Republic of the Philippines
Supreme Court
Baguio City
EN BANC
IN RE: SUPREME COURT RESOLUTION DATED
28 APRIL 2003 IN G.R. NOS. 145817 AND 145822 |
A. C. No. 6332 Present: CORONA, C.J., CARPIO,* VELASCO, JR.,* LEONARDO-DE
CASTRO, BRION, PERALTA, BERSAMIN, DEL CASTILLO, ABAD, VILLARAMA, JR., PEREZ, MENDOZA, SERENO, REYES, and PERLAS-BERNABE, JJ. Promulgated: April 17, 2012 |
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D E C I S I O N
PER CURIAM:
Factual Background
This administrative case originated
when respondent Atty. Magdaleno M. Pea filed an Urgent Motion to Inhibit and
to Resolve Respondents Urgent Omnibus Motion dated 30 January 2003[1] (the
subject Motion to Inhibit) in two consolidated petitions involving respondent
that were pending before the Court.[2]
This motion is directed against the then ponente
of the consolidated petitions, Justice Antonio T. Carpio, and reads in part:
PRIVATE RESPONDENT MAGDALENO M. PEA, pro se, respectfully states:
1.
Despite all the
obstacles respondent has had to hurdle in his quest for justice against Urban
Bank and its officials, he has remained steadfast in his belief that
ultimately, he will be vindicated and the wrongdoers will get their just
deserts [sic]. What respondent is about
to relate however has, with all due respect, shaken his faith in the highest
Court of the land. If an anomaly as atrocious as this can happen even in the
august halls of the Supreme Court, one can only wonder if there is still any
hope for our justice system.
2.
Private
respondent wishes to make clear that he is not making a sweeping accusation
against all the members of this Honorable Court. He cannot however remain
tight-lipped in the face of the overwhelming evidence that has come to his
knowledge regarding the actuation of the ponente
of this Honorable Division.
3.
In the evening of
19 November 2002, private respondent received a call from the counsel for
petitioners, Atty. Manuel R. Singson (through his cell phone number
09189137383) who very excitedly bragged that they had been able to secure an
order from this Honorable Court suspending the redemption period and the
consolidation of ownership over the Urban Bank properties sold during the
execution sale. Private respondent was
aghast because by them, more than two weeks had lapsed since the redemption
period on the various properties had expired.
At that juncture in fact, Certificates of Final Sale had already been
issued to the purchasers of the properties. The only step that had to be
accomplished was the ministerial act of issuance of new titles in favor of the
purchasers.
4.
Private
respondent composed himself and tried to recall if there was any pending
incident with this Honorable Court regarding the suspension of the redemption
period but he could not remember any. In an effort to hide his discomfort,
respondent teased Atty. Singson about bribing the ponente to get such an order.
Much to his surprise, Atty. Singson did not even bother to deny and in
fact explained that they obviously had to exert extra effort because they could
not afford to lose the properties involved (consisting mainly of almost all the
units in the Urban Bank Plaza in Makati City) as it might again cause the bank
(now Export Industry Bank) to close down.
5.
Since private
respondent himself had not received a copy of the order that Atty. Singson was
talking about, he asked Atty. Singson to fax him the advance copy that they
had received. The faxed advance copy that Atty. Singson provided him bore the
fax number and name of Atty. Singsons law office. A copy thereof is hereto attached as Annex
A.
6.
Private
respondent could not believe what he read. It appeared that a supposed Motion
for Clarification was filed by petitioners through Atty. Singson dated 6 August
2002, but he was never furnished a copy thereof. He asked a messenger to immediately secure a
copy of the motion and thereafter confirmed that he was not furnished a copy. His supposed copy as indicated in the last
page of the motion was sent to the Abello Concepcion Regala and Cruz (ACCRA)
Law Offices. ACCRA, however, was never respondents counsel and was in fact the
counsel of some of the petitioners. Respondents copy, in other words, was sent
to his opponents.
7.
The Motion for Clarification
was thus resolved without even giving respondent an opportunity to comment on
the same. In contrast, respondents Motion for Reconsideration of the
Resolution dated 19 November 2001 had been pending for almost a year and yet
petitioners motions for extension to file comment thereon [were] being granted
left and right.
8.
In view of these
circumstances, private respondent filed on 10 December 2002, an Urgent Omnibus
Motion (to Expunge Motion for Clarification and Recall of the 13 November 2002
Resolution). He filed a Supplement to
the said motion on 20 December 2002.
9.
While private
respondent was waiting for petitioners to respond to his motion, he received
sometime last week two documents that confirmed his worst fears. The two
documents indicate that this Honorable Court has not actually granted
petitioners Motion for Clarification.
They indicate that the supposed
13 November 2002 Resolution of this Honorable Court which Atty. Singson had
bragged about WAS A FALSIFIED DOCUMENT!
10.
What private respondent
anonymously received were two copies of
the official Agenda of the First Division of this Honorable Court for 13
November 2002, the date when the questioned Resolution was supposedly
issued.
In both copies (apparently secured from the office of two different
members of the Division, one of which is the copy of the ponente himself), it is clearly indicated that the members
of the Division had agreed that petitioners Motion for Clarification and
Urgent Motion to Resolve were merely NOTED and NOT GRANTED contrary to what was
stated in the 13 November 2002 Resolution. This makes the 13 November 2002
Resolution (at least the version that was released to the parties) a falsified document because it makes it
appear that a Resolution was issued by
the First Division granting petitioners Motion for Clarification when in fact
no such Resolution exists. The real Resolution arrived at by the First
Division which can be gleaned from the Agenda merely NOTED said motion. Copies of the two Agenda are hereto attached
as Annexes B and C.
11.
At this point,
private respondent could not help but conclude that this anomaly was
confirmatory of what Atty. Singson was bragging to him about. The clear and
undeniable fact is the Honorable members
of this Division agreed that petitioners Motion for Clarification would only
be NOTED but the ponente responsible
for the 13 November 2002 Resolution misrepresented that the same was GRANTED.
12.
Respondent is not
just speculating here. He is CERTAIN that the ponente has a special
interest in this case. Recently, he also found out that the ponente made a
special request to bring this case along with him when he transferred from the
Third Division to the First Division. Respondent has a copy of the Resolution
of this Honorable Court granting such request (hereto attached as Annex D).
Indeed, this circumstance, considered with all the foregoing circumstance,
ineluctably demonstrates that a major anomaly has occurred here.
13.
In view of these,
private respondent is compelled to move for the inhibition of the ponente from
this case. This matter should be thoroughly investigated and respondent is now
carefully considering his legal options for redress. It has taken him seven years to seek vindication
of his rights against petitioners, he is not about to relent at this
point. In the meantime, he can longer
expect a fair and impartial resolution of this case if the ponente does not
inhibit himself.
14.
This Honorable
Court has time and again emphasized the importance of impartiality and the
appearance of impartiality on the part of judges and justices. The ponente will
do well to heed such pronouncements.
15.
Finally, it is
has now become incumbent upon this Honorable Court to clarify its real position
on the 19 November 2001 Resolution. It is most respectfully submitted that in
order to obviate any further confusion on the matter, respondents Urgent
Omnibus Motion dated 09 December 2002 (as well as the Supplement dated 19
November 2002) should be resolved and this Honorable Court should confirm that
the stay order contained in the 19 November 2001 Resolution does not cover
properties already sold on execution. xxx (Emphasis supplied; citations omitted.)
In support of his claims to
inhibit the ponente, Atty. Pea
attached to the subject Motion to Inhibit two
copies of the official Agenda for 13 November 2002 of the First Division of
this Court, which he claimed to have anonymously received through the mail.[3] He
also attached a copy of the Courts internal
Resolution regarding the transfer of the case from the Third Division to
the First Division, upon the request of Justice Carpio, to establish the
latters alleged special interest in the case.[4]
In response, the Court
issued a resolution on 17 February 2003 to require Atty. Pea and Atty. Manuel R.
Singson, counsel of Urban Bank in the consolidated petitions, to appear before
the Court on 03 March 2003 for an Executive Session.[5]
The reason for the required
appearance of the two lawyers in the Executive Session is explained in the
Courts Resolution dated 03 March 2003.[6] It
states:
The executive session started at 10:20 a.m. Chief
Justice Hilario G. Davide, Jr. formally opened the executive session and then
requested Associate Justice Jose C. Vitug to act as chair. Justice Vitug stated
that the executive session was called
because the Court is perturbed by some statements made by respondent Atty.
Magdaleno Pea involving strictly confidential matters which are purely
internal to the Court and which the latter cites as grounds in his Urgent Motion
to Inhibit and to Resolve Respondents Urgent Omnibus Motion.
Respondent/movant Atty. Magdaleno Pea and counsel for
petitioner Atty. Manuel R. Singson attended the session.
The matters under inquiry were how
respondent was able to obtain copies of the documents he used as annexes in his
motion to inhibit, and whether the annexes are authentic.
The court also clarified that these matters were to be
taken as entirely different and apart from the merits of the main case.
Justice Vitug called the attention of respondent to
the three (3) annexes attached to the
motion to inhibit, Annexes B, C and D, questioned how the latter was able to secure copies of such documents
which are confidential to the Court and for the sole use of the Office
of the Clerk of Court, First Division
and the Justices concerned.
Annex B is alleged to be a photocopy of the
supplemental agenda of the First Division for November 13, 2002 (pages 61-62),
with an entry in handwriting reading 10 AC on the left side and what appear
to be marginal notes on the right side of both pages. Annex C is alleged to be a photocopy of the
same supplemental agenda of the First Division for November 13, 2002, with
marginal notes on the right side of pages 61-62. Annex D appears to be a photocopy of the
resolution dated September 4, 2002 of the Third Division transferring the
instant case to the First Division (an internal resolution).
Atty. Pea was made to understand that all his
statements taken during this executive session were deemed under oath. Atty. Pea acceded thereto.
Atty. Pea was asked whether he knows any personnel of
the Court who could possibly be the source. Atty. Pea replied in the negative
and added that he obtained those documents contained in the annexes through ordinary
mail addressed at his residence in Pulupandan, Negros Occidental, sometime in
the second or third week of January 2003; but failed to give the exact date of
his receipt. He said Annexes B and C
were contained in one envelope while Annex D was mailed in a separate
envelope. He did not bring the envelopes but promised the Court he would do his
best to locate them. On questions by the
Chief Justice, Atty. Pea admitted that the envelopes may no longer be found. He was unable to respond to the observation
of the Chief Justice that the Court would be in no position to know whether the
envelopes he would later produce would be the same envelopes he allegedly
received. Atty. Pea further admitted that his office did not stamp Received
on the envelopes and the contents thereof; neither did he have them recorded in
a log book.
When asked by the Chief Justice why he relied on those
annexes as grounds for his motion to inhibit when the same were coursed only
through ordinary mail under unusual circumstances and that respondent did not
even bother to take note of the postal marks nor record the same in a log book,
Atty. Pea answered that he was 100%
certain that those documents are authentic and he assumed that they came from
Manila because the Supreme Court is in Manila.
At this juncture, Atty. Pea was reminded that since
he assured the authenticity of Annexes B, C and D, he should be willing
to accept all the consequences if it turns out that there are no such copies in
the Supreme Court or if said annexes turn out to be forged. Atty. Pea manifested that he was willing
to accept the consequences.
When further asked by the Court whether he had seen
the original that made him conclude that those photocopies are authentic, he
replied in the negative, but he believed
that they are official documents of the Court inasmuch as he also received a
copy of another resolution issued by the Court when the same was faxed to him
by Atty. Singson, counsel for petitioner.
Atty. Pea expressed his disappointment upon receiving
the resolution because he was not even furnished with a copy of petitioners
motion for clarification, which was resolved. He found out that his copy was
addressed to Abello Concepcion Regala and Cruz Law Offices, which was never
respondents counsel and was in fact the counsel of some of the petitioners.
He also expressed misgivings on the fact that the
motion for clarification was acted upon even without comment from him, and he admitted that under said circumstances,
he made imputation of bribery as a joke.
