THIRD DIVISION
[A.M. No. 99-11-423-RTC. August
16, 2000]
REPORT ON THE JUDICIAL AUDIT CONDUCTED IN THE REGIONAL TRIAL COURT,
BRANCHES 87 AND 98, QUEZON CITY.
D E C I S I O N
PURISIMA, J.:
On September 15 to
17, 1999, the Office of the Court Administrator conducted an audit and physical
inventory of pending cases in Branches 87 and 98 of the Regional Trial Court of
Quezon City, presided over by Judge Elsie Ligot-Telan and Judge Justo M.
Sultan, respectively.
The audit team[1] reported that Branch 87 has a well-managed docket,
consisting of 155 criminal and 201 civil cases. When Presiding Judge Elsie
Ligot-Telan retired on September 6, 1999, she left a number of undecided cases,
all of which were still within the reglementary period after submission, to
wit:
A.....CRIMINAL[2] - One (1) Case.
B.....CIVIL[3] - Seven (7) Cases.
In the case of
Branch 98 it was found by the audit team to be very poor in terms of court
management. Of the fifty-seven (57) cases submitted for decision, thirty-four
(34) were already beyond the reglementary period, some of which involve
detention prisoners. It was observed that the said branch gave the least
preference to cases submitted for decision, and it has no effective docket
system and recording of cases. In fact, the Branch Clerk of Court has not
submitted the required docket and inventory of cases for a number of years.
Undecided within the prescribed period before Branch 98 are:
A. CRIMINAL[4] - Thirty-one (31) Cases.
B. CIVIL[5] - Three (3) Cases.
Records do not show
that Judge Justo Sultan ever requested for an extension of time within which to
decide the cases submitted before him.
When directed to
explain[6] the cause for the delay in the disposition of the
aforesaid cases, Judge Sultan asked for the consideration and understanding of
the court. He lamented that since his mandatory retirement on November 2, 1999,
he has suffered much from economic dislocation, as a result of the non-release
of his retirement benefits pending termination of this administrative case.
He stressed that
when Justice Molina, who was with the audit team as Consultant, learned of the
state of affairs in subject sala, the former advised him to immediately stop
conducting trials and just concentrate on deciding cases. He then sent a letter
to the Court Administrator on June 28, 1999, requesting for an assisting judge.
Respondent imputes
the clogged condition of cases in Branch 98 to the additional workload as a
designated Special Criminal Court,[7] and as a Pairing Court for Branch 99. Furthermore, his
confinement in the hospital owing to his failing health and old age contributed
to his lapses as presiding judge of Branch 98. Respondent pointed out that had
the Court Administrator acted on his request for an assisting judge, the
situation in his court could have improved.
Except for the
aforestated general allegation, however, respondent judge has not given any
specific explanation for failing to decide the cases mentioned in the Court’s
Resolution of December 7, 1999.
As regards his
failure to submit the required Docket and Inventory of Cases since his
appointment in 1993, respondent professed that he was unaware of the
non-compliance until he got wind of it through the Resolution dated December 7,
1999. Considering that he received his salary regularly until his retirement in
October of 1999, he assured that there have been no problem with his
performance that would call for sanctions against him.
Respondent also
reasoned that he was always been of the belief that his Branch Clerk of Court
had complied with the requirements as the latter allegedly assured him that the
periodic report pertaining to the inventory of cases had been promptly sent to
the Office of the Court Administrator. He disclosed that Atty. Reynaldo Elcano
performed his duties faithfully and well during the seventeen (17) years that
he was the Branch Clerk of Court so much so that he trusted him in the
management of the court.
Finally, the
respondent went on to paint a picture of dedicated government service, placing
reliance on his sixteen-(16) years in the judiciary, which he allegedly
rendered with competence and loyalty.
On June 27, 2000,
respondent judge manifested that he is submitting the case on the basis of
records.[8]
After a careful
examination of the records on hand, the Court finds the explanation of the
respondent judge to be unsatisfactory.
