branch 1, Balanga, Bataan, in
Criminal Case No. 6044 is hereby AFFIRMED with the modification that accused
Manuel Pruna y Ramirez or Erman Pruna y Ramirez is held guilty beyond reasonable
doubt of statutory rape, and not qualified rape, and is sentenced to suffer reclusion
perpetua and to pay the victim Lizette Arabelle Gonzales the sum of P50,000 as
moral damages in addition to the indemnity of P50,000.
Costs de oficio.
SO ORDERED.
On June 13, 1995, my clients car (Mercedes Benz with plate no. TFU 736) was taken
by your operatives led by Capt. Alejandro Casanova and [is] now in your custody.
In view of the untoward incident, my client suffered serious anxiety and depression
and was advised to undergo medical treatment and confinement at the Delos Santos
Hospital in Rodriguez Ave., Q. C. My client would have no objection if you assigned
police escort/guard under your supervision pending his confinement.
For all intense (sic) & purposes, this letter shall serve as a voluntary surrender,
without admission of guilt on the part of my client.3
At his arraignment, petitioner pleaded not guilty.4
During the trial, the prosecution presented Ballistics Report No. B-046-95, stating
that slugs recovered from the crime scene, on the one hand, and cartridge cases
fired from petitioners caliber .45 Mark IV pistol, on the other hand, were fired from
the same firearm.5 The Medico-Legal Officer who conducted the autopsy on the
deceased failed to appear at the trial. In order to dispense with her testimony,
petitioner admitted the due execution and genuineness of the medico-legal report.
6
After trial, the prosecution filed its Formal Offer of Exhibits, which included the
above-quoted letter of petitioners counsel to P/Maj. Antonio Diaz, marked as Exhibit
LL. The trial court admitted all the prosecutions exhibits in its Order dated August
27, 1996.7
Meanwhile, petitioner begged leave to file a demurrer to evidence, which was
granted by the trial court.8 Hence, on August 29, 1996, petitioner filed a Motion To
Dismiss (On Demurrer to Evidence),9 based on the following grounds: (1) the lack of
positive identification of the accused is a fatal omission warranting dismissal; (2)
prosecutions evidence are totally hearsay/incompetent, hence, inadmissible and the
guilt of the accused was not proven by positive evidence beyond reasonable doubt.
On October 7, 1996, the trial court issued an Order dismissing the case together with
the civil aspect thereof for insufficiency of evidence.10
The prosecution filed a motion for reconsideration,11 which was denied on the
ground, among others, that with the dismissal of the case double jeopardy had set
in.12
The prosecution filed a petition for certiorari with the Court of Appeals, docketed as
CA-G.R. SP No. 43697. In a Decision dated July 25, 1997,13 the appellate court
nullified the October 7, 1996 Order of the trial court. Petitioners motion for
reconsideration14 was likewise denied in a Resolution dated January 2, 1998.15
protection to insure that the innocent, even those whose innocence rests upon a
jurys leniency, will not be found guilty in a subsequent proceeding.26
Given the far-reaching scope of an accuseds right against double jeopardy, even an
appeal based on an alleged misappreciation of evidence will not lie.27 The only
instance when double jeopardy will not attach is when the trial court acted with
grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction, such as where
the prosecution was denied the opportunity to present its case,28 or where the trial
was a sham.29 However, while certiorari may be availed of to correct an erroneous
acquittal, the petitioner in such an extraordinary proceeding must clearly
demonstrate that the trial court blatantly abused its authority to a point so grave as
to deprive it of its very power to dispense justice.30
In the instant case, petitioner filed a demurrer to evidence after the prosecution
adduced its evidence and rested its case. The trial court subsequently dismissed the
case after finding that the evidence presented by the prosecution was insufficient to
support the charge against petitioner. The prosecution, which relied primarily on
Exhibit LL as the basis for the indictment against petitioner, however, contested the
dismissal of the case allegedly because the trial court prevented it from further
identifying the genuineness and due execution of said document "in the manner that
it wanted."31
The crux of the problem lies in the confusion between the due execution of a piece
of documentary evidence vis--vis the truth of its contents. Likewise at the core of
the dilemma is the fundamental distinction between an admission and a confession.
The prosecution maintains that the letter, Exhibit LL, constituted a confession and
argues thus: "What better evidence is there to positively identify the perpetrator of
the crime than the confession of the petitioner himself, freely and voluntarily given,
assisted by counsel?"32 According to the prosecution, this "extrajudicial confession
constitutes the strongest evidence of guilt."33
An admission is defined under Rule 130, Section 26 of the Rules of Court as the act,
declaration or omission of a party as to a relevant fact. A confession, on the other
hand, under Rule 130, Section 33 is the declaration of an accused acknowledging his
guilt of the offense charged or any offense necessarily included therein.
More particularly, a confession "is a declaration made at any time by a person,
voluntarily and without compulsion or inducement stating or acknowledging that he
had committed or participated in the commission of a crime. The term admission, on
the other hand, is usually applied in criminal cases to statements of fact by the
accused which do not directly involve an acknowledgment of the guilt of the accused
or of criminal intent to commit the offense with which he is charged."34
of, or with a view to, professional employment nor can an attorneys secretary,
stenographer, or clerk be examined, without the consent of the client and his
employer, concerning any fact the knowledge of which has been acquired in such
capacity; x x x.
It is worthy to note that the prosecution did not summon petitioner himself to testify
although he too was a signatory of Exhibit LL. Apparently, it was aware that
petitioner could well invoke his right against self-incrimination and refuse to answer
its questions. The prosecution then attempted to draw out what it could not
constitutionally extract from his lawyer. Yet, and as stated previously, said Exhibit LL
had earlier been admitted in evidence by the trial court in its Order dated August 27,
1996. What was objectionable was the prosecutions sole reliance on the document
without proof of other facts to establish its case against petitioner because of its
mistaken assumption that the same was a confession.
Significantly, the prosecution was neither barred nor prevented by the trial court
from establishing the genuineness and due execution of the document through
other means. Rule 132, Section 20of the Rules of Court provides the following means
of authenticating the document:
SEC. 20. Proof of private document. Before any private document offered as
authentic is received in evidence, its due execution and authenticity must be proved
either:
(a) By anyone who saw the document executed or written; or
It can not be denied that the contents of Exhibit LL, particularly with regard to the
details of the shooting communicated by petitioner to Atty. Valmonte, is privileged
because it is connected with the business for which petitioner retained the services
of the latter.39 More specifically, said communication was relayed by petitioner to
Atty. Valmonte in order to seek his professional advice or assistance in relation to
the subject matter of the employment, or to explain something in connection with it,
so as to enable him to better advice his client or manage the litigation.40
Pertinent to this is Section 24 (b) of Rule 130 of the Rules of Court, to wit:
SEC. 24. Disqualification by reason of privileged communication. The following
persons cannot testify as to matters learned in confidence in the following cases:
xxxxxxxxx
(b) An attorney cannot, without the consent of his client, be examined as to any
communication made by the client to him, or his advice given thereon in the course
Inspector Alejandro M. Casanova, who prepared the detailed Police Report of the
incident used as the basis of the inquest proceedings, nor were any eyewitnesses
presented, notwithstanding that there appeared to be at least two eyewitnesses to
the incident.
It must be borne in mind that in a criminal trial, it is the prosecution that determines
the charges to be filed and how the legal and factual elements in the case shall be
utilized as components of the information.42 Stated differently, the determination of
what evidence to adduce to bolster a successful prosecution of a criminal offense is
the exclusive domain of prosecutorial discretion. Indeed, courts generally can not
interfere with the prosecutors discretion as to control over criminal prosecutions.43
However, it is the court which ultimately determines whether such evidence is
sufficient to sustain an indictment, thus, the care with which the prosecution must
build up its case against the accused can not be gainsaid because, as has been stated
time and again, in any criminal prosecution, the State must rely on the strength of its
own evidence and not on the weakness of the evidence of the defense.44
Viewed vis-a-vis the foregoing lapses detailed above, the prosecutions insistence to
have Exhibit LL admitted "in the manner it wanted" shows only too clearly a subtle
but shrewd scheme to cover up for the foregoing procedural missteps and to cut
evidentiary corners to build its case at the expense of the defense. This cannot be
countenanced. An accused should not be prejudiced for the failure of the
prosecution to discharge its burden of overcoming the constitutional presumption of
innocence and to establish the guilt of the accused beyond reasonable doubt.45
Indeed, if the prosecution fails to discharge the burden, then it is not only the
accuseds right to be freed, it is even more the courts constitutional duty to acquit
him.46
If at all, the foregoing acts of the prosecution underscores just how careless and
haphazard it had been in building up a case against the petitioner. For such, it has
nothing but itself to blame if the trial court in assaying the proof it adduced found
the same wanting. It will neither be allowed to sweep its procedural miscues under
the rug, so to speak, on the pretext that it was denied due process when the trial
court supposedly prevented it from presenting Exhibit LL. To be more precise, the
trial court had admitted Exhibit LL in evidence but rejected the further admission of
the document "in the manner that it wanted." Verily, the prosecution can not have
its cake and eat it too.
Moreover, we agree with the trial court that the letter marked as Exhibit LL is
hearsay inasmuch as its probative force depends in whole or in part on the
competency and credibility of some person other than the witness by whom it is
sought to produce it.47 The term as used in the law of evidence "signifies all evidence
which is not founded upon the personal knowledge of the witness from whom it is
elicited, and which consequently does not depend wholly for its credibility and
weight upon the confidence which the court may have in him. Its value, if any, is
measured by the credit to be given to some third persons not sworn as witnesses to
that fact and consequently not subject to cross-examination."48 In short, it is "the
evidence not of what the witness knows himself but of what he has heard from
others."49 Thus, in one case we stated that "[w]hen evidence is based on what was
supposedly told the witness, the same is without any evidentiary weight being
patently hearsay."50 In the case at bar, it is noteworthy that the statements in the
letter were made by petitioners counsel, who even began his narration of the
events with the phrase: "According to my client."51
In holding that petitioner was identified as the person who committed the offense,
the appellate court relied on the following circumstances: (1) he admitted
responsibility therefor through Exhibit LL, which was signed by him and his counsel;
(2) he surrendered even before the issuance of the warrant of arrest; (3) his gun was
also surrendered to the police authorities by his counsel; (4) empty shells recovered
at the scene of the crime matched his gun; and (5) the letter-referral of P/Senior
Inspector Alejandro Casanova to Quezon City Prosecutor indicated that petitioner
was under the custody of the policeman on detail supposedly to guard him at the
hospital.52
With regard to the first circumstance, suffice it to state that, as has lengthily been
discussed earlier, Exhibit LL is merely an admission and not a confession. In fact,
petitioner specifically denied criminal intent therein. By and of itself it is insufficient
to support a conviction unless it is considered in connection with other proof to
establish the ultimate fact of guilt.
The second and third incidents actually support petitioners innocence because were
he indeed guilty of the felony, he would not likely have surrendered even before the
warrant was issued for his arrest. Courts go by the biblical truism that the "the
wicked flee when no man pursueth but the righteous are as bold as a lion."53
The fourth event merely proves the fact that the empty shells recovered from the
crime scene were fired from the surrendered gun. It, however, does not answer the
penultimate question of who actually pulled the trigger of the firearm.
Lastly, the appellate courts reading of the letter-referral,54 mentioning that
petitioner had been placed under the custody of a policeman, was inaccurate. As
explained by Atty. Valmonte in Exhibit LL, the policeman was actually requested for
petitioners personal safety owing to the untoward incident which caused petitioner
serious anxiety and depression, and for which he had to undergo treatment and
confinement.55
All told, we find no grave abuse on the part of the trial court in dismissing the
charges against petitioner.
WHEREFORE, in view of all the foregoing, the petition is GRANTED. The decision of
the Court of Appeals dated July 25, 1997 and the Resolution dated January 2, 1998 in
CA-G.R. SP No. 43697 are REVERSED and SET ASIDE.
SO ORDERED.
PER CURIAM:
In assaying the requisite norms for qualifications and eminence of a magistrate, legal
authorities place a premium on how he has complied with his continuing duty to
know the law. A quality thus considered essential to the judicial character is that of
"a man of learning who spends tirelessly the weary hours after midnight acquainting
himself with the great body of traditions and the learning of the law; is profoundly
learned in all the learning of the law; and knows how to use that learning." 1
Obviously, it is the primary duty of a judge, which he owes to the public and to the
legal profession, to know the very law he is supposed to apply to a given controversy.
He is called upon to exhibit more than just a cursory acquaintance with the statutes
and procedural rules. Party litigants will have great faith in the administration of
justice if judges cannot justly be accused of apparent deficiency in their grasp of the
legal principles. For, service in the judiciary means a continuous study and research
on the law from beginning to end. 2
3
eleven cases dismissed involved charges for violations of CB Circular No. 960, hence
the accused cannot be tried and convicted under a law different from that under
which she was charged; that assuming that respondent judge erred in issuing the
order of dismissal, the proper remedy should have been an appeal therefrom but
definitely not an administrative complaint for his dismissal; that a mistake
committed by a judge should not necessarily be imputed as ignorance of the law;
and that a "court can reverse or modify a doctrine but it does not show ignorance of
the justices or judges whose decisions were reversed or modified" because "even
doctrines initiated by the Supreme Court are later reversed, so how much more for
the lower courts?"
He further argued that no hearing was necessary since the prosecution had nothing
to explain because, as he theorized, "What explanation could have been given? That
the President was talking 'through his hat' (to use a colloquialism) and should not be
believed? That I should wait for the publication (as now alleged by complainants), of
a still then non-existent CB circular? . . . As it turned out, CB Circular No. 3153 (sic)
does not affect my dismissal order because the said circular's so-called saving clause
does not refer to CB Circular 960 under which the charges in the dismissed cases
were based;" that it was discretionary on him to take judicial notice of the facts
which are of public knowledge, pursuant to Section 2 of Rule 129; that the
contention of complainants that he acted prematurely and in indecent haste for
basing his order of dismissal on a mere newspaper account is contrary to the
wordings of the newspaper report wherein the President announced the lifting of
controls as an accomplished fact, not as an intention to be effected in the future,
because of the use of the present perfect tense or past tense "has lifted," not that he
"intends to lift," foreign exchange controls.
Finally, respondent judge asseverates that complainants who are officers of the
Department of Justice, violated Section 6, Rule 140 of the Rules of Court which
provides that "proceedings against judges of first instance shall be private and
confidential" when they caused to be published in the newspapers the filing of the
present administrative case against him; and he emphasizes the fact that he had to
immediately resolve a simple and pure legal matter in consonance with the
admonition of the Supreme Court for speedy disposition of cases.
In their reply 5 and supplemental reply, 6 complainants aver that although the saving
clause under Section 16 of CB Circular No. 1353 made specific reference to CB
Circular No. 1318, it will be noted that Section 111 of Circular No. 1318, which
contains a saving clause substantially similar to that of the new circular, in turn refers
to and includes Circular No. 960. Hence, whether under Circular No. 1318 or Circular
No. 1353, pending cases involving violations of Circular No. 960 are excepted from
the coverage thereof. Further, it is alleged that the precipitate dismissal of the
eleven cases, without according the prosecution the opportunity to file a motion to
quash or a comment, or even to show cause why the cases against accused Imelda R.
Marcos should not be dismissed, is clearly reflective of respondent's partiality and
bad faith. In effect, respondent judge acted as if he were the advocate of the
accused.
On December 9, 1993, this Court issued a resolution referring the complaint to the
Office of the Court Administrator for evaluation, report and recommendation,
pursuant to Section 7, Rule 140 of the Rules of Court, as revised, there being no
factual issues involved. The corresponding report and recommendation, 7 dated
February 14, 1994, was submitted by Deputy Court Administrator Juanito A. Bernad,
with the approval of Court Administrator Ernani Cruz-Pao.
The questioned order 8 of respondent judge reads as follows:
These eleven (11) cases are for Violation of Central Bank Foreign
Exchange Restrictions as consolidated in CB Circular No. 960 in
relation to the penal provision of Sec. 34 of R.A. 265, as amended.
The accused Mrs. Imelda R. Marcos pleaded not guilty to all these
cases; apparently the other accused in some of these cases,
Roberto S. Benedicto, was not arrested and therefore the Court
did not acquire jurisdiction over his person; trial was commenced
as against Mrs. Marcos.
His Excellency, the President of the Philippines, announced on
August 10, 1992 that the government has lifted all foreign
exchange restrictions and it is also reported that Central Bank
Governor Jose Cuisia said that the Monetary Board arrived at such
decision (issue of the Philippine Daily Inquirer, August 11, 1992 and
issue of the Daily Globe of the same date). The Court has to give
full confidence and credit to the reported announcement of the
Executive Department, specially from the highest official of that
department; the Courts are charged with judicial notice of matters
which are of public knowledge, without introduction of proof, the
announcement published in at least the two newspapers cited
above which are reputable and of national circulation.
Per several cases decided by the Supreme Court (People vs.
Alcaras, 56 Phil. 520, People vs. Francisco, 56 Phil. 572, People vs.
Pastor, 77 Phil. 1000, People vs. Crisanto Tamayo, 61 Phil. 225),
among others, it was held that the repeal of a penal law without
re-enactment extinguishes the right to prosecute or punish the
offense committed under the old law and if the law repealing the
prior penal law fails to penalize the acts which constituted the
offense defined and penalized in the repealed law, the repealed
law carries with it the deprivation of the courts of jurisdiction to
try, convict and sentence persons charged with violations of the
old law prior to its repeal. Under the aforecited decisions this
doctrine applies to special laws and not only to the crimes
punishable in the Revised Penal Code, such as the Import Control
Law. The Central Bank Circular No. 960 under which the accused
Mrs. Marcos is charged is considered as a penal law because
violation thereof is penalized with specific reference to the
provision of Section 34 of Republic Act 265, which penalizes
violations of Central Bank Circular No. 960, produces the effect
cited in the Supreme Court decisions and since according to the
decisions that repeal deprives the Court of jurisdiction, this Court
motu proprio dismisses all the eleven (11) cases as a forestated in
the caption, for not to do so opens this Court to charges of trying
cases over which it has no more jurisdiction.
This order was subsequently assailed in a petition for certiorari filed with the Court
of Appeals, entitled "People of the Philippines vs. Hon. Manuel T. Muro, Judge, RTC
of Manila, Br. 54 and Imelda R. Marcos," docketed as CA-G.R. SP No. 29349. When
required to file her comment, private respondent Marcos failed to file any. Likewise,
after the appellate court gave due course to the petition, private respondent was
ordered, but again failed despite notice, to file an answer to the petition and to show
cause why no writ of preliminary injunction should issue. Eventually, on April 29,
1993, the Court of Appeals rendered a decision 9 setting aside the order of August
13, 1992, and reinstating Criminal Cases Nos. 92-101959 to 92-101969.
In finding that respondent judge acted in excess of jurisdiction and with grave abuse
of discretion in issuing the order of dismissal, the appellate court held that:
The order was issued motu proprio, i.e., without any motion to
dismiss filed by counsel for the accused, without giving an
opportunity for the prosecution to be heard, and solely on the
basis of newspaper reports announcing that the President has
lifted all foreign exchange restrictions.