As to the statement of the Chief Justice making it of
record that Justice Carpio and Justice Azcuna denied that Annex B is their
copy of pp. 61 and 62 of the agenda, Justice Carpio also said that per
verification, Annex B is not Justice Santiagos copy. Thus, Justice Carpio
added that Annex B does not belong to any of the Justices of the First
Division. It was also pointed out that each of the Justices have their respective
copies of the agenda and make their own notations thereon. The official actions
of the Court are contained in the duly approved minutes and resolutions of the
Court.
Meanwhile, Justice Vitug called the attention of both
Atty. Pea and Atty. Singson to paragraphs 3 and 4 of respondents Urgent
Motion to Inhibit and to Resolve Respondents Urgent Omnibus Motion, which contain
the following allegations: (Atty. Singson) very excitedly bragged that they
had been able to secure an order from this Honorable Court suspending the
redemption period and the consolidation of ownership over the Urban Bank
properties sold during the execution sale. Private respondent was aghast
because by then, more than two weeks had lapsed since the redemption period on
the various properties had expired. In
an effort to hide his discomfort, respondent (Atty. Pea) teased Atty. Singson
about bribing the ponente to get such
an order. Much to his surprise, Atty.
Singson did not even bother to deny and in fact explained that they obviously
had to exert extra effort because they could not afford to lose the properties
involved.
For his part, Atty. Singson admitted that he faxed a
copy of the resolution dated November 13, 2002 to Atty. Pea and expressed his
belief that there was nothing wrong with it, as the resolution was officially released
and received by his office. He explained that his staff merely copied the
parties in the resolution of February 13, 2002 when the motion for
clarification was prepared. Hence, the
respondent was inadvertently not sent a copy.
Atty. Singson further denied the allegations made in
paragraphs 3 and 4 of the motion to inhibit, reasoning that all he said was
about the suspension of the redemption period which was the subject of the
motion for clarification. Atty. Singson
branded as false the allegation of Atty. Pea that he, Atty. Singson, resorted
to bribery in order that the suspension of the redemption period would be
granted.
On questions by the Chief Justice, Atty.
Pea admitted that he was only joking to Atty. Singson when on the cellular
phone he intimated that Justice Carpio could have been bribed because he has a
new Mercedes Benz. When pressed many times to answer
categorically whether Atty. Singson told him that Justice Carpio was bribed,
Atty. Pea could not make any candid or forthright answer. He was evasive.
After further deliberation whereby
Atty. Pea consistently replied that his only source of the documents in the
annexes is the regular mail, the Court Resolved to require Atty. Magdaleno Pea
within fifteen (15) days from today to SHOW CAUSE why he should not be held in
contempt and be subjected to disciplinary action as a lawyer if he will not be
able to satisfactorily explain to Court why he made gratuitous allegations and
imputations against the Court and some of its members that tend to cast doubt
or aspersion on their integrity.
Atty.
Manuel Singson was also required to submit within fifteen (15) days from today
his response to the allegations of Atty. Pea, particularly those in paragraphs
3, 4 and 6 of respondents motion to inhibit.
The
Court excused Attys. Pea and Singson from the executive session at 11:35 a.m.
and resumed its regular session on the agenda.
In
connection with the pleadings filed in these cases, the Court Resolves to GRANT
the motion by counsel for petitioner praying that intervenor-movant Unimega
Properties Holdings Corp. be directed to furnish aforesaid counsel with a copy
of the motion for reconsideration and intervention and that they be granted an
additional period of ten (10) days within which to file comment thereon and
require said intervenor-movant to SUBMIT proof of such service within
five (5) days from notice.
The
manifestation and comment of petitioners in G.R. No. 145882, Benjamin de Leon,
et al., on the motion for reconsideration with intervention by Unimega Property
Holdings Corp. is NOTED. (Emphasis supplied)
Atty. Pea duly submitted
his Compliance with the Courts Order, where he stated that:[7]
PRIVATE RESPONDENT MAGDALENO M.
PEA, pro se, respectfully submits
the following explanation in compliance with the Resolution of this Honorable
Court dated 3 March 2003:
1.
This Honorable
Court in its 3 March 2003 Resolution required respondent to show cause why he
should not be held in contempt and be subjected to disciplinary action as a
result of the allegations he made in his Urgent Motion to Inhibit and to
Resolve Respondents Urgent Omnibus Motion dated 30 January 2003. As this
Honorable Court stated during the 3 March 2003 hearing, the members of the
Court were perturbed by some statements respondent made in the motion.
2.
At the outset,
respondent wishes to apologize for the distress his statements may have caused
the members of this Honorable Court.
While such distress may have been the unavoidable consequence of his
motion to inhibit the ponente, it was certainly not his intended result.
3.
In the course of
the discussion during the 3 March 2003 hearing, it appeared that this Honorable
Court was most concerned with how respondent was able to secure Annexes B and
C of his motion (referring to the two copies of the Supplemental Agenda of
the First Division for 13 November 2002) and why respondent used those
documents as basis for his Urgent Motion to Inhibit.
4.
Respondent had
explained that he received the two annexes by ordinary mail at his residence in
Brgy. Ubay, Pulupandan, Negros Occidental sometime during the second week of
January. The sender of the document was
unknown to respondent because there was no return address. Despite efforts to locate the envelope in
which these documents came, he was unable to do so.
5.
Respondent has no
record keeper or secretary at his residence.
Since he is often in Manila on business, it is usually the househelp who
gets to receive the mail. While he had given
instructions to be very careful in the handling of documents which arrive by
registered mail, the envelopes for
Annexes A and B may have been misplaced or disposed by the househelp
because it did not bear the stamp registered mail.
6.
When respondent
read the documents, he had absolutely no reason to doubt their
authenticity. For why would anyone
bother or go to the extent of manufacturing documents for the benefit of
someone who does not even know him? The
documents contained a detailed list of the incidents deliberated by this Honorable
Court on 13 November 2002. Definitely, not just anyone could have access to such
information. Moreover, respondent
subsequently received another mail from apparently the same sender, this time
containing a pink copy of this Honorable
Courts 4 September 2002 Resolution (Annex D, Urgent Motion to
Inhibit) transferring this case from the Third Division to the First
Division. The receipt of this last document somehow confirmed to respondent that
whoever sent him the copies of the Supplemental Agenda really had access to the
records of this Honorable Court.
7.
Respondent wishes
to reiterate that the main basis of his motion to inhibit was the information
relayed to him by Atty. Singson during their telephone conversation on 19
November 2002. As stated in respondents
Urgent Motion to Inhibit, while Atty. Singson did not categorically claim that
they had bribed the ponente to secure the 13 November 2002 resolution, however, he made no denial when respondent,
in order to obtain information, half-seriously remarked that this was the
reason why the ponente had a brand new car.
Atty. Singson retorted that obviously, they had to take extra-ordinary
measures to prevent the consolidation of ownership of the properties sold as
the bank may again close down. Indeed,
one would normally be indignant upon being accused of bribery but Atty. Singson
even chuckled and instead justified their extra-ordinary efforts.
8.
Respondent very
well knew that mere suspicion was not enough. An implied admission of bribery
on the part of Atty. Singson, sans evidence, may not have been sufficient basis
for a motion to inhibit. However,
respondent did not have to look far for evidence. Atty. Singson in not denying
the allegation of bribery is considered an admission by silence, under Section
32 of Rule 130 of the Rules of Court.
Further, Atty. Singson faxed to him the advance copy of the 13
November 2002 Resolution. To respondent,
that was solid evidence and in fact to this day, Atty. Singson fails to explain
exactly when, from whom, and how he was able to secure said advance copy. The
records of this Honorable Court disclosed that Atty. Singsons official copy of
the 13 November 2002 Resolution was sent to him by registered mail only on 20
November 2002 (a copy of the daily mailing report is hereto attached as Annex
A). Why then was he able to fax a copy
to respondent on 19 November 2002 or a day before the resolution was released
for mailing?
9.
Despite all
these, respondent hesitated to file a motion to inhibit. He only finally decided to proceed when he
received the copies of the Supplemental Agenda. To emphasize, the Supplemental
Agenda merely confirmed what Atty. Singson had earlier told him. Contrary to the apparent impression of this
Honorable Court, respondents motion is not primarily anchored on anonymously
received documents but on the word of petitioners counsel himself. The copies
of the Supplemental Agenda are merely corroborative (albeit extremely
convincing) evidence.
10.
Indeed, any conscientious lawyer who comes
into possession of the information relayed by Atty. Singson and the copies of
the Supplemental Agenda would bring them to the attention of this Honorable
Court. In doing so, respondent was compelled by a sense of duty to inform this
Honorable Court of any apparent irregularity that has come to his knowledge. It was not done out of spite but a deep
sense of respect.
11.
In all honesty, respondent had been advised by
well-meaning friends to publicize the incident and take legal action against
the parties involved. Instead,
respondent decided that a motion to inhibit before this Honorable Court was the
most appropriate channel to ventilate his concerns. Respondent is not out to cast aspersions on
anybody, most especially members of this Honorable Court. He had to file the
Urgent Motion to Inhibit because he sincerely believed, and still firmly
believes, that he could not get impartial justice if the ponente did not recuse himself.
12.
Respondent sincerely regrets that documents considered
confidential by this Honorable Court leaked out and assures this Honorable
Court that he had absolutely no hand in securing them. Respondent
just found himself in a position where he had to come out with those documents
because his opponent was crude enough to brag that their extra-ordinary
efforts to secure a stay order from a certain ponente had bore fruit. Respondent
has devoted at least seven years of his life to this cause. He almost lost his
life and was nearly driven to penury fighting this battle. Certainly, he cannot
be expected to simply raise his hands in surrender.
13.
At this point,
respondent is just relieved that it was confirmed during the 3 March 2003
hearing that Annex C of his Urgent Motion to Inhibit is a faithful
reproduction/replica of the relevant portions of the Supplemental Agenda (TSN
dated 3 March 2003, pp. 72-73 and 81) on record with the first Division. With this, respondent rests his case. [8]
(Emphasis supplied)
On the other hand, Atty.
Singson, as part of his Compliance and Affidavit dated 28 July 2003,[9]
categorically denied having bragged to Atty. Pea and that he did not employ extra
efforts to obtain a favorable suspension order from the Court.[10]
After considering and evaluating
the submissions made by the two lawyers, the Court ordered that a formal
investigation be undertaken by the Office of the Bar Confidant (OBC) on the actions
of Atty. Pea.[11] The Courts Resolution
dated 28 April 2003 in the consolidated petitions, which is the subject matter
of this separate administrative case, reads:
On January 30, 2003, respondent
Magdaleno M. Pea filed an Urgent Motion to Inhibit the ponente of the instant
case. Respondent Pea attached to his
Urgent Motion Annex B, a copy of pp. 61-62 of the First Divisions Agenda of
13 November 2002. Respondent Pea
claimed that Annex B bears the recommended actions, in handwritten notations,
of a member of the Court (First Division) on Item No. 175 of the Agenda. Item No. 175(f) refers to the Urgent Motion
for Clarification filed by petitioner on 7 August 2002. The purported
handwritten notation on Annex B for Item No. 175 (f) is N, or to simply
note the motion. However, the Court
issued a Resolution on 13 November 2002 granting the Urgent Motion for
Clarification. In his Urgent Motion to Inhibit, respondent Pea claimed that the Resolution of 13 November 2002 was
forged because the recommended and approved action of the Court was to simply
note, and not to approve, the Urgent Motion for Clarification.
Thus,
respondent Pea stated in his Urgent motion to Inhibit:
9.
While private respondent was waiting for petitioners to respond to his motion,
he received sometime last week two documents that confirmed his worst
fears. The two documents indicate that
this Honorable Court had not actually granted petitioners Motion for
Clarification. They indicate that the
supposed 13 November 2002 Resolution of this Honorable Court which Atty.
Singson had bragged about WAS A FALSIFIED DOCUMENT!
10.
