G.R. No. 176389 - ANTONIO LEJANO, petitioner,
-versus- PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, respondent.
G.R. No. 176864 – PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, appellee, -versus- HUBERT JEFFREY P. WEBB, et al., appellants.
Promulgated:
December 14, 2010
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SUPPLEMENTAL OPINION
BRION, J.:
In addition to my vote and independently of the merits of the present case, I write this opinion to point out the growing disregard and non-observance of the sub judice rule, to the detriment of the rights of the accused, the integrity of the courts, and, ultimately, the administration of justice. I seize this opportunity fully aware that the present case – dubbed in the news media as the Vizconde Massacre – is one of the most sensational criminal cases in Philippine history in terms of the mode of commission of the crime and the personalities involved. From the time the charges were filed, the case has captured the public’s interest that an unusual amount of air time and print space have been devoted to it. Of late, with the public’s renewed interest after the case was submitted for decision, key personalities have again been unabashedly publicizing their opinions and commenting even on the merits of the case before various forms of media. A Senior Justice of this Court, who was a witness in the case (while he was in private law practice) and who consequently inhibited himself from participation, was even publicly maligned in the print and broadcast media through unsupported speculations about his intervention in the case. That was how bad and how low comments about the case had been.
In essence, the sub judice rule restricts comments and disclosures pertaining to pending judicial proceedings. The restriction applies not only to participants in the pending case, i.e., to members of the bar and bench, and to litigants and witnesses, but also to the public in general, which necessarily includes the media. Although the Rules of Court does not contain a specific provision imposing the sub judice rule, it supports the observance of the restriction by punishing its violation as indirect contempt under Section 3(d) of Rule 71:
Section
3. Indirect contempt to be punished
after charge and hearing. – x x x a person guilty of any of the following acts
may be punished for indirect contempt:
x x x x
(d)
Any improper conduct tending, directly or indirectly, to impede, obstruct, or
degrade the administration of justice[.]
Persons facing charges for indirect contempt for violation of the sub judice rule often invoke as defense their right to free speech and claim that the citation for contempt constitutes a form of impermissible subsequent punishment.
We have long recognized in this jurisdiction that the freedom of speech under Section 4, Article III of the Constitution is not absolute. A very literal construction of the provision, as espoused by US Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black,[1] may lead to the disregard of other equally compelling constitutional rights and principles. In Vicente v. Majaducon,[2] this Court declared that “[the freedom of speech] needs on occasion to be adjusted to and accommodated with the requirements of equally important public interests such as the maintenance of the integrity of courts and orderly functioning of the administration of justice.” Courts, both within and outside this jurisdiction, have long grappled with the dilemma of balancing the public’s right to free speech and the government’s duty to administer fair and impartial justice. While the sub judice rule may be considered as a curtailment of the right to free speech, it is “necessary to ensure the proper administration of justice and the right of an accused to a fair trial.”[3] Both these latter concerns are equally paramount and cannot lightly be disregarded.
Before proceeding with this line of thought, however, let me clarify that the sub judice rule is not imposed on all forms of speech. In so far as criminal proceedings are concerned, two classes of publicized speech made during the pendency of the proceedings can be considered as contemptuous: first, comments on the merits of the case, and second, intemperate and unreasonable comments on the conduct of the courts with respect to the case. Publicized speech should be understood to be limited to those aired or printed in the various forms of media such as television, radio, newspapers, magazines, and internet, and excludes discussions, in public or in private, between and among ordinary citizens. The Constitution simply gives the citizens the right to speech, not the right to unrestricted publicized speech.