The newspaper report is not the publication required by law in
order that the enactment can become effective and binding. Laws
take effect after fifteen days following the completion of their
publication in the Official Gazette or in a newspaper of general
circulation unless it is otherwise provided (Section 1, Executive
Order No. 200). The full text of CB Circular 1353, series of 1992,
The mere personal knowledge of the judge is not the judicial knowledge of the court,
and he is not authorized to make his individual knowledge of a fact, not generally or
professionally known, the basis of his action. Judicial cognizance is taken only of
those matters which are "commonly" known. 16
Things of "common knowledge," of which courts take judicial notice, may be matters
coming to the knowledge of men generally in the course of the ordinary experiences
of life, or they may be matters which are generally accepted by mankind as true and
are capable of ready and unquestioned demonstration. 17 Thus, facts which are
universally known, and which may be found in encyclopedias, dictionaries or other
publications, are judicially noticed, provided they are of such universal notoriety and
so generally understood that they may be regarded as forming part of the common
knowledge of every person. 18
Respondent judge, in the guise of exercising discretion and on the basis of a mere
newspaper account which is sometimes even referred to as hearsay evidence twice
removed, took judicial notice of the supposed lifting of foreign exchange controls, a
matter which was not and cannot be considered of common knowledge or of
general notoriety. Worse, he took cognizance of an administrative regulation which
was not yet in force when the order of dismissal was issued. Jurisprudence dictates
that judicial notice cannot be taken of a statute before it becomes effective. 19 The
reason is simple. A law which is not yet in force and hence, still inexistent, cannot be
of common knowledge capable of ready and unquestionable demonstration, which
is one of the requirements before a court can take judicial notice of a fact.
Evidently, it was impossible for respondent judge, and it was definitely not proper for
him, to have taken cognizance of CB Circular No. 1353, when the same was not yet in
force at the time the improvident order of dismissal was issued.
II. Central Bank Circular No. 1353, which took effect on September 1, 1992, further
liberalized the foreign exchange regulations on receipts and disbursements of
residents arising from non-trade and trade transactions. Section 16 thereof provides
for a saving clause, thus:
Sec. 16. Final Provisions of CB Circular No. 1318. - All the provisions
in Chapter X of CB Circular No. 1318 insofar as they are not
inconsistent with, or contrary to the provisions of this Circular,
shall remain in full force and effect: Provided, however, that any
regulation on non-trade foreign exchange transactions which has
been repealed, amended or modified by this Circular, violations of
which are the subject of pending actions or investigations, shall not
be considered repealed insofar as such pending actions or
investigations are concerned, it being understood that as to such
cases covered by the old regulations which were then pending at the time of the
passage of the new regulations. Thus, any reference made to Circular No. 1318
necessarily involves and affects Circular No. 960.
III. It has been said that next in importance to the duty of rendering a righteous
judgment is that of doing it in such a manner as will beget no suspicion of the
20
fairness and integrity of the judge. This means that a judge should not only render
a just, correct and impartial decision but should do so in such a manner as to be free
from any suspicion as to its fairness and impartiality and as to his integrity. While a
judge should possess proficiency in law in order that he can competently construe
and enforce the law, it is more important that he should act and behave in such a
manner that the parties before him should have confidence in his impartiality. Thus,
it is not enough that he decides cases without bias and favoritism. Nor is it sufficient
that he in fact rids himself of prepossessions. His actuations should moreover inspire
that belief. Like Caesar's wife, a judge must not only be pure but beyond suspicion. 21
Moreover, it has always heretofore been the rule that in disposing of controverted
cases, judges should show their full understanding of the case, avoid the suspicion of
arbitrary conclusion, promote confidence in their intellectual integrity and
22
contribute useful precedents to the growth of the law. A judge should be mindful
that his duty is the application of general law to particular instances, that ours is a
government of laws and not of men, and that he violates his duty as a minister of
justice under such a system if he seeks to do what he may personally consider
substantial justice in a particular case and disregards the general law as he knows it
to be binding on him. Such action may have detrimental consequences beyond the
immediate controversy. 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 the law. 23 These are immutable
principles that go into the very essence of the task of dispensing justice and we see
no reason why they should not be duly considered in the present case.
The assertion of respondent judge that there was no need to await publication of
Circular No. 1353 for the reason that the public announcement made by the
President in several newspapers of general circulation lifting foreign exchange
controls is total, absolute, without qualification, and immediately effective, is beyond
comprehension. As a judge of the Regional Trial Court of Manila, respondent is
supposed to be well-versed in the elementary legal mandates on the publication of
laws before they take effect. It is inconceivable that respondent should insist on an
altogether different and illogical interpretation of an established and wellentrenched rule if only to suit his own personal opinion and, as it were, to defend his
indefensible action. It was not for him to indulge or even to give the appearance of
catering to the at-times human failing of yielding to first impressions. 24 He having
done so, in the face of the foregoing premises, this Court is hard put to believe that
he indeed acted in good faith.
IV. This is not a simple case of a misapplication or erroneous interpretation of the
law. The very act of respondent judge in altogether dismissing sua sponte the eleven
criminal cases without even a motion to quash having been filed by the accused, and
without at least giving the prosecution the basic opportunity to be heard on the
matter by way of a written comment or on oral argument, is not only a blatant denial
of elementary due process to the Government but is palpably indicative of bad faith
and partiality.
The avowed desire of respondent judge to speedily dispose of the cases as early as
possible is no license for abuse of judicial power and discretion, 25 nor does such
professed objective, even if true, justify a deprivation of the prosecution's right to be
heard and a violation of its right to due process of
law. 26
The lightning speed, to borrow the words of complainants, with which respondent
judge resolved to dismiss the cases without the benefit of a hearing and without
reasonable notice to the prosecution inevitably opened him to suspicion of having
acted out of partiality for the accused. Regardless of how carefully he may have
evaluated changes in the factual situation and legal standing of the cases, as a result
of the newspaper report, the fact remains that he gave the prosecution no chance
whatsoever to show or prove that it had strong evidence of the guilt of the accused.
To repeat, he thereby effectively deprived the prosecution of its right to due process.
27
More importantly, notwithstanding the fact that respondent was not sure of the
effects and implications of the President's announcement, as by his own admission
he was in doubt whether or not he should dismiss the cases, 28 he nonetheless
deliberately refrained from requiring the prosecution to comment thereon. In a
puerile defense of his action, respondent judge can but rhetorically ask: "What
explanation could have been given? That the President was talking 'through his hat'
and should not be believed? That I should wait for the publication of a still then nonexistent CB Circular?" The pretended cogency of this ratiocination cannot stand even
the minutest legal scrutiny.
In order that bias may not be imputed to a judge, he should have the patience and
circumspection to give the opposing party a chance to present his evidence even if
he thinks that the oppositor's proofs might not be adequate to overthrow the case
for the other party. A display of petulance and impatience in the conduct of the trial
is a norm of conduct which is inconsistent with the "cold neutrality of an impartial
judge." 29 At the very least, respondent judge acted injudiciously and with unjustified
haste in the outright dismissal of the eleven cases, and thereby rendered his
actuation highly dubious.
V. It bears stressing that the questioned order of respondent judge could have
seriously and substantially affected the rights of the prosecution had the accused
invoked the defense of double jeopardy, considering that the dismissal was ordered
after arraignment and without the consent of said accused. This could have spawned
legal complications and inevitable delay in the criminal proceedings, were it not for
the holding of the Court of Appeals that respondent judge acted with grave abuse of
discretion amounting to lack of jurisdiction. This saved the day for the People since in
the absence of jurisdiction, double jeopardy will not set in. To stress this point, and
as a caveat to trial courts against falling into the same judicial error, we reiterate
what we have heretofore declared:
It is settled doctrine that double jeopardy cannot be invoked
against this Court's setting aside of the trial court's judgment of
dismissal or acquittal where the prosecution which represents the
sovereign people in criminal cases is denied due process. . . . .
Where the prosecution is deprived of a fair opportunity to
prosecute and prove its case, its right to due process is thereby
violated.
The cardinal precept is that where there is a violation of basic
constitutional rights, courts are ousted of their jurisdiction. Thus,
the violation of the State's right to due process raises a serious
jurisdictional issue . . . which cannot be glossed over or
disregarded at will. Where the denial of the fundamental right of
due process is apparent, a decision rendered in disregard of that
right is void for lack of jurisdiction . . . . 30
It is also significant that accused Marcos, despite due notice, never submitted either
her comment on or an answer to the petition for certiorari as required by the Court
of Appeals, nor was double jeopardy invoked in her defense. This serves to further
underscore the fact that the order of dismissal was clearly unjustified and erroneous.
Furthermore, considering that the accused is a prominent public figure with a record
of influence and power, it is not easy to allay public skepticism and suspicions on
how said dismissal order came to be, to the consequent although undeserved
discredit of the entire judiciary.
VI. To hold a judge liable for rendering a manifestly unjust order through inexcusable
negligence or ignorance, it must be clearly shown that although he has acted without
malice, he failed to observe in the performance of his duty that diligence, prudence
and care which the law is entitled to exact in the rendering of any public service.
Negligence and ignorance are inexcusable if they imply a manifest injustice which
cannot be explained by a reasonable interpretation, and even though there is a
Subsequently, the Court dismissed another RTC judge, with forfeiture of retirement
benefits, for gross ignorance of the law and for knowingly rendering an unjust order
or judgment when he granted bail to an accused charged with raping an 11-year old
girl, despite the contrary recommendation of the investigating judge, and thereafter
granted the motion to dismiss the case allegedly executed by the complainant. 34
Similarly, an RTC judge who was described by this Court as one "who is ignorant of
fairly elementary and quite familiar legal principles and administrative regulations,
has a marked penchant for applying unorthodox, even strange theories and concepts
in the adjudication of controversies, exhibits indifference to and even disdain for due
process and the rule of law, applies the law whimsically, capriciously and
oppressively, and displays bias and impartiality," was dismissed from the service with
forfeiture of all retirement benefits and with prejudice to reinstatement in any
branch of the government or any of its agencies or instrumentalities. 35
Still in another administrative case, an RTJ judge was also dismissed by this Court for
gross ignorance of the law after she ordered, in a probate proceeding, the
cancellation of the certificates of title issued in the name of the complainant,
without affording due process to the latter and other interested parties. 36
Only recently, an RTC judge who had been reinstated in the service was dismissed
after he acquitted all the accused in four criminal cases for illegal possession of
firearms, on the ground that there was no proof of malice or deliberate intent on the
part of the accused to violate the law. The Court found him guilty of gross ignorance
of the law, his error of judgment being almost deliberate and tantamount to
knowingly rendering an incorrect and unjust judgment. 37
ACCORDINGLY, on the foregoing premises and considerations, the Court finds
respondent Judge Manuel T. Muro guilty of gross ignorance of the law. He is hereby
DISMISSED from the service, such dismissal to carry with it cancellation of eligibility,
forfeiture of leave credits and retirement benefits, and disqualification from
reemployment in the government service. 38
Respondent is hereby ordered to CEASE and DESIST immediately from rendering any
judgment or order, or continuing any judicial action or proceeding whatsoever,
effective upon receipt of this decision.
SO ORDERED.
another two-year contract with Al Meroouge. He was concerned that his passport
might get lost. However, after being assured that his passport, together with his
boxes, would be forwarded to him, he acquiesced. He turned over his passport to
LBC, for which he was issued a receipt.7
Eubertos boxes were delivered to him via the LBC-Ormoc City Branch on different
8
9
dates: three boxes on September 7, 1995; one box on September 14, 1995 and one
10
box on September 16, 1995. He inquired about his passport, but the Ormoc City
LBC Manager told him that his passport was not in their office. He advised Euberto to
wait for a few days, as it might arrive on a later date. Euberto made several followups, to no avail.11 Furagganan sent letter-inquiries to the managers of the LBC-Cebu
Branch and LBC-Catbalogan Branch,12 informing them that Eubertos passport was
attached to HAWB No. 004467, together with the waybills and bill of lading of
shipments. However, the passport of Euberto could not be located.
Euberto then engaged the services of counsel who, on January 8, 1996, sent a
demand letter13 to LBC. Still, LBC did not act on the demand and failed to return his
passport. Euberto was not able to return to Bahrain and report back for work.
14
On September 22, 1997, Euberto filed a Complaint for damages against LBC
Express, Inc. and LBC International, Inc. with the RTC of Naval, Biliran. The case was
docketed as Civil Case No. B-1024 and raffled to Branch 16, and was later amended15
to implead Eubertos wife Sisinia. The complaint alleged that because of the loss of
Eubertos passport through the gross negligence of the defendants, he failed to
report back for work in Bahrain. The spouses Ado prayed that damages for Eubertos
unearned income be awarded to them and that after due proceedings, the court
render judgment in their favor, as follows:
1. Condemning and ordering the defendants, jointly and severally, to pay the plaintiff
the following sums:
a. P300,000.00 as moral damages;
b. P200,000.00 as exemplary damages;
c. Actual and compensatory damages of P20,000.00 a month from October 10, 1995
with interest at the legal rate of 12% per annum until fully paid;
d. P30,000.00 as attorneys fees;
e. P20,000.00 as litigation expenses;
On October 22, 2001, the trial court rendered judgment23 in favor of the spouses
Ado. The fallo of the decision reads:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, this Court finds in favor of the plaintiffs and
renders judgment against the defendants making them liable solidarily to pay the
plaintiffs:
(a) P480,000.00 in compensatory damages plus legal interest from the filing of this
complaint until fully paid;
(b) P300,000.00 in moral damages;
(c) P30,000.00 in attorneys fees; and
To prove their claim for actual damages, spouses Ado offered in evidence a
certification from Eubertos employer, which reads:
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
This is to certify that Mr. Euberto Ado holder of Passport Number L 067892 was
working as a Mechanic at our Marine Workshop. He left Bahrain on 08.08.1995 to
Manila on holiday for the period of three months. He was getting the basic salary of
BD 280.000 (Two hundred & Eighty) only monthly.
He was holding the return visa for coming back to after having his leave. Mr. Euberto
Ado could not return back to Bahrain [as] his passport was misplace[d] in Manila.
Yours (sic) Sincerely,
On November 14, 2001, LBC appealed the decision to the CA. In their Brief, LBC, as
appellants, alleged that:
On August 14, 2001, the spouses Ado filed their formal offer of documentary
evidence.19 The defendants were given ten (10) days from August 30, 2001 within
which to file their comments thereon. Meanwhile, trial was set at 8:30 a.m. of
October 10, 2001 and on November 8 and 9, 2001 for the defendants to adduce
their evidence.20 However, the defendants failed to file their respective comments
and on October 4, 2001, the court issued an Order 21 admitting all the documentary
evidence of the plaintiffs. On October 10, 2001, the case was called for hearing.
There was no appearance for the defendants, and the court issued an order
declaring that the defendants were deemed to have waived their right to adduce
their evidence, and that the case was considered submitted for decision.22
1. The lower court erred in declaring that plaintiff-appellee Euberto Ado lost a
renewed contract at a basic salary of 280 Bahrain Dinar that entitles the plaintiffsappellees for the award of actual and moral damages as well as attorneys fees.
2. The lower court erred in declaring that the defendants-appellants waived its (sic)
right to present the necessary evidence.25
LBC questioned the trial courts ruling that due to the loss of his passport, Euberto
lost the opportunity for the renewal of his two-year contract, at the basic salary of
about P20,000.00 a month in Bahrain, or for the total peso equivalent of
P480,000.00 for two years. They argued that such ruling of the court was based on
The petitioners reiterate their submissions in the appellate court in support of their
petition.
The petition is partially granted.
One is entitled to actual or compensatory damages in the form of an adequate
compensation for such pecuniary losses suffered as has been duly proved. In
contracts, the damages for which the obligor who acted in good faith shall be those
that are the natural and probable consequences of the breach of the obligation, and
which the parties have foreseen or could have reasonably foreseen at the time the
obligation was constituted. In the case where the obligor acted in bad faith, the
obligor shall be responsible for all the damages which may be reasonably attributed
to the non-performance of the obligation.28
The Court agrees with the petitioners contention that the respondents failed to
adduce preponderant evidence to prove that upon his return to Bahrain, he would
be automatically employed by his former employer for a period of two years and
that he will be given the same job with the same compensation as provided for in his
expired employment contract.
It is well-settled in our jurisdiction that actual or compensatory damages is not
presumed, but must be duly proved with reasonable degree of certainty. A court
cannot rely on speculation, conjecture or guesswork as to the fact and amount of
damages, but must depend upon competent proof that they have suffered and on
evidence of the actual amount thereof.29 Indeed, the party alleging a fact has the
burden of proving it and a mere allegation is not evidence.30
In this case, the only evidence adduced by the respondents to prove that Euberto
had been granted a two-year re-entry visa and that upon his return to Bahrain he
would be automatically given a two-year employment contract is Eubertos own
testimony and his employers certification. The CA found the same to be sufficient,
and affirmed the award for actual/compensatory damages, thus:
We do not agree. It is worthy to note that appellants reproduction of appellee
Eubertos testimony is, to say the least, incomplete. A more judicious scrutiny of the
records, however, reveal that while the two-year contract has not actually been
executed between appellee Euberto and his employer, his employment is assured by
the fact that he was issued a re-entry visa by the embassy. The portion of the crossexamination left out by the appellant reads:
"Q-Is a re-entry visa an assurance of contract (sic)?
A-Yes, automatically.
A Yes, Sir.
A-If I could go back to place (sic) of work before the expiration of my re-entry visa,
automatically, another contract will be issued.
A I have re-entry visa. Whenever I will assume work in Bahrain automatically another
contract will be issued.
A-Yes, Sir."
A Not yet.
Q Is a re-entry visa an assurance of contract?
A Yes, automatically.
Q On what basis?
A If I could go back to place of work before the expiration of my re-entry visa,
automatically, another contract will be issued.
Q Is that so?
A Yes, Sir.
Q In support of your testimony, you presented a certification from your alleged
employer?
A Yes, Sir.
Q Who secured that certification?
A I requested one of my compadre because he was there.
Q You were not the one who secured that certification?
A Yes, of course, because I am here and I could not go back because my passport was
lost.
Q How close are you with your manager?
A Very close because I was even entrusted to maintain the yatch owned by the
manager.
Q The fact that you were not in Bahrain, you have no personal knowledge about the
issuance of certification?
are entitled to temperate damages of P10,000.00 under Article 2224 of the New Civil
Code which provides: "[t]emperate or moderate damages, which are more than
nominal but less than compensatory damages, may be recovered when the court
finds that some pecuniary loss has been suffered but its amount cannot, from the
nature of the case, be proved with certainty."33
The CA affirmed the award of moral damages in favor of the respondents as follows:
Considering the foregoing and the fact that appellants had in fact been negligent in
handling appellee Eubertos passport, the trial court could not be said to have erred
in awarding both actual and moral damages to the appellees, the latter being
justified further by the fact that the appellees entire family suffered, having lost
much-needed source of their income, which also resulted in their failure to complete
the construction of the house they were building.34
ATTY. SABITSANA:
Certification of employment and salary.
COURT: The past employment?