What private respondent anonymously received were two copies of the official
Agenda of the First Division of this Honorable Court for 13 November 2002, the
date when the questioned Resolution was supposedly issued. In both copies (apparently secured from the
office of two different members of the Division, one of which is the copy of
the ponente himself), it is clearly indicated that the members of the Division
had agreed that petitioners Motion for Clarification and Urgent Motion to
Resolve were merely NOTED and NOT GRANTED contrary to what was
stated in the 13 November 2002 Resolution.
This makes the 13 November 2002 Resolution (at least the version that
was released to the parties) a falsified
document because it makes it appear that a Resolution was issued by the First
Division granting petitioners Motion for Clarification when in fact no such
Resolution exists. The real Resolution arrived at by the First Division which
can be gleaned from the Agenda merely NOTED said motion. Copies of the two Agenda are hereto attached
as Annexes B and C.
11. At this point, private respondent could not
help but conclude that this anomaly was confirmatory of what Atty. Singson was
bragging about. The clear and undeniable fact is the Honorable members of this
Division agreed that petitioners Motion for Clarification would only be NOTED
but the ponente responsible for the 13 November 2002 Resolution misrepresented
that the same was GRANTED.
On 3 March 2003, the Court called
respondent Pea and Atty. Manuel Singson, counsel for petitioner Urban Bank, to
a hearing to determine, among others, the authenticity of the annexes to
respondent Peas Urgent Motion to Inhibit, including Annex B. In the hearing, respondent Pea affirmed the
authenticity of the annexes and even manifested that he was willing to accept
the consequences if the annexes, including Annex B, turned out to be
forgeries.
In
the same hearing, the members of the Court (First Division) informed respondent
Pea that the handwritten notations on Annex B did not belong to any of them.
In particular, Justice Carpio, to whom the case was assigned and the apparent
object of respondent Peas Urgent Motion to Inhibit as the ponente
responsible for the 13 November 2002 Resolution, stated that his recommended
action on Item No. 175(f) was a & f, see RES, meaning on Items 175(a) and
(f), see proposed resolution. In short, the handwritten notations on
Annex B, purportedly belonging to a member of the Court, were forgeries.
For ready reference, attached as Annexes 1 and 2 to this Resolution are a
copy of pp. 61-62 of Justice Carpios 13 November 2002 Agenda, and a copy of
Justice Carpios recommended actions for the entire 13 November 2002 Agenda,
respectively.
In the same hearing, the Court
directed respondent Pea to show cause why he should not be held in contempt
and subjected to disciplinary action for submitting the annexes to his Motion
to Inhibit. In his Compliance dated 3
April 2003, respondent Pea did not give any explanation as to why he attached
B to his Urgent Motion to Inhibit.
In fact, in his Compliance, respondent Pea did not mention at all Annex
B. Respondent Pea, however, stated that he just found himself in a position
where he had to come out with those documents because his opponent was crude
enough to brag that their extra-ordinary efforts to secure a stay order from
a certain ponente had bore fruit. In
petitioners Opposition to the Urgent Motion to Inhibit, Atty. Singson stated
that he categorically denied that he had bragged to PEA about the Resolution
of this Honorable Court dated November 13, 2002 and that extra efforts have
been exerted to obtain the same.
IN VIEW OF THE FOREGOING, the Court
hereby DIRECTS the Office of the Bar
Confidant to conduct a formal
investigation of respondent Atty. Magdaleno M. Pea for submitting to the Court
a falsified document, Annex B, allegedly forming part of the confidential
records of a member of the Court, in support of his Motion to Inhibit that same
member of the Court. The Office of
the Bar Confidant is directed to submit its findings, report and recommendation
within 90 days from receipt of this Resolution.[12]
(Emphasis supplied.)
During the proceedings with
the OBC, Attys. Pea[13]
and Singson[14] duly submitted their
respective Affidavits.
While the administrative
case was still pending, some of the other parties in the consolidated petitions
specifically, Benjamin L. de Leon, Delfin Gonzalez, Jr., and Eric L. Lee,
(the De Leon Group), the petitioners in G.R. No. 145822 manifested before the
Court other malicious imputations allegedly made by Atty. Pea during the
course of the proceedings in the said petitions. They moved that these be
considered as sufficient and additional basis to cite him for contempt of
court.[15]
The Court likewise referred this matter to the OBC.[16]
In reply to the accusations
leveled against him by the De Leon Group, respondent Pea denied having used
abrasive, insulting and intemperate language in his pleadings; and argued that
his statements therein were privileged and could not be used as a basis for liability.[17]
He also accused Urban Bank and its directors and officers of violating the rule
against forum shopping by dividing themselves into separate groups and filing
three Petitions (G.R. Nos. 145817, 145818 and 145822) against the same Decision
of the Court of Appeals with the same causes of actions and prayers for relief.[18]
The OBC thereafter conducted
a hearing, wherein respondent Pea and Atty. Singson appeared and testified on
matters that were the subject of the administrative cases.[19]
Several hearings were also held with respect to the additional contempt charges
raised by the De Leon Group. Thereafter, respondent Pea filed his Memorandum.[20]
The OBC submitted to the
Court its Report on the instant administrative case and made recommendations on
the matter (the OBC Report). As a matter of policy, this Court does not quote
at length, nor even disclose the dispositive recommendation of the OBC in
administrative investigations of members of the bar. However, Atty. Pea, despite the fact that the OBC
Report is confidential and internal, has obtained, without authority, a copy thereof
and has formally claimed that this Court should apply to him the
non-penalty of an admonition against him, as recommended by the OBC.[21]
Furthermore, he has already
voiced suspicion that the present ponente
of the consolidated petitions[22]
from which this separate administrative case arose, Justice Maria Lourdes P. A.
Sereno, would exclude or suppress material evidence found in the OBC report from
her ponencia in the parent case in alleged
gratitude to the alleged help that Justice Carpio had given her by allegedly
recommending her to the Supreme Court.[23]
The specific allegation on the supposed loyalty by one Member of the Court to
another, without any extrinsic factual basis to support it, is too undignified
to warrant a response in this Decision. To allay his fears that Justice Sereno
would participate in any undue attempt to suppress material evidence, the Court
shall summarize and quote from the OBC Report the four charges of professional misconduct
in connection with the instant administrative case.
On the first charge of gratuitous imputations against members of the
Court, the OBC found that respondent Pea gave the impression that some anomaly
or irregularity was committed by the Courts First Division in issuing the questioned
13 November 2002 Resolution. According to respondent, Justice Carpio, the then ponente of the consolidated petitions,
purportedly changed the action of the First Division from simply NOTING the motion
for clarification filed by Urban Bank to GRANTING it altogether. The OBC
opines that although respondent Pea may appear to have been passionate in the
subject Motion to Inhibit, the language he used is not to be considered as malicious
imputations but mere expressions of concern based on what he discovered from
the internal documents of the Court that he had secured.[24] Moreover,
the OBC ruled that respondent did not make a direct accusation of bribery
against Justice Carpio, and the formers remark about the latter having
received a new Mercedes Benz was not made in the presence of the court, but was
uttered in a private mobile phone conversation between him and Atty. Singson.[25] Respondents
profound apologies to the Court were also taken cognizance by the OBC, which
suggests the imposition of a simple warning against any such future conduct.[26]
Further, the OBC recommended
the dismissal of the second charge that
respondent supposedly submitted falsified documents to this Court as annexes in
the subject Motion to Inhibit, specifically Annex B which appears to be a
photocopy of the agenda of the First Division on 13 November 2002 with some
handwritten notes.[27]
It reasoned that the submission of falsified documents partakes of the nature
of a criminal act, where the required proof is guilt beyond reasonable doubt, but
respondent Pea is not being charged with a criminal offense in the instant
case. The OBC noted the statement of the Clerk of Court during the 03 March
2003 Executive Session that Annex B does not exist in the records.[28]
On the third charge for contempt against respondent filed by the De Leon
Group and Atty. Rogelio Vinluan, their counsel, the OBC likewise suggests the
dismissal of the same. To recall, respondent submitted pleadings in the
consolidated petitions where he allegedly charged Atty. Vinluan of having used
his influence over Justice Arturo B. Buena to gain a favorable resolution to
the benefit of his clients.[29] The
OBC suggests that respondent be acquitted of the charge of using abrasive and
disrespectful language against Members of the Court and his fellow lawyers, but
nevertheless recommends that respondent be advised to refrain from using
unnecessary words or statements in the future.[30]
Finally, the OBC desisted
from making a finding on the fourth
charge of forum-shopping leveled by respondent Pea against Urban Bank and
the individual bank directors. In his counter-suit, respondent accused the bank
and its directors and officers of having violated the rule against
forum-shopping by splitting into three distinct groups and filing three
separate petitions to question the unfavorable decision of the Court of
Appeals.[31] However, since not all
the parties to the consolidated petitions participated in the hearings in the
instant case, the OBC recommends that separate proceedings be conducted with
respect to this counter-suit in order to afford Urban Bank and all of the concerned
directors and officers, including their respective counsel, to defend
themselves and present witnesses and/or evidence in support of their cause.[32]
Taking the foregoing in
consideration, the OBC submitted the following recommendations for approval of
this Court:
RECOMMENDATIONS:
WHEREFORE, in
light of the foregoing premises, it is respectfully recommended the following:
A.
On
the charge of gratuitous allegations:
1.
To
DISMISS the charge on the ground that the statements in his Motion to Inhibit,
etc., do not constitute malicious imputations as he was merely expressing his
concern of what he has discovered based on the documents he has obtained.
However, let this case serve as his FIRST WARNING, being an officer of the
court, to be more cautious, restraint and circumspect with his dealings in the
future with the Court and its Member.
2.
To
ADMONISH respondent for making such non-sense and unfounded joke against
Honorable Justice Antonio T. Carpio the latter deserves due respect and
courtesy from no less than the member of the bar. Likewise, Atty. Singson
should also be ADVISED to be more cautious in his dealing with his opposing counsel
to avoid misconception of facts.
B.
On
the charge of falsification:
1.
To
DISMISS the charge of submitting falsified documents on ground of lack of legal
basis. A charge of submitting falsified
documents partakes of the nature of criminal act under Art. 172 of the Revised
penal Code, and the quantum of proof required to hold respondent guilty thereof
is proof beyond reasonable doubt. This is to avoid conflicting findings in the
criminal case. The administrative proceedings
of the same act must await of the outcome in the criminal case of falsification
of document.
C.
On
the contempt of court filed by private complainant:
1.
To
DISMISS the charge considering that the statements cited by Atty. Pea in his
pleadings previously filed in related cases, while it may appear to be
offending on the part of the complainant, but the same do not categorically
contain disrespectful, abusive and abrasive language or intemperate words that
may tend to discredit the name of the complainant. Respondent merely narrated
the facts based of his own knowledge and discoveries which, to him, warranted
to be brought to the attention of the court for its information and
consideration. He must be ADVISED however, to refrain from using unnecessary
words and statements which may not be material in the resolution of the issued
raised therein.
D.
On
the counter-charge of forum-shopping
1.
To
RE-DOCKET the counter-charge of forum shopping, as embodied in the Comment
dated 22 August 2003 of Atty. Pea, as a separate administrative case against
the petitioners and counsels in G.R. 145817, G.R. No. 145818 and G.R. No.
145822;
2.
To
FURNISH the petitioners and their counsel a copy of the said comment dated 22
August 2003 for their information.
3.
To
REQUIRE the petitioners and their counsel, SINGSON VALDEZ & ASSOCIATES,
represented by ATTY. MANUEL R. SINGSON, ANGARA ABELLO CONCEPCION REALA &
CRUZ represented by ATTY. ROGELIO A. VINLUAN, ATTY. STEPHEN GEORGE S. D. AQUINO
and ATTY. HAZEL ROSE B. SEE to comment thereon within ten (10) days from receipt
thereof.[33] (Emphasis supplied)
ISSUES
In these administrative
matters, the salient issues for the Courts consideration are limited to the
following:
(a) whether respondent Pea made gratuitous allegations and
imputations against members of the Court;
(b) whether he can be held administratively liable for submitting
allegedly falsified documents consisting of internal documents of the court;
(c) whether he can likewise be held administratively liable for the
contempt charges leveled against him in the Manifestation and Motion filed by the
De Leon Group; and
(d) whether Urban Bank and the individual bank directors and officers
are guilty of forum shopping.
