EN BANC
[G.R. No. 125586. June 29, 2000]
DR. TERESITA G. DOMALANTA and DR. AGRIPINA B. FRANCISCO, petitioners,
vs. THE COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS, AQUILINO Q. PIMENTEL, JR. and THE OFFICE
OF THE STATE PROSECUTOR, DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, MANILA, respondents.
D E C I S I O N
YNARES-SANTIAGO,
J.:
Challenged in this
petition for certiorari and prohibition is COMELEC En Banc
Resolution No. 96-1616 dated May 28, 1996[1] which –
RESOLVED:
1. to file an
Information against PES Vitaliano Fabros, Provincial Prosecutor Pacifico Paas,
and Division Schools Superintendent Olympia Marquez, Chairman, Vice-Chairman,
and Member-Secretary, respectively of the provincial Board of Canvassers,
Isabela together with its staff members, namely : Dr. Teresita Domalanta,
Agripina Francisco, Dante Limon, Edwardo Tamang and George Noriega, before the
Regional Trial Court of Isabela for violation of Section 27 (b) of Republic Act
No. 6646, the prosecution of which shall be handled by the Chief State
Prosecutor Zenon de Guia, with the duty to submit periodic report[s] thereon
after every hearing of the case; and
2. to file an
administrative complaint against said respondents for grave misconduct, gross
dishonesty, and conduct unbecoming public officials to the prejudice of the
best interest of the public service;
3. to preventively
suspend the respondents for a period of ninety (90) days reckoned from receipt
of this resolution.
From the record, it
appears that on August 4, 1995, then senatorial candidate Aquilino Pimentel,
Jr. filed a complaint-affidavit[2] charging Provincial Election Supervisor (PES)
Vitaliano Fabros, Provincial Prosecutor Pacifico Paas and Division
Superintendent of Schools Dr. Olympia Marquez, Chairman, Vice-Chairman and
Member-Secretary, respectively, of the Provincial Board of Canvassers of
Isabela with alleged violation of Section 27 (b) of Republic Act No. 6646,
otherwise known as the Guingona Electoral Reform Law of 1987.
The case, docketed
as E.O. Case No. 95-408 entitled "Aquilino Pimentel, Jr. v. PBC of
Isabela" for alleged violation of the Omnibus Election Code was thereafter
referred to the Law Department of the Commission of Elections (COMELEC) for
evaluation and report. The COMELEC’s Law Department summarized the facts of the
controversy in its evaluation report dated May 20, 1996,[3] thus:
The instant case
stemmed from the alleged irregularity committed by the Provincial Board of
Canvassers of Isabela in crediting unauthorized additional votes, thus: (a)
Twenty seven thousand seven hundred fifty five (27,755) to Juan Ponce Enrile,
(b) Seven thousand (7,000) to Ramon Mitra, and (c) Ten thousand (10,000)
to Gregorio Honasan.
After the
submission of the counter-affidavits of the respondents, Pimentel filed on
September 1, 1995 an amended complaint impleading the members of the staff of
the Board namely: Dr. Teresita Domalanta, Agripina Francisco, Dante Limon,
Eduardo Tamang and George Noriega, as additional respondents.
