FIRST DIVISION
ANA MARIE CAMBALIZA, Adm. Case No. 6290
Complainant,
Present:
DAVIDE, JR., C.J.,
- versus - PANGANIBAN,
SANTIAGO,
CARPIO,
and
AZCUNA,
JJ.
ATTY. ANA LUZ B. CRISTAL-TENORIO,
Respondent.
Promulgated:
July 14, 2004
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DAVIDE,
JR., C.J.:
In a verified complaint for disbarment
filed with the Committee on Bar Discipline of the Integrated Bar of the
Philippines (IBP) on 30 May 2000, complainant Ana Marie Cambaliza, a former
employee of respondent Atty. Ana Luz B. Cristal-Tenorio in her law office,
charged the latter with deceit, grossly immoral conduct, and malpractice or
other gross misconduct in office.
On deceit, the complainant alleged
that the respondent has been falsely representing herself to be married to
Felicisimo R. Tenorio, Jr., who has a prior and subsisting marriage with
another woman. However, through spurious means, the respondent and
Felicisimo R. Tenorio, Jr., were able to obtain a false marriage contract,[1]
which states that they were married on 10 February 1980 in Manila. Certifications from the Civil Registry of
Manila[2]
and the National Statistics Office (NSO)[3]
prove that no record of marriage exists between them. The false date and place of marriage between the two are stated
in the birth certificates of their two children, Donnabel Tenorio[4]
and Felicisimo Tenorio III.[5]
But in the birth certificates of their
two other children, Oliver Tenorio[6]
and John Cedric Tenorio,[7]
another date and place of marriage are indicated, namely, 12 February 1980 in
Malaybalay, Bukidnon.
As to grossly immoral conduct, the
complainant alleged that the respondent caused the dissemination to the public
of a libelous affidavit derogatory to Makati City Councilor Divina Alora Jacome. The respondent would often openly and
sarcastically declare to the complainant and her co-employees the alleged
immorality of Councilor Jacome.
On malpractice or other gross misconduct
in office, the complainant alleged that the respondent (1) cooperated in the
illegal practice of law by her husband, who is not a member of the Philippine Bar;
(2) converted her client’s money to her own use and benefit, which led to the
filing of an estafa case against her; and (3) threatened the complainant and
her family on 24 January 2000 with the statement “Isang bala ka lang” to deter them from divulging respondent’s
illegal activities and transactions.
In her answer, the respondent denied
all the allegations against her. As to
the charge of deceit, she declared that she is legally married to Felicisimo R.
Tenorio, Jr. They were married on 12 February 1980 as shown by their
Certificate of Marriage, Registry No. 2000-9108 of the Civil Registry of Quezon
City.[8] Her husband has no prior and subsisting
marriage with another woman.
As to the charge of grossly
immoral conduct, the respondent denied that she caused the dissemination of a
libelous and defamatory affidavit against Councilor Jacome. On the contrary, it
was Councilor Jacome who caused the execution of said document. Additionally, the
complainant and her cohorts are the rumormongers who went around the city of
Makati on the pretext of conducting a survey but did so to besmirch
respondent’s good name and reputation.
The charge of malpractice or other
gross misconduct in office was likewise denied by the respondent. She claimed that her Cristal-Tenorio Law
Office is registered with the Department of Trade and Industry as a single proprietorship,
as shown by its Certificate of Registration of Business Name.[9] Hence, she has no partners in her law
office. As to the estafa case, the same
had already been dropped pursuant to the Order of 14 June 1996 issued by Branch
103 of the Regional Trial Court of Quezon City.[10] The respondent likewise denied that she
threatened the complainant with the words “Isang bala ka lang” on 24 January
2000.
Further, the respondent averred that
this disbarment complaint was filed by the complainant to get even with
her. She terminated complainant’s employment after receiving numerous
complaints that the complainant extorted
money from different people with the promise of processing their passports and marriages to foreigners, but she
reneged on her promise. Likewise, this disbarment
complaint is politically motivated: some politicians offered to re-hire the complainant
and her cohorts should they initiate
this complaint, which they did and for which they were re-hired. The respondent also flaunted the fact that
she had received numerous awards and citations for civic works and exemplary
service to the community. She then prayed
for the dismissal of the disbarment case
for being baseless.
The IBP referred this case to
Investigating Commissioner Atty. Kenny H. Tantuico.
During the hearing on 30 August
2000, the parties agreed that the complainant would submit a Reply to
respondent’s Answer, while the respondent would submit a Rejoinder to the Reply.
The parties also agreed that the
Complaint, Answer, and the attached affidavits would constitute as the
respective direct testimonies of the parties and the affiants.[11]
In her Reply, the complainant bolstered
her claim that the respondent cooperated in the illegal practice of law by her
husband by submitting (1) the letterhead of Cristal-Tenorio Law Office[12]
where the name of Felicisimo R. Tenorio, Jr., is listed as a senior partner;
and (2) a Sagip Communication Radio Group identification card[13]
signed by the respondent as Chairperson where her husband is identified as
“Atty. Felicisimo R. Tenorio, Jr.” She
added that respondent’s husband even appeared in court hearings.