OUR RULING
A. First
Charge: Malicious and Groundless Imputation of Bribery and Wrongdoing against a
Member of the Court.
We do not adopt the
recommendation of the OBC on this charge.
Respondent Pea is
administratively liable for making gratuitous imputations of bribery and
wrongdoing against a member of the Court, as seen in the text of the subject Motion
to Inhibit, his statements during the 03 March 2003 Executive Session, and his
unrelenting obstinacy in hurling effectively the same imputations in his
subsequent pleadings. In moving for the inhibition of a Member of the Court in
the manner he adopted, respondent Pea, as a lawyer, contravened the ethical
standards of the legal profession.
As officers of the court,
lawyers are duty-bound to observe and maintain the respect due to the courts
and judicial officers.[34]
They are to abstain from offensive or menacing language or behavior before the court[35]
and must refrain from attributing to a judge motives that are not supported by
the record or have no materiality to the case.[36]
While lawyers are entitled
to present their case with vigor and courage, such enthusiasm does not justify
the use of foul and abusive language.[37]
Language abounds with countless possibilities for one to be emphatic but
respectful, convincing but not derogatory, illuminating but not offensive.[38] A
lawyers language should be forceful but dignified, emphatic but respectful as
befitting an advocate and in keeping with the dignity of the legal profession.[39]
In the subject Motion for
Inhibition, respondent Pea insinuated that the then ponente of the case had been bribed by Atty. Singson, counsel of
Urban Bank in the consolidated petitions, in light of the questioned 13
November 2002 Resolution, suspending the period of redemption of the levied
properties pending appeal. The subject Motion to Inhibit reads in part:
4. Private respondent [Pea] composed himself and tried to
recall if there was any pending incident with this Honorable Court regarding
the suspension of the redemption period but he could not remember any. In an effort to hide his discomfort,
respondent teased Atty. Singson about bribing the ponente to get such an order.
Much to his surprise, Atty. Singson did not even bother to deny and in fact
explained that they obviously had to exert extra effort because they could not
afford to lose the properties involved (consisting mainly of almost all the
units in the Urban Bank Plaza in Makati City) as it might cause the bank (now
Export Industry Bank) to close down.[40]
(Emphasis supplied.)
During the 03 March 2003 Executive
Session by the First Division of this Court, respondent Pea explained that his
reference to the bribe was merely a joke in the course of a telephone
conversation between lawyers:
CHIEF JUSTICE DAVIDE:
Regarding
that allegation made by Atty. Pea on [sic] when you made mention earlier of
him saying about Justice Carpio?
ATTY. SINGSON:
Yes,
Your Honor, he said kaya pala may bagong Mercedez [sic] si
Carpio, eh.
CHIEF JUSTICE:
He
said to you that?
ATTY. SINGSON:
Yes,
that was what he was referring to when he said about bribery.
xxx xxx xxx
ATTY. PEA:
First
of all I would like to everything that he said, he told me that he got, they
got a stay order, it is a stay order
from the Supreme Court through Justice Carpio and then I gave that joke. That
was just a joke really. He got a new Me[r]cedez [sic] Benz, you see, he was
the one who told me they got a stay order from the Supreme Court through
Justice Carpio, that was what happened
CHIEF JUSTICE:
You
mean you made a joke?
ATTY. PEA:
You
Honor?
CHIEF JUSTICE;
You
made a joke after he told you supposedly that he got (interrupted)
ATTY. PEA:
He got a stay order from Justice Carpio.
CHIEF JUSTICE:
And you say that is the reason why he got a
new Mercedez [sic] Benz, you made it as a joke?
ATTY. PEA:
Your
Honor, that is a joke between lawyers.
CHIEF JUSTICE;
That
is correct, you are making it as a joke?
ATTY. PEA:
Your
Honor, I think, because how they got (interrupted)
CHIEF JUSTICE:
If it were a joke why did you allege in
your motion that it was Atty. Singson who said that Justice Carpio was bribed
or the ponente was bribed, is that also another joke?[41]
(Emphasis supplied.)
Respondent Pea insinuated
ill motives to the then ponente of
the consolidated petitions with respect to the issuance of the 13 November 2003
Resolution. To respondents mind and based on his interpretation of the two
copies of the Agenda which he anonymously received, the First Division agreed
only to simply note Urban Banks Motion for Clarification. Nevertheless, the questioned
Resolution, which Atty. Singson sent to him by facsimile, had instead granted
the Motion. Hence, respondent Pea attributed the modification of the action of
the First Division to simply note the Motion, one apparently unfavorable to
respondent Pea, to Justice Carpio, who had supposedly received a Mercedes Benz
for the supposedly altered resolution.
However, as pointed out by
the Court in the Resolution dated 03 March 2003, each Justice has his own
respective copy of the Agenda, where he can make his own handwritten notations
on the action for each item and case, but [t]he official actions of the Court
are contained in the duly approved minutes and resolutions of the Court.[42] Hence,
contrary to the insinuations made by respondent Pea, Justice Carpio had not altered the action of the First
Division in granting Urban Banks Motion for Clarification in the consolidated petitions,
as in fact, this was the approved resolution agreed upon by the Justices then
present. The ponente of the case had not recommended that the Motion for
Clarification be simply noted, but in fact, had referred to a separate
resolution, i.e., a) & f) See
RES., disposing of the said item (F) including item (A), which is the Motion
to Inhibit Associate Justice Artemio Panganiban. In addition to the official
minutes of the 13 November 2002 Session,[43]
Justice Carpio submitted for the record his written recommendation on the
agenda item involving the consolidated petitions, to prove that this was his
recommendation, and the minutes confirm the approval of this recommendation.[44]
The Court, through a
unanimous action of the then Members of the First Division, had indeed adopted
the recommended and proposed resolution of Justice Carpio, as the then ponente, and granted the Motion for Clarification
filed by Urban Bank. It is completely wrong for respondent Pea to claim that
the action had been issued without any sufficient basis or evidence on record,
and hence was done so with partiality. A mere adverse ruling of the court is
not adequate to immediately justify the imputation of such bias or prejudice as
to warrant inhibition of a Member of this Court, absent any verifiable proof of
specific misconduct. Suspicions or insinuations of bribery involving a member
of this Court, in exchange for a favorable resolution, are grave accusations.
They cannot be treated lightly or be jokingly alleged by parties, much less
by counsel in pleadings or motions. These suspicions or insinuations strike not
only at the stature or reputation of the individual members of the Court, but
at the integrity of its decisions as well.[45]
Respondent Pea attempts to
draw a connection and direct correlation between Urban Banks failure to
furnish him a copy of its Motion for Clarification, purportedly denying him an
opportunity to refute the allegations therein, and the supposedly corrupt means by which the unfavorable
Resolution was thereby obtained. This is completely untenable and
irresponsible. Had he simply confined the issue to an alleged deprivation of
due process, then there would hardly be any controversy regarding his conduct
as a lawyer and an officer of the Court. The purported lack of notice of the Motion
for Clarification filed the bank in the consolidated petitions could have been
raised as a valid concern for judicial resolution. Instead, respondent Pea insinuates
ill motives on the part of Members of the Court imputing the failure of a
private party to give him due notice to be, in effect, a failure of the Court.
This merits the exercise of the Courts disciplinary powers over him as a member
of the Bar. To allege that bribery has been committed by members of the
judiciary, a complainant especially, a lawyer must go beyond mere
suspicions, speculations, insinuations or even the plain silence of an opposing
counsel.
Based on the two lawyers
disclosures during the 03 March 2003 Executive Session, respondent Pea appears
to have been caught by surprise by his telephone conversation with Atty.
Singson, who informed him of the suspension of the redemption period by the
Court and its issuance of a Stay Order over the execution pending appeal. The
astonishment of respondent would seem natural, since he was caught unawares of
Urban Banks Motion for Clarification, which was the subject matter of the 13
November 2002 Resolution. His supposed joke, which he himself initiated and
made without provocation, was disdainful all the same, as it suggested that the
bank had obtained the Order from this Court in exchange for an expensive luxury
automobile.
Atty. Pea cannot be excused
for uttering snide and accusatory remarks at the expense of the reputation and
integrity of members of this Court, and for using those unsubstantiated claims
as basis for the subject Motion for Inhibition. Instead of investigating the
veracity of Atty. Singsons revelations, respondent read too much into the
declarations and the purported silence of opposing counsel towards his joke.
Respondent made unfounded imputations of impropriety to a specific Member of
the Court. Such conduct does not befit a member of the legal profession and
falls utterly short of giving respect to the Court and upholding its dignity.
Respondent Peas defense
that the allegation of bribery and collusion between Justice Carpio, Atty.
Singson and the petitioners was a joke fails to convince, as in fact, he was
deadly serious about the charges he raised. Respondent insisted that his
alleged insinuation of ill motives was just a joke between two lawyers
engaged in a private telephone conversation regarding the case. Although the
courts and judicial officers are entitled to due respect, they are not immune
to criticisms nor are they beyond the subject matter of free speech, especially
in the context of a private conversation between two individuals. In this case,
though, respondent himself was responsible for moving the private matter into
the realm of public knowledge by citing that same joke in his own Motion for
Inhibition filed before this Court. In general, courts will not act as overly
sensitive censors of all private conversations of lawyers at all times, just to
ensure obedience to the duty to afford proper respect and deference to the
former. Nevertheless, this Court will not shy away from exercising its
disciplinary powers whenever persons who impute bribery to judicial officers and
bring such imputations themselves to the courts attention through their own pleadings
or motions.
Contrary to his assertion that the accusation of bribery was
only made in jest, respondent has never backed down since he first made the
accusation in January 2003 and continually raises as an issue in the consolidated
petitions how Justice Carpio purportedly changed the agreed action of the First
Division when he issued the questioned 13 November 2002 Resolution, even after
the Court in the 03 March 2003 Executive Session had precisely explained to him
that no impropriety had attended the issuance of the said Resolution. In the Motions to Inhibit
dated 21 January 2010[46]
and 22 August 2011,[47] he
repeatedly insists on the anomalous/unusual circumstances surrounding the
issuance by Justice Carpio of the same questioned Resolution, which was
allegedly contrary to the handwritten notes made in the copies of the Agenda
that he received. Respondent Pea most recently capitalized on the purported
alteration or falsification supposedly committed by Justice Carpio by filing an
ethics complaint against the latter, where he alleged that:
Sometime thereafter,
respondent Pea received a copy of the Suppl [sic] Agenda 1st
Division of this Honorable Court with a notation in handwriting 10AC on the
left side and marginal notes on the right side. A perusal thereof, reveals that
when this Honorable Court took up the matter of the Motion for Clarification of
petitioner Urban Bank, this Honorable Court merely N or Noted the Motion
for Clarification of petitioner Urban Bank and did not grant the same.
xxx xxx xxx
Considering
the foregoing (I was not furnished a copy of the Motion for Clarification, or
required to comment by the Honorable Justice Carpio and opposing counsel, Atty.
Singson, being able to secure an advance copy of the assailed 13 November 2002
Resolution), the matter brought out in the Executive Session and the admission
made by Atty. Enriqueta Vidal and the Honorable Hilario Davide and the
Honorable Justice Vitug with regard to his copy of the Suppl [sic] Agenda 1st
Division of this Honorable Court which was sent to respondent Pea was correct
and that the Motion for Clarification was merely N or NOTED. However, the
Honorable Justice Carpio issued a Resolution Granting the Motion for
Clarification.
Therefore,
the Honorable Justice Carpio issued the
13 November 2002 Resolution in an anomalous/falsified manner and in clear
contravention of this Honorable Courts Decision to merely Note the same.