ATTY. SABITSANA:
Yes, Your Honor.32
Thus, Eubertos two-year contract of employment had already expired before leaving
Bahrain for his three-month vacation in the Philippines. Whether or not respondent
Eubertos employer would automatically employ him upon his return to Bahrain
after his sojourn in the Philippines would depend entirely upon his employer. The
respondents failed to adduce any evidence that Eubertos employer would give him
his former position under the same terms and conditions stipulated in his previous
employment contract. Euberto even failed to prove, by preponderant evidence,
other than his self-serving testimony, that the re-entry visa issued to him was at his
employers behest, with an assurance that upon his return to Bahrain, he would
automatically be re-employed. The respondents could very well have secured an
undertaking or an authenticated certification from Eubertos employer that upon his
return to Bahrain, he would be automatically employed for a period of two years
under the same terms and conditions of the first contract. While they adduced in
evidence a certification from Eubertos employer that he had been issued a re-entry
visa, there was no undertaking to automatically re-employ respondent Euberto for
another two years upon his return to Bahrain for a monthly salary of 280 Bahrain
Dinars. The CA, thus, erred in affirming the award of actual or compensatory
damages of P480,000.00 to the respondent spouses.
There is preponderant evidence that the respondents indeed suffered some
pecuniary loss due to the loss of Eubertos passport. However, the respondents
failed to adduce preponderant evidence of the passports value. Nevertheless, they
Case law has it that moral damages may be awarded for breach of contract where
the breach thereof by the obligor is wanton, reckless, malicious or in bad faith,
oppressive or abusive,35 or where the obligor is guilty of gross negligence amounting
to bad faith.36 In the case of Philippine Telegraph & Telephone Corporation v. Court of
37
Appeals, the Court had laid the requisites for awarding moral damages, thus: first,
evidence of besmirched reputation or physical, mental or psychological suffering
sustained by the claimant; second, a culpable act or omission factually established;
third, proof that the wrongful act or omission of the defendant is the proximate
cause of the damages sustained by the claimant; and fourth, that the case is
predicated on any of the instances expressed or envisioned by Article 2219 and
Article 2220 of the Civil Code.
Article 2220 of the Civil Code states that breach of contract may be a legal ground
for awarding moral damages if the defendant acted fraudulently or in bad faith.
The rulings of the trial and appellate courts that the respondent spouses are entitled
to moral damages are correct. While the failure to deliver Eubertos passport does
not per se amount to willful misconduct38 or bad faith, the evidence on record shows
that the petitioners indeed acted in bad faith and in wanton disregard of their
contractual obligation to the respondents.
The respondents made numerous inquiries from the petitioners on the whereabouts
of Eubertos passport, and repeatedly made requests for its return; the petitioners
dilly-dallied and gave various excuses. The petitioners told the respondents that the
passport may have been inadvertently transported to their other branches.
Exasperated, the respondents had to secure the services of counsel. Their demands
for the production of the passport (made through counsel) were ignored by the
petitioners. Worse still, the petitioners alleged in their answer to the complaint that
the van carrying Eubertos passport, while parked somewhere along 14th Street,
Port Area, South Harbor, Manila, was forcibly opened by unidentified person/s who
pilfered its contents, probably including the said passport.39 The trial court found the
allegation of pilferage to be baseless and declared as follows:
The defendants LBC failed to notify Euberto Ado at the earliest possible time that his
passport was lost. It was only in the second week of October 1996 that he was
informed through the letters of Atty. Florencio C. Lameyra, dated October 9, 1996,
to the Chief, Legal and Enforcement Division of the Civil Aeronautics Board, and the
letter of Atty. Generoso Santos that his passport was lost and not stolen by thieves
as asserted in their answer.40
Thus, with the attendant circumstances, there is ample basis for an award of moral
damages to the respondents. There is, to be sure, no hard and fast rule for
determining what would be a fair amount of moral damages.
Each case has to be resolved based on the attendant particulars. The Court finds that
an award of P50,000.00 as moral damages in favor of the respondents is
commensurate in this case.
Considering that the petitioners were guilty of bad faith and the private respondents
were compelled to litigate,41 the latter are entitled to the amount of P15,000.00 as
attorneys fees.
IN LIGHT OF ALL THE FOREGOING, the Court of Appeals Decision in CA-G.R. CV No.
73732 is AFFIRMED WITH MODIFICATION. The award for actual/compensatory
damages is deleted. In lieu thereof, the respondents, spouses Euberto and Sisinia
Ado, are awarded temperate damages in the amount of P10,000.00. The awards for
moral damages and attorneys fees are reduced to P50,000.00 and P15,000.00,
respectively. No costs.
SO ORDERED.
DECISION
CHICO-NAZARIO, J.:
This is a petition for review on certiorari of the Decision2 of the Court of Appeals in
CA-G.R. CV No. 16886 entitled, "The Consolidated Bank & Trust Corporation
(SOLIDBANK) v. Del Monte Motor Works, Inc., Narciso O. Morales and Spouse"
promulgated on 25 November 1999 and of the Resolution of the appellate court
dated 11 May 2000 denying petitioners motion for reconsideration. Said decision
and resolution affirmed the order dated 28 December 1987 of the Regional Trial
Court (RTC), Branch 27, Manila.
The facts of the case are as follows:
On 13 June 1984, petitioner filed before the RTC of Manila a complaint3 for recovery
of sum of money against respondents, impleading the spouse of respondent Narciso
O. Morales (respondent Morales) in order to bind their conjugal partnership of gains.
Petitioner, a domestic banking and trust corporation, alleges therein that on 23 April
1982, it extended in favor of respondents a loan in the amount of One Million Pesos
(P1,000,000.00) as evidenced by a promissory note executed by respondents on the
same date. Under the promissory note, respondents Del Monte Motor Works, Inc.
(respondent corporation) and Morales bound themselves jointly and severally to pay
petitioner the full amount of the loan through twenty-five monthly installments of
P40,000.00 a month with interest pegged at 23% per annum. The note was to be
paid in full by 23 May 1984. As respondents defaulted on their monthly installments,
the full amount of the loan became due and demandable pursuant to the terms of
the promissory note. Petitioner likewise alleges that it made oral and written
demands upon respondents to settle their obligation but notwithstanding these
demands, respondents still failed to pay their indebtedness which, as of 09 March
1984, stood at P1,332,474.55. Petitioner attached to its complaint as Annexes "A,"
"B," and "C," respectively, a photocopy of the promissory note supposedly executed
by respondents, a copy of the demand letter it sent respondents dated 20 January
1983, and statement of account pertaining to respondents loan.
On 06 December 1984, respondent Morales filed his manifestation together with his
answer wherein he likewise renounced any liability on the promissory note, thus:
1. He ADMIT[S] paragraphs 1, 2, and 3 of the complaint with a qualification in
paragraph 3 thereof that he has long been separated from his wife and the system
governing their property relations is that of complete separation of property and not
that of conjugal partnership of gain[s];
2. He [DENIES], generally and specifically, the allegations contained in paragraphs 4,
5, 6, 7, and 8 thereof, for lack of knowledge and information sufficient to form a
belief and as to the truth of the matter therein averred, the truth being those alleged
in the Special And Affirmative Defenses hereinbelow pleaded;
That I, NARCISO MORALES, after having been duly sworn to in accordance with law,
hereby depose and declare that:
I am one of the named defendant[s] in the above-entitled case;
I have cause[d] the preparation of the foregoing Answer upon facts and figures
supplied by me to my retained counsel; have read each and every allegations
contained therein and hereby certify that the same are true and correct of my own
knowledge and information.
(SGD) NARCISO MORALES
Affiant5
VERIFICATION
The trial court initially admitted into evidence Exhibit "E" and granted respondents
motion that they be allowed to amend their respective answers to conform with this
new evidence.11
On 30 September 1985, respondent corporation filed a manifestation and motion for
reconsideration12 of the trial courts order admitting into evidence petitioners
Exhibit "E." Respondent corporation claims that Exhibit "E" should not have been
admitted as it was immaterial, irrelevant, was not properly identified and hearsay
evidence. Respondent corporation insists that Exhibit "E" was not properly identified
by Lavarino who testified that he had nothing to do in the preparation and execution
of petitioners exhibits, one of which was Exhibit "E." Further, as there were
markings in Exhibit "A" which were not contained in Exhibit "E," the latter could not
possibly be considered an original copy of Exhibit "A." Lastly, respondent corporation
claims that the exhibit in question had no bearing on the complaint as Lavarino
admitted that Exhibit "E" was not the original of Exhibit "A" which was the
foundation of the complaint and upon which respondent corporation based its own
answer.
Respondent Morales similarly filed a manifestation with motion to reconsider order
13
admitting as evidence Exhibit "E" which, other than insisting that the due execution
and genuineness of the promissory note were not established as far as he was
concerned, essentially raised the same arguments contained in respondent
corporations manifestation with motion for reconsideration referred to above.
On 06 December 1985, the trial court granted respondents motions for
reconsideration.14 Petitioner moved for the reconsideration of this order which was
denied by the court a quo on 20 December 1985.15
On 26 December 1985, respondents separately filed their motions to dismiss on the
similar ground that with the exclusion of Exhibits "A" and "E," petitioner no longer
possessed any proof of respondents alleged indebtedness.16
On 08 April 1986, petitioner filed a motion17 praying that the presiding judge, Judge
Ricardo D. Diaz, of the court a quo inhibit himself from this case maintaining that the
latter rushed into resolving its motion for reconsideration of the trial courts order of
06 December 1985 thereby depriving it the opportunity of presenting proof that the
original of Exhibit "A" was delivered to respondents as early as 02 April 1983. Such
haste on the part of the presiding judge, according to petitioner, cast doubt on his
objectivity and fairness. This motion to inhibit was denied by the trial court on 06
August 1987.18
In an order dated 28 December 1987,19 the case before the trial court was dismissed,
the dispositive portion of which reads:
WHEREFORE, the instant case against defendants Del Monte Motor Works, Inc. and
Narciso O. Morales and spouse, is hereby DISMISSED, with costs against the plaintiff.
The trial courts finding was affirmed by the Court of Appeals in the assailed decision
now before us. The dispositive portion of the appellate courts decision reads:
WHEREFORE, PREMISES CONSIDERED, the decision of the Regional Trial Court,
Manila, Branch 27, dated December 28, 1987 dismissing plaintiff-appellant['s]
complaint is hereby AFFIRMED. Cost against the plaintiff-appellant.20
Petitioner thereafter filed a motion for reconsideration dated 14 December 1999
which was denied for lack of merit in a resolution of the Court of Appeals
promulgated on 11 May 2000.21
Aggrieved by the appellate courts ruling, petitioner now seeks redress from this
Court imputing the following errors on the Court of Appeals:
I
THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS GRAVELY ERRED WHEN IT FOUND THAT
PRIVATE RESPONDENTS DENIED THE MATERIAL ALLEGATIONS OF PETITIONER
SOLIDBANKS COMPLAINT, DESPITE THE PRESENCE OF INDUBITABLE FACTS CLEARLY
POINTING TO THE FACT THAT SAID PRIVATE RESPONDENTS ADMITTED THE
GENUINENESS AND DUE EXECUTION OF THE SUBJECT PROMISSORY NOTE.
II
THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS GRAVELY ERRED WHEN IT UPHELD THE
EXCLUSION OF EXHIBIT E, THE SECOND ORIGINAL OF THE PROMISSORY NOTE,
DESPITE THE FACT THAT THE ORIGINAL OF EXHIBIT A (XEROX COPY OF THE
DUPLICATE ORIGINAL OF THE PROMISSORY NOTE) WAS ACTUALLY IN THE
POSSESSION OF PRIVATE RESPONDENTS, THUS WARRANTING THE ADMISSION OF
SECONDARY EVIDENCE.
III
THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS GRAVELY ERRED IN NOT HOLDING THAT THE
TRIAL JUDGE SHOULD HAVE INHIBITED HIMSELF FROM TAKING COGNIZANCE OF
AND FROM TRYING AND DECIDING THE INSTANT CASE CONSIDERING HIS PERCEIVED
AND MANIFEST BIAS AND PARTIALITY IN FAVOR OF THE PRIVATE RESPONDENTS TO
THE GRAVE PREJUDICE OF PETITIONER SOLIDBANK.22
. . . This means that the defendant must declare under oath that he did not sign the
document or that it is otherwise false or fabricated. Neither does the statement of
the answer to the effect that the instrument was procured by fraudulent
representation raise any issue as to its genuineness or due execution. On the
contrary such a plea is an admission both of the genuineness and due execution
thereof, since it seeks to avoid the instrument upon a ground not affecting either.27
In this case, both the court a quo and the Court of Appeals erred in ruling that
respondents were able to specifically deny the allegations in petitioners complaint
in the manner specifically required by the rules. In effect, respondents had, to all
intents and purposes, admitted the genuineness and due execution of the subject
promissory note and recognized their obligation to petitioner.
The appellate court likewise sustained the ruling of the trial court that the "best
evidence rule or primary evidence must be applied as the purpose of the proof is to
establish the terms of the writing meaning the alleged promissory note as it is the
basis of the recovery of the money allegedly loaned to the defendants (respondents
herein)."28
The "best evidence rule" is encapsulated in Rule 130, Section 3, of the Revised Rules
of Civil Procedure which provides:
Sec. 3. Original document must be produced; exceptions. When the subject of
inquiry is the contents of a document, no evidence shall be admissible other than the
original document itself, except in the following cases:
(a) When the original has been lost or destroyed, or cannot be produced in court,
without bad faith on the part of the offeror;
(b) When the original is in the custody or under the control of the party against
whom the evidence is offered, and the latter fails to produce it after reasonable
notice;
(c) When the original consists of numerous accounts or other documents which
cannot be examined in court without great loss of time and the fact sought to be
established from them is only the general result of the whole; and
(d) When the original is a public record in the custody of a public officer or is
recorded in a public office.
The "best evidence rule," according to Professor Thayer, first appeared in the year
1699-1700 when in one case involving a goldsmith, Holt, C. J., was quoted as stating
that they should take into consideration the usages of trade and that "the best proof
that the nature of the thing will afford is only required."29 Over the years, the phrase
was used to describe rules which were already existing such as the rule that the
terms of a document must be proved by the production of the document itself, in
preference to evidence about the document; it was also utilized to designate the
hearsay rule or the rule excluding assertions made out of court and not subject to
the rigors of cross-examination; and the phrase was likewise used to designate the
group of rules by which testimony of particular classes of witnesses was preferred to
that of others.30
According to McCormick, an authority on the rules of evidence, "the only actual rule
that the best evidence phrase denotes today is the rule requiring the production of
the original writing"31 the rationale being:
(1) that precision in presenting to the court the exact words of the writing is of more
than average importance, particularly as respects operative or dispositive
instruments, such as deeds, wills and contracts, since a slight variation in words may
mean a great difference in rights, (2) that there is a substantial hazard of inaccuracy
in the human process of making a copy by handwriting or typewriting, and (3) as
respects oral testimony purporting to give from memory the terms of a writing,
there is a special risk of error, greater than in the case of attempts at describing
other situations generally. In the light of these dangers of mistransmission,
accompanying the use of written copies or of recollection, largely avoided through
proving the terms by presenting the writing itself, the preference for the original
writing is justified.32
Bearing in mind that the risk of mistransmission of the contents of a writing is the
justification for the "best evidence rule," we declare that this rule finds no
application to this case. It should be noted that respondents never disputed the
terms and conditions of the promissory note thus leaving us to conclude that as far
as the parties herein are concerned, the wording or content of said note is clear
enough and leaves no room for disagreement. In their responsive pleadings,
respondents principal defense rests on the alleged lack of consideration of the
promissory note. In addition, respondent Morales also claims that he did not sign the
note in his personal capacity. These contentions clearly do not question the "precise
wording"33 of the promissory note which should have paved the way for the
application of the "best evidence rule." It was, therefore, an error for the Court of
Appeals to sustain the decision of the trial court on this point.
Besides, the "best evidence rule" as stated in our Revised Rules of Civil Procedure is
not absolute. As quoted earlier, the rule accepts of exceptions one of which is when
the original of the subject document is in the possession of the adverse party. As
pointed out by petitioner in its motion to inhibit, had it been given the opportunity
by the court a quo, it would have sufficiently established that the original of Exhibit
"A" was in the possession of respondents which would have called into application
one of the exceptions to the "best evidence rule."
Significantly, and as discussed earlier, respondents failed to deny specifically the
execution of the promissory note. This being the case, there was no need for
petitioner to present the original of the promissory note in question. Their judicial
admission with respect to the genuineness and execution of the promissory note
sufficiently established their liability to petitioner regardless of the fact that
petitioner failed to present the original of said note.34
Indeed, when the defendant fails to deny specifically and under oath the due
execution and genuineness of a document copied in a complaint, the plaintiff need
not prove that fact as it is considered admitted by the defendant.35 In the case of
Asia Banking Corporation v. Walter E. Olsen & Co.,36 this Court held that
Another error assigned by the appellant is the fact that the lower court took into
consideration the documents attached to the complaint as a part thereof, without
having been expressly introduced in evidence. This was no error. In the answer of
the defendants there was no denial under oath of the authenticity of these
documents. Under Section 103 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the authenticity and
due execution of these documents must, in that case, be deemed admitted. The
effect of this is to relieve the plaintiff from the duty of expressly presenting such
documents as evidence. The court, for the proper decision of the case, may and
should consider, without the introduction of evidence, the facts admitted by the
parties.37
Anent petitioners allegation that the presiding judge of the court a quo should have
inhibited himself from this case, we resolve this issue against petitioner.
In order for this Court to sustain a charge of partiality and prejudice brought against
a judge, there must be convincing proof to show that he or she is, indeed, biased and
partial. Bare allegations are not enough. Bias and prejudice are serious charges
which cannot be presumed particularly if weighed against a judges sacred obligation
under his oath of office to administer justice without respect to person and do equal
right to the poor and the rich.38 There must be a showing of bias and prejudice
stemming from an extrajudicial source resulting in an opinion in the merits on some
basis other than what the judge learned from his participation in the case.39
In this case, as petitioner failed to proffer any evidence indicating that Judge Diaz
was guilty of bias and prejudice, we affirm the Court of Appeals holding that there
was no cogent reason for him to disqualify himself from this case.
Finally, Rule 33, Section 1, of the Revised Rules of Civil Procedure states the rule on
the effect of judgment on demurrer to evidence. It reads:
SECTION 1. Demurrer to evidence.- After the plaintiff has completed the presentation
of his evidence, the defendant may move for dismissal on the ground that upon the
facts and the law the plaintiff has shown no right to relief. If his motion is denied, he
shall have the right to present evidence. If the motion is granted but on appeal the
order of dismissal is reversed he shall be deemed to have waived the right to present
evidence.
A demurrer to evidence abbreviates judicial proceedings, it being an instrument for
the expeditious termination of an action. Caution, however, must be exercised by
the party seeking the dismissal of a case upon this ground as under the rules, if the
movants plea for the dismissal on demurrer to evidence is granted and the order of
dismissal is reversed on appeal, he loses his right to adduce evidence. If the
defendants motion for judgment on demurrer to evidence is granted and the order
is subsequently reversed on appeal, judgment is rendered in favor of the adverse
party because the movant loses his right to present evidence.40 The reviewing court
cannot remand the case for further proceedings; rather, it should render judgment
41
on the basis of the evidence presented by the plaintiff.
Under the promissory note executed by respondents in this case, they are obligated
to petitioner in the amount of One Million Pesos, this being the amount of loan they
obtained on 23 April 1982. In addition, they also bound themselves to pay the 23%
interest per annum on the loan; and a penalty charge of 3% per annum on the
amount due until fully paid. Respondents likewise agreed to pay attorneys fees
equivalent to 10% of the total amount due, but in no case less than P200.00, plus
costs of suit with both these amounts bearing a 1% interest per month until paid.
Costs against respondents.