Aquilino Pimentel
alleged that the unauthorized additional number of votes were included in the
total votes for senatorial candidates Enrile, Mitra and Honasan
in the Provincial Certificate of Canvass duly signed and thumbmarked by the
members of the PBC of Isabela and which same was submitted to the Comelec as
National Board of Canvassers which was included in the canvass on which the
proclamation was based. In order to prove his charge, complainant submitted in
evidence the Certificate of Canvass supported by Statement of Votes per
precinct of Santiago City, Municipalities of Angadanan, Cauayan, Cordon, Delfin
Albano, Echague, San Mariano, San Pablo, Ilagan and San Mateo. A comparison of
the votes indicated in the Statement of Votes by city/municipality and that of
the municipal/city Certificate of Canvass was submitted by the complainant
which is hereunder reproduced:
Municipality |
Votes as indicated in the
Municipality/City Certificate of Canvass |
Votes as indicated in the Statement of
Votes by Municipality/City prepared by the Provincial Board of Canvassers of
Isabela |
Discrepancy |
Santiago City |
|
|
|
Enrile |
15,454 |
16,454 |
+1,000 |
Angadanan |
|
|
|
Enrile |
5,996 |
7,996 |
+2,000 |
Mitra |
3,888 |
4,888 |
+1,000 |
Cauayan |
|
|
|
Enrile |
13,710 |
19,710 |
+6,000 |
Honasan |
11,205 |
21,205 |
+10,000 |
Cordon |
|
|
|
Enrile |
6,794 |
9,794 |
3,000 |
Delfin Albano |
|
|
|
Enrile |
3,972 |
4,972 |
+1,000 |
Echague |
|
|
|
Enrile |
10,552 |
15,552 |
+5,000 |
San Mariano |
|
|
|
Enrile |
5,683 |
8,253 |
+2,570 |
San Pablo |
|
|
|
Enrile |
2,418 |
3,438 |
+1,020 |
Ilagan |
|
|
|
Mitra |
14,457 |
20,457 |
+6,000 |
San Mateo |
|
|
|
Enrile |
9,424 |
15,589 |
+6,165 |
In their defense,
Provincial Election Supervisor Vitaliano Fabros, Provincial Prosecutor Pacifico
Paas and Division Superintendent of Schools Dr. Olympia Marquez, Chairman,
Vice-Chairman and Member-Secretary, respectively, of the Provincial Board of
Canvassers of Isabela were in unison in vehemently denying the charges imputed
against them and declared that they faithfully performed their poll duties
assigned to them.
PES Vitaliano
Fabros, in his counter-affidavit, asserted that it could not have been possible
not to read the actual figures reflected in the municipality/city Certificate
of Canvass considering the presence of counsels and watchers of candidates and
political parties and if ever there are discrepancies between the
city/municipal Certificate of Canvass and that of the Provincial Certificate of
Canvass the same may be attributable to human fatigue.
Respondent
Pacifico Paas declared that he assumed the opening of the envelopes containing
the election returns by municipality and broke the corresponding paper seals
and handed the same to the Chairman who in turn assumed the reading of votes
through a microphone with the tabulators and recorders reflecting the figures
in the Statement of Votes and further declared that he had no direct view over
the votes read by Chairman Fabros nor had he interfered save for one or two
election returns in the reading. He even vigorously denied any privy (sic) to
the discrepancy of the figures indicated in the "Statement of Votes by
Municipality" and "Provincial Certificate of Canvass" because he
honestly believed that these are the true and faithful reproduction of the
figures indicated in the Provincial Board of Canvasser’s copy of the election
returns provided them which were used in the canvass.
Respondent Dr.
Olympia Marquez stated that it was Chairman Fabros who read the votes obtained
by the candidates through an amplifier sound system and correspondingly the
recorders tabulated the figures as read into the Statement of Votes by
municipality; that she did not so much interfere in the opening of the
envelopes and the election returns, nor in the reading of the votes in the
duration of the canvassing and that she conveniently sat side by side with the
recorders and periodically see to it that votes correspondingly read and
announced were faithfully reflected in the Statement of Votes.
Respondents Dr.
Teresita Domalanta and Agripina Francisco, in their joint counter-affidavit,
categorically denied the charges, and declared that they faithfully recorded
the votes obtained by the candidates as read and announced by the Chairman of
the Provincial Board of Canvassers and during the recording Dr. Olympia Marquez
periodically checked the correctness of the entries in the Tally Sheet for the
Statement of Votes; that they recorded the votes obtained by local candidates
in some municipalities including senatorial candidates whose surname begins
with letter "T" and that they did not participate in the preparation
of the Provincial Certificate of Canvass.
Respondents Dante
Limon and Eduardo Tamang, in their joint-affidavit, vehemently denied the
charges. They claimed that their assigned duty is only to record the names of
candidates and their corresponding number of votes obtained as announced by PBC
Chairman, Atty. Vitaliano Fabros because they have no access to the votes written
in the Municipal Certificate of Canvass.
Respondent George
Noriega, in his counter-affidavit likewise denied the charges and averred that
he had no direct knowledge in the preparation of the alleged falsified
Provincial Certificate of Canvass, and as Tabulator, he only added what was
recorded in the Statement of Votes prepared by other persons and denied any
participation in the alleged falsification of the Statement of Votes.