A clear judicial administrative violation.[48]
(Emphasis supplied.)
Clearly, the bribery joke
which respondent himself initiated has gotten the better of him. Respondent has
convinced himself of the veracity of his own malicious insinuations by his own repetitious
allegations in his subsequent pleadings.
The Court in the past refrained
from imposing actual penalties in administrative cases in the presence of
mitigating factors, such as the acknowledgment of the infraction and the
feeling of remorse.[49]
In this case, the profound apologies[50]
offered by respondent Pea for his insinuations against Justice Carpio are
insincere and hypocritical, as seen by his later actions. Although he expressed
remorse for having caused the Court distress because of his statements,[51] he
refuses to acknowledge any unethical conduct on his part for his unfounded
accusations against the actions of Justice Carpio with respect to the questioned
13 November 2002 Resolution. Worse, he has persisted in attributing ill-motives
against Justice Carpio, even after the latter had recused himself from the case
since 2003.
This is not the first time that respondent resorted to
initiating unfounded and vicious attacks against the integrity and impartiality
of Members of this Court. Earlier in the proceedings of the consolidated petitions,
respondent assailed how retired Justice Arturo B. Buena showed
bias in favor of the De Leon Group, when the latters petition in G.R. No.
145822 was reinstated on a second motion for reconsideration:[52]
It has come to the attention
and knowledge of herein respondent that petitioners counsel has been making
statement to the effect that they could
get a favorable resolution from the Supreme Court, on their second motion for
reconsideration. In short, petitioners counsel is practically saying that
they are sure to get the Supreme Court to entertain the second motion for
reconsideration even if it violates the rules.[53]
1. The motion for voluntary inhibition is directed at Justice
Buena because it was he who penned the challenged Resolution, which granted the
second motion for reconsideration in violation of the Rules. It was he who
crafted, drafted and finalized the said Resolution. It was he who tried to
justify the violation of the Rules. It
was from Justice Buenas office that contents of the challenged Resolution was
apparently leaked to the petitioners counsel long before its promulgation.[54]
What miracle did Atty.
Vinluan perform and what phenomenon transpired? Why are herein petitioners very special in the eyes of Justice Buena?[55]
It is quite obvious that the
partiality of Justice Buena has been
affected by his relationship with Atty. Vinluan, as evidenced by the
above-described facts and circumstances.[56]
Surprisingly,
Justice Arturo B. Buena, the assigned ponente, reinstated the petition without
any explanation whatsoever, and in gross violation of Sec. 4, Rule 56 of the
1997 Rules of Civil Procedure. This was highly irregular by itself. But what made
reinstatement more suspicious was the fact that even before the release of the
Resolution reinstating the petition in G. R. No. 145822, the counsel for
petitioners, Atty. Rogelio Vinluan, was already boasting that he would be able
to reinstate their petition. Obviously, even before the release of the Resolution
in question, Atty. Vinluan already knew what Justice Buenas resolution would
be.[57]
(Emphasis supplied.)
In no less than six motions,[58] he
similarly accused former Chief Justice
Artemio V. Panganiban of prejudice based on his affiliation with the Rotary
Club, wherein some of the directors and officers of Urban Bank were also
members. He even claimed that Justice Panganiban went to Urban Bank to meet
with some of the directors and officers, who consulted him on the legal issues
arising from criminal suits in relation to the facts of the main petitions,
citing only an unnamed reliable source:
The friendship and close
relationship of the three (Justice Panganiban and Urban Banks Arsenio Archit
Bartolome and Teodoro Ted Borlongan) went beyond their being Rotarians. As a
matter of fact, Justice Panganiban was seen a couple of times going to Urban
Bank to see Archit and/or Ted, before the banks closure. Respondent has also discovered, through a reliable source, that Justice
Panganiban was known to have been consulted, and his legal advice sought, by
Borlongan and Bartolome, in connection with the above-entitled cases, while
the same was still pending with the Court of Appeals and in connection with the
four (4) criminal cases filed the with the MTC [Municipal Trial Court] at Bago
City by herein respondent against Borlongan, et al., for introducing falsified
documents in a judicial proceeding. In the latter cases, it was even Justice Panganiban who furnished a copy of the SC Decision
in Doris Ho vs. People (his own
ponencia) to Bartolome and Borlongan, for the purpose of giving his friends a
legal basis in questioning the issuance of the warrants of arrest against
Borlongan and the rest of his co-accused in Criminal Case Nos. 6683 to
6686, MTC Bago City (now appealed to
Supreme Court; see Footnote No. 1 below).[59] (Emphasis supplied.)
Lastly, respondent Pea
raised the issue of unmitigated partiality against retired Justice Antonio Eduardo B. Nachura on the ground that the
latter resolved a separate case involving related issues to the main petitions
in favor of the opposing parties:
3. The Petitioners in G. R. No. 143591, entitled Teodoro C. Borlongan, et al., v. Magdaleno
M. Pea, et al, are also the same petitioners in the above-entitled
consolidated cases G. R. Nos. 145817 and 145822; and the respondents in the
above-entitled consolidated case G. R. No. 162562. Under the circumstances, herein private respondent is ABSOLUTELY
CERTAIN that the extreme bias and prejudice of Justice Nachura against him in
G. R. No. 143591 would certainly be carried over to the above-entitled
consolidated cases.[60] (Emphasis supplied.)
Not only has respondent Pea
failed to show sincere remorse for his malicious insinuations of bribery and
wrongdoing against Justice Carpio, he in fact continually availed of such
unethical tactics in moving for the inhibition of eleven Justices of the Court.[61]
Indeed, his pattern of behavior can no longer be seen as isolated incidents
that the Court can pardon given certain mitigating circumstances. Respondent
Pea has blatantly and consistently cast unfounded aspersions against judicial
officers in utter disregard of his duties and responsibilities to the Court.
In Estrada v. Sandiganbayan,[62]
the Court chose to indefinitely suspend Atty. Alan Paguia, when the latter
imputed devious motives and questioned the impartiality of members of the
Court, despite its earlier warnings:
The Supreme Court does not
claim infallibility; it will not denounce criticism made by anyone against the
Court for, if well-founded, can truly have constructive effects in the task of
the Court, but it will not countenance any wrongdoing nor allow the erosion of
our peoples faith in the judicial system, let alone, by those who have been
privileged by it to practice law in the Philippines.
Canon 11 of the Code of
Professional Responsibility mandates that the lawyer should observe and
maintain the respect due to the courts and judicial officers and, indeed,
should insist on similar conduct by others. In liberally imputing sinister and
devious motives and questioning the impartiality, integrity, and authority of
the members of the Court, Atty. Paguia has only succeeded in seeking to impede,
obstruct and pervert the dispensation of justice.
Respondent Peas actions
betray a similar disrespectful attitude towards the Court that cannot be
countenanced especially for those privileged enough to practice law in the
country. To be sure, Atty. Paguia has just been recently reinstated to the
practice of law after showing sincere remorse and having renewed his belief and
respect for the Court, almost eight years from the time the penalty was imposed.
Thus, the Court orders respondent Pea be indefinitely
suspended from the practice of law for his apparently irredeemable habit of
repeatedly imputing unfounded motives and partiality against members of the
Court.
B. Second Charge: Submission of Falsified
Internal Court Documents.
We likewise reject the
recommendation of the OBC with respect to the second charge.
It must be noted that the
Court, in its Resolutions dated 03 March 2003 and 28 April 2003, expressed
administrative concern over Atty. Peas behavior on three points: (1) his
submission of a falsified court document, (2) his access to Supreme Court
documents that are highly restricted and confidential, and (3) his use of court
documents (genuine or false) in his pleadings.
Respondent Pea submitted a falsified
internal court document, Annex B, had illegal access to confidential court
documents, and made improper use of them in the proceedings before this Court. The
Court directed the initial investigation by the OBC based on the charge that
respondent Pea had submitted a falsified document to this Court.[63]
The charge of falsification stems from his submission of an alleged copy of the
Courts Agenda[64] (Annex B) purportedly
belonging to a member of the Division handling the case. The pertinent portion
of the subject Motion to Inhibit reads:
10. What private respondent anonymously received were two copies of
the Official Agenda of the First Division of this Honorable Court for 13
November 2002, the date when the questioned Resolution was supposedly issued. In both copies (apparently secured from the
office of two different members of the Division, one of which is the copy of the
ponente himself), it is clearly indicated that the members of the Division
had allegedly agreed that petitioners Motion for Clarification and Urgent
Motion to Resolve were merely NOTED and NOT GRANTED contrary to what was stated
in the 13 November 2002 Resolution (at
least the version that was released to the parties) a falsified document
because it makes it appear that a Resolution was issued by the First Division
granting petitioners Motion for Clarification when in fact no such Resolution
exists. The real Resolution arrived at by the First Division which can be
gleaned from the Agenda merely NOTED said motion. Copies of the two Agenda are
hereto attached as Annexes B and C.[65]
(Emphasis supplied.)
During the 03 March 2003 Executive
Session, respondent Pea expressed his absolute conviction that the document
attached as Annex B was an exact copy of the Agenda of the then ponente of the case.[66]
It was later discovered, however, that no such copy existed, either in the
latters records or in those of any other member of the Division concerned:
CHIEF JUSTICE:
We make of
record again that insofar as Annex B is concerned it was confirmed by the
Office of the Clerk of Court of this Division that the original of that does
not appear in the record, is not in the record and that nobody, none of the
members of the division has a copy of, that copy of Annex B of your pleading
does not come from anyone of the members of the division. That is the position of
the Court now as explained earlier. Specifically Mr. Justice Carpio said that
Annex B, specifically with that capital A. capital C preceded by 10 did not
come from his office, was not based on the document in his office and that is
also true to each of the members of this Division.[67]
(Emphasis
supplied.)
The falsification, subject
of the instant administrative case, lies in the fact that respondent Pea
submitted to the Court a document he was absolutely certain, at the time of
such submission, was a copy of the Agenda of the then ponente. In supporting the subject Motion to Inhibit, respondent
misled the Court by presenting a document that was not what he claimed it to
be. Contrary to the assurances made in the same motion[68] he
made allegations that were false and submitted documents that were not borne
out by the records of this case. Instead of verifying the contents of Annex
B, which came to him through dubious means, he unquestioningly accepted their
genuineness and veracity. Despite the Courts own explanation that Annex B
does not exist, he continues to insist on its existence.
Candor and truthfulness are
some of the qualities exacted and expected from members of the legal
profession.[69] Thus, lawyers shall
commit no falsehood, nor shall they mislead or allow the court to be misled by
any artifice.[70] As disciples of truth,
their lofty vocation is to correctly inform the court of the law and the facts
of the case and to aid it in doing justice and arriving at correct conclusions.[71]
Courts are entitled to expect only complete honesty from lawyers appearing and
pleading before them.[72] In
the instant case, the submission of a document purporting to be a copy of the
Agenda of a member of this Court is an act of dishonesty that puts into doubt
the ability of respondent to uphold his duty as a disciple of truth.
Respondent Pea would argue,
however, that falsification as a criminal act under the Revised Penal Code
was not judicially established during the proceedings of the OBC investigation
and, thus, he cannot be held liable for falsification. The comparison of the
present administrative and disciplinary proceedings with a criminal charge of
falsification is misplaced.
The subject matter of
administrative proceedings is confined to whether there is administrative
liability for the submission of a falsified document namely Annex B, which
respondent Pea claims (albeit mistakenly) to be a genuine copy of the Agenda
of the ponente. The issue, then, is
whether he transgressed the ethical standards demanded of lawyers, by which
they should be truthful in their dealings with and submissions to the Court.
The investigation clearly does not include the determination of criminal
liability, which demands a different modicum of proof with respect to the use
of falsified documents. At this time, the Court makes no definitive
pronouncement as to the guilt of respondent over his violation of the
provisions of the Revised Penal Code regarding the use of falsified documents.