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the Court of Appeals decision dated 25
November 1999 as well as its Resolution of 11 May 2000, affirming the order of the
Regional Trial Court, Manila, Branch 27, dated 28 December 1987, are hereby
REVERSED and SET ASIDE. Respondents are ordered to pay One Million Pesos
(P1,000,000.00) plus 23% interest per annum, penalty charge of 3% interest per
annum, and 10% of the amount due as attorneys fees together with a 1% interest
per month until fully paid. The sum of P220,020.00 which was the value of the
postdated check given
by respondents to petitioner as partial payment should be deducted from the
amount due from respondents.
SO ORDERED.
DEL CASTILLO, J.
When the parties admit the contents of written documents but put in issue whether
these documents adequately and correctly express the true intention of the parties,
the deciding body is authorized to look beyond these instruments and into the
contemporaneous and subsequent actions of the parties in order to determine such
intent.
Well-settled is the rule that in case of doubt, it is the intention of the contracting
parties that prevails, for the intention is the soul of a contract, not its wording which
is prone to mistakes, inadequacies, or ambiguities. To hold otherwise would give life,
validity, and precedence to mere typographical errors and defeat the very purpose
of agreements.
This Petition for Review on Certiorari1 assails the October 7, 2003 Decision,2 as well
3
as the May 11, 2005 Resolution of the Court of Appeals (CA) in CA G.R. SP No.
69981. The dispositive portion of the appellate courts Decision reads:
WHEREFORE, finding reversible error committed by the Department of Agrarian
Reform Adjudication Board, the instant petition for review is GRANTED. The assailed
Decision, dated 17 January 2001, rendered by the Department of Agrarian Reform
Adjudication Board is hereby ANNULLED and SET ASIDE. The Decision of the
Department of Agrarian Reform Adjudication Board of Bayombong[,] Nueva Vizcaya,
dated 17 March 1998, is REINSTATED. Costs against respondents.
SO ORDERED.4
The reinstated Decision of the Department of Agrarian Reform Adjudication Board
(DARAB) of Bayombong, Nueva Vizcaya, in turn, contained the following dispositive
portion:
Accordingly, judgment is rendered:
4. Ordering RBBI to return the amount paid to it by Nestor and Salun-at; and
ordering the latter to pay 20 cavans of palay per hectare at 46 kilos per
cavan unto [respondents] plus such accrued and unpaid rentals for the past
years as may be duly accounted for with the assistance of the Municipal
Agrarian Reform Officer of Bagabag, Nueva Vizcaya who is also hereby
instructed to assist the parties execute their leasehold contracts and;
5. The order to supervise harvest dated March 11, 1998 shall be observed
until otherwise modified or dissolved by the appellate body.
SO ORDERED.5
Factual Antecedents
Respondents Espejos were the original registered owners of two parcels of
agricultural land, with an area of two hectares each. One is located at Barangay
Lantap, Bagabag, Nueva Vizcaya (the Lantap property) while the other is located in
Barangay Murong, Bagabag, Nueva Vizcaya (the Murong property). There is no
dispute among the parties that the Lantap property is tenanted by respondent Nemi
Fernandez (Nemi)6 (who is the husband7 of respondent Elenita Espejo (Elenita), while
the Murong property is tenanted by petitioners Salun-at Marquez (Marquez) and
Nestor Dela Cruz (Dela Cruz).8
The respondents mortgaged both parcels of land to Rural Bank of Bayombong, Inc.
(RBBI) to secure certain loans. Upon their failure to pay the loans, the mortgaged
properties were foreclosed and sold to RBBI. RBBI eventually consolidated title to the
properties and transfer certificates of title (TCTs) were issued in the name of RBBI.
TCT No. T-62096 dated January 14, 1985 was issued for the Murong property. It
contained the following description:
Both TCTs describe their respective subjects as located in "Bagabag Townsite, K-27,"
without any reference to either Barangay Lantap or Barangay Murong.
On February 26, 1985, respondents Espejos bought back one of their lots from RBBI.
The Deed of Sale11 described the property sold as follows:
Murong.19 The CLOAs were registered in the Registry of Deeds of Nueva Vizcaya on
September 5, 1991.
On February 10, 1997 (more than 10 years after the Deed of Sale in favor of the
respondents and almost seven years after the execution of VLTs in favor of the
petitioners), respondents filed a Complaint20 before the Regional Agrarian Reform
Adjudicator (RARAD) of Bayombong, Nueva Vizcaya for the cancellation of
petitioners CLOAs, the deposit of leasehold rentals by petitioners in favor of
respondents, and the execution of a deed of voluntary land transfer by RBBI in favor
of respondent Nemi. The complaint was based on respondents theory that the
Murong property, occupied by the petitioners, was owned by the respondents by
virtue of the 1985 buy-back, as documented in the Deed of Sale. They based their
claim on the fact that their Deed of Sale refers to TCT No. 62096, which pertains to
the Murong property.
Petitioners filed their Answer21 and insisted that they bought the Murong property
as farmer-beneficiaries thereof. They maintained that they have always displayed
good faith, paid lease rentals to RBBI when it became the owner of the Murong
property, bought the same from RBBI upon the honest belief that they were buying
the Murong property, and occupied and exercised acts of ownership over the
Murong property. Petitioners also argued that what respondents Espejos
repurchased from RBBI in 1985 was actually the Lantap property, as evidenced by
their continued occupation and possession of the Lantap property through
respondent Nemi.
RBBI answered22 that it was the Lantap property which was the subject of the buyback transaction with respondents Espejos. It denied committing a grave mistake in
the transaction and maintained its good faith in the disposition of its acquired assets
in conformity with the rural banking rules and regulations.
OIC-RARAD Decision23
The OIC-RARAD gave precedence to the TCT numbers appearing on the Deed of Sale
and the VLTs. Since TCT No. T-62096 appeared on respondents Deed of Sale and the
said title refers to the Murong property, the OIC-RARAD concluded that the subject
of sale was indeed the Murong property. On the other hand, since the petitioners
VLTs referred to TCT No. T-62836, which corresponds to the Lantap property, the
OIC-RARAD ruled that petitioners CLOAs necessarily refer to the Lantap property. As
for the particular description contained in the VLTs that the subject thereof is the
Murong property, the OIC-RARAD ruled that it was a mere typographical error.
Further, since the VLTs covered the Lantap property and petitioners are not the
actual tillers thereof, the OIC-RARAD declared that they were disqualified to become
tenants of the Lantap property and ordered the cancellation of their CLOAs. It then
ordered RBBI to execute a leasehold contract with the real tenant of the Lantap
property, Nemi.
The OIC-RARAD recognized that petitioners only right as the actual tillers of the
Murong property is to remain as the tenants thereof after the execution of leasehold
contracts with and payment of rentals in arrears to respondents.
DARAB Decision24
Upon appeal filed by petitioners, the DARAB reversed the OIC-RARAD Decision. It
ruled that in assailing the validity of the CLOAs issued to petitioners as bona fide
tenant-farmers, the burden of proof rests on the respondents. There being no
evidence that the DAR field personnel were remiss in the performance of their
official duties when they issued the corresponding CLOAs in favor of petitioners, the
presumption of regular performance of duty prevails. This conclusion is made more
imperative by the respondents admission that petitioners are the actual tillers of the
Murong property, hence qualified beneficiaries thereof.
As for respondents allegation that they bought back the Murong property from
RBBI, the DARAB ruled that they failed to support their allegation with substantial
evidence. It gave more credence to RBBIs claim that respondents repurchased the
Lantap property, not the Murong property. Respondents, as owners of the Lantap
property, were ordered to enter into an agricultural leasehold contract with their
brother-in-law Nemi, who is the actual tenant of the Lantap property.
The DARAB ended its January 17, 2001 Decision in this wise:
We find no basis or justification to question the authenticity and validity of the
CLOAs issued to appellants as they are by operation of law qualified beneficiaries
over the landholdings; there is nothing to quiet as these titles were awarded in
conformity with the CARP program implementation; and finally, the Board declares
that all controverted claims to or against the subject landholding must be completely
and finally laid to rest.
WHEREFORE, premises considered and finding reversible errors[,] the assailed
decision is ANNULLED and a new judgment is hereby rendered, declaring:
1. Appellants Salun-at Marquez and Nestor Dela Cruz as the bona fide
tenant-tillers over the Murong property and therefore they are the qualified
beneficiaries thereof;
2. Declaring Transfer Certificate of Title (TCT) Nos. 395 and 396 issued in the
name of [farmer-beneficiaries] Salun-at Marquez and Nestor Dela Cruz
respectively, covered formerly by TCT No. 62096 (TCT No. 43258) of the
Murong property as valid and legal;
3. Ordering the co-[respondents] to firm-up an agricultural leasehold
contract with bona fide tenant-tiller Nemi Fernandez over the Lantap
property, *the latter+ being the subject matter of the buy back
arrangement entered into between [respondents] and Rural Bank of
Bayombong, Incorporated, and other incidental matters are deemed
resolved.
SO ORDERED.25
Ruling of the Court of Appeals
In appealing to the CA, the respondents insisted that the DARAB erred in ruling that
they repurchased the Lantap property, while the petitioners were awarded the
Murong property. They were adamant that the title numbers indicated in their
respective deeds of conveyance should control in determining the subjects thereof.
Since respondents Deed of Sale expressed that its subject is the property with TCT
No. T-62096, then what was sold to them was the Murong property. On the other
hand, petitioners VLTs and CLOAs say that they cover the property with TCT No. T62836; thus it should be understood that they were awarded the Lantap property.
Respondents added that since petitioners are not the actual tillers of the Lantap
property, their CLOAs should be cancelled due to their lack of qualification.
The CA agreed with the respondents. Using the Best Evidence Rule embodied in Rule
130, Section 3, the CA held that the Deed of Sale is the best evidence as to its
contents, particularly the description of the land which was the object of the sale.
Since the Deed of Sale expressed that its subject is the land covered by TCT No. T62096 the Murong property then that is the property that the respondents
repurchased.
The CA further ruled that as for petitioners VLTs, the same refer to the property
with TCT No. T-62836; thus, the subject of their CLOAs is the Lantap property. The
additional description in the VLTs that the subject thereof is located in Barangay
Murong was considered to be a mere typographical error. The CA ruled that the
technical description contained in the TCT is more accurate in identifying the subject
property since the same particularly describes the properties metes and bounds.
Both the RBBI26 and petitioners27 filed their respective motions for reconsideration,
which were separately denied.28
On June 22, 2004, RBBI filed a separate Petition for Review on Certiorari, docketed as
G.R. No. 163320, with this Court.29 RBBI raised the issue that the CA failed to
appreciate that respondents did not come to court with clean hands because they
misled RBBI to believe at the time of the sale that the two lots were not tenanted.
RBBI also asked that they be declared free from any liability to the parties as it did
not enrich itself at anyones expense. RBBIs petition was dismissed on July 26, 2004
for lack of merit. The said Resolution reads:
Considering the allegations, issues[,] and arguments adduced in the petition for
review on certiorari, the Court Resolves to DENY the petition for lack of sufficient
showing that the Court of Appeals had committed any reversible error in the
questioned judgment to warrant the exercise by this Court of its discretionary
appellate jurisdiction in this case.30
Their Motion for Reconsideration was likewise denied with finality.31 Entry of
judgment was made in that case on December 15, 2004.32
On July 27, 2005,33 petitioners filed the instant petition.
Issues
Rephrased and consolidated, the parties present the following issues for the Courts
determination:
I
What is the effect of the final judgment dismissing RBBIs Petition for Review on
Certiorari, which assailed the same CA Decision
II
Whether the CA erred in utilizing the Best Evidence Rule to determine the subject of
the contracts
III
What are the subject properties of the parties respective contracts with RBBI
Our Ruling
Propriety of the Petition
Respondents maintain that the instant petition for review raises factual issues which
are beyond the province of Rule 45.34
The issues involved herein are not entirely factual. Petitioners assail the appellate
courts rejection of their evidence (as to the contractual intent) as inadmissible
under the Best Evidence Rule. The question involving the admissibility of evidence is
35
a legal question that is within the Courts authority to review.
Besides, even if it were a factual question, the Court is not precluded to review the
same. The rule that a petition for review should raise only questions of law admits of
exceptions, among which are "(1) when the findings are grounded entirely on
speculations, surmises, or conjectures; (2) when the inference made is manifestly
mistaken, absurd or impossible; (3) when there is grave abuse of discretion; (4) when
the judgment is based on a misappreciation of facts; (5) when the findings of fact are
conflicting; (6) when, in making its findings, the same are contrary to the admissions
of both appellant and appellee; (7) when the findings are contrary to those of the
trial court; (8) when the findings are conclusions without citation of specific evidence
on which they are based; (9) when the facts set forth in the petition as well as in the
petitioner's main and reply briefs are not disputed by the respondent; and (10) when
the findings of fact are premised on the supposed absence of evidence and
contradicted by the evidence on record."36
In the instant case, we find sufficient basis to apply the exceptions to the general
rule because the appellate court misappreciated the facts of the case through its
erroneous application of the Best Evidence Rule, as will be discussed below.
Moreover, the disparate rulings of the three reviewing bodies below are sufficient
for the Court to exercise its jurisdiction under Rule 45.
First Issue
Dismissal of RBBIs appeal
Respondents maintain that the Courts earlier dismissal of RBBIs petition
for review of the same CA Decision is eloquent proof that there is no reversible error
in the appellate courts decision in favor of the respondents.37
We are not persuaded. This Court dismissed RBBIs earlier petition in G.R. No.
163320 because it failed to convincingly demonstrate the alleged errors in the CA
Decision. The bank did not point out the inadequacies and errors in the appellate
courts decision but simply placed the responsibility for the confusion on the
respondents for allegedly misleading the bank as to the identity of the properties
and for misrepresenting that the two lots were not tenanted. Thus, RBBI argued that
respondents did not come to court with clean hands.
These arguments were ineffectual in convincing the Court to review the appellate
courts Decision. It is the appellants responsibility to point out the perceived errors
in the appealed decision. When a party merely raises equitable considerations such
as the "clean hands" doctrine without a clear-cut legal basis and cogent arguments
to support his claim, there should be no surprise if the Court is not swayed to
exercise its appellate jurisdiction and the appeal is dismissed outright. The dismissal
of an appeal does not always and necessarily mean that the appealed decision is
correct, for it could simply be the result of the appellants inadequate discussion,
ineffectual arguments, or even procedural lapses.
RBBIs failure to convince the Court of the merits of its appeal should not prejudice
petitioners who were not parties to RBBIs appeal, especially because petitioners
duly filed a separate appeal and were able to articulately and effectively present
their arguments. A party cannot be deprived of his right to appeal an adverse
decision just because another party had already appealed ahead of him,38 or just
because the other partys separate appeal had already been dismissed.39
There is another reason not to bind the petitioners to the final judgment against
RBBI. RBBI executed the transfer (VLTs) in favor of petitioners prior to the
commencement of the action. Thus, when the action for cancellation of CLOA was
filed, RBBI had already divested itself of its title to the two properties involved.
Under the rule on res judicata, a judgment (in personam) is conclusive only between
the parties and their successors-in-interest by title subsequent to the
commencement of the action.40 Thus, when the vendor (in this case RBBI) has
already transferred his title to third persons (petitioners), the said transferees are
not bound by any judgment which may be rendered against the vendor.41
Second Issue
Is it correct to apply the Best Evidence Rule?
Citing the Best Evidence Rule in Rule 130, Section 3, the CA held that the Deed of
Sale between respondents and RBBI is the best evidence as to the property that was
sold by RBBI to the respondents. Since the Deed of Sale stated that its subject is the
land covered by TCT No. T-62096 the title for the Murong property then the
property repurchased by the respondents was the Murong property. Likewise, the
CA held that since the VLTs between petitioners and RBBI refer to TCT No. T-62836
the title for the Lantap property then the property transferred to petitioners was
the Lantap property.
Petitioners argue that the appellate court erred in using the best evidence rule to
determine the subject of the Deed of Sale and the Deeds of Voluntary Land Transfer.
They maintain that the issue in the case is not the contents of the contracts but the
intention of the parties that was not adequately expressed in their contracts.
Petitioners then argue that it is the Parol Evidence Rule that should be applied in
order to adequately resolve the dispute.
Indeed, the appellate court erred in its application of the Best Evidence Rule. The
Best Evidence Rule states that when the subject of inquiry is the contents of a
document, the best evidence is the original document itself and no other evidence
(such as a reproduction, photocopy or oral evidence) is admissible as a general rule.
The original is preferred because it reduces the chance of undetected tampering
with the document.42
In the instant case, there is no room for the application of the Best Evidence Rule
because there is no dispute regarding the contents of the documents. It is admitted
by the parties that the respondents Deed of Sale referred to TCT No. T-62096 as its
subject; while the petitioners Deeds of Voluntary Land Transfer referred to TCT No.
T-62836 as its subject, which is further described as located in Barangay Murong.
The real issue is whether the admitted contents of these documents adequately and
correctly express the true intention of the parties. As to the Deed of Sale, petitioners
(and RBBI) maintain that while it refers to TCT No. T-62096, the parties actually
intended the sale of the Lantap property (covered by TCT No. T-62836).
As to the VLTs, respondents contend that the reference to TCT No. T-62836
(corresponding to the Lantap property) reflects the true intention of RBBI and the
petitioners, and the reference to "Barangay Murong" was a typographical error. On
the other hand, petitioners claim that the reference to "Barangay Murong" reflects
their true intention, while the reference to TCT No. T-62836 was a mere error. This
dispute reflects an intrinsic ambiguity in the contracts, arising from an apparent
failure of the instruments to adequately express the true intention of the parties. To
resolve the ambiguity, resort must be had to evidence outside of the instruments.
The CA, however, refused to look beyond the literal wording of the documents and
rejected any other evidence that could shed light on the actual intention of the
contracting parties. Though the CA cited the Best Evidence Rule, it appears that what
it actually applied was the Parol Evidence Rule instead, which provides:
When the terms of an agreement have been reduced to writing, it is considered as
containing all the terms agreed upon and there can be, between the parties and
their successors in interest, no evidence of such terms other than the contents of the
written agreement.43
The Parol Evidence Rule excludes parol or extrinsic evidence by which a party seeks
to contradict, vary, add to or subtract from the terms of a valid agreement or
instrument. Thus, it appears that what the CA actually applied in its assailed Decision
when it refused to look beyond the words of the contracts was the Parol Evidence
Rule, not the Best Evidence Rule. The appellate court gave primacy to the literal
terms of the two contracts and refused to admit any other evidence that would
contradict such terms.
However, even the application of the Parol Evidence Rule is improper in the case at
bar. In the first place, respondents are not parties to the VLTs executed between
RBBI and petitioners; they are strangers to the written contracts. Rule 130, Section 9
specifically provides that parol evidence rule is exclusive only as "between the
parties and their successors-in-interest." The parol evidence rule may not be invoked
where at least one of the parties to the suit is not a party or a privy of a party to the
written document in question, and does not base his claim on the instrument or
assert a right originating in the instrument.44
Moreover, the instant case falls under the exceptions to the Parol Evidence Rule, as
provided in the second paragraph of Rule 130, Section 9:
However, a party may present evidence to modify, explain or add to the terms of the
written agreement if he puts in issue in his pleading:
(1) An intrinsic ambiguity, mistake or imperfection in the written
agreement;
(2) The failure of the written agreement to express the true intent and
agreement of the parties thereto;
x x x x (Emphasis supplied)
Here, the petitioners VLTs suffer from intrinsic ambiguity. The VLTs described the
subject property as covered by TCT No. T-62836 (Lantap property), but they also
describe the subject property as being located in "Barangay Murong." Even the
respondents Deed of Sale falls under the exception to the Parol Evidence Rule. It
refers to "TCT No. T-62096" (Murong property), but RBBI contended that the true
intent was to sell the Lantap property. In short, it was squarely put in issue that the
written agreement failed to express the true intent of the parties.