On the basis of the
foregoing factual findings, the COMELEC’s Law Department recommended that:
1. an information
be filed aganst Provincial Election Supervisor Vitaliano Fabros, Provincial
Prosecutor Pacifico Paas, and Division Superintendent of Schools Dr. Olympia
Marquez, Chairman, Vice- Chairman and Member-Secretary, respectively of the
Board of Canvassers of Isabela before the Regional Trial Court Isabela for
violation of Section 27 (b) of Republic Act No. 6646 , the prosecution of which
shall be handled by Regional Election Director Samuel Barangan of Region II,
with the duty to submit periodic progress report[s] after every hearing of the
case;
2. an
administrative complaint against said respondent for grave misconduct, gross
dishonesty, and conduct unbecoming public officials to the prejudice of the
best interest of the service; and
3. the cases
against Dr. Teresita Domalanta, Agripina Francisco, Dante Limon, Edwardo Tamang
and George Noriega be dismissed for insufficiency of evidence to establish a
probable cause.
In justifying its
stand, the COMELEC Law Department reasoned as follows:
Respondents stand
charged with alleged violation of Section 27 (b) of Republic Act No. 6646 which
provides:
Section 27. Election
offenses. – In addition to the prohibited acts and election offenses
enumerated in Section 261 and 262 of Batas Pambansa Blg. 881, as amended, the
following shall be guilty of an election offense.
x x x...........................x x x...........................x
x x
(b)....Any member of the board of election inspectors or board of canvassers
who tampers with, increases or decreases votes received by a candidate in any
election or any member of the board who refuses, after proper verification and
hearing, to credit the correct votes or deduct such tampered votes. (Underscoring ours)
There is no
question there was indeed an increase in the number of votes obtained by
senatorial candidates Enrile, Mitra and Honasan which the complainant called it
[a] glaring discrepancy. An examination of the Municipal Certificate of Canvass
with its Statement of votes per precinct in relation to the Provincial
Certificate of Canvass as supported by the Statement of Votes by
City/Municipality would show that the votes of the aforementioned candidates
were illegally increased in Santiago City and in the nine (9) municipalities of
Isabela.
The crucial and
pivotal issue for determination in the case at bar is whether or not the
respondent’s alleged act of increasing the number of votes garnered by senatorial
candidates Enrile, Mitra and Honasan constitutes a violation of Section 27 (b)
of Republic Act No. 7168.
By a general
overview, in order to have judicious evaluation of the case, it is imperatively
necessary to define MISTAKE, NEGLIGENCE and GROSS NEGLIGENCE which
may aid in arriving [at] an intelligent findings (sic).
Mistakes, concededly committed by public officers are not
actionable without any clear showing that they were motivated by malice or
gross negligence amounting to bad faith.[4]
Negligence is the omission to do something which a reasonable
man guided by those consideration[s] which ordinarily regulate the conduct of
human affairs would do, or the doing of something which a prudent and
reasonable man would not do[5] or the failure to observe for the protection of the
interest of another person, that degree of precaution and vigilance which the
circumstances justly demand, whereby such other person suffers injury.[6]
Gross
negligence has been defined as
negligence characterized by the want of even slight care, acting or omitting to
act in a situation where there is [a] duty to act, not inadvertently but
willfully and intentionally with a conscious indifference to consequences
insofar as other persons may be affected.[7]
It cannot be
disputed that the Certificate of Canvass for senatorial candidates and its
supporting statements of votes by municipality and city, are sensitive
election documents where the entries therein shall be highly scrutinized.
From the foregoing
guidepost, we find the contention of respondents members of the Provincial
Board of Canvassers that the erroneous crediting of additional votes to
senatorial candidates Enrile, Mitra and Honasan was an honest mistake due to
human fatigue, patently not tenable. This is so because there appears to be a
pattern as shown in the comparison between the Statement of Votes by Precinct
of each of the nine (9) municipalities and one (1) city and the Statement of
Votes by Municipality prepared by the Provincial Board of Canvassers, thus, in Santiago
City senatorial candidate, Enrile obtained fifteen thousand four hundred
fifty four (15,454) as per City Certificate of Canvass while in the Statement
of Votes by City prepared by the Provincial Board of Canvassers was sixteen
thousand four hundred fifty four (16,454); in the Municipality of Angadanan,
senatorial candidates Enrile and Mitra were credited with five thousand nine
hundred ninety six (5,996) votes and three thousand eight hundred eight
(3,888), respectively, as indicated in Municipal Certificate of Canvass but in
the Statement of Votes by Municipality of Cauayan, Enrile and Honasan
were credited thirteen thousand seven hundred ten (13,710) and eleven thousand
two hundred five (11,205), respectively, while the Statement of Votes by
Municipality would show that Enrile got thirteen thousand seven hundred ten
(19,710) and Honasan, twenty one thousand two hundred five (21,205); in the
Municipality of Cordon, Enrile obtained six thousand seven hundred
ninety four (6,794) but in the Statement of Votes by Municipality the number of
votes for Enrile was nine thousand seven hundred ninety four (9,794); in the
municipality of Delfin Albano, per Municipal Certificate of Canvass
Enrile garnered three thousand nine hundred seventy two (3,972) votes while in
the Statement of Votes by Municipality Enrile was credited with four thousand
nine hundred seventy two (4,972); in the municipality of Echague, Enrile
obtained ten thousand five hundred fifty two (10,552) votes as reflected in the
Votes by Municipality he was credited with fifteen thousand five hundred fifty
two (15,552) votes; and in the Municipality of Ilagan, Mitra was
credited with fourteen thousand four hundred fifty seven (14,457) votes but in
the Statement of Votes by Municipality, Mitra’s vote was twenty thousand four
hundred fifty seven (20,457).