In brief, respondent led
this Court to believe that what he submitted was a faithful reproduction of the
ponentes Agenda, just to support the
subject Motion to Inhibit. The original of the purported copy was later found
to have been inexistent in the courts records. Regardless of whether or not Annex
B was criminally falsified or forged is immaterial to the present
disposition. What is now crucial is whether respondent was candid and truthful
in claiming absolute certainty with respect to the genuineness and authenticity
of his submissions.
The assertion of respondent
Pea that the typewritten contents of Annexes B and C appear to be genuine
and accurate is unconvincing and cannot exonerate him from liability. Although
Annex C was determined to be in the Courts records,[73]
the bare similarity of its typewritten contents with those of Annex B will
not shield him from disciplinary action. Although the typewritten contents of
the two Agendas appear identical, the
handwritten notes located at the right-hand side are different. Respondent,
in fact, claims that the handwritten notes come from two different members of
the Division, one of them the then ponente
of the case.
The subject Motion to
Inhibit is anchored on the veracity of the handwritten remarks not on the
printed contents which are allegedly contrary to the substance of the Courts
13 November 2002 Resolution faxed to him by Atty. Singson. Respondent Pea
cannot claim the genuineness of Annex B (which is not in the records), based
on the apparent identity of its printed contents with those of Annex C (which
is in the records). The handwritten notes are markedly different and, according
to him, made by two different members of the Court. In his Motion to Inhibit, respondent
failed to substantiate his assertion that Annex B and the notes made therein
belonged to any member of this Court.
More importantly, the Court
notes that respondent Pea has not
explained, to the Courts satisfaction, how he managed to obtain internal and
confidential documents.
Respondent Pea would have
the Court believe that he happened to obtain the two copies of the Agenda
(Annexes B and C) and the internal Resolution (Annex D) in two separate
envelopes anonymously sent via ordinary mail. He supposedly received them
sometime during the second or the third week of January 2002 in his
home-cum-office in Pulupandan, Negros Occidental.[74]
He, however, failed to present the envelopes containing the documents, but
explained that these may have already been thrown away, since he had no system
of recording incoming communications in his home/office in the province. The
Court is not persuaded by his account of the receipt of these restricted court documents.
The Agenda, the Courts
action thereon, as well as the Resolution (Annex D), are internal documents
that are accessible only to court officers,[75]
who are bound by strict confidentiality.
For respondent Pea to have been able to secure originals or photocopies of the
Courts Agenda is disturbing because that ability implies a breach of the rules
of strict confidentiality in the Court. Notably, the Agenda purportedly sent to
him did not contain all the items for deliberation by the Courts First
Division for that day; the copies sent were limited to the incidents pertaining
to his pending case. This circumstance can hardly be considered as random,
since the exact item (Item No. 175) of concern for him specifically, the Courts
action on Urban Banks Motion for Clarification was what had been sent
directly to his provincial home/office, and what he conveniently acquired
thereby.
The Court finds it hard to
believe that confidential court records just coincidentally and anonymously
appeared in the provincial home/office of respondent Pea through ordinary
mail. Also incredible is his explanation that the envelopes that contained the
documents, and that could have led to the identification of their source were
opportunely misplaced or thrown away, despite the grave importance he had
ascribed to them. It is highly improbable that a personnel of the Court would breach
the rules of strict confidentiality[76]
to send to litigants or their counsel the Courts Agenda, together with
handwritten notes and the internal resolutions of the Court, without any
prodding or consideration, and even at the risk of incurring grave criminal and
administrative penalties.[77]
Respondent Peas account of having lost the envelopes appears too convenient
an excuse to assuage the Courts skepticism towards this breach of
confidentiality within its own halls.
Worse, respondent Pea
flaunted his continued access as recent as 2010 to other internal and
confidential records in the proceedings of this case. Despite the
administrative proceedings leveled against him for having illicitly obtained
the confidential Agenda of the Courts First Division, he brazenly resorted
again to such unethical behavior by surreptiously acquiring no less than the
confidential and still unreleased OBC Report on the very administrative case of
which he himself is the subject.
In his Motion to
Vacate/Recall dated 20 February 2010,[78]
respondent Pea prayed that the questioned 13 November 2002 Resolution be
recalled on the ground that there was a mistake in its issuance based on the
copies of the Agenda he had mysteriously received. In support of this motion,
he casually cited and attached a photocopy
of the confidential OBC Report.[79] This
OBC Report has not been released to any party, and was then in fact still under
deliberation by this Court. Curiously, the attached photocopy bears marks
corresponding to the unreleased copy of the signed OBC Report, as it actually appears in the rollo of the administrative case.[80] Unfortunately,
respondent did not explain in the said motion how he was able to obtain a copy thereof.
Regardless of the means employed
by respondent, his acquisition of the OBC Report from the Courts own records already
speaks of an appalling pattern of unethical behavior that the Court will no
longer ignore. Even as he was the subject of an administrative case for
obtaining confidential court records, he continued to have access to other
internal documents of the Court. His actions have established that he is
incorrigible and not likely to change. His continued obstinacy in disregarding
ethical standards and ignoring the rule of confidentiality of court records deserves
nothing less than the ultimate penalty of disbarment from the profession.
Moreover, in the subject Motion
to Inhibit, respondent Pea even tried to bolster his claim that the then ponente of the case had a special
interest in the case by attaching an internal
resolution of the Court.[81]
In the said Internal Resolution dated 04 September 2002, the two consolidated petitions
(G.R. Nos. 145817 and 145822) were transferred from the Third Division to the
First Division, where Justice Carpio was subsequently assigned.[82] How
respondent Pea was again able to secure this internal document is another
disturbing mystery in this case, especially since the resolution was sent by
the Third Division Clerk of Court to the First Division Clerk of Court, the
Raffle Committee and the Judicial Records Office only, and not to any of the
parties. Similar to the copies of the Agenda of the First Division, respondent
Pea again purportedly received this Internal Resolution by mail.[83]
What is more alarming in this instance is that he received not just any
photocopy of the Courts Resolution, but a pink
copy itself, the very same material used for such internal resolutions in
the Courts records. As he himself admitted, respondent Pea could not have
gotten hold of the said internal Resolution, which was on its face declared an internal matter, without the assistance
of a person who had access to the records of his case in the Court.
This claimed major anomaly
of the transfer of the case, which is being decried by respondent in the
subject Motion to Inhibit, stems from his gross misunderstanding of the
internal rules of the Court.
Upon the reorganization of
the members of various Divisions due to the retirement of other Justices, the
cases already assigned to a Member-in-Charge are required to be transferred to
the Division to which the Member-in-Charge moves.[84]
Hence, in this case, Justice Carpio, similar to other members of the Court at
that time, did not lose his case assignments but brought them with him when he
transferred to the First Division. In fact, the transfers of the assigned cases
to the new Division are made by request from the Member-in-Charge, because otherwise
the rollo of the cases of which he is
Member-in-Charge will be retained by a Division in which he is no longer a
member. Thus, the transfer of the two consolidated petitions to the First
Division that is being heavily criticized by respondent Pea was simple
compliance with the established internal procedures of the Court, and not
attributable to any undue interest or malicious intention on the part of the then
ponente to retain the case for
himself. Respondent had raised irresponsible suspicions[85]
against the integrity of the ponente
without any understanding of the Supreme Courts processes in the transfer of
cases.
Respondent Pea had, in
fact, previously used this deplorable tactic of obtaining internal court
records to call for the inhibition of Justices of the Court. In previously moving
for the inhibition of Justice Buena, he assailed how supposedly the retired Justice
violated the rules with respect to a second motion for reconsideration when the
latter reinstated the Petition of the De Leon Group in G.R. No. 145822.
Respondent attributed the special treatment extended by Justice Buena to his
supposed association with the De Leon Groups counsel, Atty. Rogelio Vinluan of
the ACCRA Law Office. To establish this special treatment, he attached a complete
copy of the Minutes of the Division[86] composed
of 58 pages and showing 77 cases dismissed by the Court due to failure to pay
the required fees, which Justice Buena allegedly did not reinstate:
10. A review of the records of the Supreme Court will show that for
the past several months alone, seventy-seven petitions were dismissed by the
Supreme Court, mainly for failure to pay the required fees. Out of that number,
NONE WERE REINSTATED upon the filing of a SECOND MOTION FOR RECONSIDERATION. If
Justice Buena willingly disregarded the Rules by reinstating petitioners
petition (De Leon Group Petition in G. R. No. 145822) upon the filing of a
second motion for reconsideration, then he should have reinstated also the
aforesaid 77 cases in order to be fair. At the very least, he should now
reinstate all of said 77 cases if only to show that he is not biased in favor
of herein petitioners. He could not and will not do so, however, because those
cases are not favored ones. Photocopies of the case titles and numbers, as well
as the resolutions dismissing the aforesaid seventy-seven cases, consisting of
58 pages, are attached hereto collectively as Annex A.[87]
Respondent Pea was able to
attach to this motion for inhibition the portions of the Courts Minutes on 12
April 2000, 07 February 2001, 12 February 2001, 14 February 2001, 26 February
2001, 28 March 2001, 14 April 2001, 18 April 2001, 26 April 2001, 16 May 2001,
11 July 2001, 08 August 2001, 13 August 2001, 20 August 2001, 29 August 2001,
05 September 2001, 24 September 2001, 08 October 2001 and others which were
undated. The attached Minutes pointed to specific cases which were dismissed
for failure to pay the necessary fees, among others. It was unclear if the
cases were specifically assigned to Justice Buena or if respondent Pea
represented any of the parties therein.
Nevertheless, what stands
out is that he obtained confidential Minutes of the Court pertaining to other
cases, which specifically dismissed or denied petitions on the failure of the
parties to pay necessary fees. This could not have just been mere coincidence
again since it required some legal understanding and familiarity with the cases
in order to be able to sift through and identify the kinds of cases, which were
dismissed or denied on such grounds. Although the parties to these cases were
notified and given copies of the Courts resolutions, what respondent Pea
obtained were the actual copies of the Minutes that included other items in the
Courts Agenda and that were not released to the public. Under the Courts own
Internal Rules, only the Minutes pertinent to the parties are those that are
distributed to the parties concerned.[88] Yet,
respondent was able to attach wholesale Minutes of dozens of cases to his
pleading.
Although the above
confidential documents that were accessed by respondent totaling 58 pages in
all are not the subject of the investigation of the administrative case, his previous
receipt or acquisition of the minutes of the Court as early as 2000 confirm in
no uncertain terms his access to internal records of the Court, not just of his
case, but of other pending cases and that this access has continued as late as
2010. It seems rather ironic that respondent Pea would accuse his fellow
lawyers of allegedly having an inside track to members of the Court, when he in
turn, on record, had mysteriously easy access to confidential court documents. That
internal documents of the Court (whether voluminous or in relation to his case
or otherwise) would suddenly find themselves in the hands of respondent Pea
through registered mail is too incredible for this Court to attribute any good
faith on his part.
Even if the Court were to give
some modicum of credence to the unlikely story of how respondent Pea came upon
these internal documents, it looks with disapproval upon his actions with
respect to those documents, which were supposedly sent to him anonymously. If
indeed lawyers were sent official judicial records that are confidential in
nature and not easily accessible, the ethical recourse for them would be to
make a candid and immediate disclosure of the matter to the court concerned for proper investigation, and not as
proof to further the merits of their case. In fact, respondent himself
acknowledged that reporting the leaked out documents was a duty he owed to
the Court[89] more so in this case,
since the documents were sent anonymously and through dubious circumstances.
No issue would have arisen
with respect to his continuing fitness to be a member of the legal profession,
if he had simply reported his receipt of the leaked court documents, and
nothing more. Yet, he not only failed to immediately disclose the suspicious circumstances
of his having obtained confidential court records; he even had the tenacity to
use the documents sent through suspicious means to support his request for
inhibition. As a lawyer, he should have known better than to hinge his motions
and pleadings on documents of questionable origins, without even verifying the
authenticity of the contents by comparing them with sources of greater
reliability and credibility.