Based on the foregoing, the resolution of the instant case necessitates an
examination of the parties respective parol evidence, in order to determine the true
intent of the parties. Well-settled is the rule that in case of doubt, it is the intention
of the contracting parties that prevails, for the intention is the soul of a contract,45
not its wording which is prone to mistakes, inadequacies, or ambiguities. To hold
otherwise would give life, validity, and precedence to mere typographical errors and
defeat the very purpose of agreements.
In this regard, guidance is provided by the following articles of the Civil Code
involving the interpretation of contracts:
Article 1370. If the terms of a contract are clear and leave no doubt upon the
intention of the contracting parties, the literal meaning of its stipulations shall
control.
If the words appear to be contrary to the evident intention of the parties, the latter
shall prevail over the former.
Article 1371. In order to judge the intention of the contracting parties, their
contemporaneous and subsequent acts shall be principally considered.
Rule 130, Section 13 which provides for the rules on the interpretation of documents
is likewise enlightening:
Section 13. Interpretation according to circumstances. For the proper construction
of an instrument, the circumstances under which it was made, including the
situation of the subject thereof and of the parties to it, may be shown, so that the
judge may be placed in the position of those whose language he is to
interpret.1wphi1
Applying the foregoing guiding rules, it is clear that the Deed of Sale was intended to
transfer the Lantap property to the respondents, while the VLTs were intended to
convey the Murong property to the petitioners. This may be seen from the
contemporaneous and subsequent acts of the parties.
Third issue
Determining the intention of the parties
regarding the subjects of their contracts
We are convinced that the subject of the Deed of Sale between RBBI and the
respondents was the Lantap property, and not the Murong property. After the
execution in 1985 of the Deed of Sale, the respondents did not exercise acts of
ownership that could show that they indeed knew and believed that they
repurchased the Murong property. They did not take possession of the Murong
property. As admitted by the parties, the Murong property was in the possession of
the petitioners, who occupied and tilled the same without any objection from the
respondents. Moreover, petitioners paid leasehold rentals for using the Murong
property to RBBI, not to the respondents.
Aside from respondents neglect of their alleged ownership rights over the Murong
property, there is one other circumstance that convinces us that what respondents
really repurchased was the Lantap property. Respondent Nemi (husband of
respondent Elenita) is the farmer actually tilling the Lantap property, without turning
over the supposed landowners share to RBBI. This strongly indicates that the
respondents considered themselves (and not RBBI) as the owners of the Lantap
property. For if respondents (particularly spouses Elenita and Nemi) truly believed
that RBBI retained ownership of the Lantap property, how come they never
complied with their obligations as supposed tenants of RBBIs land? The factual
circumstances of the case simply do not support the theory propounded by the
respondents.
We are likewise convinced that the subject of the Deeds of Voluntary Land Transfer
(VLTs) in favor of petitioners was the Murong property, and not the Lantap property.
When the VLTs were executed in 1990, petitioners were already the tenant-farmers
of the Murong property, and had been paying rentals to RBBI accordingly. It is
therefore natural that the Murong property and no other was the one that they had
intended to acquire from RBBI with the execution of the VLTs. Moreover, after the
execution of the VLTs, petitioners remained in possession of the Murong property,
enjoying and tilling it without any opposition from anybody. Subsequently, after the
petitioners completed their payment of the total purchase price of P90,000.00 to
RBBI, the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) officials conducted their
investigation of the Murong property which, with the presumption of regularity in
the performance of official duty, did not reveal any anomaly. Petitioners were found
to be in actual possession of the Murong property and were the qualified
beneficiaries thereof. Thus, the DAR officials issued CLOAs in petitioners favor; and
these CLOAs explicitly refer to the land in Barangay Murong. All this time, petitioners
were in possession of the Murong property, undisturbed by anyone for several long
years, until respondents started the controversy in 1997.
All of these contemporaneous and subsequent actions of RBBI and petitioners
support their position that the subject of their contract (VLTs) is the Murong
property, not the Lantap property. Conversely, there has been no contrary evidence
of the parties actuations to indicate that they intended the sale of the Lantap
property. Thus, it appears that the reference in their VLT to TCT No. T-62836 (Lantap
property) was due to their honest but mistaken belief that the said title covers the
Murong property. Such a mistake is not farfetched considering that TCT No. T-62836
only refers to the Municipality of Bayombong, Nueva Vizcaya, and does not indicate
the particular barangay where the property is located. Moreover, both properties
are bounded by a road and public land. Hence, were it not for the detailed technical
description, the titles for the two properties are very similar.
The respondents attempt to discredit petitioners argument that their VLTs were
intrinsically ambiguous and failed to express their true intention by asking why
petitioners never filed an action for the reformation of their contract.46 A cause of
action for the reformation of a contract only arises when one of the contracting
parties manifests an intention, by overt acts, not to abide by the true agreement of
the parties.47 It seems fairly obvious that petitioners had no cause to reform their
VLTs because the parties thereto (RBBI and petitioners) never had any dispute as to
the interpretation and application thereof. They both understood the VLTs to cover
the Murong property (and not the Lantap property). It was only much later, when
strangers to the contracts argued for a different interpretation, that the issue
became relevant for the first time.
All told, we rule that the Deed of Sale dated February 26, 1985 between respondents
and RBBI covers the Lantap property under TCT No. T-62836, while the Deeds of
Voluntary Land Transfer and TCT Nos. CLOA-395 and CLOA-396 of the petitioners
cover the Murong property under TCT No. T-62096. In consequence, the CAs ruling
against RBBI should not be executed as such execution would be inconsistent with
our ruling herein. Although the CAs decision had already become final and
executory as against RBBI with the dismissal of RBBIs petition in G.R. No. 163320,
our ruling herein in favor of petitioners is a supervening cause which renders the
execution of the CA decision against RBBI unjust and inequitable.
WHEREFORE, the Petition for Review on Certiorari is GRANTED. The assailed October
7, 2003 Decision, as well as the May 11, 2005 Resolution of the Court of Appeals in
CA-G.R. SP No. 69981 are REVERSED and SET ASIDE. The January 17, 2001 Decision of
the DARAB Central Office is REINSTATED. The Deed of Sale dated February 26, 1985
between respondents and Rural Bank of Bayombong, Inc. covers the Lantap property
under TCT No. T-62836, while the Deeds of Voluntary Land Transfer and TCT Nos.
CLOA-395 and CLOA-396 of the petitioners cover the Murong property under TCT
No. T-62096. The Register of Deeds of Nueva Vizcaya is directed to make the
necessary corrections to the titles of the said properties in accordance with this
Decision. Costs against respondents.
SO ORDERED.
April 4, 2007
On 16 November 2004, public respondent judge issued the assailed order denying
the admission and excluding from the records petitioners Exhibits "A", "C", "D", "E",
"H" and its sub-markings, "I", "J" and its sub-markings, "K", "L", "M" and its submarkings, "N" and its sub-markings, "O", "P" and its sub-markings, "Q" and its submarkings, "R" and "S" and its sub-markings. According to the court a quo:
The Court finds merit in the objections raised and the motion to strike out filed
respectively by the defendants. The record shows that the plaintiff has been given
every opportunity to present the originals of the Xerox or photocopies of the
documents it offered. It never produced the originals. The plaintiff attempted to
justify the admission of the photocopies by contending that "the photocopies
offered are equivalent to the original of the document" on the basis of the Electronic
Evidence (Comment to Defendant Wallem Philippines Objections and Motion to
Strike). But as rightly pointed out in defendant Wallems Reply to the Comment of
Plaintiff, the Xerox copies do not constitute the electronic evidence defined in
Section 1 of Rule 2 of the Rules on Electronic Evidence as follows:
"(h) "Electronic document" refers to information or the representation of
information, data, figures, symbols or other models of written expression, described
or however represented, by which a right is established or an obligation
extinguished, or by which a fact may be proved and affirmed, which is received,
recorded, transmitted, stored, processed, retrieved or produced electronically. It
includes digitally signed documents and any printout, readable by sight or other
means which accurately reflects the electronic data message or electronic
document. For the purpose of these Rules, the term "electronic document" may be
used interchangeably with "electronic data message".
The information in those Xerox or photocopies was not received, recorded, retrieved
or produced electronically. Moreover, such electronic evidence must be
authenticated (Sections 1 and 2, Rule 5, Rules on Electronic Evidence), which the
plaintiff failed to do. Finally, the required Affidavit to prove the admissibility and
evidentiary weight of the alleged electronic evidence (Sec. 1, Rule 9, Ibid) was not
executed, much less presented in evidence.
The Xerox or photocopies offered should, therefore, be stricken off the record. Aside
from their being not properly identified by any competent witness, the loss of the
principals thereof was not established by any competent proof.
xxxx
WHEREFORE, plaintiffs Exhibits "A", "C", "D", "E", "H" and its sub-markings, "I", "J",
and its sub-markings, "K", "L", "M" and its sub-markings, "N" and its sub-markings,
"O", "P" and its sub-markings, "Q" and its sub-markings, and "R" are hereby DENIED
admission and excluded from the records. However, these excluded evidence should
be attached to the records of this case to enable the appellate court to pass upon
them should an appeal be taken from the decision on the merits to be rendered
upon the termination of the trial of this case.
Exhibits "S" and its sub-markings are also DENIED admission for lack of proper
identification since the witness who brought these pictures expressly admitted that
he was not present when the photos were taken and had not knowledge when the
same where taken.3
Upon denial of petitioners Motion for Reconsideration in an Order dated 20 April
2005, petitioner filed a Petition for Certiorari under Rule 65 of the Rules of Civil
Procedure before the Court of Appeals maintaining that public respondent Judge
acted with grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction in
denying the admission of its Exhibits "A", "C", "D", "E", "H" and its sub-markings, "I",
"J" and its sub-markings, "K", "L", "M" and its sub-markings, "N" and its sub-markings,
"O", "P" and its sub-markings, "Q" and its sub-markings, "R", and "S" and its submarkings.
On 9 November 2005, the appellate court issued a Decision dismissing petitioners
petition for certiorari, the pertinent portions of which elucidate:
After a judicious scrutiny of the record of the case on hand, together with the rules
and jurisprudence which are applicable in the premises, we have come up with a
finding that the petition for certiorari filed in this case is not meritorious.
It appears that there is no sufficient showing by the petitioner that the respondent
judge acted with grave abuse of discretion in issuing the assailed orders in Civil Case
No. CEB-18662. As what our jurisprudence tells us, grave abuse of discretion is
meant such capricious and whimsical exercise of judgment as would be equivalent to
lack of jurisdiction x x x.
In the case at bench, what has been shown to the contrary by the totality of the
record on hand is that the respondent judge acted correctly and within the pale of
his sound discretion in issuing the assailed order, dated November 16, 2004, in Civil
Case No. CEB-18662.
Indeed, it appears that the pieces of petitioners documentary evidence which were
denied admission by the respondent judge were not properly identified by any
competent witness. As pointed out by the respondent Bangpai Shipping Company in
its comment on the petition filed in this case which reproduces some excerpts of the
testimonies in the court a quo of Atty. Marianito De Los Santos, Engr. Nestor
Enriquez, Jr. and Mr. Rodulfo I. Pagaling, the said witnesses did not have personal
But even if it be granted just for the sake of argument that the respondent judge
committed an error in denying the aforementioned documentary evidence of the
petitioner, still the petition for certiorari filed in this case must fail. Such error would
at most be only an error of law and not an error of jurisdiction. In Lee vs. People, 393
SCRA 397, the Supreme Court of the Philippines said that certiorari will not lie in case
of an error of law. x x x.
Furthermore, no error can be ascribed to the court a quo in denying admission and
excluding from the records petitioners Exhibits "A", "C", "D", "E", "H" and its submarkings, "I", "J" and its sub-markings, "K", "L", "M" and its sub-markings, "N" and its
sub-markings, "O", "P" and its sub-markings, "Q" and its sub-markings, and "R". The
trial court was correct in rejecting these photocopies as they violate the best
evidence rule and are therefore of no probative value being incompetent pieces of
evidence. Before the onset of liberal rules of discovery, and modern technique of
electronic copying, the best evidence rule was designed to guard against incomplete
or fraudulent proof and the introduction of altered copies and the withholding of the
originals.8 But the modern justification for the rule has expanded from the
prevention of fraud to a recognition that writings occupy a central position in the
law.9 The importance of the precise terms of writings in the world of legal relations,
the fallibility of the human memory as reliable evidence of the terms, and the
hazards of inaccurate or incomplete duplicate are the concerns addressed by the
best evidence rule.10
Moreover, as mandated under Section 2, Rule 130 of the Rules of Court:
"SECTION 2. Original writing must be produced; exceptions. There can be no
evidence of a writing the contents of which is the subject of inquiry, other than the
original writing itself, except in the following cases:
(a) When the original has been lost, destroyed, or cannot be produced in
court;
(b) When the original is in the possession of the party against whom the
evidence is offered, and the latter fails to produce it after reasonable
notice;
(c) When the original is a record or other document in the custody of a
public officer;
(d) When the original has been recorded in an existing record a certified
copy of which is made evidence by law;
(e) When the original consists of numerous accounts or other documents
which cannot be examined in court without great loss of time and the fact
sought to be established from them is only the general result of the whole."
When the original document has been lost or destroyed, or cannot be produced in
court, the offeror, upon proof of its execution or existence and the cause of its
unavailability without bad faith on his part, may prove its contents by a copy, or by a
recital of its contents in some authentic document, or by the testimony of witnesses
in the order stated.11 The offeror of secondary evidence is burdened to prove the
predicates thereof: (a) the loss or destruction of the original without bad faith on the
part of the proponent/offeror which can be shown by circumstantial evidence of
routine practices of destruction of documents;12 (b) the proponent must prove by a
fair preponderance of evidence as to raise a reasonable inference of the loss or
destruction of the original copy; and (c) it must be shown that a diligent and bona
fide but unsuccessful search has been made for the document in the proper place or
places.13 However, in the case at bar, though petitioner insisted in offering the
photocopies as documentary evidence, it failed to establish that such offer was
made in accordance with the exceptions as enumerated under the abovequoted
rule. Accordingly, we find no error in the Order of the court a quo denying
admissibility of the photocopies offered by petitioner as documentary evidence.
Finally, it perplexes this Court why petitioner continued to obdurately disregard the
opportunities given by the trial court for it to present the originals of the
photocopies it presented yet comes before us now praying that it be allowed to
present the originals of the exhibits that were denied admission or in case the same
are lost, to lay the predicate for the admission of secondary evidence. Had petitioner
presented the originals of the documents to the court instead of the photocopies it
obstinately offered as evidence, or at the very least laid the predicate for the
admission of said photocopies, this controversy would not have unnecessarily been
brought before the appellate court and finally to this Court for adjudication. Had it
not been for petitioners intransigence, the merits of petitioners complaint for
damages would have been decided upon by the trial court long ago. As aptly
articulated by the Court of Appeals, petitioner has only itself to blame for the
respondent judges denial of admission of its aforementioned documentary evidence
and consequently, the denial of its prayer to be given another opportunity to present
the originals of the documents that were denied admission nor to lay the predicate
for the admission of secondary evidence in case the same has been lost.
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the instant petition is hereby DENIED. The
Decision of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CEB-SP No. 00848, dated 9 November
2005 is hereby AFFIRMED. Costs against petitioner.
SO ORDERED.
The Office of the Solicitor General summarized in the Appellee's Brief2 the evidence
for the prosecution as follows:
The trial court gave full credit to the version of the prosecution and found
unmeritorious appellant's defense. It noted that in appellant's statement before
Barangay Captain Emerlito Calara,5 she had promised to return to the complainants
the money she had taken from them. There was nothing in said statement that
showed that such money was a debt. As to the Affidavit of Desistance, the trial court
rejected the same, for it was signed by the complainants after all of them testified in
court and were paid by the appellant.
The trial court likewise observed that the appellant had failed to refute the
statement in the certification issued by the POEA that she was not licensed to recruit
workers for overseas employment, and that she had even admitted in open court
that she was not licensed to do so.
Accordingly, in its decision of 7 February 1996,6 the trial court convicted the
appellant of the crime of illegal recruitment in large scale and sentenced her to
suffer life imprisonment and to pay a fine of P100,000.
Finally, the appellant failed to refute the testimony of Barangay Captain Calara that
the complainants filed the case against her because she recruited them and later
reneged on her assurances.
The appellant seasonably filed her notice of appeal. In her Appellant's Brief,7 she
imputes upon the trial court the commission of this single error, to wit:
The challenge against the POEA certification (Exh. "A") that the appellant was neither
licensed nor authorized to recruit workers for overseas employment must likewise
fail. The trial court correctly ruled that the said certification is a public document
issued by a public officer in the performance of an official duty; hence, it is a prima
facie evidence of the facts therein stated pursuant to Section 23 of Rule 132 of the
Rules of Court. In any event, as said court noted, the appellant admitted in open
court that she was not licensed or authorized to recruit workers.12
THE TRIAL COURT GRAVELY ERRED IN FINDING [HER] GUILTY OF THE CRIME
OF ILLEGAL RECRUITMENT IN A LARGE SCALE DESPITE THE FAILURE OF THE
PROSECUTION TO PROVE HER GUILT BEYOND REASONABLE DOUBT.
She anchors her appeal chiefly on the Affidavit of Desistance executed by the
complainants. She claims that it creates serious doubts as to her liability and proves
that she was not engaged in recruitment activities. Finally, she alleges that the POEA
certification is a mere fabrication and should not have been given any probative
value; and, in any event, the prosecution failed to prove that she had no license or
authority to recruit workers.
The Office of the Solicitor General supports the trial court's decision and prays that
the assailed decision be affirmed in toto.
The appeal is without merit.
The Affidavit of Desistance deserves scant consideration. In the first place, it was
executed after the complainants testified under oath and in open court that they
were offered job placements abroad and were made to pay placement or processing
fees. In the second place, the affidavit did not expressly repudiate their testimony in
court on the recruitment activities of the appellant. In fact, the appellant admitted
that the complaining witnesses executed it after she had paid them back the
amounts they had given her.8 The affidavit was more of an afterthought arising from
personal consideration of pity.
We have said before that courts should not attach persuasive value to affidavits of
desistance, especially when executed as an afterthought.9 Moreover, it would be a
dangerous rule for courts to reject testimonies solemnly taken before the courts of
justice simply because the witnesses who had given them later on changed their
mind for one reason or another, for such rule would make solemn trial a mockery
and place the investigation of truth at the mercy of unscrupulous witnesses.10 It
must always be remembered that a criminal offense is an outrage to the sovereign
State. To the State belongs the power to prosecute and punish crimes. While there
may be a compromise upon the civil liability arising from an offense, such
compromise shall not extinguish the public action for the imposition of the legal
penalty.11
any prohibited practice enumerated under Article 34 of the Labor Code; (b) does not
have a license or authority to lawfully engage in the recruitment and placement of
workers; and (c) commits the same against three or more persons, individually or as
a group.13 Paragraph (b) of Article 38, explicitly provides that illegal recruitment
when committed by a syndicate or in large scale shall be considered an offense
involving economic sabotage. Under Article 39 of the Labor Code the penalty of life
imprisonment and a fine of P100,000 shall be imposed if illegal recruitment
constitutes economic sabotage.
