THIRD DIVISION
BONIFACIO
OBRERO, Complainant, - versus - ATTY.
MA. VICTORIA A. ACIDERA, Clerk of Court, Branch
13, Regional Trial Court, Respondent. |
A.M.
No. P-08-2442
(Formerly A.M. OCA I.P.I.
No. 07-2680-P) Present: AUSTRIA-MARTINEZ, J.,
Acting Chairperson, TINGA,* CHICO-NAZARIO, NACHURA, and REYES, JJ. Promulgated: March 28,
2008 |
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RESOLUTION
NACHURA, J.:
This administrative case arose from a
Complaint[1]
dated
Obrero alleges that respondent Atty.
Acidera allowed the filing of motions that do not strictly conform to the Rules
of Court, to his damage and prejudice. In the complaint, he pointed to two
instances to justify his charges against the respondent. First, on
In
her Answer[4]
dated
The
issue is whether or not the respondent is guilty of Gross Ignorance of the
Rules, Gross Incompetence, Conduct Prejudicial to the Best Interest of the
Service, and failing to measure up to the ethical standards in government
prescribed under R.A. No. 6713.
The Court’s Ruling
The
records and Atty. Acidera’s own admission confirm that respondent is guilty of ignorance
of the law.
The
act alleged in the complaint is a violation of Section 5, Rule 15, of the Rules
of Court:
Section 5. Notice of
Hearing. – The notice of hearing shall
be addressed to all parties concerned, and shall specify the time and date
of the hearing which must not be later than ten (10) days after the filing of
the motion.
It
is an elementary rule of procedure that any motion which does not comply with
the above procedural requisite is a mere scrap of paper, should not be accepted
for filing and, if filed, is not entitled to judicial cognizance. As such, it produces no effect on the reglementary
period for the filing of the required pleading. Thus, where the motion is
directed to the clerk of court, not to the parties, and merely states that the
same is to be submitted “for the resolution of the court upon receipt thereof,”
such a motion is fatally defective.[5] Any
subsequent action of the court thereon will not cure the flaw, for a motion
with a fatally defective notice is a “useless piece of paper.”[6]
To comply with the requirement of
notice, as part and parcel of procedural due process, it is necessary that all
motions be addressed to all parties concerned.
This is a mandatory requirement, and the failure of the movant to comply
with this requisite is fatal. Accordingly, a clerk of court who accepts the
filing of a fatally defective motion and submits the same to the judgment of
the court is equally guilty of violating a basic procedural requirement.
The Clerk of Court’s compliance with
the Rules of Court is not merely directory, but mandatory. He is expected to
know the rules of procedure, particularly those rules that pertain to his
functions as an officer of the court.
Thus, as correctly pointed out by the
Office of the Court Administrator (OCA), respondent’s evident disregard of an
elementary rule of procedure makes her administratively liable for ignorance of
the law.[7]
Since the motions in question were mere scraps of paper for want of the
required notice, they must be deemed, for all legal intents and purposes, as if
they were not filed.
We are in full accord with the
findings of the OCA, viz.:
Despite the string of rulings declaring that
notice of hearings must be addressed to the parties to be entitled to judicial
cognizance, respondent clerk of court allowed the filing of the Motion, dated
February 21, 2007, filed by Atty. Castor Raval as well as another,
Manifestation and Motion, dated March 5, 2007, filed by Atty. Sandro Marie N.
Obra. Respondent’s specious arguments do
not hold water. Whether or not damage or
prejudice has been caused to complainant when respondent allowed the filing of the
fatally defective motions is not material.
It is when these are brought for consideration of the court, and worse
when the court gave undue attention to them by directing Atty. Obra, in an
Order dated
On the basis of such findings, the
OCA recommends the imposition of a fine of P10,000.00.
Atty. Acidera’s justification that
she has no authority to deny the filing of the motions, as it would supplant
the power of the judge to act on the same, does not persuade. While it is true that the duty of a clerk of
court does not involve the determination of law or fact or the exercise of
judicial powers, and is generally administrative or ministerial in nature, she still
assumes the responsibility to observe ordinary prudence in the performance of
her duties. That diligence calls for her to verify if the pleadings submitted
to her for the judgment of the court comply with the minimum procedural
requirements. Such determination is not an exercise of discretion or judgment but
an administrative act in aid of the speedy disposition of cases.
Clerks of court must be individuals
of competence, honesty and probity. They play a key role in the court and, thus,
cannot be permitted to slacken on their jobs under one pretext or another.[8]
Knowledge as to form of pleadings and motions is a skill required of a clerk of
court of a regional trial court. The RTC’s general jurisdiction calls for an
efficient clerk of court, an attorney, who is presumed to know the law and the
Rules of Court so that the court may effectively administer justice. Atty.
Acidera has certainly been inefficient in the performance of even the simplest
duty.
Ignorantia legis non excusat remains a valid dictum.
When an officer of the court such as the respondent, who is supposed to
know the law, displays such ignorance, then she must be called to account.
WHEREFORE,
respondent Atty. Ma. Victoria A. Acidera is found GUILTY of Ignorance of the Law for which she is FINED the amount of Ten Thousand Pesos
(P10,000.00) and WARNED that
the commission of a similar offense in the future shall be dealt with more
severely.
SO ORDERED.
ANTONIO
EDUARDO B. NACHURA
Associate Justice
WE CONCUR:
MA. ALICIA AUSTRIA-MARTINEZ
Associate
Justice
Acting Chairperson
DANTE O. TINGA Associate
Justice |
MINITA V. CHICO-NAZARIO Associate Justice |
RUBEN T. REYES
Associate
Justice
* In lieu of Associate Justice Consuelo
Ynares-Santiago per Special Order No. 497, dated
[1] Rollo, pp. 1-10.
[2] Annex “A” of the Complaint of Obrero, id. at 11-12.
[3] Annex “B” of the Complaint of Obrero, id. at 13.
[4] Rollo, pp. 19-22.
[5] Regalado, Remedial Law Compendium, p. 23; Cledera v. Sarmiento, 148-A Phil. 468, 485 (1971).
[6] Omico Mining and Industrial Corporation v. Judge Vallejos, 159 Phil. 886, 899 (1975).
[7] Recommendation of the OCA.
[8] Alvarez v. Diaz, 468 Phil. 347, 372 (2004).