FIRST DIVISION
[G.R. Nos. 117955-58. March 13, 1997]
HERMINIGILDO TOMARONG, VENANCIO SUMAGANG, FRANCISCO MAGSAYO AND FEDERICO CUEVAS, petitioner, vs. HON. ANTONIO C. LUBGUBAN in his capacity as presiding judge, 2nd MCTC of Lazi, Siquijor, and ANTONIO BANGQUIAO, DEMETRIO LUMACAD, RICO TUMAPON AND FELIX TAMIAT, respondents.
D E C I S I O N
BELLOSILLO, J.:
Is Administrative Circular No. 04-94 of the Supreme Court requiring a certification on non-forum shopping applicable to election contests before municipal trial courts?
Herminigildo Tomarong, Venancio Sumagang, Francisco Magsayo and
Federico Cuevas were candidates for Punong Barangay of Lazi, Siquijor, who
were defeated in
the 11 May
1994 Barangay Elections.
Each of them timely filed an election protest[1] before the 2nd Municipal Circuit Trial Court
of Lazi, Siquijor, presided over by Judge Antonio C. Lubguban. The winning candidates filed individual
answers praying for the dismissal of the protests respectively filed against
them based on the affirmative defense that the protestants failed to attach to
their petitions the required certification on non-forum shopping pursuant to
Supreme Court Administrative Circular No. 04-94 which provides:
x x x x
1. The plaintiff, petitioner, applicant or principal party seeking relief in the complaint, petition, application or other initiatory pleading shall certify under oath in such original pleading, or in a sworn certification annexed thereto and simultaneously filed therewith, to the truth of the following facts and undertakings: (a) he has not theretofore commenced any other action or proceeding involving the same issues in the Supreme Court, the Court of Appeals, or any other tribunal or agency; (b) to the best of his knowledge, no such action or proceeding is pending in the Supreme Court, the Court of Appeals, or any other tribunal or agency; (c) if there is any such action or proceeding which is either pending or may have been terminated, he must state the status thereof; and, (d) if he should thereafter learn that a similar action or proceeding has been filed or is pending before the Supreme Court, the Court of Appeals or any other tribunal or agency, he undertakes to report that fact within five (5) days therefrom to the court or agency wherein the original pleading and sworn certification contemplated herein have been filed.
x x x x
2. Any violation of this
Circular shall be a cause for the dismissal of the complaint, petition,
application or other initiatory pleading, upon motion and after hearing. However, any clearly willful and deliberate forum shopping by any party and
his counsel through the filing of multiple complaints or other initiatory
pleadings to obtain favorable action shall be a ground for summary dismissal
thereof and shall constitute direct contempt of court. Furthermore, the submission of a false
certification or non-compliance with the undertakings therein, as provided in
Paragraph 1 hereof, shall constitute indirect contempt of court, without
prejudice to disciplinary proceedings against the counsel and the filing of a criminal action against the guilty
party.
x x x x
The protestants vehemently argued that
compliance with the Circular was not required in election contests. Nonetheless, on 6 June 1994, eighteen (18)
days after the election cases were filed, protestants submitted the required
certification with prayer that the same be admitted as integral part of their
protests.[2]
During the preliminary hearings, the court a quo rejected protestees' affirmative defense and
gave due course to the protests, holding that election cases are not covered by
Administrative Circular No. 04-94.[3] Later, however, the municipal trial court
agreed with the joint suggestion of counsel for the protestants and the
protestees to seek a clarification from higher authorities as to the
applicability of the Circular to this case.
A query was then addressed to the Secretary of Justice requesting for an
opinion on the matter. The Secretary
however declined to render an opinion but advised the trial court to refer the
issue to the Court Administrator. The
query was thus sent to the Court Administrator[4] who opined that the certification on non-forum
shopping should be required in election contests before the Municipal Trial
Courts.[5]
On 6 October 1994 the court a quo issued an order dismissing the protests on the basis of the opinion of the Court Administrator. On 25 October 1994 the protestants sought a reconsideration of the dismissal but the same was denied.