The appellant promised the five complainants that there were jobs available for
them in Taiwan. She exacted money from them for alleged passports, as well as for
placement fees. There was a certification from the POEA that the appellant was not
licensed to recruit workers for overseas job placements, which she likewise admitted
in her testimony. All these point to the inescapable conclusion that she was engaged
in illegal recruitment in large scale. Thus, the trial court correctly found the appellant
guilty beyond reasonable doubt of the crime of illegal recruitment in large scale. The
penalty imposed upon her is in accordance with Article 39 of the Labor Code.
WHEREFORE, the instant appeal is DISMISSED and the decision of the Regional Trial
Court of Malolos, Bulacan, Branch 76, in Criminal Case No. 3363-M-93 is hereby
AFFIRMED in toto.
SO ORDERED.
former the delivery of said titles. 3 Private respondents, however, refused on the
ground that the title of the first lot is in the possession of another person, 4 and
petitioner's acquisition of the title of the other lot is subject to certain conditions.
Offshoot, petitioner sued private respondents for specific performance before the
RTC. In their answer with counterclaim private respondents merely alleged the
5
existence of the following oral conditions which were never reflected in the deeds
6
of sale:
3.3.2 Title to the other property (TCT No. 243273) remains with
the defendants (private respondents) until plaintiff (petitioner)
shows proof that all the following requirements have been met:
FRANCISCO, J.:
On September 30, 1982, private respondents sold to petitioner two (2) parcels of
registered land in Quezon City for a consideration of P35,000.00 and P20,000.00,
respectively. The first deed of absolute sale covering Transfer Certificate of Title
(TCT) No. 258628 provides in part:
That for and in consideration of the sum of THIRTY FIVE
THOUSAND (P35,000.00) PESOS, receipt of which in full is hereby
acknowledged, we have sold, transferred and conveyed, as we
hereby sell, transfer and convey, that subdivided portion of the
property covered by TCT No. 258628 known as Lot No. 684-G-1-B2 in favor of RAFAEL S. ORTAEZ, of legal age, Filipino, whose
marriage is under a regime of complete separation of property,
and a resident of 942 Aurora Blvd., Quezon City, his heirs or
assigns. 1
while the second deed of absolute sale covering TCT. No. 243273 provides:
That for and in consideration of the sum of TWENTY THOUSAND
(P20,000.00) PESOS receipt of which in full is hereby
acknowledged, we have sold, transferred and conveyed, as we
hereby sell, transfer and convey, that consolidated-subdivided
portion of the property covered by TCT No. 243273 known as Lot
No. 5 in favor of RAFAEL S. ORTANEZ, of legal age, Filipino, whose
marriage is under a regime of complete separation of property,
and a resident of 942 Aurora Blvd., Cubao, Quezon City his heirs or
2
assigns.
Private respondents received the payments for the above-mentioned lots, but failed
to deliver the titles to petitioner. On April 9, 1990 the latter demanded from the
(i) Plaintiff will cause the segregation of his right of way amounting
to 398 sq. m.;
(ii) Plaintiff will submit to the defendants the approved plan for the
segregation;
(iii) Plaintiff will put up a strong wall between his property and that
of defendants' lot to segregate his right of way;
(iv) Plaintiff will pay the capital gains tax and all other expenses
that may be incurred by reason of sale. . .
During trial, private respondent Oscar Inocentes, a former judge, orally testified that
the sale was subject to the above conditions, 7 although such conditions were not
incorporated in the deeds of sale. Despite petitioner's timely objections on the
ground that the introduction of said oral conditions was barred by the parol
evidence rule, the lower court nonetheless, admitted them and eventually dismissed
the complaint as well as the counterclaim. On appeal, the Court of Appeals (CA)
affirmed the court a quo. Hence, this petition.
We are tasked to resolve the issue on the admissibility of parol evidence to establish
the alleged oral conditions-precedent to a contract of sale, when the deeds of sale
are silent on such conditions.
The parol evidence herein introduced is inadmissible. First, private respondents' oral
testimony on the alleged conditions, coming from a party who has an interest in the
outcome of the case, depending exclusively on human memory, is not as reliable as
written or documentary evidence. 8 Spoken words could be notoriously unreliable
unlike a written contract which speaks of a uniform language. 9 Thus, under the
general rule in Section 9 of Rule 130 10 of the Rules of Court, when the terms of an
agreement were reduced to writing, as in this case, it is deemed to contain all the
terms agreed upon and no evidence of such terms can be admitted other than the
contents thereof. 11 Considering that the written deeds of sale were the only
repository of the truth, whatever is not found in said instruments must have been
waived and abandoned by the parties. 12 Examining the deeds of sale, we cannot
even make an inference that the sale was subject to any condition. As a contract, it is
the law between the parties. 13
Secondly, to buttress their argument, private respondents rely on the case of Land
Settlement Development, Co. vs. Garcia Plantation 14 where the Court ruled that a
condition precedent to a contract may be established by parol evidence. However,
the material facts of that case are different from this case. In the former, the
contract sought to be enforced 15 expressly stated that it is subject to an agreement
containing the conditions-precedent which were proven through parol evidence.
Whereas, the deeds of sale in this case, made no reference to any pre-conditions or
other agreement. In fact, the sale is denominated as absolute in its own terms.
Third, the parol evidence herein sought to be introduced would vary, contradict or
16
defeat the operation of a valid instrument, hence, contrary to the rule that:
The parol evidence rule forbids any addition to . . . the terms of a
written instrument by testimony purporting to show that, at or
before the signing of the document, other or different terms were
orally agreed upon by the parties. 17
Although parol evidence is admissible to explain the meaning of a contract,
"it cannot serve the purpose of incorporating into the contract additional
contemporaneous conditions which are not mentioned at all in the writing
unless there has been fraud or mistake." 18 No such fraud or mistake exists
in this case.
Fourth, we disagree with private respondents' argument that their parol evidence is
admissible under the exceptions provided by the Rules, specifically, the alleged
failure of the agreement to express the true intent of the parties. Such exception
obtains only in the following instance:
[W]here the written contract is so ambiguous or obscure in terms
that the contractual intention of the parties cannot be understood
from a mere reading of the instrument. In such a case, extrinsic
evidence of the subject matter of the contract, of the relations of
the parties to each other, and of the facts and circumstances
surrounding them when they entered into the contract may be
the house owned by his sister-in-law Susan Ramirez; that accused Maximo Alvarez
after pouring the gasoline on the door of the house of Susan Ramirez ignited and set
it on fire; that the accused at the time he successfully set the house on fire (sic) of
Susan Ramirez knew that it was occupied by Susan Ramirez, the members of the
family as well as Esperanza Alvarez, the estranged wife of the accused; that as a
consequence of the accused in successfully setting the fire to the house of Susan
Ramirez, the door of said house was burned and together with several articles of the
house, including shoes, chairs and others.
COURT:
1
Before us is a petition for review on certiorari assailing the Decision of the Court of
Appeals dated May 31, 2000 in CA-G.R. SP No. 56154, entitled "Susan Ramirez,
petitioner, versus, Hon. Benjamin M. Aquino, Jr., as Judge RTC, Malabon, MM, Br. 72,
and Maximo Alvarez, respondents."
Susan Ramirez, herein respondent, is the complaining witness in Criminal Case No.
19933-MN for arson3 pending before the Regional Trial Court, Branch 72, Malabon
City. The accused is Maximo Alvarez, herein petitioner. He is the husband of
Esperanza G. Alvarez, sister of respondent.
ATTY. ALCANTARA:
xxx
On June 21, 1999, the private prosecutor called Esperanza Alvarez to the witness
stand as the first witness against petitioner, her husband. Petitioner and his counsel
raised no objection.
Esperanza testified as follows:
Q: When you were able to find the source, incidentally what was the source of that
scent?
A: When I stand by the window, sir, I saw a man pouring the gasoline in the house of
my sister (and witness pointing to the person of the accused inside the court room).
"ATTY. ALCANTARA:
Q: For the record, Mrs. Witness, can you state the name of that person, if you know?
We are calling Mrs. Esperanza Alvarez, the wife of the accused, Your Honor.
A: He is my husband, sir, Maximo Alvarez.
COURT:
Q: If that Maximo Alvarez you were able to see, can you identify him?
Swear in the witness.
A: Yes, sir.
xxx
Q: If you can see him inside the Court room, can you please point him?
ATTY. MESIAH: (sic)
Your Honor, we are offering the testimony of this witness for the purpose of proving
that the accused Maximo Alvarez committed all the elements of the crime being
charged particularly that accused Maximo Alvarez pour on May 29, 1998 gasoline in
the house located at Blk. 5, Lot 9, Phase 1-C, Dagat-dagatan, Navotas, Metro Manila,
A: Witness pointing to a person and when asked to stand and asked his name, he
gave his name as Maximo Alvarez."4
In the course of Esperanzas direct testimony against petitioner, the latter showed
"uncontrolled emotions," prompting the trial judge to suspend the proceedings.
3. The policy of the law is to guard the security and confidences of private life, even
at the risk of an occasional failure of justice, and to prevent domestic disunion and
unhappiness; and
On September 2, 1999, the trial court issued the questioned Order disqualifying
Esperanza Alvarez from further testifying and deleting her testimony from the
records.7 The prosecution filed a motion for reconsideration but was denied in the
other assailed Order dated October 19, 1999.8
This prompted respondent Susan Ramirez, the complaining witness in Criminal Case
No. 19933-MN, to file with the Court of Appeals a petition for certiorari9 with
application for preliminary injunction and temporary restraining order.10
On May 31, 2000, the Appellate Court rendered a Decision nullifying and setting
aside the assailed Orders issued by the trial court.
But like all other general rules, the marital disqualification rule has its own
exceptions, both in civil actions between the spouses and in criminal cases for
offenses committed by one against the other. Like the rule itself, the exceptions are
backed by sound reasons which, in the excepted cases, outweigh those in support of
the general rule. For instance, where the marital and domestic relations are so
strained that there is no more harmony to be preserved nor peace and tranquility
which may be disturbed, the reason based upon such harmony and tranquility fails.
In such a case, identity of interests disappears and the consequent danger of perjury
based on that identity is non-existent. Likewise, in such a situation, the security and
confidences of private life, which the law aims at protecting, will be nothing but
ideals, which through their absence, merely leave a void in the unhappy home.12
13
"We think that the correct rule, which may be adopted in this jurisdiction, is that laid
down in Cargil vs. State, 35 ALR 133, 220 Pac. 64, 25 Okl. 314, wherein the court
said:
The rule that the injury must amount to a physical wrong upon the person is too
narrow; and the rule that any offense remotely or indirectly affecting domestic
harmony comes within the exception is too broad. The better rule is that, when an
offense directly attacks, or directly and vitally impairs, the conjugal relation, it comes
within the exception to the statute that one shall not be a witness against the other
except in a criminal prosecution for a crime committee (by) one against the other."
Obviously, the offense of arson attributed to petitioner, directly impairs the conjugal
relation between him and his wife Esperanza. His act, as embodied in the
Information for arson filed against him, eradicates all the major aspects of marital
life such as trust, confidence, respect and love by which virtues the conjugal
relationship survives and flourishes.
As correctly observed by the Court of Appeals:
"The act of private respondent in setting fire to the house of his sister-in-law Susan
Ramirez, knowing fully well that his wife was there, and in fact with the alleged
intent of injuring the latter, is an act totally alien to the harmony and confidences of
marital relation which the disqualification primarily seeks to protect. The criminal act
complained of had the effect of directly and vitally impairing the conjugal relation. It
underscored the fact that the marital and domestic relations between her and the
accused-husband have become so strained that there is no more harmony, peace or
tranquility to be preserved. The Supreme Court has held that in such a case, identity
is non-existent. In such a situation, the security and confidences of private life which
the law aims to protect are nothing but ideals which through their absence, merely
leave a void in the unhappy home. (People v. Castaeda, 271 SCRA 504). Thus, there
is no longer any reason to apply the Marital Disqualification Rule."
It should be stressed that as shown by the records, prior to the commission of the
offense, the relationship between petitioner and his wife was already strained. In
fact, they were separated de facto almost six months before the incident. Indeed,
the evidence and facts presented reveal that the preservation of the marriage
between petitioner and Esperanza is no longer an interest the State aims to protect.
At this point, it bears emphasis that the State, being interested in laying the truth
before the courts so that the guilty may be punished and the innocent exonerated,
must have the right to offer the direct testimony of Esperanza, even against the
14
objection of the accused, because (as stated by this Court in Francisco ), "it was the
latter himself who gave rise to its necessity."
WHEREFORE, the Decision of the Court of Appeals is AFFIRMED. The trial court, RTC,
Branch 72, Malabon City, is ordered to allow Esperanza Alvarez to testify against
petitioner, her husband, in Criminal Case No. 19933-MN. Costs against petitioner.
SO ORDERED.
against the petitioner seeking the annulment of the second sale of said parcel of land
made by the petitioner to a certain Erlinda Dandoy on the premise that the said land
was previously sold to them. In his answer, petitioner contends that he never sold
the property to the private respondents and that his signature appearing in the deed
of absolute sale in favor of the latter was a forgery, hence, the alleged sale was
fictitious and inexistent. At this juncture, it is worth mentioning that the civil case
was filed on March 1, 1985, five years before June 19, 1990 when the criminal case
for estafa was instituted.
On October 3, 1991, the trial court denied the petitioner's motion as well as a
subsequent motion for reconsideration.
ROMERO, J.:
Petitioner Arturo Alano has filed this petition for review of the decision 1 of the Court
of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP No. 28150 which affirmed in toto the order of the Regional
Trial Court of Manila, Branch 37 2 denying petitioner's motion for the suspension of
proceeding of Criminal Case No. 90-84933, entitled "People of the Philippines vs.
Arturo Alano" as well as his motion for reconsideration.
Aggrieved, petitioner filed a petition for certiorari and prohibition before the Court
of Appeals seeking the nullification of the assailed order.
Criminal Case No. 90-84933 is a prosecution for the crime of estafa. The information
3
alleges:
On July 26, 1993, 4 the Court of Appeals dismissed the petition for lack of merit, the
decretal portion of which reads:
civil and criminal cases have similar issues or the issue in one is intimately related to
the issues raised in the other, then a prejudicial question would likely exists,
provided the other element or characteristic is satisfied. 6
On the basis of the foregoing and a perusal of the facts obtaining in the case at bar,
the disposition of the issue raised need not unduly detain us. We have already ruled
that a criminal action for estafa (for alleged double sale of property) is a prejudicial
question to a civil action for nullity of the alleged deed of sale and the defense of the
alleged vendor is the forgery of his signature in the deed. 7
Notwithstanding the apparent prejudicial question involved, the Court of
Appeals still affirmed the Order of the trial court denying petitioner's
motion for the suspension of the proceeding on the ground that petitioner,
in the stipulation of facts, had already admitted during the pre-trial order
dated October 5, 1990 of the criminal case the validity of his signature in
the first deed of sale between him and the private respondent, as well as
his subsequent acknowledgment of his signature in twenty-three (23) cash
vouchers evidencing the payments made by the private respondent. 8
Moreover, it was also noted by the Court of Appeals that petitioner even
wrote to the private respondent offering to refund whatever sum the latter
had paid. 9
In this regard, the pre-trial provision on criminal procedure found in Rule 118 of the
Rules of Court provides:
Sec. 2. Pre-trial conference; subject. . . . The pre-trial conference
shall consider the following:
(a) Plea bargaining
(b) Stipulation of facts
From the foregoing, there is no question that a stipulation of facts by the parties in a
criminal case is recognized as declarations constituting judicial admissions, hence,
binding upon the parties 10 and by virtue of which the prosecution dispensed with
the introduction of additional evidence and the defense waived the right to contest
or dispute the veracity of the statement contained in the exhibit. 11
Accordingly, the stipulation of facts stated in the pre-trial order amounts to an
admission by the petitioner resulting in the waiver of his right to present evidence on
his behalf. While it is true that the right to present evidence is guaranteed under the
Constitution, 12 this right may be waived expressly or impliedly. 13
Since the suspension of the criminal case due to a prejudicial question is only a
procedural matter, the same is subject to a waiver by virtue of the prior acts of the
accused. After all, the doctrine of waiver is made solely for the benefit and
protection of the individual in his private capacity, if it can be dispensed with and
relinquished without infringing on any public right and without detriment to the
community at large. 14
Accordingly, petitioner's admission in the stipulation of facts during the pre-trial of
the criminal amounts to a waiver of his defense of forgery in the civil case. Hence,
we have no reason to nullify such waiver, it being not contrary to law, public order,
public policy, morals or good customs, or prejudicial to a third person with a right
recognized by law. 15 Furthermore, it must be emphasized that the pre-trial order
was signed by the petitioner himself. As such, the rule that no proof need be offered
as to any facts admitted at a pre-trial hearing applies. 16
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, the appealed decision of the Court of Appeals
dated July 26, 1993 is AFFIRMED. Costs against petitioner.
SO ORDERED.
G. R. No. 158149
February 9, 2006
and informed him that he and his wife Perla had chosen Lots 1 and 2 of Block 2 with
a total area of 1,740.3 square meters.
In a letter dated August 22, 1972 to Perla Manalo, Ramos confirmed the reservation
of the lots. He also pegged the price of the lots at P200.00 per square meter, or a
total of P348,060.00, with a 20% down payment of the purchase price amounting to
P69,612.00 less the P34,887.66 owing from Ramos, payable on or before December
31, 1972; the corresponding Contract of Conditional Sale would then be signed on or
before the same date, but if the selling operations of XEI resumed after December
31, 1972, the balance of the downpayment would fall due then, and the spouses
would sign the aforesaid contract within five (5) days from receipt of the notice of
resumption of such selling operations. It was also stated in the letter that, in the
meantime, the spouses may introduce improvements thereon subject to the rules
and regulations imposed by XEI in the subdivision. Perla Manalo conformed to the
letter agreement.7
The spouses Manalo took possession of the property on September 2, 1972,
constructed a house thereon, and installed a fence around the perimeter of the lots.
In the meantime, many of the lot buyers refused to pay their monthly installments
until they were assured that they would be issued Torrens titles over the lots they
had purchased.8 The spouses Manalo were notified of the resumption of the selling
operations of XEI.9 However, they did not pay the balance of the downpayment on
the lots because Ramos failed to prepare a contract of conditional sale and transmit
the same to Manalo for their signature. On August 14, 1973, Perla Manalo went to
the XEI office and requested that the payment of the amount representing the
balance of the downpayment be deferred, which, however, XEI rejected. On August
10, 1973, XEI furnished her with a statement of their account as of July 31, 1973,
showing that they had a balance of P34,724.34 on the downpayment of the two lots
after deducting the account of Ramos, plus P3,819.6810 interest thereon from
September 1, 1972 to July 31, 1973, and that the interests on the unpaid balance of
the purchase price of P278,448.00 from September 1, 1972 to July 31, 1973
11
amounted to P30,629.28. The spouses were informed that they were being billed
12
for said unpaid interests.