If respondent Pea
entertained doubts as to the veracity of the Divisions actions with respect to
the pending incidents in his case, as allegedly embodied in the anonymous
Agendas sent to him, then he should have simply checked the records to verify
the genuineness of the questioned 13 November 2002 Resolution faxed to him by
Atty. Singson. It is through officially released resolutions and decisions that
parties and their counsel are informed of and guided by the Courts actions on pending
incidents, and not by the confidential and handwritten notes of the individual
members of the Court. Respondents wholesale reliance on copies of the Agenda
purported to be those of individual members of the Court and anonymously sent
to him is grossly misplaced.
The Court has already
explained that there was in fact no discrepancy between the agreed upon action of
the Division and the questioned 13 November 2002 Resolution, contrary to the
assertions of respondent Pea. He grounded the subject Motion to Inhibit on the
fact that the anonymously sent copies of the Agenda indicate that the Motion
for Clarification filed by Urban Bank should simply be noted,[90]
but it was instead granted by the
Court. The Court, however, made clear during the 03 March 2003 Executive Session,
that there was nothing irregular about annotating the first item with SEE RES
(See Resolution) and marking the rest of the incidents with N (Noted). In
fact, these annotations conform with the recommended actions submitted by the ponente for that particular item.[91] The
Resolution identified in the first item governs and contains the actual disposition
of two of the incidents in the pending case.[92]
To be sure, what governs as the final action of the Court en banc or in Division is the minutes
of the proceedings,[93]
which lists the dispositions of the items taken up during the session, reviewed
by the members, and finally approved by the Chief Justice or the Division chairperson.
Contrary to respondents suspicions, the action taken by the Division in its 13
November 2002 Session was accurately reflected in the questioned Resolution
released by the Court.
Respondent Pea has no one
else to blame but himself, since he allegedly, blindly and mistakenly relied
on anonymously sent unverified photocopies of the Courts Agenda, in order to
support his call for the inhibition of a member of the Court. Neither can he
rely on the alleged bragging of Atty. Singson which the latter denies to
impute ill motive to judicial officers. Whether Atty. Singson actually exerted
extraordinary efforts to secure the suspension Order or freely divulged it in
their telephone conversation, respondent should have been more circumspect in
making grave accusations of bribery (jokingly or not) without any extrinsic
evidence or proof to back up his claim.
Respondent Pea is
sanctioned for knowingly using confidential and internal court records and
documents, which he suspiciously obtained in bolstering his case. His unbridled
access to internal court documents has not been properly explained. The
cavalier explanation of respondent Pea that this Courts confidential documents
would simply find themselves conveniently falling into respondents lap through
registered mail and that the envelopes containing them could no longer be
traced is unworthy of belief. This gives the Court reason to infer that laws
and its own internal rules have been violated over and over again by some court
personnel, whom respondent Pea now aids and abets by feigning ignorance of how
the internal documents could have reached him. It is not unreasonable to even
conclude that criminal liabilities have been incurred in relation to the
Revised Penal Code[94]
and the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act, with Atty. Pea benefitting from
the same.[95] Respondents actions
clearly merit no other penalty than disbarment.
This second penalty of
disbarment is all the more justified by the earlier imposition of an indefinite
suspension. If taken together, these two violations already speak of respondent
Peas inherent unworthiness to become a member of the Bar. Although an
indefinite suspension opens up the possibility of future reinstatement after a clear
showing of remorse and a change of ways (as in the case of Atty. Paguia),
respondent has shown to be incorrigible and no longer deserves the compassion
of the Court. Not only has respondent thumbed his nose on the integrity of the
persons occupying the Bench by casting grave aspersions of bribery and
wrongdoing, he has also showed disdain for the sanctity of court procedures and
records by his haughty display of illegal access to internal Supreme Court documents.
C. Third Charge: Respondent Peas
insinuations of wrongdoing and collusion between members of the Court and
another counsel.
Aside from attributing
bribery to the ponente, respondent
Penas allegations of collusion between previous members of the Court and the
counsel for the De Leon Group are unfounded and contravene the ethical duties
of respondent to the Court and his fellow lawyers. His actions reveal a pattern
of behavior that is disconcerting and administratively punishable.
However, considering the
ultimate penalty of disbarment earlier imposed on respondent Pea, the Court no
longer finds the need to squarely rule on the third charge, as any possible
administrative liability on this matter would be a mere superfluity.
D. Fourth Charge: The charge of forum shopping
is not the proper subject of the present allegations of administrative
misconduct.
The counter-charge of forum
shopping has been made by respondent Pea against petitioners and their
respective counsel in his defense.[96] However,
this is already beyond the scope of the subject matter of this administrative
case. It will be recalled that he assailed the fact that Urban Bank, the De
Leon Group, and the other group of bank officers filed three separate Petitions
(G.R. Nos. 145817, 145818 and 145822, respectively) before the Court. They all questioned
therein the rulings of the appellate court affirming the grant of execution
pending appeal.
Considering that this claim
is the subject of administrative penalties, and that other interested parties
did not participate in the investigation conducted by the OBC herein, prudence
and equity dictate that the Court reserve judgment for the meantime until the
subject is fully ventilated and all parties are given an opportunity to argue
their cases.
The charges of forum shopping
are hereby dismissed without prejudice to the filing and/or hearing of separate
administrative complaints[97]
against petitioners Urban Bank, Corazon M. Bejasa, Arturo E. Manuel, Jr., P.
Siervo H. Dizon, Delfin C. Gonzales, Jr., Benjamin L. de Leon and Eric L. Lee,
and their respective counsel of record. Considering their deaths, petitioners
Teodoro C. Borlongan and Ben T. Lim, Sr., can no longer be included in any
future administrative action in relation to these matters. On the other hand,
Ben Y. Lim, Jr., was mistakenly impleaded by respondent Pea and therefore, is
not a real and direct party to the case.
EPILOGUE
As parting words, the Court
herein highlights the disorder caused by respondent Peas actions in the
administration of justice. In order to foreclose resort to such abhorrent
practice or strategy in the future, the Court finds the need to educate the
public and the Bar.
Lawyers shall conduct
themselves with courtesy, fairness and candor towards their professional
colleagues.[98] They shall not, in their
professional dealings, use language that is abusive, offensive or otherwise
improper.[99] Lawyers shall use
dignified language in their pleadings despite the adversarial nature of our
legal system.[100] The use of intemperate
language and unkind ascriptions has no place in the dignity of a judicial
forum.[101]
The Court cannot countenance
the ease with which lawyers, in the hopes of strengthening their cause in a
motion for inhibition, make grave and unfounded accusations of unethical conduct
or even wrongdoing against other members of the legal profession. It is the
duty of members of the Bar to abstain from all offensive personality and to
advance no fact prejudicial to the honor or reputation of a party or witness,
unless required by the justness of the cause with which they are charged.[102]
It has not escaped the
Courts attention that respondent Pea has manifested a troubling history of praying
for the inhibition of several members of this Court or for the re-raffle of the
case to another Division, on the basis of groundless and unfounded accusations
of partiality. A sampling of his predilection for seeking the inhibition of, so
far, eleven Justices of this Court, in an apparent bid to shop for a
sympathetic ear, includes the following:
1.
Peas Motion to Inhibit (Re:
Justice Artemio V. Panganiban) dated 12 January 2001;
2.
Urgent Motion to Inhibit (Re: Justice Arturo Buena)
dated 20 August 2001;
3.
Letter Complaint (Re: Justice Buena) dated 28
October 2001;
4.
Motion to Inhibit (Re: Justice Panganiban)
dated 18 February 2002;
5.
Reply (Re: Justice Panganiban)
dated 15 March 2001;
6.
Urgent Motion to Inhibit (re: ponente) dated 30 January 2003;
7.
Motion to Inhibit (Re: Justice Leonardo A.
Quisumbing) dated 08 July 2004;
8.
Motion to Inhibit (Re: Justice Panganiban)
dated 28 December 2004;
9.
Motion to Inhibit (Re: Justice Eduardo Antonio
B. Nachura) dated 17 December 2007;
10.
Motion for Inhibition (Re: Justice Panganiban)
dated 28 December 2004;
11.
Reiteratory Motion to Recuse
dated 03
March 2006 (Re: Justice Panganiban);
12.
Motion to Inhibit (Re: Justice Nachura) dated
07 January 2008;
13.
Urgent Consolidated Motion
to Reiterate Request for Inhibition (Re: Justice Antonio T. Carpio) dated 02 June 2008;
14.
Urgent Motion for Re-Raffle (Re: Justice Presbitero J.
Velasco) dated 10 July 2008;
15.
Supplement to the Urgent
Motion for Re-Raffle (Re: Justices Conchita Carpio Morales and Dante O. Tinga) dated 04
August 2008;
16.
Urgent Consolidated Motion
for Re-Raffle (Re:
Justices Carpio Morales, Tinga and Velasco) dated 14 August 2008;
17.
Urgent Consolidated Motion
for Re-Raffle (Re:
Justices Arturo D. Brion, Leonardo A. Quisumbing, Carpio Morales, Tinga,
Velasco, Quisumbing) dated 28 August 2008;
18.
Motion to Inhibit (Re: Justice Carpio) dated
21 January 2010;
19.
Very Urgent Motion to Inhibit
(Re:
Justices Carpio Morales and Ma. Lourdes P. A. Sereno) dated 30 March 2011;
20.
Very Urgent Motion to
Inhibit dated
22 August 2011 (Re: Justice Sereno); and
21.
Very Urgent Motion to
Re-Raffle
dated 01 September 2011 (Re: Justices Carpio, Jose Perez and Sereno).
The grounds for inhibition
of the Justices in these motions of respondent ranged from flimsy and sparse
relations between the parties and the members of the Court to wild accusations
of partiality on mere conjectures and surmises. For example, respondent accused
former Chief Justice Panganiban of bias based on his affiliation with the
Rotary Club, in which the late Teodoro Borlongan, then President of Urban Bank,
was likewise an officer.[103]
He moved for the inhibition of Justice Sereno on the ground that she was a
close judicial ally of Justice Carpio, and in turn, the latter, according to respondent,
was antagonistic toward him during the Courts 03 March 2003 Executive Session
in this administrative case.[104]
Meanwhile, respondent
recently sought to have the case re-raffled from the Courts Third Division
because Justice Jose Portugal Perez, a member thereof, was allegedly appointed
to the Court through the endorsement of former Executive Secretary Eduardo
Ermita, who was a close ally of the then Chairman Emeritus of Urban Bank,
former President Fidel V. Ramos.[105] He similarly sought the inhibition of Justice Dante
O. Tinga for his close professional and political ties with former President
Ramos.[106] He likewise assailed the
partiality of Justice Arturo D. Brion, considering he is a law school classmate
and fraternity brother of Chief Justice Renato C. Corona, who was then
Presidential Legal Counsel of former President Ramos. Thus, according to
respondent Pea, President Ramos, through Justice Corona, will most likely
exercise his influence over the Honorable Justice Brion.[107]
Curiously, in asking for the
inhibition of Justice Nachura for his alleged partiality in favor of Urban Bank
because of his decision in a related case[108]
and his prior appointment as Undersecretary of Education during the Ramos
presidency, respondent Pea impliedly prayed that his case be specifically
retained in the Courts Third Division.[109]
Respondents peculiar request, which was not included in his other motions,
gives the impression that in his quest to have Justice Nachura inhibit himself,
respondent nonetheless did not want his case to be raffled out of the Third
Division. If his only intention was to raise the possibility of bias against
Justice Nachura alone, then it would not matter whether his case remained with
the Third Division, with another member being designated to replace Justice
Nachura, or raffled to another Division altogether. Respondent Peas odd
prayer in his motion for inhibition bore signs of an intent to shop for a forum
that he perceived to be friendly to him, except for one member.