The protestants then instituted the present petition for
certiorari under Rule 65 of the Rules of Court alleging grave abuse of
discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction on the part of the lower
court when it reversed its initial ruling and dismissed their protests. They
maintain that Administrative Circular No. 04-94 itself explicitly limits its
application to civil complaints and whatever cross-claims, first, second, third,
fourth, et seq. - party complaints that may spring in consequence thereof. According to them, an election contest is
distinct from a civil complaint; it is a special summary proceeding the object
of which is to expedite the settlement of the controversy between candidates as
to who received the majority of the legal ballots in an election for a
specified office.
In addition, protestants who are now petitioners herein assert that the jurisdiction of the MTC over election protests is exclusive and intransferable to any other court hence the "judicial plague" called forum shopping that is sought to be curbed by the subject Circular could not occur in the proceedings before it as the filing of protests before any other court, tribunal or agency would have fatally vitiated them and merited their instantaneous dismissal.
We do not agree with petitioners. In Loyola v. Court of Appeals,[6] which involves substantially a similar set
of facts and issue, this Court held -
We do not agree x x
x that Administrative Circular
No. 04-94 is not applicable to election cases x x x x
There is nothing in the Circular that indicates that it does not apply
to election cases. On the contrary,
it expressly provides that the
requirements therein, which
are in addition to those in pertinent provisions of the Rules of Court
and existing circulars, "shall be strictly complied with in the filing of
complaints, petitions, applications or other initiatory pleadings in all courts
and agencies other than Supreme Court and the Court of Appeals." Ubi lex non distinguit nec nos distinguere debemus.
Nor are we persuaded x x x that considering that the MCTC has after all the original and exclusive jurisdiction over the election protest, the certification was unnecessary since the private respondent could not have filed the case anywhere else. The argument fails to consider the possibility of a party availing, rightly or wrongly, of other legal remedies; or of filing the same election protest in more than one MTC, despite the erroneous venues; or of even being unaware of the original exclusive jurisdiction of the MTC over such election protests and filing one of the protests in the RTC by mistake.
In the aforecited case, however, the election protest was allowed because the filing of the required certification a day after the filing of the protest was held to be a substantial compliance with Administrative Circular No. 04-94. This Court observed -
In this case, it is a fact that the certification of non-forum
shopping was filed by the private respondent on 19 May 1994, a day after he
filed the election protest. Since the
proclamation of the results of the election was made by the barangay board of
canvassers on 10 May 1994, the private respondent, pursuant to Section 9 of R.A.
6679, had ten (10) days therefrom or until 20 May 1994 within which to file an
election protest. The filing of the
certification was therefore still within the period for filing an election
protest. Accordingly, although the
certification was not filed simultaneously with the initiatory pleading, its
filing within the reglementary period was
a substantial compliance with Administrative Circular No. 04-94.
The fact that the Circular requires that it be strictly complied
with merely underscores its mandatory nature in that it cannot be dispensed
with or its requirements altogether desregarded, but it does not thereby
interdict substantial compliance with its provisions under justifiable
circumstances.[7]
In the instant case, we cannot consider
the subsequent filing of the required certification a substantial compliance
with the requirements of the Circular, the same having been submitted only
after the lapse of eighteen (18) days from the date of filing of the
protests. Quite obviously, the
reglementary period for filing the protest had, by then, already expired.
It should be emphasized that the mere submission of a
certification under Administrative Circular No. 04-94 after the filing of a motion
to dismiss on the ground of non-compliance thereof does not necessarily operate
as a substantial compliance; otherwise, the Circular would lose its value or
efficacy.[8]
WHEREFORE, the instant petition is DISMISSED. Costs against petitioners.
SO ORDERED
Padilla, (Chairman), Vitug, Kapunan, and Hermosisima, Jr., JJ., concur.Kyleä
[1] Election Case No.
366, Herminigildo Tomarong v. Felix
L. Tamiat; Election Case No.
367, Venancio Sumagang v. Antonio
Bangquiao; Election Case No. 368, Francisco
Magsayao v. Demetrio Lumacad; and Election Case No. 369, Federico Cuevas v. Rico Tumapon , all filed
19 May 1994.
[2] Records, pp.
6-7, 10-11, 13-16.
[3] Rollo, p. 18.
[4] Rollo, pp.
37-38
[5] Rollo, p. 39.
[6] G.R. No.
117186, 29 June 1995, 245 SCRA 477,
484.
[7] Id., pp. 483-484.
[8] Kavinta v.
Castillo Jr., G.R. No. 117083, 27
October 1995, 249 SCRA 604, 609.