On January 25, 1974, the spouses Manalo received another statement of account
from XEI, inclusive of interests on the purchase price of the lots.13 In a letter dated
April 6, 1974 to XEI, Manalo, Jr. stated they had not yet received the notice of
resumption of Leis selling operations, and that there had been no arrangement on
the payment of interests; hence, they should not be charged with interest on the
balance of the downpayment on the property.14 Further, they demanded that a deed
of conditional sale over the two lots be transmitted to them for their signatures.
However, XEI ignored the demands. Consequently, the spouses refused to pay the
balance of the downpayment of the purchase price.15
the property. The latter alleged that they, as vendors, and XEI, as vendee, had a
contract of sale over the lots which had not yet been rescinded.28
Sometime in June 1976, Manalo, Jr. constructed a business sign in the sidewalk near
his house. In a letter dated June 17, 1976, XEI informed Manalo, Jr. that business
signs were not allowed along the sidewalk. It demanded that he remove the same,
on the ground, among others, that the sidewalk was not part of the land which he
had purchased on installment basis from XEI.16 Manalo, Jr. did not respond. XEI
reiterated its demand on September 15, 1977.17
While the case was pending, the spouses Manalo wrote CBM to offer an amicable
settlement, promising to abide by the purchase price of the property (P313,172.34),
per agreement with XEI, through Ramos. However, on July 28, 1988, CBM wrote the
spouses, through counsel, proposing that the price of P1,500.00 per square meter of
the property was a reasonable starting point for negotiation of the settlement.29 The
spouses rejected the counter proposal,30 emphasizing that they would abide by their
original agreement with XEI. CBM moved to withdraw its complaint31 because of the
issues raised.32
Subsequently, XEI turned over its selling operations to OBM, including the
receivables for lots already contracted and those yet to be sold.18 On December 8,
1977, OBM warned Manalo, Jr., that "putting up of a business sign is specifically
prohibited by their contract of conditional sale" and that his failure to comply with its
demand would impel it to avail of the remedies as provided in their contract of
conditional sale.19
Meanwhile, on December 5, 1979, the Register of Deeds issued Transfer Certificate
of Title (TCT) No. T-265822 over Lot 1, Block 2, and TCT No. T-265823 over Lot 2,
20
Block 2, in favor of the OBM. The lien in favor of the Central Bank of the Philippines
was annotated at the dorsal portion of said title, which was later cancelled on August
4, 1980.21
Subsequently, the Commercial Bank of Manila (CBM) acquired the Xavierville Estate
from OBM. CBM wrote Edilberto Ng, the president of Xavierville Homeowners
Association that, as of January 31, 1983, Manalo, Jr. was one of the lot buyers in the
subdivision.22 CBM reiterated in its letter to Ng that, as of January 24, 1984, Manalo
was a homeowner in the subdivision.23
In a letter dated August 5, 1986, the CBM requested Perla Manalo to stop any ongoing construction on the property since it (CBM) was the owner of the lot and she
had no permission for such construction.24 She agreed to have a conference meeting
with CBM officers where she informed them that her husband had a contract with
OBM, through XEI, to purchase the property. When asked to prove her claim, she
promised to send the documents to CBM. However, she failed to do so.25 On
September 5, 1986, CBM reiterated its demand that it be furnished with the
documents promised,26 but Perla Manalo did not respond.
On July 27, 1987, CBM filed a complaint27 for unlawful detainer against the spouses
with the Metropolitan Trial Court of Quezon City. The case was docketed as Civil
Case No. 51618. CBM claimed that the spouses had been unlawfully occupying the
property without its consent and that despite its demands, they refused to vacate
In the meantime, the CBM was renamed the Boston Bank of the Philippines. After
CBM filed its complaint against the spouses Manalo, the latter filed a complaint for
specific performance and damages against the bank before the Regional Trial Court
(RTC) of Quezon City on October 31, 1989.
The plaintiffs alleged therein that they had always been ready, able and willing to pay
the installments on the lots sold to them by the defendants remote predecessor-ininterest, as might be or stipulated in the contract of sale, but no contract was
forthcoming; they constructed their house worth P2,000,000.00 on the property in
good faith; Manalo, Jr., informed the defendant, through its counsel, on October 15,
1988 that he would abide by the terms and conditions of his original agreement with
the defendants predecessor-in-interest; during the hearing of the ejectment case on
October 16, 1988, they offered to pay P313,172.34 representing the balance on the
purchase price of said lots; such tender of payment was rejected, so that the subject
lots could be sold at considerably higher prices to third parties.
Plaintiffs further alleged that upon payment of the P313,172.34, they were entitled
to the execution and delivery of a Deed of Absolute Sale covering the subject lots,
sufficient in form and substance to transfer title thereto free and clear of any and all
liens and encumbrances of whatever kind and nature.33 The plaintiffs prayed that,
after due hearing, judgment be rendered in their favor, to wit:
WHEREFORE, it is respectfully prayed that after due hearing:
(a) The defendant should be ordered to execute and deliver a Deed of
Absolute Sale over subject lots in favor of the plaintiffs after payment of the
sum of P313,172.34, sufficient in form and substance to transfer to them
titles thereto free and clear of any and all liens and encumbrances of
whatever kind or nature;
(b) The defendant should be held liable for moral and exemplary damages
in the amounts of P300,000.00 and P30,000.00, respectively, for not
promptly executing and delivering to plaintiff the necessary Contract of
Sale, notwithstanding repeated demands therefor and for having been
constrained to engage the services of undersigned counsel for which they
agreed to pay attorneys fees in the sum of P50,000.00 to enforce their
rights in the premises and appearance fee of P500.00;
(c) And for such other and further relief as may be just and equitable in the
premises.34
In its Answer to the complaint, the defendant interposed the following affirmative
defenses: (a) plaintiffs had no cause of action against it because the August 22, 1972
letter agreement between XEI and the plaintiffs was not binding on it; and (b) "it had
no record of any contract to sell executed by it or its predecessor, or of any
statement of accounts from its predecessors, or records of payments of the plaintiffs
or of any documents which entitled them to the possession of the lots."35 The
defendant, likewise, interposed counterclaims for damages and attorneys fees and
prayed for the eviction of the plaintiffs from the property.36
Meanwhile, in a letter dated January 25, 1993, plaintiffs, through counsel, proposed
an amicable settlement of the case by paying P942,648.70, representing the balance
of the purchase price of the two lots based on the current market value.37 However,
the defendant rejected the same and insisted that for the smaller lot, they pay
P4,500,000.00, the current market value of the property.38 The defendant insisted
that it owned the property since there was no contract or agreement between it and
the plaintiffs relative thereto.
During the trial, the plaintiffs adduced in evidence the separate Contracts of
Conditional Sale executed between XEI and Alberto Soller;39 Alfredo Aguila,40 and
Dra. Elena Santos-Roque41 to prove that XEI continued selling residential lots in the
subdivision as agent of OBM after the latter had acquired the said lots.
For its part, defendant presented in evidence the letter dated August 22, 1972,
where XEI proposed to sell the two lots subject to two suspensive conditions: the
payment of the balance of the downpayment of the property, and the execution of
the corresponding contract of conditional sale. Since plaintiffs failed to pay, OBM
consequently refused to execute the corresponding contract of conditional sale and
forfeited the P34,877.66 downpayment for the two lots, but did not notify them of
said forfeiture.42 It alleged that OBM considered the lots unsold because the titles
thereto bore no annotation that they had been sold under a contract of conditional
sale, and the plaintiffs were not notified of XEIs resumption of its selling operations.
On May 2, 1994, the RTC rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs and against the
defendant. The fallo of the decision reads:
WHEREFORE, judgment is hereby rendered in favor of the plaintiffs and against the
defendant
(a) Ordering the latter to execute and deliver a Deed of Absolute Sale over
Lot 1 and 2, Block 2 of the Xavierville Estate Subdivision after payment of
the sum of P942,978.70 sufficient in form and substance to transfer to
them titles thereto free from any and all liens and encumbrances of
whatever kind and nature.
(b) Ordering the defendant to pay moral and exemplary damages in the
amount of P150,000.00; and
(c) To pay attorneys fees in the sum of P50,000.00 and to pay the costs.
SO ORDERED.43
The trial court ruled that under the August 22, 1972 letter agreement of XEI and the
plaintiffs, the parties had a "complete contract to sell" over the lots, and that they
had already partially consummated the same. It declared that the failure of the
defendant to notify the plaintiffs of the resumption of its selling operations and to
execute a deed of conditional sale did not prevent the defendants obligation to
convey titles to the lots from acquiring binding effect. Consequently, the plaintiffs
had a cause of action to compel the defendant to execute a deed of sale over the
lots in their favor.
Boston Bank appealed the decision to the CA, alleging that the lower court erred in
(a) not concluding that the letter of XEI to the spouses Manalo, was at most a mere
contract to sell subject to suspensive conditions, i.e., the payment of the balance of
the downpayment on the property and the execution of a deed of conditional sale
(which were not complied with); and (b) in awarding moral and exemplary damages
to the spouses Manalo despite the absence of testimony providing facts to justify
such awards.44
On September 30, 2002, the CA rendered a decision affirming that of the RTC with
modification. The fallo reads:
WHEREFORE, the appealed decision is AFFIRMED with MODIFICATIONS that (a) the
figure "P942,978.70" appearing [in] par. (a) of the dispositive portion thereof is
changed to "P313,172.34 plus interest thereon at the rate of 12% per annum from
September 1, 1972 until fully paid" and (b) the award of moral and exemplary
damages and attorneys fees in favor of plaintiffs-appellees is DELETED.
SO ORDERED.45
The appellate court sustained the ruling of the RTC that the appellant and the
appellees had executed a Contract to Sell over the two lots but declared that the
balance of the purchase price of the property amounting to P278,448.00 was
payable in fixed amounts, inclusive of pre-computed interests, from delivery of the
possession of the property to the appellees on a monthly basis for 120 months,
based on the deeds of conditional sale executed by XEI in favor of other lot buyers.46
The CA also declared that, while XEI must have resumed its selling operations before
the end of 1972 and the downpayment on the property remained unpaid as of
December 31, 1972, absent a written notice of cancellation of the contract to sell
from the bank or notarial demand therefor as required by Republic Act No. 6552, the
spouses had, at the very least, a 60-day grace period from January 1, 1973 within
which to pay the same.
Boston Bank filed a motion for the reconsideration of the decision alleging that there
was no perfected contract to sell the two lots, as there was no agreement between
XEI and the respondents on the manner of payment as well as the other terms and
conditions of the sale. It further averred that its claim for recovery of possession of
the aforesaid lots in its Memorandum dated February 28, 1994 filed before the trial
court constituted a judicial demand for rescission that satisfied the requirements of
the New Civil Code. However, the appellate court denied the motion.
Boston Bank, now petitioner, filed the instant petition for review on certiorari
assailing the CA rulings. It maintains that, as held by the CA, the records do not
reflect any schedule of payment of the 80% balance of the purchase price, or
P278,448.00. Petitioner insists that unless the parties had agreed on the manner of
payment of the principal amount, including the other terms and conditions of the
contract, there would be no existing contract of sale or contract to sell.47 Petitioner
avers that the letter agreement to respondent spouses dated August 22, 1972
merely confirmed their reservation for the purchase of Lot Nos. 1 and 2, consisting
of 1,740.3 square meters, more or less, at the price of P200.00 per square meter (or
P348,060.00), the amount of the downpayment thereon and the application of the
P34,887.00 due from Ramos as part of such downpayment.
Petitioner asserts that there is no factual basis for the CA ruling that the terms and
conditions relating to the payment of the balance of the purchase price of the
property (as agreed upon by XEI and other lot buyers in the same subdivision) were
also applicable to the contract entered into between the petitioner and the
Respondents. It insists that such a ruling is contrary to law, as it is tantamount to
compelling the parties to agree to something that was not even discussed, thus,
violating their freedom to contract. Besides, the situation of the respondents cannot
be equated with those of the other lot buyers, as, for one thing, the respondents
made a partial payment on the downpayment for the two lots even before the
execution of any contract of conditional sale.
Petitioner posits that, even on the assumption that there was a perfected contract to
sell between the parties, nevertheless, it cannot be compelled to convey the
property to the respondents because the latter failed to pay the balance of the
downpayment of the property, as well as the balance of 80% of the purchase price,
thus resulting in the extinction of its obligation to convey title to the lots to the
Respondents.
Another egregious error of the CA, petitioner avers, is the application of Republic Act
No. 6552. It insists that such law applies only to a perfected agreement or perfected
contract to sell, not in this case where the downpayment on the purchase price of
the property was not completely paid, and no installment payments were made by
the buyers.
Petitioner also faults the CA for declaring that petitioner failed to serve a notice on
the respondents of cancellation or rescission of the contract to sell, or notarial
demand therefor. Petitioner insists that its August 5, 1986 letter requiring
respondents to vacate the property and its complaint for ejectment in Civil Case No.
51618 filed in the Metropolitan Trial Court amounted to the requisite demand for a
rescission of the contract to sell. Moreover, the action of the respondents below was
barred by laches because despite demands, they failed to pay the balance of the
purchase price of the lots (let alone the downpayment) for a considerable number of
years.
For their part, respondents assert that as long as there is a meeting of the minds of
the parties to a contract of sale as to the price, the contract is valid despite the
parties failure to agree on the manner of payment. In such a situation, the balance
of the purchase price would be payable on demand, conformably to Article 1169 of
the New Civil Code. They insist that the law does not require a party to agree on the
manner of payment of the purchase price as a prerequisite to a valid contract to sell.
The respondents cite the ruling of this Court in Buenaventura v. Court of Appeals48 to
support their submission.
They argue that even if the manner and timeline for the payment of the balance of
the purchase price of the property is an essential requisite of a contract to sell,
nevertheless, as shown by their letter agreement of August 22, 1972 with the OBM,
through XEI and the other letters to them, an agreement was reached as to the
manner of payment of the balance of the purchase price. They point out that such
letters referred to the terms of the terms of the deeds of conditional sale executed
by XEI in favor of the other lot buyers in the subdivision, which contained uniform
terms of 120 equal monthly installments (excluding the downpayment, but inclusive
of pre-computed interests). The respondents assert that XEI was a real estate broker
and knew that the contracts involving residential lots in the subdivision contained
uniform terms as to the manner and timeline of the payment of the purchase price
of said lots.
Respondents further posit that the terms and conditions to be incorporated in the
"corresponding contract of conditional sale" to be executed by the parties would be
the same as those contained in the contracts of conditional sale executed by lot
buyers in the subdivision. After all, they maintain, the contents of the corresponding
contract of conditional sale referred to in the August 22, 1972 letter agreement
envisaged those contained in the contracts of conditional sale that XEI and other lot
buyers executed. Respondents cite the ruling of this Court in Mitsui Bussan Kaisha v.
Manila E.R.R. & L. Co.49
The respondents aver that the issues raised by the petitioner are factual,
inappropriate in a petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the Rules of
Court. They assert that petitioner adopted a theory in litigating the case in the trial
court, but changed the same on appeal before the CA, and again in this Court. They
argue that the petitioner is estopped from adopting a new theory contrary to those
it had adopted in the trial and appellate courts. Moreover, the existence of a
contract of conditional sale was admitted in the letters of XEI and OBM. They aver
that they became owners of the lots upon delivery to them by XEI.
The issues for resolution are the following: (1) whether the factual issues raised by
the petitioner are proper; (2) whether petitioner or its predecessors-in-interest, the
XEI or the OBM, as seller, and the respondents, as buyers, forged a perfect contract
to sell over the property; (3) whether petitioner is estopped from contending that no
such contract was forged by the parties; and (4) whether respondents has a cause of
action against the petitioner for specific performance.
The rule is that before this Court, only legal issues may be raised in a petition for
review on certiorari. The reason is that this Court is not a trier of facts, and is not to
review and calibrate the evidence on record. Moreover, the findings of facts of the
trial court, as affirmed on appeal by the Court of Appeals, are conclusive on this
Court unless the case falls under any of the following exceptions:
(1) when the conclusion is a finding grounded entirely on speculations, surmises and
conjectures; (2) when the inference made is manifestly mistaken, absurd or
impossible; (3) where there is a grave abuse of discretion; (4) when the judgment is
based on a misapprehension of facts; (5) when the findings of fact are conflicting; (6)
when the Court of Appeals, in making its findings went beyond the issues of the case
and the same is contrary to the admissions of both appellant and appellee; (7) when
the findings are contrary to those of the trial court; (8) when the findings of fact are
conclusions without citation of specific evidence on which they are based; (9) when
the facts set forth in the petition as well as in the petitioners main and reply briefs
are not disputed by the respondents; and (10) when the findings of fact of the Court
of Appeals are premised on the supposed absence of evidence and contradicted by
the evidence on record.50
We have reviewed the records and we find that, indeed, the ruling of the appellate
court dismissing petitioners appeal is contrary to law and is not supported by
evidence. A careful examination of the factual backdrop of the case, as well as the
antecedental proceedings constrains us to hold that petitioner is not barred from
asserting that XEI or OBM, on one hand, and the respondents, on the other, failed to
forge a perfected contract to sell the subject lots.
It must be stressed that the Court may consider an issue not raised during the trial
when there is plain error.51 Although a factual issue was not raised in the trial court,
such issue may still be considered and resolved by the Court in the interest of
52
substantial justice, if it finds that to do so is necessary to arrive at a just decision, or
when an issue is closely related to an issue raised in the trial court and the Court of
Appeals and is necessary for a just and complete resolution of the case.53 When the
trial court decides a case in favor of a party on certain grounds, the Court may base
its decision upon some other points, which the trial court or appellate court ignored
or erroneously decided in favor of a party.54
In this case, the issue of whether XEI had agreed to allow the respondents to pay the
purchase price of the property was raised by the parties. The trial court ruled that
the parties had perfected a contract to sell, as against petitioners claim that no such
contract existed. However, in resolving the issue of whether the petitioner was
obliged to sell the property to the respondents, while the CA declared that XEI or
OBM and the respondents failed to agree on the schedule of payment of the balance
of the purchase price of the property, it ruled that XEI and the respondents had
forged a contract to sell; hence, petitioner is entitled to ventilate the issue before
this Court.
We agree with petitioners contention that, for a perfected contract of sale or
contract to sell to exist in law, there must be an agreement of the parties, not only
on the price of the property sold, but also on the manner the price is to be paid by
the vendee.