As can be gleaned
from the figures shown, save in the municipalities of San Mariano, San Pablo
and San Mateo, the last three digits of the number of votes in the Municipal
Certificate of Canvass of the other municipalities were retained in the padded
votes which will give rise to the presumption that the act was done
intentionally and deliberately.
The position
proferred by the respondent board members that they cannot be held liable even
if the votes reflected in the assailed certificate of canvass do not tally with
the figures on the other copies of the Municipal Certificate of Canvass because
the copies in the possession of the complainant and any other copies thereof
were never used in the provincial canvass, is patently without merit. Neither
is the assertion by respondent board members that the offense imputed against
them is not mala prohibita but mala in se where criminal intent
is material by invoking the ruling of the Court of Appeals in the case of People
vs. Sunico, et. al., a valid argument at all.
Based on the facts
obtaining in this case, there appears a malice on the part of the members of
the board to increase the votes of the three (3) senatorial candidates taking
into account the pattern of the distribution of the increase of votes as
clearly illustrated above. This illegal act will jibe with the position of the
respondents that violation of Section 27 (b) of Rep. Act No. 6646, is mala
in se. Besides, what we are proving here is the existence of a prima
facie case only, and not a proof beyond reasonable doubt.
IT MUST BE POINTED
OUT CLEARLY THAT THE ALLEGED FALSIFIED PROVINCIAL CERTIFICATE OF CANVASS OF
ISABELA WAS SEASONABLY RETABULATED OR CORRECTED BY THE COMELEC EN BANC SITTING
AS THE NATIONAL BOARD OF CANVASSERS WHICH ABSOLUTELY BELIE THE GRATUITOUS
ALLEGATION OF PIMENTEL THAT THE INCREASE OF VOTES WERE INCLUDED IN THE CANVASS
AND MADE AS ONE OF THE BASIS IN THE PROCLAMATION OF THE WINNING SENATORIAL
CANDIDATES [Capitalization ours]
But notwithstanding
that the illegal increase of the votes of Enrile, Mitra and Honasan were
retabulated or corrected, the members of the Provincial Board of Canvassers of
Isabela are criminally liable to the alleged act committed.
More importantly,
A CAREFUL READING OF THE COUNTER-AFFIDAVITS OF OTHER RESPONDENTS ATTY. PACIFICO
PAAS, DR. OLYMPIA MARQUEZ INCLUDING THE MEMBERS OF THE STAFF WOULD POINT TO THE
CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD, ATTY. FABROS AS THE SOURCE OF THE DATA RECORDED AND
TABULATED. SUCH BEING THE CASE, ABSENT A CLEAR AND CONVINCING PROOF OF
CONSPIRACY OR COLLUSION BETWEEN THE RESPONDENTS MEMBERS OF THE PROVINCIAL BOARD
AND ITS RESPONDENT STAFFS, THE LATTER CANNOT BE FAULTED ON THE ALLEGED WRONG
DOING. The Chairman and the Member Secretary may be indicted for the offense
charged as earlier indicated, and the fact that they certified that the entries
reflected in the Provincial Certificate of Canvass and Statement of Votes By
Municipality were true and correct. However, the exoneration of the tabulators
and recorders was further strengthened by the corroborating statement of
Member-Secretary Dr. Olympia Marquez when she stated, in her counter-affidavit,
that she sat beside the tabulators and recorders in order to see to it that the
correct figures are reflected in the Statement of Votes By Municipality.