In her Rejoinder, respondent averred
that she neither formed a law partnership with her husband nor allowed her
husband to appear in court on her behalf.
If there was an instance that her husband appeared in court, he did so
as a representative of her law firm. The
letterhead submitted by the complainant was a false reproduction to show that
her husband is one of her law partners.
But upon cross-examination, when
confronted with the letterhead of Cristal-Tenorio Law Office bearing her
signature, she admitted that Felicisimo R. Tenorio, Jr., is not a lawyer, but
he and a certain Gerardo A. Panghulan, who is also not a lawyer, are named as
senior partners because they have investments in her law office.[14]
The respondent further declared that
she married Felicisimo R. Tenorio, Jr., on 12 February 1980 in Quezon City, but
when she later discovered that their marriage contract was not registered she
applied for late registration on 5 April 2000.
She then presented as evidence a certified copy of the marriage contract
issued by the Office of the Civil Registrar General and authenticated by the
NSO. The erroneous entries in the birth
certificates of her children as to the place and date of her marriage
were merely an oversight.[15]
Sometime after the parties
submitted their respective Offer of Evidence and Memoranda, the complainant filed
a Motion to Withdraw Complaint on 13 November 2002 after allegedly realizing
that this disbarment complaint arose out of a misunderstanding and
misappreciation of facts. Thus, she is
no longer interested in pursuing the case. This motion was not acted upon by the IBP.
In her Report and Recommendation dated
30 September 2003, IBP Commissioner on Bar Discipline Milagros V. San Juan found
that the complainant failed to substantiate the charges of deceit and grossly
immoral conduct. However, she found the
respondent guilty of the charge of cooperating in the illegal practice of law
by Felicisimo R. Tenorio, Jr., in violation of Canon 9 and Rule 9.01 of the
Code of Professional Responsibility based on the following evidence: (1) the letterhead of Cristal-Tenorio Law
Office, which lists Felicisimo R. Tenorio, Jr., as a senior partner; (2)
the Sagip Communication Radio Group identification
card of “Atty. Felicisimo R. Tenorio, Jr.,” signed by respondent as Chairperson;
(3) and the Order dated 18 June 1997
issued by the Metropolitan Trial Court in Criminal Cases Nos. 20729 – 20734, wherein Felicisimo R. Tenorio, Jr., entered his
appearance as counsel and even moved for the provisional dismissal of the cases for failure of the private complainants
to appear and for lack of interest to prosecute the said cases. Thus, Commissioner San Juan recommended that the
respondent be reprimanded.
In its Resolution No. XVI-2003-228
dated 25 October 2003, the IBP Board of Governors adopted and approved with
modification the Report and Recommendation of Commissioner San Juan. The modification consisted in increasing the
penalty from reprimand to suspension from the practice of law for six months
with a warning that a similar offense in the future would be dealt with more
severely.
We agree with the findings and
conclusion of Commissioner San Juan as approved and adopted with modification
by the Board of Governors of the IBP.
At the outset, we find that the
IBP was correct in not acting on the Motion to Withdraw Complaint filed by
complainant Cambaliza. In Rayos-Ombac vs. Rayos,[16]
we declared:
The affidavit of
withdrawal of the disbarment case allegedly executed by complainant does not,
in any way, exonerate the respondent. A
case of suspension or disbarment may proceed regardless of interest or lack of
interest of the complainant. What
matters is whether, on the basis of the facts borne out by the record, the
charge of deceit and grossly immoral conduct has been duly proven. This rule is premised on the nature of
disciplinary proceedings. A proceeding
for suspension or disbarment is not in any sense a civil action where the
complainant is a plaintiff and the respondent lawyer is a defendant. Disciplinary proceedings involve no private
interest and afford no redress for private grievance. They are undertaken and prosecuted solely for the public
welfare. They are undertaken for the
purpose of preserving courts of justice from the official ministration of
persons unfit to practice in them. The
attorney is called to answer to the court for his conduct as an officer of the
court. The complainant or the person
who called the attention of the court to the attorney's alleged misconduct is
in no sense a party, and has generally no interest in the outcome except as all
good citizens may have in the proper administration of justice. Hence, if the evidence on record warrants,
the respondent may be suspended or disbarred despite the desistance of
complainant or his withdrawal of the charges.
Hence, notwithstanding the Motion to Withdraw Complaint,
this disbarment case should proceed accordingly.
The IBP
correctly found that the charges of deceit and grossly immoral conduct were not
substantiated. In disbarment proceedings, the complainant has the burden of
proving his case by convincing evidence.[17] With respect to the estafa case which is the
basis for the charge of malpractice or other gross misconduct in office, the respondent
is not yet convicted thereof. In Gerona vs. Datingaling,[18]
we held that when the criminal prosecution based on the same act charged is
still pending in court, any administrative disciplinary proceedings for the
same act must await the outcome of the criminal case to avoid contradictory findings.
We,
however, affirm the IBP’s finding that the respondent is guilty of assisting in
the unauthorized practice of law. A lawyer who allows a non-member of the Bar
to misrepresent himself as a lawyer and to practice law is guilty of violating
Canon 9 and Rule 9.01 of the Code of Professional Responsibility, which read as
follows:
Canon 9 – A lawyer shall not
directly or indirectly assist in the unauthorized practice of law.