Comments on the merits of the case may refer to the credibility of witnesses, the character of the accused, the soundness of the alibis offered, the relevance of the evidence presented, and generally any other comment bearing on the guilt or innocence of the accused.[4] The danger posed by this class of speech is the undue influence it may directly exert on the court in the resolution of the criminal case, or indirectly through the public opinion it may generate against the accused and the adverse impact this public opinion may have during the trial. The significance of the sub judice rule is highlighted in criminal cases, as the possibility of undue influence prejudices the accused’s right to a fair trial. “The principal purpose of the sub judice rule is to preserve the impartiality of the judicial system by protecting it from undue influence.”[5] Public opinion has no place in a criminal trial. We ruled that –
it is a traditional
conviction of civilized society everywhere that courts and juries, in the
decision of issues of fact and law should be immune from every extraneous
influence; that facts should be decided
upon evidence produced in court; and that the determination of such facts
should be uninfluenced by bias, prejudice or sympathies.[6]
The right to a fair trial is an adjunct of the accused’s right to due process which “guarantees [him] a presumption of innocence until the contrary is proved in a trial x x x where the conclusions reached are induced not by any outside force or influence but only by evidence and argument given in open court, where fitting dignity and calm ambiance is demanded.”[7]
In foreign jurisdictions, the courts do not hesitate to exercise their power to punish for contempt where necessary to dispose of judicial business unhampered by publications that tend to impair the impartiality of verdicts.[8]
If
the media publish prejudicial material, they can appear to urge, or may in fact
be urging, a particular finding: the media can “wage a campaign” against one of
the parties to proceedings. If the jury decides in accordance with an outcome
promoted by the media, it will appear as if the jurors were swayed by the
media. By the same token, if the jury’s decision does not accord with media
opinion, it may appear as if they were deliberately reacting against it. Either
way, it may appear that the jury’s decision was not impartial and based on the
evidence presented in court, even if it was.[9]
The accused must be assured of a fair trial notwithstanding the prejudicial publicity;[10] he has a constitutional right to have his cause tried fairly by an impartial tribunal, uninfluenced by publication or public clamor.[11] “The sub judice doctrine protects against the appearance of decisions having been influenced by published material.”[12]
As
may be observed from the cited material, the sub judice rule is used by foreign courts to insulate members of
the jury from being influenced by prejudicial publicity. But the fact that the jury system is not
adopted in this jurisdiction is not an argument against our observance of the sub judice rule; justices and judges are
no different from members of the jury, they are not immune from the pervasive
effects of media. “It
might be farcical to build around them an impregnable armor against the
influence of the most powerful media of public opinion.”[13] As I said in another case, in a slightly
different context, even those who are determined, in their conscious minds, to
avoid bias may be affected.[14]
Also,
it is not necessary that the publicity actually influenced the court’s
disposition of the case; “the actual impact of prejudicial publicity is not
relevant to liability for sub judice
contempt.”[15] In several cases, the Court has noted the
enormous effect of
media in stirring public sentience x x x Even while it may be difficult to quantify the
influence, or pressure that media can bring to bear on [witnesses and judges]
directly and through the shaping of public opinion, it is a fact, nonetheless,
that, indeed, it does so in so many ways and in varying degrees. The conscious
or unconscious effect that such a coverage may have on the testimony of
witnesses and the decision of judges cannot be evaluated but, it can likewise
be said, it is not at all unlikely for a vote of guilt or innocence to yield to
it.[16]
Comment on the conduct of the courts with respect to the case becomes subject to a contempt proceeding when it is intemperate, is contumacious, and unduly impairs upon the dignity of the court. A comment that impairs of the dignity of the court “excites in the mind of the people a general dissatisfaction with all judicial determinations, and indisposes their minds to obey them[.]”[17] If the speech tends to undermine the confidence of the people in the honesty and integrity of the court and its members, and lowers or degrades the administration of justice, then the speech constitutes contempt.[18] “Unwarranted attacks on the dignity of the courts cannot be disguised as free speech, for the exercise of said right cannot be used to impair the independence and efficiency of courts or public respect therefore and confidence therein.”[19] Without the sub judice rule and the contempt power, the courts will be powerless to protect their integrity and independence that are essential in the orderly and effective dispensation and administration of justice.
This,
of course, is not meant to stifle all forms of criticism against the
court. As the third branch of the
government, the courts remain accountable to the people. The people’s freedom to criticize the
government includes the right to criticize the courts, their proceedings and
decisions. This is the principle of open
justice, which is fundamental to our democratic society and ensures that (a)
there is a safeguard against judicial
arbitrariness or idiosyncrasy, and that (b) the public’s confidence in the
administration of justice is maintained.[20] The criticism must, however, be fair, made in
good faith, and “not spill over the walls of decency and propriety.”[21] And to enhance the open court principle and
allow the people to make fair and reasoned criticism of the courts, the sub judice rule excludes from its
coverage fair and accurate reports (without comment) of what have actually
taken place in open court.
In sum, the court, in
a pending litigation, must be shielded from embarrassment or influence in its
all-important duty of deciding the case.[22] Any
publication pending a suit, reflecting upon the court, the parties, the
officers of the court, the counsel, etc., with reference to the suit, or
tending to influence the decision of the controversy, is contempt of court and
is punishable. The resulting (but
temporary) curtailment of speech because of the sub judice rule is necessary and justified by the more compelling
interests to uphold the rights of the accused and promote the fair and orderly
administration of justice.
If
we do not apply at all the sub judice
rule to the present case, the reason is obvious to those who have followed the
case in the media – both parties are in
pari delicto as both have apparently gone to the media to campaign for the
merits of their respective causes. Thus,
the egregious action of one has been cancelled by a similar action by the
other. It is in this sense that this
Supplemental Opinion is independent of
the merits of the case. Their common
action, however, cannot have their prejudicial effects on both; whatever the
results may be, doubts will linger about the real merits of the case due to the
inordinate media campaign that transpired.