Based on the
foregoing findings, the Law Department recommended that the cases against both
petitioners be dismissed. However, the COMELEC en banc still issued the
assailed Resolution which petitioners challenge on the grounds that:
1.....Minute
Resolution No. 96-1616 Finding Conspiracy Among The Members Of The Provincial
Board Of Canvassers and the Herein Petitioners Has No Factual Basis and Runs
Counter To The Study and Report, Annex "C", Upon Which The Questioned
Minute Resolution Was Based.
Hence, Its
Issuance Was Attended By Grave Abuse Of Discretion Amounting To Lack Or Excess
Of Jurisdiction.
2.....Findings
of the Law Department Refers to Members Of The PBOC Only And Does Not Include
Petitioners.
3. Findings Of Conspiracy
Not Supported By any Evidence.
4.....The
Continuous Media Blitzkrieg On "Dagdag-Bawas" And The Attack
On The Inside Workings Of The Comelec Terrified Or Terrorized COMELEC Into
Including Petitioners In The Charge.
5.....Participation
Of Petitioners Limited To Canvass Of Local Officials And Two Senators Starting
With The Letter "T" And Does Not Cover Scope Of Instant Complaint Of
Atty. Pimentel.
6. The Three (3)
Important Documents Upon Which Complaint Was Based Does Not Carry The Signatures
Of Movants.
7. Respondent
Pimentel, When Informed About The Innocence Of Movants That They Did Not Tally
Votes For Enrile, Honasan and Mitra Commented "that is a good point"
An Admission Rendering The Case Against Petitioners Dismissible.
8. Overzealousness
In The Prosecution Of Election Offenses Must Be Tempered With The Yardstick
That The Innocent Must Not Be Victims Of Injustice.
9.....A
Serious Review Is an Imperative Necessity To Protect Movants From The Onslaught
Of A Public Trial That Carries The Stigma Of Perpetual Embarassment.
10.....Petitioners
Are Awardees Of COMELEC Hope I And II And Committing An Anomaly Repugnant To
What They Have Taught Is Beyond Their Wildest Dreams.
11.....Petitioner
Dr. Domalanta Is A Career Official Of The DECS And Has An Irreproachable
Character To Protect And Would Not Do An Act That Will Forever Destroy Her Good
Reputation.
12.....The
Same is True With Petitioner Dr. Francsico Who Has Just Retired From Public
Service As Assistant Division Superintendent.
The primordial
issue to be resolved is whether or not the COMELEC gravely abused its
discretion in directing the filing of criminal and administrative complaints
against the petitioners.
In sum, petitioners
insist on their innocence in any wrongdoing in the preparation of the Statement
of Votes per Municipality, arguing that there is no evidence on record to show
a hint of probable cause against them for the commission of an election offense
under Section 27 of R.A. No. 6646 with regard to the padding of votes during
the May 8, 1995 elections.
The argument is
tenuous.
It needs be
stressed that for the May 8, 1995 elections, petitioners were part of the
support or technical staff of the Provincial Board of Canvassers (PBC) of the
Province of Isabela that was tasked with the canvassing of the Municipal/City
Certificates of Canvass (CoC), the preparation of the Provincial Certificates
of Canvass and the supporting Statement of Votes (SoV) per Municipality/City
which entries in said documents were certified to as correct by the PBC. It is
upon a comparison between the Municipal/City CoC submitted to the PBC and the
SoV per Municipality/City as prepared by the members of the PBC and their
support staff, including herein petitioners, that one would readily see the
neatly padded vote totals for the three (3) senatorial candidates, namely,
Enrile, Honasan and Mitra, viz:
Municipality/ |
Votes appearing in Municipal/City
Certificates |
Votes canvassed by COMELEC based on PBC’s |
Discrepancy |
||
Santiago City |
|
|
|
||
Enrile |
15,454 |
16,454 |
1,000 |
||
Angadanan |
|
|
|
||
Enrile |
5,996 |
7,996 |
2,000 |
||
Mitra |
3,888 |
4,888 |
1,000 |
||
Cauayan |
|
|
|
||
Enrile |
13,710 |
19,710 |
6,000 |
||
Honasan |
11,205 |
21,205 |
10,000 |
||
Cordon |
|
|
|
||
Enrile |
6,794 |
9,794 |
3,000 |
||
Delfin Albano |
|
|
|
||
Enrile |
3,972 |
4,972 |
1,000 |
||
Echague |
|
|
|
||
Enrile |
10,552 |
15,552 |
5,000 |
||
San Mariano |
|
|
|
||
Enrile |
5,683 |
8,253 |
2,570 |
||
San Pablo |
|
|
|
||
Enrile |
2,418 |
3,438 |
1,020 |
||
Ilagan |
|
|
|
||
Mitra |
14,457 |
20,457 |
6,000 |
||
San Mateo |
|
|
|
||
Enrile |
9,424 |
15,589 |
6,165 |
||
TOTAL |
103,553 |
148,308 |
44,755 |
||
Candidate |
Unauthorized Additional Votes |
|
|||
ENRILE |
27,755 |
|
|||
HONASAN |
10,000 |
|
|||
MITRA |
7,000 |
|
|||
It can be clearly
seen from the list above that the discrepancies are too substantial and rounded
off to be categorized as a mere ‘computation error’ or a result of fatigue.