Rule 9.01 – A lawyer shall not
delegate to any unqualified person the performance of any task which by law may
only be performed by a member of the Bar in good standing.
The
term “practice of law” implies customarily or habitually holding oneself out to
the public as a lawyer for compensation as a source of livelihood or in
consideration of his services. Holding
one’s self out as a lawyer may be shown by acts indicative of that purpose like
identifying oneself as attorney, appearing in court in representation of a
client, or associating oneself as a partner of a law office for the general
practice of law.[19] Such acts constitute unauthorized practice
of law.
In this
case, Felicisimo R. Tenorio, Jr., is not a lawyer, but he holds himself out as
one. His wife, the respondent herein,
abetted and aided him in the
unauthorized practice of the legal profession.
At the
hearing, the respondent admitted that the letterhead of Cristal-Tenorio Law Office listed Felicisimo R. Tenorio,
Jr., Gerardo A. Panghulan, and Maricris D. Battung as senior partners. She admitted that the first two are not
lawyers but paralegals. They are listed
in the letterhead of her law office as senior partners because they have
investments in her law office.[20]
That is a blatant misrepresentation.
The Sagip Communication Radio Group
identification card is another proof that the respondent assisted Felicisimo R.
Tenorio, Jr., in misrepresenting to the public that he is a lawyer. Notably, the identification card stating that
he is “Atty. Felicisimo Tenorio, Jr.,” bears the signature of the respondent as
Chairperson of the Group.
The
lawyer’s duty to prevent, or at the very least not to assist in, the
unauthorized practice of law is founded on public interest and policy. Public policy requires that the practice of
law be limited to those individuals found duly qualified in education and
character. The permissive right
conferred on the lawyer is an individual and limited privilege subject to
withdrawal if he fails to maintain proper standards of moral and professional
conduct. The purpose is to protect the
public, the court, the client, and the bar from the incompetence or dishonesty
of those unlicensed to practice law and not subject to the disciplinary control
of the Court. It devolves upon a lawyer
to see that this purpose is attained. Thus,
the canons and ethics of the profession enjoin him not to permit his
professional services or his name to be used in aid of, or to make possible the
unauthorized practice of law by, any agency, personal or corporate. And, the law makes it a misbehavior on his
part, subject to disciplinary action, to aid a layman in the unauthorized
practice of law.[21]
WHEREFORE, for culpable violation of Canon
9 and Rule 9.01 of the Code of Professional Responsibility, respondent Atty. Ana
Luz B. Cristal-Tenorio is hereby suspended
from the practice of law for a period of six (6) months effective
immediately, with a warning that a repetition of the same or similar act in the
future will be dealt with more severely.
Let copies of this Resolution be attached
to respondent Cristal-Tenorio’s record as attorney in this Court and furnished
to the IBP and the Office of the Court Administrator for circulation to all
courts.
SO ORDERED.
HILARIO G. DAVIDE, JR.
Chief Justice
WE CONCUR:
Associate Justice
CONSUELO YNARES-SANTIAGO ANTONIO T. CARPIO
Associate Justice Associate Justice
ADOLFO S. AZCUNA
Associate Justice
Item
No. ___
Agenda
for 14 July 2004
FIRST DIVISION
F O R C O
N C U R R E N C E
ANA MARIE CAMBALIZA, Adm. Case No. 6290
Complainant,
- versus -
ATTY.
ANA LUZ B. CRISTAL-TENORIO,
Respondent.
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COUNSEL
FOR THE COMPLAINANT:
ATTY. ARTURO C. JARABATA
203 Ipil Street, St. Joseph
Cainta, Rizal
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
ATTY. MARCIAL MAGSINO
Magsino Bautista & Associates
Law Offices
Suite 601-602, 1010 Bldg., A. Mabini
Street
Ermita, Manila
ATTY.
ANA LUZ B. CRISTAL-TENORIO
Respondent
201 Asuncion Complex
2472 Zenaida Street, Makati City
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(Please return to the Office of Chief Justice
HILARIO G. DAVIDE, JR.)
[1] Rollo, 19.
[2] Id., 9.
[3] Id., 10.
[4] Id., 5.
[5] Id., 6.
[6] Id., 7.
[7] Id., 8.
[8] Id., 36.
[9] Rollo, 37.
[10] Id., 38.
[11] Rollo, 130.
[12] Id., 104.
[13] Id., 106.
[14] TSN, 30 October 2000, 1-66.
[15] TSN, 30 October 2000, 1-66.
[16] Adm. Case No. 2884, 349 Phil. 7, 15-16 (1998).
[17] Adarne v. Aldaba, Adm. Case No. 801, 27 June 1978, 83 SCRA 734.
[18] Adm. Case No. 4801, 27 February 2003, 398 SCRA 148.
[19] See Ruben E. Agpalo, The Code of Professional Responsibility for Lawyers, 75 (1st ed. 1991) (hereafter Agpalo).
[20] TSN, 30 October 2000, 52.
[21] Agpalo, 69, 78.