Lest
we be misunderstood, our application of the sub
judice rule to this case cannot serve as a precedent for similar future
violations. Precisely, this Supplemental
Opinion is a signal to all that this Court has not forgotten, and is in fact
keenly aware of, the limits of what can be publicly ventilated on the merits of
a case while sub judice, and on the
comments on the conduct of the courts with respect to the case. This Court will not standby idly and
helplessly as its integrity as an institution and its processes are shamelessly
brought to disrepute.
ARTURO D. BRION
Associate Justice
[1] See Justice Black’s concurring opinion in Smith v. California, 361 U.S. 147 (1959), part of which reads:
Certainly
the First Amendment's language leaves no room for inference that abridgments of
speech and press can be made just because they are slight. That Amendment
provides, in simple words, that "Congress shall make no law . . .
abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press." I read "no law . . . abridging" to mean no law abridging.
The First Amendment, which is the supreme law of the land, has thus fixed its
own value on freedom of speech and press by putting these freedoms wholly
"beyond the reach" of federal power to abridge. No other provision of the Constitution
purports to dilute the scope of these unequivocal commands of the First
Amendment. Consequently, I do not believe that any federal agencies, including
Congress and this Court, have power or authority to subordinate speech and
press to what they think are “more important interests.” The contrary notion is, in my judgment,
court-made, not Constitution-made. (361
[2] A.M. No. RTJ-02-1698, June 23, 2005, 461 SCRA 12, 24-25, citing Choa v. Chiongson, A.M. No. MTJ-95-1063, August 9, 1996, 260 SCRA 477, 484-485.
[3] Law Reform Commission – New South Wales, Discussion Paper 43 (2000) – Contempt by Publication, http://www.lawlink.nsw.gov.au/lrc.nsf/pages/dp43chp02, last visited December 9, 2010.
[4] Ibid.; the Discussion Paper 43 (2000) of the Law Reform Commission of New South Wales has identified some “high-risk publications” against which the sub judice rule applies. These include:
a. A photograph of the accused where identity is likely to be an issue;
b. Suggestions that the accused has previous criminal convictions, has been previously charged for committing an offense and/or previously acquitted, or has been involved in other criminal activity;
c. Suggestions that the accused has confessed to committing the crime in question;
d. Suggestions that the accused has confessed to committing the crime in question;
e. Suggestions that the accused is guilty or innocent of the crime for which he or she is charged, or that the jury should convict or acquit the accused; and
f. Comments which engender sympathy or antipathy for the accused and/or which disparage the prosecution, or which make favorable or unfavorable references to the character or credibility of the accused or a witness.
[5] Ibid.
[6] Nestle v. Sanchez, Nos. L-75209 and 78791, September 30, 1987, 154 SCRA 542, 546.
[7] Re: Request Radio-TV Coverage of the Trial in the Sandiganbayan of the Plunder Cases Against the Former President Joseph E. Estrada, A.M. No. 01-4-03-SC, June 29, 2001, 360 SCRA 248, 259-260.
[8] People v. Godoy, G.R. Nos. 115908-09, March 29, 1995, 243 SCRA 64, 81, citing U.S. v. Sullen, 36 F. 2d 220.
[9] Supra note 3.
[10]
See
[11] Supra note 6, at 546.
[12] Supra note 3.
[13] Supra note 7, at 260.
[14] Separate Opinion of the author in Louis "Barok" C. Biraogo v. The Philippine Truth Commission of 2010, G.R. Nos. 192935 & 193036, December 7, 2010, part of which reads:
Where the government simply wants to tell its story, already labeled as true, well ahead of any court proceedings, and judicial notice is taken of the kind of publicity and the ferment in public opinion that news of government scandals generate, it does not require a leap of faith to conclude that an accused brought to court against overwhelming public opinion starts his case with less than equal chance of acquittal. The presumption of innocence notwithstanding, the playing field cannot but be uneven in a criminal trial when the accused enters trial with a government-sponsored badge of guilty on his forehead. The presumption of innocence in law cannot serve an accused in a biased atmosphere pointing to guilt in fact because the government and public opinion have spoken against the accused. [Citations omitted]
[15] Supra note 3.
[16] Supra note 7, at 259-260.
[17] Supra note 8, at 82, citing J. Perfecto’s dissenting opinion in In re Francisco Brillantes, 42 O.G. 59.
[18] Id. at 94.
[19] In the Matter of the Allegations Contained in the Columns of Mr. Amado P. Macasaet Published in Malaya Dated September 18, 19, 20, and 21, 2007, A.M. No. 07-09-13-SC, August 8, 2008, 561 SCRA 395, 448, citing Roxas v. Zuzuarregui, G.R. Nos. 152072 & 152104, July 12, 2007, 527 SCRA 446.
[20] Id.at 434.
[21] Tiongco v. Savillo, A.M. No. RTJ-02-1719, March 31, 2006, 486 SCRA 48, 64, citing In re Almacen, infra note 22.
[22] In re Almacen, No. L-27654, February 18, 1970, 31 SCRA 562.