EN BANC
[G.R. No. 128772. February 3, 2000]
RICARDO C.
CADAYONA, petitioner, vs. COURT OF APPEALS and THE PROVINCIAL
GOVERNOR OF LEYTE, respondents.
D E C I S I O N
GONZAGA_REYES, J.:
On January 13, 1997, petitioner Ricardo C.
Cadayona filed a Petition for Review with the Court of Appeals to annul
Resolution Nos. 96-7418 and 96-2569 of the Civil Service Commission, which
affirmed his preventive suspension. The Petition was docketed as CA-G.R. SP.
No.43104 entitled "Ricardo C. Cadayona vs. Provincial Governor of
Leyte". In a Resolution[1] dated February 19, 1997, the Court of Appeals
dismissed the petition outright on the following grounds:
a. the certificate
of non-forum shopping attached thereto was not executed by the petitioner
himself but by his counsel;
b. three annexes
attached to it (Annexes D, E and F) were mere xerox or plain copies and not
certified true copies.
On March 31, 1997, the Court of Appeals
denied petitioner's motion for reconsideration of the dismissal stating that
although there was substantial compliance with the Circular on forum shopping,
the failure to submit certified true copies of Annexes D, E and F of the
petition is a fatal flaw justifying dismissal of the petition:
x x x
"The
petitioner posits that under the Circular, 'What is required to be certified
are the award, judgment, final order or resolution appealed from and material
portions of, the record referred to in the petition. The other supporting
papers do not have to be certified true copies.’ He backs up his theory with
the so-called doctrine of last antecedent supposedly enunciated in Felipe
vs. De la Cruz, 99 Phil. 940, under which the qualifier succeeding phase
"such material portions of the record as are referred to therein,"
and does not include the remote phrase "other supporting papers." EsmmÓ is
Petitioner's legal
hermeneutics is faulty and his reliance on the Felipe case is
misplaced. The term "certified true copies," being the only qualifier
in the phrase 'such material portions of the record as are referred to therein
and other supporting papers,' must refer to both 'material portions of the
record' and 'other supporting papers'. In the Felipe case , there were
two qualifiers; hence, it was held that each must refer to the object nearest
to it.
But even granting
that petitioner's interpretation is correct, Annexes "D" (order of
suspension), "E" (petitioner's letter refusing to sit and serve as a
member of the special committee tasked to inspect/re-inspect the heavy
equipment imported from Japan) and "F" (administrative charge against
the petitioner) are portions of the record referred to in the petition. They
were all mentioned in the Resolution of Civil Service Commission (CSC) Regional
Director Vicente-Escarian as well as in the appealed Resolutions of the CSC.
The purpose of the requirement that they should have been certified as true
copies is to expedite the determination by this Court of whether or not the
petition is prima facie meritorious on the basis of authentic documents
so as to warrant further action or proceedings.
Petitioner's
proffered excuse that it was totally impossible to obtain certified true copies
of these annexes because the originals are with the respondent deserves no
consideration. He could have secured certified true copies from the CSC. What
is more, a copy, if not the original, of Annexes "D" and
"F" were presumably served on him while Annex "E" is his
own le,tter. He can not successfully plead time constraint for his counsel's
office and the CSC's are both in Quezon City. The alleged political undertones
of the case 'could not have prevented him or his counsel from going to the CSC
to obtain the necessary certified true copies.
Accordingly, for
being fatally flawed under Revised Administrative circular No.1-95, the
dismissal of the petition is justified."[2] Esmsoâ
Hence this petition where the petitioner
assigns the following errors:
"I. THE
HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS COMMITTED AN ERROR OF LAW WHEN IT IMPOSED THE
REQUIREMENT THAT ALL ANNEXES TO THE PETITION FOR REVIEW BE CERTIFIED.
II. THE
HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS COMMITTED AN ERROR OF LAW WHEN IT DISMISSED THE
PETITION FOR REVIEW."[3]
Petitioner maintains that Administrative
Circular 1-95 requires that only copies of the award, judgment, final order or
resolution appealed from and material points of record referred in the petition
shall be certified; said circular does not require that the annexes be
certified true copies. Under the so-called doctrine of last antecedent, the
phrase "certified true copies" does not qualify the remote phrase
"other supporting papers"; the qualifier phrase "certified true
copies" only refers to the immediately succeeding phrase "such
material portions of the record as referred to therein". Petitioner
further argues that even assuming that some of the annexes he submitted were
not certified, the Court of Appeals could still have made a prima facie determination
of the case based on the authentic or certified documents. Moreover, the Court
of Appeals could have ordered the transmitta1 of certified true copies of the
entire record of the proceeding under review. Petitioner also alleges that his
failure to attach certified true copies of the questioned annexes was
excusable. He claims that he only had a limited period of time within which to
obtain certified documents after he received the resolution of the Civil
Service Commission. This was impossible to do since he had to file his petition
with the Court of Appeals on January 13, 1997 but he was only able to engage
the services of counsel on January 5, 1997. Finally, petitioner begs that this
court liberally construe the rules in his favor given that his appeal was
dismissed on a technicality.[4] Mseä sm
On the other hand, respondents contend that
the right to appeal is merely a statutory right and one must comply with the
requirements of the law in order to properly exercise said right. Respondent's
application of the doctrine of last antecedent is misleading for the proper
application of the doctrine shows that the phrase "certified true
copies" qualifies the words nearest to it i.e. "such material portion
of the record as are referred to therein and other supporting papers" (emphasis
supplied).
We find merit in the petition. The outright
dismissal of the petition for review is a reversible error.