There is a limit to what can be construed as an honest mistake or oversight in
the performance of official duty. Suffice it to state that the magnitude of the
error as reflected in the discrepancies itemized above renders unacceptable the
defense of ‘computer error’ or honest mistake.
In the separate
counter-affidavits[8] submitted by members of the PBC of Isabela, all
three of them asserted their lack of knowledge of any irregularity committed
despite the glaring discrepancies detailed above. However, paragraph 2 of the
Joint Counter-Affidavit[9] of petitioner Domalanta and Dr. Olympia G. Marquez,
acting as Member-Secretary of the PBC, avers that in recording the vote totals
of the senatorial candidates appearing in the Municipal CoCs in the SoV per
Municipality/City, the Board was assisted by the petitioners, two (2) clerks
also from the DECS, Messrs. Dante Limon and Edward Tamang as well as Mr. George
Noriega, a representative of the Provincial Accountant’s Office. Implicit in
the averment of paragraph 2 of said Joint Counter-Affidavit is the insinuation
that the anomalies or the tampering of the results of the senatorial canvass in
Isabela could only have been done by their staff.
It was indeed
highly unlikely that the padded vote totals were entered in the SoV per
Municipality/City without the knowledge of petitioners, if they were faithfully
and regularly performing their assigned tasks. A reasonably prudent man on the
other hand would readily come to the conclusion that there exists a probable
cause to believe that the petitioners are culpable together with the other
members of the support staff as well as the PBC members in the padding of the
vote totals of the said senatorial candidates. It can not be denied that the
members of the PBC and their support staff, including herein petitioners, were
the only ones in control and in possession of said documents during its
preparation. It need not be overemphasized, given this fact, that the padding
of the vote totals could only have been done by all of them acting in concert
with one another.
It bears stressing
in this regard that all that is required in the preliminary investigation is
the determination of probable cause so as to justify the holding of petitioners
for trial. Probable cause is defined -
… as the existence
of such facts and circumstances as would excite the belief, in a reasonable
mind, acting on the facts within the knowledge of the prosecutor, that the
person charged was guilty of the crime for which he was prosecuted.[10] This definition is still relevant today as we
continue to cite it in recent cases.[11] xxx Pilapil v. Sandiganbayan[12] sets the
standard for determining probable cause. xxx There we said:
Probable cause is
a reasonable ground of presumption that a matter is, or may be, well founded,
such a state of facts in the mind of the prosecutor as would lead a person of
ordinary caution and prudence to believe or entertain an honest or strong
suspicion, that a thing is so. The term does not mean "actual or positive
cause" nor does it import absolute certainty. It is merely based on
opinion and reasonable belief. Thus, a finding of probable cause does not
require an inquiry into whether there is sufficient evidence to procure a
conviction. It is enough that it is believed that the act or omission
complained of constitutes the offense charged. Precisely, there is a trial for
the reception of evidence of the prosecution in support of the charge.