At the outset, the
Court reiterates that failure to decide cases within the required period is
inexcusable and constitutes gross inefficiency which is a ground for
administrative sanction against the defaulting judge,[9] either by a fine or suspension from the service,
depending on factors that tend to aggravate or mitigate his liability.[10] This is in accordance with the mandate that the
judge shall dispose of the business of the court promptly and decide cases
within the prescribed periods.[11]
Conformably, the
rules require the courts to decide cases ready for decision within three (3)
months from date of submission. With respect to cases falling under the Rules
on Summary Procedure, first level courts are only allowed thirty (30) days
following the receipt of the last affidavit and position paper, or the
expiration of the period for filing the same, within which to render judgment.[12] However, in the case under consideration, subject
cases have remained undecided beyond such period. Canon 3, Rule 3.09 requires
judges to manage their dockets in such a manner that the work of their court is
to be accomplished with reasonable dispatch.[13] The excuses respondent judge offered for the delay
in resolving the aforesaid cases were incomplete and not entirely persuasive as
to absolve him completely of any administrative liability.
The Court is not
unmindful of the Herculean task trial judges are faced with the perennial
clogged dockets of the lower courts. However, this should not be an excuse for
them to abdicate their duty to dispense justice. Judges must adopt a system of
record management and organize their dockets in order to bolster the prompt and
efficient dispatch of business.[14] Delay in the disposition of cases erodes the faith
and confidence of the people in the judiciary, lowers its standards and brings
it into disrepute.[15] Furthermore, if the caseload of the judge prevents
the disposition of cases within the reglementary periods, he should ask this Court
for a reasonable extension of time to dispose of the cases involved. This is to
avoid or dispel any suspicion that something sinister is going on.[16] But there is no showing in the records of the
present case that Judge Sultan asked for such an extension. All that he did was
to inform this Court in his letter of June 28, 1999 that in view of his up and
coming retirement on November 2, 1999 "he can no longer render full and
complete attention to his cases, including cases for decision". Having served
as such judge for a considerable length of time, Judge Sultan ought to have
known that the norm in regard to extension of the aforesaid reglementary period
for decision has always been to ask this Court for the same, giving valid
justification therefor.
Similarly, the
Court is unconvinced of Judge Sultan’s vain attempt to evade accountability for
his failure to submit the periodic docket inventories[17] by passing the blame to his Clerk of Court. This
attitude towards his very own duties is unacceptable. Proper and efficient
court management is the responsibility of the judge. He is the one directly
responsible for the proper discharge of his official functions.[18] It is incumbent upon a him to devise an efficient
recording and filing system in his court so that no disorderliness can affect
the flow of cases and their speedy disposition.[19] A judge cannot simply take refuge behind the
inefficiency or mismanagement of his court personnel, for the latter are not
the guardians of the former’s responsibility.[20]
Be that as it may,
the Court deems it necessary to temper respondent’s liability in light of the
undeniable fact that, as shown by his medical certificate, he had to contend
with an illness during the later part of his service in the judiciary, which
illness undoubtedly contributed to the deterioration of his health and
adversely affected his work efficiency.
WHEREFORE, the Court finds Judge Justo M. Sultan
ADMINISTRATIVELY LIABLE for failure to dispose subject cases within the
prescribed period and to submit the required periodic inventory of cases, and
hereby penalizes him with a FINE of Twenty Thousand (P20,000.00) Pesos,
to be taken from his withheld retirement benefits.
SO ORDERED.
Melo,
(Chairman), Vitug, Panganiban, and Gonzaga-Reyes,
JJ., concur.
[1] Composed of Atty. Ma. Carina M. Cunanan, Susan Luber,
Charito C. Cruz, Regina A. Gimena and Ephraim R. Avanzado, with Justice Conrado
M. Molina as Consultant.
[2] CRIMINAL CASE - 98-78148-49. Submitted for decision
on August 18, 1999, with decision dated September 3, 1999, for release.
[3] CIVIL
CASES:
a. ....94-19380.
Submitted for decision on August 27, 1999, with draft decision;
b. ....98-34417. Submitted for decision on August 17, 1999;
c. ....98-35348. Submitted for decision on August 17, 1999;
d. ....98-33681. Submitted for decision on July 5, 1999, with draft decision;
e. ....94-19213. Order issued on July 27, 1999, submitted within thirty (30)
days, forwarded to Judge Teodoro Bay, Pairing Judge;
f. ....99-37633. Submitted for decision on July 30, 1999;
g. ....32619. Submitted for decision on July 5, 1999.