A decision of the Civil Service Commission
may be appealed to t e Court of Appeals under Section 6 of Rule 43,[5] which provides:
"Sec. 6. Contents
of the Petition. –The petition or review shall (a) state the full names of
the parties to the case, without impleading the court or agencies either as
petitioners or respondents; (b ) contain a concise statement of the facts and
issues involved and the grounds relied upon for the review;
(c) be accompanied
by a clearly legible duplicate original or a certified true copy of the award,
judgment, final order or resolution appealed from, together with certified true
copies of such material portions of the record referred to therein and other
supporting papers; and (d) contain a sworn certification against forum shopping
as provided in the last paragraph of section 2, Rule 42. The petition shall
state the specific material dates showing that it was filed within the period
fixed herein."
The failure of the petitioner to comply with
any of the requirements under Rule 43 including the contents of the petition
and the documents which should accompany the petition, is a sufficient ground
for the dismissal thereof.[6] ExÓ sm
Section 6 of Rule 1 states that the Rules
"shall be liberally construed in order to promote their objective of
securing a just, speedy and inexpensive disposition of every action and
proceeding." In line with this guideline, we do not construe the
above-quoted section as imposing the requirement that all supporting papers
accompanying the petition should be certified true copies. A comparison of this
provision with the counterpart provision in Rule 42 (governing petitions for
review from the RTC to the CA) would show that under the latter, only the
judgments or final orders of the lower courts need be certified true copies or
duplicate originals.[7] Also under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court (governing
Appeals by Certiorari to the Supreme Court), only the judgment or final
order or resolution accompanying the petition must be a clearly legible
duplicate original or a certified true copy thereof certified by the clerk of
court of the court a quo.[8] Even
under Rule 65 governing certiorari and prohibition, petitions need be
accompanied by certified true copies of the questioned judgment,[9] it being sufficient that copies of all other
relevant documents should accompany the petition. Numerous resolutions issued
by this Court emphasize that in appeals by certiorari under Rules 45 and
original civil actions for certiorari under Rule 65 in relation to Rules 46 and
56, what is required to be a certified true copy is the copy of the questioned
judgment, final order or resolution.[10] No plausible reason suggests itself why a different
treatment, i.e. a stricter requirement, should be given to petitions under Rule
43, which governs appeals from the Court of Tax Appeals and quasi-judicial
agencies to the Court of Appeals. None could have been intended by the framers
of the Rules. A contrary ruling would be too harsh and would not promote the
underlying objective of securing a just, speedy and inexpensive disposition of
every action and proceeding. It must be conceded that obtaining certified true
copies necessary entails additional expenses that will make litigation more
onerous to the litigants. Moreover, certified true copies are not easily
procurable and party litigants must wait for a period of time before the
certified true copies are released. At any rate, the entire records of the case
will eventually be elevated to the appellate court.
In giving due course to the petition, we
note that the petitioner substantially complied with the requirement of Section
6 since only three (Annexes D,[11] E[12] and F[13]) out of seven annexes were not certified true
copies. The allegation of petitioner that the annexes which were certified are
the most important to the resolution of the case and a prima facie
determination of the merits of the case could have been made on the basis
thereof has not been disputed in the comment filed by respondent Provincial
Governor. Neither is there any controversion of petitioner's allegation that
the original of Annexes "D", "E" and "F" are in
the possession of respondent rendering his failure to secure certificates thereof
excusable.
Kyleä
The rules of procedure are not to be applied
in a very rigid or technical sense, which would frustrate and not promote
substantial justice. If a technical and rigid enforcement of the rules were
made, their aim would be defeated.[14] Under the circumstances of this case, the Court of
Appeals should have directed the petitioner to comply with the rule if it
doubted the authenticity of some of the supporting documents instead of
dismissing the case outright
WHEREFORE, the instant petition is hereby GRANTED. The order
of the Court of Appeals dismissing the petition of herein petitioner is
REVERSED and SET ASIDE and the case is REMANDED to the Court of Appeals for
further proceedings.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr., C.J., Bellosillo, Melo,
Puno, Vitug, Kapunan, Mendoza, Panganiban, Quisumbing, Purisima, Pardo, Buena,
Ynares-Santiago, and De Leon, Jr., JJ., concur.2/18/00 11:25 AM
[1] Special Eighth Division composed of the ponente, J. Salvador J. Valdez, Jr.; and the members J. Corona Ibay Somera (Acting Chairman) and J. Romeo J. Callejo concurring.
[2] Decision, pp. 2-5; Rollo, pp. 22-25.
[3] Petition for Review, p. 4; Rollo. p. 10.
[4] Petition for Review, pp. 4-9; Rollo, pp. 10-15.
[5] Previously Administrative Circular 1-95.
[6] § 7, Rule 43.
[7] Sec. 2.
[8] § 4.
[9] §1 and 2.
[10] Martinez vs. Magallanes, G.R. No.133766, January 13, 1999; Borja vs. Judge Hontanosas, Jr., G.R. No.134748, January 13, 1999; Regalado, et al vs. NLRC, et al., G.R. No.134671, January 13, 1999; G and M (Phils.), Inc. vs. NLRC, et al., G.R. No.133836, January 13, 1999; Dimalanta vs. People, G.R. No.134798, November 9, 1988.
[11] Annex D - Letter of the Provincial Governor informing the petitioner of his preventive suspension.
[12] Annex E - Letter from the petitioner refusing his appointment in the commission tasked to appraise ,the condition of the machinery ordered from Japan.
[13] Annex F - Letter of the Provincial Governor informing the petitioner of the charge of Insubordination against him.
[14] Director of Lands vs. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. L-47380, February 23, 1999 at p. 11.