Whether an act was
done causing undue injury to the government and whether the same was done with
manifest partiality or evident bad faith can only be made out by proper and
sufficient testimony. Necessarily, a conclusion can be arrived at when the case
has already proceeded on sufficient proof.[13]
… Probable cause
to warrant arrest is not an opaque concept in our jurisdiction. Continuing
accretions of case law reiterate that they are facts and circumstances which
would lead a reasonably discreet and prudent man to believe that an
offense has been committed by the person sought to be arrested.[14] Other jurisdictions utilize the term man of
reasonable caution[15] or the
term ordinarily prudent and cautious man.[16] The terms
are legally synonymous and their reference is not to a person with training in
the law such as a prosecutor or a judge but to the average man on the
street.[17] It ought
to be emphasized that in determining probable cause, the average man weighs
facts and circumstances without resorting to the calibration of our technical
rules of evidence of which his knowledge is nil. Rather, he relies on the
calculus of common sense of which all reasonable men have an abundance.
xxx...........................xxx...........................xxx
… A finding of
probable cause needs only to rest on evidence showing that more likely than
not a crime has been committed and was committed by the suspects. Probable
cause need not be based on clear and convincing evidence of guilt, neither on
evidence establishing guilt beyond reasonable doubt and definitely, not on
evidence establishing absolute certainty of guilt. As well put in Brinegar
v. United States,[18] while probable cause requires more than "bare
suspicion", it requires "less than evidence which would justify xxx
conviction." A finding of probable cause is not a pronouncement of guilt.[19]
The peculiar
factual circumstances prevailing in this case hardly paints a picture of
manifest human error or fatigue in the tabulation of the votes of the
senatorial candidates in Isabela. It, in fact, discloses a pernicious scheme
which would not have been successfully perpetrated without the indispensable
cooperation of all members of the PBC and their support staff which included
herein petitioners. The latter’s protestations in the counter-affidavits that
they only tabulated the vote totals of senatorial candidates Tillah and
Tolentino are at best convenient and self-serving explanations to justify their
exculpation from any wrong-doing. Their claims are, moreover, not substantiated
by any of the PBC members. Indeed, as this Court pointedly observed in Velayo
v. COMELEC[20] the "self-serving nature of said Affidavits
cannot be discounted. As this Court has pronounced, reliance should not be
placed on mere affidavits."
Be that as it may,
petitioners’ claims are a matter of defense and as pointed out by the Court
recently in Pimentel, Jr. v. COMELEC [21] -
… the merit of
defenses such as honest mistake, simple error, good faith, and the mere
performance of ministerial duties, as interposed by persons charged with the
election offense of tampering, increasing or decreasing votes received by a
candidate in any election, are best ventilated in the trial proper than at
the preliminary investigation.
Second. Section 27 (b) of R.A. No. 6646 which reads, viz:
‘xxx [T]he
following shall be guilty of an election offense:
x x x...........................x x x...........................x
x x
(b)....Any
member of the board of election inspectors or board of canvassers who tampers,
increases or decreases the votes received by a candidate in any election or any
member of the board who refuses, after proper verification and hearing to
credit the correct votes or deduct such tampered votes.
penalizes two (2)
acts: first the tampering, increasing or decreasing of votes received by a
candidate in any election; and second, the refusal, after proper verification
and hearing to credit the correct votes or deduct such tampered votes. The
first obtains in this case.
Petitioner
categorically charged private respondents xxx with ‘illegal acts of padding the
votes of the senatorial candidates’ amounting to ‘violations of the Omnibus
Election Code, as amended, and Section 27 of R.A. 6646.’ They never denied that
the total number of votes of the senatorial candidate xxx as appearing in the
CoCs and SoVs is significantly and considerably higher xxx than that appearing
in the election returns. xxx
These
circumstances in themselves, constitute probable cause that justifies the
belief that more likely than not, the election offense was committed and was
committed by private respondents xxx. Probable cause is based neither on clear
and convincing evidence of guilt nor evidence establishing absolute certainty
of guilt.[22] It is merely based on opinion and reasonable belief,
and so it is enough that there exists such state of facts as would lead a
person of ordinary caution and prudence to believe or entertain an honest or
strong suspicion that a thing is so.[23] Considering that private respondents xxx in invoking
the defenses of honest mistake, oversight due to fatigue and performance of
ministerial duties virtually admitted the existence of the discrepancies in the
total number of votes garnered by petitioner and other senatorial candidates,
which discrepancies by no stretch of imagination could be dismissed as
negligible or inconsequential, there is not merely a strong suspicion that they
actually committed the election offense which they are charged. The burden of
proof appears to have shifted to them to prove that the said discrepancies
cannot be considered illegal and criminal.
The instant
petition for certiorari and prohibition, therefore, must be dismissed.