[4] CRIMINAL
CASES:
a. 98-77873. Submitted
for decision on June 3, 1999;
b. 95-61663. Submitted for decision on October 1998;
c. 93-48014. Submitted for decision on July 16, 1998;
d. 94-57000 and 94-57001. Submitted for decision on March 4 1998;
e. 94-58765. Submitted for decision on March 5, 1998;
f. 93-51893. Submitted for decision on March 13, 1997;
g. 95-64210. Submitted for decision on October 7, 1998;
h. 97-69441. Submitted for decision on February 24, 1999;
i. 94-57391. Submitted for decision on January 15, 1999;
j. 95-60037. Submitted for resolution on June 17, 1999;
k. 93-42642. Submitted for resolution on September 16, 1994;
l. 95-62313. Submitted for decision on July 2, 1998;
m. 96-68416. Submitted for decision on December 10, 1997;
n. 95-61872. Submitted for decision on March 12, 1997;
o. 96-65541. Submitted for decision on February 19, 1997;
p. 93-47574. Submitted for decision on September 25, 1996;
q. 94-52772, 94-52773, 94-52774, 94-52775, 94-52776, 94-52777. Submitted for
decision on May 12, 1999;
r. 97-73352. Submitted for decision on May 11, 1999;
s. 97-69623. Submitted for decision on May 3, 1999;
t. 98-77939 and 98-77940. Submitted for decision on April 21, 1999;
u. 92-38786. Submitted for decision on February 26, 1999;
v. 95-61776. Submitted for decision on November 22, 1997;
w. 92-34370. Submitted for decision on April 30, 1997;
x. 94-59050. Submitted for decision on September 5, 1997;
y. Submitted for decision on December 17, 1997;]
[5] CIVIL
CASES:
a. 94-20287. Submitted
for decision on August 17, 1998;
b. 98-10354. Submitted for decision on November 27, 1998;
c. 99-36859. Submitted for decision on June 7, 1999.
[6] Resolution of dated December 7, 1999.
[7] Designated as such on November 12, 1996.
[8] Rollo.
[9] Report on the Judicial Audit in RTC, Br. 27,
Lapu-lapu City, 289 SCRA 398, 404.
[10] Bernardo vs. Fabros, 307 SCRA 28, 36 citing:
Report on the Judicial Audit Conducted in RTC-Branches 29 and 59, Toledo City;
292 SCRA 8.
[11] Rule 3.05, Canon 3, Code of Judicial Conduct.
[12] Raboca vs. Pantanosas, Jr., 245 SCRA 293, 295;
citing: Section 15, Article VIII, Constitution of the Philippines and Section
10, Revised Rules on Summary Procedure.
[13] Re: Report on the Judicial Audit of Cases in the Regional
Trial Court, Branch 35, Iriga City, 299 SCRA 382, 387.
[14] Bernardo vs. Fabros, supra, p. 35
citing: Cf. paragraph 8 of Canon of Judicial Ethics.
[15] Abarquez vs. Rebosura, 285 SCRA 109, 120
citing: Report on the Audit and Inventory of Cases in the RTC, Branch 11,
Balayan, Batangas, A.M. No. 93-11-1311-RTC, July 26, 1994, 234 SCRA 502 and Re:
Judge Luis B. Bello, Jr., A.M. No. 95-3-89-RTC, August 23, 1995, 247 SCRA 519.
[16] Bolalin vs. Occiano, 266 SCRA 203, 208.
[17] As mandated by Administrative Circulars Nos. 1 dated
January 28, 1988; 10-94 dated June 29, 1994; 17-94 dated November 14, 1994.
[18] Abarquez vs. Rebosura, supra, pp.
120-121 citing: Agcaoili vs. Ramos, etc., A.M. No. MTJ-92-6-251,
February 7, 1994, 229 SCRA 705.
[19] Office of the Court Administrator vs.
Villanueva, 279 SCRA 267, 273.
[20] Lagatic vs. Peñas, Jr., 276 SCRA 46, 53
citing: Tan vs. Madayag, 231 SCRA 62 and Nidua vs. Lazaro, 174
SCRA 581.