Under Article 1458 of the New Civil Code, in a contract of sale, whether absolute or
conditional, one of the contracting parties obliges himself to transfer the ownership
of and deliver a determinate thing, and the other to pay therefor a price certain in
money or its equivalent. A contract of sale is perfected at the moment there is a
meeting of the minds upon the thing which is the object of the contract and the
price. From the averment of perfection, the parties are bound, not only to the
fulfillment of what has been expressly stipulated, but also to all the consequences
which, according to their nature, may be in keeping with good faith, usage and law.55
On the other hand, when the contract of sale or to sell is not perfected, it cannot, as
an independent source of obligation, serve as a binding juridical relation between
the parties.56
A definite agreement as to the price is an essential element of a binding agreement
to sell personal or real property because it seriously affects the rights and obligations
of the parties. Price is an essential element in the formation of a binding and
enforceable contract of sale. The fixing of the price can never be left to the decision
of one of the contracting parties. But a price fixed by one of the contracting parties,
if accepted by the other, gives rise to a perfected sale.57
It is not enough for the parties to agree on the price of the property. The parties
must also agree on the manner of payment of the price of the property to give rise
to a binding and enforceable contract of sale or contract to sell. This is so because
the agreement as to the manner of payment goes into the price, such that a
disagreement on the manner of payment is tantamount to a failure to agree on the
price.58
In a contract to sell property by installments, it is not enough that the parties agree
on the price as well as the amount of downpayment. The parties must, likewise,
agree on the manner of payment of the balance of the purchase price and on the
other terms and conditions relative to the sale. Even if the buyer makes a
downpayment or portion thereof, such payment cannot be considered as sufficient
proof of the perfection of any purchase and sale between the parties. Indeed, this
Court ruled in Velasco v. Court of Appeals59 that:
It is not difficult to glean from the aforequoted averments that the petitioners
themselves admit that they and the respondent still had to meet and agree on how
and when the down-payment and the installment payments were to be paid. Such
being the situation, it cannot, therefore, be said that a definite and firm sales
agreement between the parties had been perfected over the lot in question. Indeed,
this Court has already ruled before that a definite agreement on the manner of
payment of the purchase price is an essential element in the formation of a binding
and enforceable contract of sale. The fact, therefore, that the petitioners delivered
to the respondent the sum of P10,000.00 as part of the downpayment that they had
to pay cannot be considered as sufficient proof of the perfection of any purchase
and sale agreement between the parties herein under article 1482 of the New Civil
Code, as the petitioners themselves admit that some essential matter the terms of
payment still had to be mutually covenanted.60
We agree with the contention of the petitioner that, as held by the CA, there is no
showing, in the records, of the schedule of payment of the balance of the purchase
price on the property amounting to P278,448.00. We have meticulously reviewed
the records, including Ramos February 8, 1972 and August 22, 1972 letters to
respondents,61 and find that said parties confined themselves to agreeing on the
price of the property (P348,060.00), the 20% downpayment of the purchase price
(P69,612.00), and credited respondents for the P34,887.00 owing from Ramos as
part of the 20% downpayment. The timeline for the payment of the balance of the
downpayment (P34,724.34) was also agreed upon, that is, on or before XEI resumed
its selling operations, on or before December 31, 1972, or within five (5) days from
written notice of such resumption of selling operations. The parties had also agreed
to incorporate all the terms and conditions relating to the sale, inclusive of the terms
of payment of the balance of the purchase price and the other substantial terms and
conditions in the "corresponding contract of conditional sale," to be later signed by
the parties, simultaneously with respondents settlement of the balance of the
downpayment.
The February 8, 1972 letter of XEI reads:
Mr. Carlos T. Manalo, Jr.
Hurricane Rotary Well Drilling
Rizal Avenue Ext.,Caloocan City
Dear Mr. Manalo:
We agree with your verbal offer to exchange the proceeds of your contract with us
to form as a down payment for a lot in our Xavierville Estate Subdivision.
Please let us know your choice lot so that we can fix the price and terms of payment
in our conditional sale.
Sincerely yours,
XAVIERVILLE ESTATE, INC.
(Signed)
EMERITO B. RAMOS, JR.
President
CONFORME:
President Buyer63
(Signed)
CARLOS T. MANALO, JR.
Hurricane Rotary Well Drilling62
Based on these two letters, the determination of the terms of payment of the
P278,448.00 had yet to be agreed upon on or before December 31, 1972, or even
afterwards, when the parties sign the corresponding contract of conditional sale.
The August 22, 1972 letter agreement of XEI and the respondents reads:
(Signed)
PERLA P. MANALO
So long as an essential element entering into the proposed obligation of either of the
parties remains to be determined by an agreement which they are to make, the
contract is incomplete and unenforceable.66 The reason is that such a contract is
lacking in the necessary qualities of definiteness, certainty and mutuality.67
There is no evidence on record to prove that XEI or OBM and the respondents had
agreed, after December 31, 1972, on the terms of payment of the balance of the
purchase price of the property and the other substantial terms and conditions
relative to the sale. Indeed, the parties are in agreement that there had been no
contract of conditional sale ever executed by XEI, OBM or petitioner, as vendor, and
the respondents, as vendees.68
The ruling of this Court in Buenaventura v. Court of Appeals has no bearing in this
case because the issue of the manner of payment of the purchase price of the
property was not raised therein.
We reject the submission of respondents that they and Ramos had intended to
incorporate the terms of payment contained in the three contracts of conditional
sale executed by XEI and other lot buyers in the "corresponding contract of
conditional sale," which would later be signed by them.69 We have meticulously
reviewed the respondents complaint and find no such allegation therein.70 Indeed,
respondents merely alleged in their complaint that they were bound to pay the
balance of the purchase price of the property "in installments." When respondent
Manalo, Jr. testified, he was never asked, on direct examination or even on crossexamination, whether the terms of payment of the balance of the purchase price of
the lots under the contracts of conditional sale executed by XEI and other lot buyers
would form part of the "corresponding contract of conditional sale" to be signed by
them simultaneously with the payment of the balance of the downpayment on the
purchase price.
We note that, in its letter to the respondents dated June 17, 1976, or almost three
years from the execution by the parties of their August 22, 1972 letter agreement,
XEI stated, in part, that respondents had purchased the property "on installment
basis."71 However, in the said letter, XEI failed to state a specific amount for each
installment, and whether such payments were to be made monthly, semi-annually,
or annually. Also, respondents, as plaintiffs below, failed to adduce a shred of
evidence to prove that they were obliged to pay the P278,448.00 monthly, semiannually or annually. The allegation that the payment of the P278,448.00 was to be
paid in installments is, thus, vague and indefinite. Case law is that, for a contract to
be enforceable, its terms must be certain and explicit, not vague or indefinite.72
There is no factual and legal basis for the CA ruling that, based on the terms of
payment of the balance of the purchase price of the lots under the contracts of
conditional sale executed by XEI and the other lot buyers, respondents were obliged
to pay the P278,448.00 with pre-computed interest of 12% per annum in 120-month
installments. As gleaned from the ruling of the appellate court, it failed to justify its
use of the terms of payment under the three "contracts of conditional sale" as basis
for such ruling, to wit:
On the other hand, the records do not disclose the schedule of payment of the
purchase price, net of the downpayment. Considering, however, the Contracts of
Conditional Sale (Exhs. "N," "O" and "P") entered into by XEI with other lot buyers, it
would appear that the subdivision lots sold by XEI, under contracts to sell, were
payable in 120 equal monthly installments (exclusive of the downpayment but
including pre-computed interests) commencing on delivery of the lot to the buyer.73
By its ruling, the CA unilaterally supplied an essential element to the letter
agreement of XEI and the Respondents. Courts should not undertake to make a
contract for the parties, nor can it enforce one, the terms of which are in doubt.74
Indeed, the Court emphasized in Chua v. Court of Appeals75 that it is not the
province of a court to alter a contract by construction or to make a new contract for
the parties; its duty is confined to the interpretation of the one which they have
made for themselves, without regard to its wisdom or folly, as the court cannot
supply material stipulations or read into contract words which it does not contain.
Respondents, as plaintiffs below, failed to allege in their complaint that the terms of
payment of the P278,448.00 to be incorporated in the "corresponding contract of
conditional sale" were those contained in the contracts of conditional sale executed
by XEI and Soller, Aguila and Roque.76 They likewise failed to prove such allegation in
this Court.
The bare fact that other lot buyers were allowed to pay the balance of the purchase
price of lots purchased by them in 120 or 180 monthly installments does not
constitute evidence that XEI also agreed to give the respondents the same mode and
timeline of payment of the P278,448.00.
Under Section 34, Rule 130 of the Revised Rules of Court, evidence that one did a
certain thing at one time is not admissible to prove that he did the same or similar
thing at another time, although such evidence may be received to prove habit,
usage, pattern of conduct or the intent of the parties.
Similar acts as evidence. Evidence that one did or did not do a certain thing at one
time is not admissible to prove that he did or did not do the same or a similar thing
at another time; but it may be received to prove a specific intent or knowledge,
identity, plan, system, scheme, habit, custom or usage, and the like.
However, respondents failed to allege and prove, in the trial court, that, as a matter
of business usage, habit or pattern of conduct, XEI granted all lot buyers the right to
pay the balance of the purchase price in installments of 120 months of fixed
amounts with pre-computed interests, and that XEI and the respondents had
intended to adopt such terms of payment relative to the sale of the two lots in
question. Indeed, respondents adduced in evidence the three contracts of
conditional sale executed by XEI and other lot buyers merely to prove that XEI
continued to sell lots in the subdivision as sales agent of OBM after it acquired said
lots, not to prove usage, habit or pattern of conduct on the part of XEI to require all
lot buyers in the subdivision to pay the balance of the purchase price of said lots in
120 months. It further failed to prive that the trial court admitted the said deeds77 as
part of the testimony of respondent Manalo, Jr.78
Habit, custom, usage or pattern of conduct must be proved like any other facts.
Courts must contend with the caveat that, before they admit evidence of usage, of
habit or pattern of conduct, the offering party must establish the degree of
specificity and frequency of uniform response that ensures more than a mere
tendency to act in a given manner but rather, conduct that is semi-automatic in
nature. The offering party must allege and prove specific, repetitive conduct that
might constitute evidence of habit. The examples offered in evidence to prove habit,
or pattern of evidence must be numerous enough to base on inference of systematic
conduct. Mere similarity of contracts does not present the kind of sufficiently similar
circumstances to outweigh the danger of prejudice and confusion.
In determining whether the examples are numerous enough, and sufficiently regular,
the key criteria are adequacy of sampling and uniformity of response. After all, habit
means a course of behavior of a person regularly represented in like circumstances.79
It is only when examples offered to establish pattern of conduct or habit are
numerous enough to lose an inference of systematic conduct that examples are
admissible. The key criteria are adequacy of sampling and uniformity of response or
ratio of reaction to situations.80
There are cases where the course of dealings to be followed is defined by the usage
of a particular trade or market or profession. As expostulated by Justice Benjamin
Cardozo of the United States Supreme Court: "Life casts the moulds of conduct,
which will someday become fixed as law. Law preserves the moulds which have
taken form and shape from life."81 Usage furnishes a standard for the measurement
of many of the rights and acts of men.82 It is also well-settled that parties who
contract on a subject matter concerning which known usage prevail, incorporate
such usage by implication into their agreement, if nothing is said to be contrary.83
However, the respondents inexplicably failed to adduce sufficient competent
evidence to prove usage, habit or pattern of conduct of XEI to justify the use of the
terms of payment in the contracts of the other lot buyers, and thus grant
respondents the right to pay the P278,448.00 in 120 months, presumably because of
respondents belief that the manner of payment of the said amount is not an
essential element of a contract to sell. There is no evidence that XEI or OBM and all
the lot buyers in the subdivision, including lot buyers who pay part of the
downpayment of the property purchased by them in the form of service, had
executed contracts of conditional sale containing uniform terms and conditions.
Moreover, under the terms of the contracts of conditional sale executed by XEI and
three lot buyers in the subdivision, XEI agreed to grant 120 months within which to
pay the balance of the purchase price to two of them, but granted one 180 months
to do so.84 There is no evidence on record that XEI granted the same right to buyers
of two or more lots.
Irrefragably, under Article 1469 of the New Civil Code, the price of the property sold
may be considered certain if it be so with reference to another thing certain. It is
sufficient if it can be determined by the stipulations of the contract made by the
parties thereto85 or by reference to an agreement incorporated in the contract of
sale or contract to sell or if it is capable of being ascertained with certainty in said
contract;86 or if the contract contains express or implied provisions by which it may
be rendered certain;87 or if it provides some method or criterion by which it can be
definitely ascertained.88 As this Court held in Villaraza v. Court of Appeals,89 the price
is considered certain if, by its terms, the contract furnishes a basis or measure for
ascertaining the amount agreed upon.
We have carefully reviewed the August 22, 1972 letter agreement of the parties and
find no direct or implied reference to the manner and schedule of payment of the
balance of the purchase price of the lots covered by the deeds of conditional sale
90
executed by XEI and that of the other lot buyers as basis for or mode of
determination of the schedule of the payment by the respondents of the
P278,448.00.
The ruling of this Court in Mitsui Bussan Kaisha v. Manila Electric Railroad and Light
Company91 is not applicable in this case because the basic price fixed in the contract
was P9.45 per long ton, but it was stipulated that the price was subject to
modification "in proportion to variations in calories and ash content, and not
otherwise." In this case, the parties did not fix in their letters-agreement, any
method or mode of determining the terms of payment of the balance of the
purchase price of the property amounting to P278,448.00.
It bears stressing that the respondents failed and refused to pay the balance of the
downpayment and of the purchase price of the property amounting to P278,448.00
despite notice to them of the resumption by XEI of its selling operations. The
respondents enjoyed possession of the property without paying a centavo. On the
other hand, XEI and OBM failed and refused to transmit a contract of conditional sale
to the Respondents. The respondents could have at least consigned the balance of
the downpayment after notice of the resumption of the selling operations of XEI and
filed an action to compel XEI or OBM to transmit to them the said contract; however,
they failed to do so.
As a consequence, respondents and XEI (or OBM for that matter) failed to forge a
perfected contract to sell the two lots; hence, respondents have no cause of action
for specific performance against petitioner. Republic Act No. 6552 applies only to a
perfected contract to sell and not to a contract with no binding and enforceable
effect.
IN LIGHT OF ALL THE FOREGOING, the petition is GRANTED. The Decision of the
Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 47458 is REVERSED and SET ASIDE. The Regional
Trial Court of Quezon City, Branch 98 is ordered to dismiss the complaint. Costs
against the Respondents.
SO ORDERED.
"A. Whether or not the survey report of the cargo surveyor, Jesus Cortez, who had
not been presented as a witness of the said report during the trial of this case before
the lower court can be admitted in evidence to prove the alleged facts cited in the
said report.
"B. Whether or not the respondent, Court of Appeals, had validly or legally reversed
the finding of fact of the Regional Trial Court which clearly and unequivocally held
that the loss of the cargo subject of this case was caused by fortuitous event for
which herein petitioner could not be held liable.
"C. Whether or not the respondent, Court of Appeals, had committed serious error
and grave abuse of discretion in disregarding the testimony of the witness from the
MARINA, Engr. Jacinto Lazo y Villegal, to the effect that the vessel Judy VII was
seaworthy at the time of incident and further in disregarding the testimony of the
PAG-ASA weather specialist, Ms. Rosa Barba y Saliente, to the effect that typhoon
Trining did not hit Metro Manila or Palawan."14
In the main, the issues are as follows: (1) whether petitioner is liable for the loss of
the cargo, and (2) whether the survey report of Jesus Cortez is admissible in
evidence.
The Contract in the present case was one of affreightment, as shown by the fact that
it was petitioners crew that manned the tugboat M/V Ayalit and controlled the
barge Judy VII.23 Necessarily, petitioner was a common carrier, and the pertinent law
governs the present factual circumstances.
Question of Fact
Common carriers are bound to observe extraordinary diligence in their vigilance over
the goods and the safety of the passengers they transport, as required by the nature
of their business and for reasons of public policy.24 Extraordinary diligence requires
rendering service with the greatest skill and foresight to avoid damage and
destruction to the goods entrusted for carriage and delivery.25
The resolution of the present case hinges on whether the loss of the cargo was due
to a fortuitous event. This issue involves primarily a question of fact, notwithstanding
petitioners claim that it pertains only to a question of law. As a general rule,
questions of fact may not be raised in a petition for review.15 The present case serves
as an exception to this rule, because the factual findings of the appellate and the trial
courts vary.16 This Court meticulously reviewed the records, but found no reason to
reverse the CA.
Rule on Common Carriers
Common carriers are persons, corporations, firms or associations engaged in the
business of carrying or transporting passengers or goods, or both -- by land, water,
or air -- when this service is offered to the public for compensation.17 Petitioner is
clearly a common carrier, because it offers to the public its business of transporting
goods through its vessels.18
Common carriers are presumed to have been at fault or to have acted negligently for
26
loss or damage to the goods that they have transported. This presumption can be
rebutted only by proof that they observed extraordinary diligence, or that the loss or
damage was occasioned by any of the following causes:27
"(1) Flood, storm, earthquake, lightning, or other natural disaster or calamity;
"(2) Act of the public enemy in war, whether international or civil;
"(3) Act or omission of the shipper or owner of the goods;
"(4) The character of the goods or defects in the packing or in the containers;
Thus, the Court corrects the trial courts finding that petitioner became a private
19
carrier when Vulcan chartered it. Charter parties are classified as contracts of
demise (or bareboat) and affreightment, which are distinguished as follows:
28
Article 1174 of the Civil Code provides that "no person shall be responsible for a
fortuitous event which could not be foreseen, or which, though foreseen, was
inevitable." Thus, if the loss or damage was due to such an event, a common carrier
is exempted from liability.
Jurisprudence defines the elements of a "fortuitous event" as follows: (a) the cause
of the unforeseen and unexpected occurrence, or the failure of the debtors to
comply with their obligations, must have been independent of human will; (b) the
event that constituted the caso fortuito must have been impossible to foresee or, if
foreseeable, impossible to avoid; (c) the occurrence must have been such as to
render it impossible for the debtors to fulfill their obligation in a normal manner; and
(d) the obligor must have been free from any participation in the aggravation of the
resulting injury to the creditor.29
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To excuse the common carrier fully of any liability, the fortuitous event must have
been the proximate and only cause of the loss.30 Moreover, it should have exercised
due diligence to prevent or minimize the loss before, during and after the
occurrence of the fortuitous event.31
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Court:
Mr. witness, did the captain of that tugboat give any instruction on how to save the
barge Judy VII?
Joey Draper:
I can no longer remember sir, because that happened [a] long time ago."37
Second, the alleged fortuitous event was not the sole and proximate cause of the
loss. There is a preponderance of evidence that the barge was not seaworthy when it
sailed for Manila.38 Respondent was able to prove that, in the hull of the barge, there
were holes that might have caused or aggravated the sinking.39 Because the
presumption of negligence or fault applied to petitioner, it was incumbent upon it to
show that there were no holes; or, if there were, that they did not aggravate the
sinking.
Petitioner offered no evidence to rebut the existence of the holes. Its witness,
Domingo A. Luna, testified that the barge was in "tip-top" or excellent condition,40
but that he had not personally inspected it when it left Palawan.41
The submission of the Philippine Coast Guards Certificate of Inspection of Judy VII,
42
dated July 31, 1991, did not conclusively prove that the barge was seaworthy. The
43
regularity of the issuance of the Certificate is disputably presumed. It could be
contradicted by competent evidence, which respondent offered. Moreover, this
evidence did not necessarily take into account the actual condition of
the vessel at the time of the commencement of the voyage.44
Second Issue:
Admissibility of the Survey Report
Petitioner claims that the Survey Report45 prepared by Jesus Cortez, the cargo
surveyor, should not have been admitted in evidence. The Court partly agrees.
Because he did not testify during the trial,46 then the Report that he had prepared
was hearsay and therefore inadmissible for the purpose of proving the truth of its
contents.
In the instant case, the challenged Survey Report prepared by Cortez was admitted
only as part of the testimonies of respondents witnesses. The referral to Cortezs
Report was in relation to Manlapigs final Adjustment Report. Evidently, it was the
existence of the Survey Report that was testified to. The admissibility of that Report
as part of the testimonies of the witnesses was correctly ruled upon by the trial
court.
At any rate, even without the Survey Report, petitioner has already failed to
overcome the presumption of fault that applies to common carriers.
WHEREFORE, the Petition is DENIED and the assailed Decision and Resolution are
AFFIRMED. Costs against petitioner.
SO ORDERED.