It is grounded on alleged grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess
of jurisdiction. Only recently in Sadikul Sahali v. COMELEC,[24] the Court, citing Garcia, et al. v. HRET,[25] said:
Certiorari as a
special civil action can be availed of only if there is a concurrence of the
essential requisites, to wit: (a) the tribunal, board or officer exercising
judicial functions has acted without or in excess of jurisdiction or with grave
abuse of discretion amounting to lack or in excess of jurisdiction, and (b)
there is no appeal, nor any plain, speedy and adequate remedy in the ordinary
course of law for the purpose of annulling or modifying the proceeding. There
must be a capricious, arbitrary and whimsical exercise of power for it to
prosper.
To question the
jurisdiction of the lower court or the agency exercising judicial or
quasi-judicial functions, the remedy is a special civil action for certiorari
under Rule 65 of the Rules of Court. The petitioner in such cases must clearly
show that the public respondent acted without jurisdiction or with grave abuse
of discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction. Grave abuse of
discretion defies exact definition but generally refers to "capricious or
whimsical exercise of judgment as is equivalent to lack of jurisdiction. The
abuse of discretion must be patent and gross as to amount to an evasion of
positive duty or a virtual refusal to perform a duty enjoined by law, or to act
at all in contemplation of law, as where the power is exercised in an arbitrary
and despotic manner by reason of passion and hostility.
It has been held,
however, that no grave abuse of discretion may be attributed to a court simply
because of its alleged misappreciation of facts and evidence. A writ of
certiorari may not be used to correct a lower tribunal’s evaluation of the
evidence and factual findings. In other words, it is not a remedy for mere
errors of judgment, which are correctible by an appeal or a petition for review
under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court.
In fine, certiorari
will only issue to correct errors of jurisdiction not errors of procedure or
mistakes in the findings or conclusions of the lower court. As long as a court
acts within its jurisdiction, any alleged errors committed in the exercise of
its discretion will amount to nothing more than errors of judgment which are
reviewable by timely appeal and not by special civil action for certiorari.[26]
WHEREFORE, the petition is hereby DISMISSED for lack of merit.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr.,
C.J., Bellosillo, Melo, Puno, Vitug, Kapunan, Mendoza, Panganiban, Quisumbing,
Purisima, Buena, Gonzaga-Reyes, and De
Leon, Jr., concur.
Pardo, J., no part.
[1] Rollo, pp. 67-68.
[2] Later amended to include herein petitioners as well
as Dante Limon, Eduard Tamang and George Noriega; see Rollo, pp.
34-37.
[3] Rollo, pp. 57-61.
[4] Citing Farolan v. Salmac Marketing Corp., 195
SCRA 168 (1991)
[5] Citing McKee v. IAC, 211 SCRA 517 (1992)
[6] Ibid.
[7] Citing Fernando v. Sandiganbayan, 212 SCRA 680
(1992)
[8] Rollo, pp. 108-114.
[9] Rollo, p. 55.
[10] Buchanan v. Vda. De Esteban, 32 Phil. 33
(1915)
[11] Citing Que v. IAC, 169 SCRA 137 (1989); Ponce v.
Legaspi, 208 SCRA 377 (1992); Albenson v. CA, 217 SCRA 16 (1993)
[12] 221 SCRA 349 (1993)
[13] Allado v. Diokno, 232 SCRA 192 (1994)
[14] Bernas, The Constitution of the Republic of the
Philippines, A Commentary, Vol. I, 1987 ed., pp. 86-87.
[15] Brinegar v. U.S., 338 U.S. 160 (1949)
[16] Del Carmen, Criminal Procedure, Law and Practice, 3rd
ed., p. 86.
[17] Ibid.
[18] 338 US 160 (1949)
[19] Webb v. De Leon, 247 SCRA 652 (1995)
[20] G.R. No. 135613, 9 March 2000, p. 28, citing Casimiro
v. COMELEC, 171 SCRA 468 (1989)
[21] G.R. No. 133509, 9 February 2000, p. 10, citing
Pimentel, Jr. v. COMELEC, 289 SCRA 586 (1998)
[22] Pimentel, Jr. v. COMELEC, supra.
[23] Olivarez v. Sandiganbayan, 248 SCRA 700
(1995); Pilapil v. Sandiganbayan, supra.
[24] G.R. No. 134169, 2 February 2000, p. 10.
[25] G.R. No. 134792, 12 August 1999.
[26] Citing People v. CA, G.R. No. 128986, 21 June 1999.