In Chin v. Court of Appeals,[110]
the Court warned against litigants contumacious practice in successively
asking for the inhibition of judges, in order to shop for one who is more friendly
and sympathetic to their cause:
We agree that judges have
the duty of protecting the integrity of the judiciary as an institution worthy
of public trust and confidence. But under the circumstances here, we also agree
that unnecessary inhibition of judges in a case would open the floodgates to
forum-shopping. More so, considering that Judge Magpale was not the first judge
that TAN had asked to be inhibited on the same allegation of prejudgment. To allow successive inhibitions would
justify petitioners apprehension about the practice of certain litigants
shopping for a judge more friendly and sympathetic to their cause than previous
ones.
As held in Mateo, Jr. v. Hon. Villaluz, the
invitation for judges to disqualify themselves need not always be heeded. It is
not always desirable that they should do so. It might amount in certain cases
to their being recreant about their duties. It could also be an instrument
whereby a party could inhibit a judge in the hope of getting another more
amenable to his persuasion. (Emphasis supplied.)
The Courts warning in Chin applies squarely to the multiple
and successive requests for inhibition and re-raffle filed by respondent Pea.
Lest other litigants follow his lead, the Court condemns in no uncertain terms
the practice of shopping for a justice, most especially in the highest tribunal
of the land. This abhorrent practice is indeed one of the reasons why this
administrative case has dragged on for years. Not only does it impute ill
motive and disrepute to the members of the Court, but it likewise delays the
administration of justice.
Oddly enough, respondent
Pea has been less concerned about the inordinate delay in resolving the case
than about making sure that the wrong or unfriendly Justices in his
perception do not sit and rule on the issues. He has thrived on the
protracted interruptions caused by his numerous motions for inhibition and
re-raffle, resulting in the case languishing in this Court for years and
clogging its dockets. Respondent stands out for this disorderly behavior and
must be made an example so that litigants be reminded that they cannot bend or toy
with the rules of procedure to favor their causes. Worse, respondent has thrown
no less than the rules of basic courtesy in imputing sinister motives against
members of the Court.
Based on the foregoing, the
Court finds that respondent Pea has violated several canons of professional
and ethical conduct expected from him as a lawyer and an officer of the court.
His conduct, demeanor and language with respect to his cause of action in
this Court, no less tend to undermine the integrity and reputation of the
judiciary, as well as inflict unfounded accusations against fellow lawyers. Most
disconcerting for this Court is his uncanny ability to obtain confidential and
internal court records and to use them shamelessly in his pleadings in
furtherance of his cause.
In addition, the Court cannot
just make short shrift of his inclination towards casually moving for the
inhibition of Justices of the Court based on unfounded claims, since he has not
shown remorse or contrition for his ways. Atty. Pea has shown and displayed in
these proceedings that he has fallen short of the ethical standards of the
noble profession and must be sanctioned accordingly.
PREMISES CONSIDERED, for violating Canons 8, 10 and 11 of the Code of
Professional Responsibility and for failing to give due respect to the Courts
and his fellow lawyers, respondent Atty. Magdaleno M. Pea is hereby DISBARRED from the practice of law,
effective upon his receipt of this Decision, and his name is ORDERED STRICKEN from the Roll of
Attorneys.
Let a copy of this Decision be
attached to respondent Peas personal record in the Office of the Bar
Confidant and other copies thereof be furnished the Integrated Bar of the
Philippines.
The En Banc Clerk of Court is
directed to INVESTIGATE how respondent
was able to secure copies of the following: (a) copies of the Agenda dated 13
November 2002 of the Courts First Division, attached as Annexes B and C of
respondent Peas Urgent Motion to Inhibit and to Resolve Respondents Urgent
Omnibus Motion dated 30 January 2003; (b) the Internal Resolution dated 04
September 2002, attached as Annex D of the same motion; (c) the Report and
Recommendation dated 11 December 2007, issued by the Office of the Bar
Confidant, attached as Annex 5 of respondent Peas Motion to Vacate/Recall
dated 20 February 2010; and (d) the Minutes of the Court, consisting of
58-pages, attached as Annex A of the Reply (to Petitioners Opposition to
Motion to Urgent Motion to Inhibit) dated 31 October 2001 filed by respondent
Pea. She is further required to SUBMIT
such an investigation report with recommendations on the administrative and
disciplinary liabilities, if any, of all court personnel possibly involved
therein, as well as suggestions for protecting confidential and internal court
documents of pending cases within NINETY
(90) DAYS from receipt of this Resolution.
SO ORDERED.
RENATO C. CORONA
Chief Justice
(No part) ANTONIO T. CARPIO
Associate Justice TERESITA J. LEONARDO-DE CASTRO Associate Justice DIOSDADO
M. PERALTA Associate Justice MARIANO
C. DEL CASTILLO Associate Justice MARTIN
S. VILLARAMA, JR. Associate Justice JOSE
CATRAL MENDOZA Associate Justice BIENVENIDO
L. REYES Associate Justice |
(No part) PRESBITERO J. VELASCO, JR. Associate Justice ARTURO
D. BRION Associate Justice LUCAS
P. BERSAMIN Associate Justice ROBERTO
A. ABAD Associate Justice JOSE
PORTUGAL PEREZ Associate Justice MARIA
LOURDES P. A. SERENO Associate Justice ESTELA
M. PERLAS-BERNABE Associate Justice |
* No part.
[1] Rollo (Vol. 1), pp. 16-24.
[2] Urban Bank, Inc., v.
Magdaleno M. Pea, G.R. No. 145817 and Delfin
C. Gonzales, Jr., et al., v. Magdaleno M. Pea, G.R. No. 145822. A separate
petition entitled Magdaleno M.
Pea, v. Urban Bank, Inc., Teodoro Borlongan, Delfin C. Gonzalez, Jr., Benjamin
L. de Leon, P. Siervo H. Dizon, Eric L. Lee, Ben T. Lim, Jr., Corazon Bejasa,
and Arturo Manuel, Jr., and docketed as G.R. No. 162562, was later filed and
consolidated with the two earlier petitions. (See Urban Bank v. Pea, G.R. No. 145817, 145822, 162562, 19 October
2011)
[3] Annexes A, B and C, of the Motion; rollo (Vol. 1), pp. 25-32.
[4] Annex D, of the Motion; id. at 33.
[5] The manifestation of the Office of the Chief Legal
counsel of PDIC with motion with leave of court praying that the Export and
Industry Bank with office address at 36th Floor, Export and Industry
Bank Plaza, Chino Roces Avenue corner Gil Puyat Avenue, Makati City be
furnished with all the pleadings and other court processes vice the PDIC for
reasons mentioned therein is NOTED and GRANTED.
Before acting on respondent Magdalena
Penas Urgent Motion to Inhibit and to Resolve Respondents Urgent Omnibus
Motion dated January 30, 2003, the Court Resolves to direct Atty. Magdaleno M.
Pea and Atty. Manuel R. Singson to APPEAR before this Court on Monday, March
3, 2003, at 10:00 a.m.
Let
this resolution be served personally on aforesaid lawyers, if feasible. (SC
Resolution dated 17 February 2003; rollo [Vol.
1], pp. 34-35)
[6] SC Resolution dated 03 March 2003; id., pp. 38-43.
[7] Respondent Peas Compliance dated 03 April 2003; rollo (G.R. No. 145817), Vol. 2, pp. 1333-1340.
[8] Id. at 1333-1338.
[9] Rollo (Vol. 1), pp. 74-84.
[10] Petitioner Urban Banks Opposition (to Urgent Motion to Inhibit and to Resolve Respondents Urgent Omnibus Motion) dated 28 February 2003; rollo (Vol. 1), pp. 119-131.
[11] SC Resolution dated 28 April 2003, at 4; rollo (Vol. 1), p. 54.
[12] Rollo (Vol. 1), at 51-55.
[13] Respondent Peas Affidavit dated 27 June 2003; id., pp. 68-71.
[14] Atty. Singsons Affidavit dated 28 July 2003; id., pp. 75-84.
[15] Petitioner De Leon Groups Manifestation and Motion dated 14 May 2003; id., pp. 174-182.
[16] SC Resolution dated 09 June 2003; id., pp. 183-184; see also SC Resolution dated 19 January 2005, which allowed the OBC to proceed with the investigation of the contempt charge against respondent Pea; id., pp. 325-326.
[17] Respondent Peas Comment dated 22 August 2003; id., pp. 196-220.
[18] Id.
[19] Office of the Bar Confidant TSN dated 10 August 2006; rollo (Vol. 3), pp. 714-774.
[20] Respondent Peas Memorandum for the Respondent dated 03 November 2006; rollo (Vol. 2), pp. 363-379.
[21] Respondent Peas Motion to Vacate/Recall dated 20 February 2010; rollo (G. R. No. 145822), Vol. 2, pp. 3286-3293.
[22] The three consolidated petitions in the main case include: (1) Urban Bank, Inc., v. Magdaleno M. Pea, G.R. No. 145817; (2) Delfin C. Gonzales, Jr., et al., v. Magdaleno M. Pea. G.R. No. 145822; and (3) Magdaleno M. Pea v. Urban Bank, Inc., et al., G.R. No. 162562.
[23] In fact, with all due respect, I believe the Honorable Justice Sereno will attempt to protect the Honorable Justice Carpio by perhaps separating the Admin Case No. 6332, thus separating the findings of the OBC regarding the Agendas, and thus protecting the Honorable Justice Carpio. (Respondent Peas Letter dated 16 September 2011, p. 6, which is Annex A of his Supplement to the Very Urgent Motion for Re-Raffle dated 20 September 2011)
[24] While respondent may appear to have been passionate and agitated in
his language in his motion, the same may not be considered as malicious imputations as he
is merely expressing concern of what he has discovered based on the documents
he has obtained apparently from an anonymous sender and based on his own
discoveries. (OBC Report dated11
December 2007, p. 50; rollo [Vol. 4],
p. 1706)
[25] Nevertheless, it is worthy [to note] that in respondents motion to
inhibit, etc., the latter did not make a direct accusation of bribery against
the ponente but merely narrated events, which in respondents view, warranted
the inhibition of the said ponente. The statements made by respondent in his
conversation with Atty. Singson, particularly his remark about Justice Carpio
having a new Mercedez Benz was not made in the presence of or so near a court
nor in any public place or in a published material as to create any impression
in the mind of the public or malign the integrity of any member of the
Court. Rather it was part of a private conversation between respondent and
Atty. Singson only. (OBC
Report dated 11 December 2007, p. 51; rollo
[Vol. 4], p. 1707)
[26] In the highest interest of justice, let the apology and the begging
of herein respondent touches the Courts indulgence and compassion and accord
respondent the benefit of the doubt on his sincerity. However, let this
benevolence of the Court serve, as his first warning, being an officer of the
court, to be more cautious, restraint and circumspect with his dealing in the
future with the Members of the Court and the Supreme Court. (OBC Report dated 11 December 2007, p. 52; rollo [Vol. 4], p. 1708)
[27] OBC Report dated 11 December 2007, p. 53; rollo (Vol. 4), p. 1709.
[28] During the Executive Session on 3 March 2003, Hon. Justice Antonio
T. Carpio categorically denied that Annex B belong to him or any of the Members of the First Division. On the other hand, Hon. Justice Jose C. Vitug
admitted that Annex C might be his copy and the same is on the record of the case as
confirmed by the Division Clerk of Court. The Clerk of Court, however, averted that there is no such Annex B in the records and
the notation 10 AC as appearing in Annex B is not present in Annex C. (OBC Report dated 11
December 2007, p. 53; id., p. 1709)
[29] During the
investigation Atty. Vinluan appears. He identifies the affidavit he executed on
16 May 2003, in support of the manifestation and motion of private petitioners.
He enumerates several pleadings of respondent in related cases imputing that
the uses his influence over Justice Buena to gain favorable resolution of the
case. He vehemently denies that imputations. According to him this unfounded
accusation tends to discredit his long-standing name and hard-earned reputation
before the Supreme Court and the legal profession. (OBC Report dated 11
December 2007, p. 58; id., p. 1714)
[30] The statements may
not appear to be abrasive and disrespectful but it contains words that may
offend the ego of the complainant, but prudence dictates that respondent as a
lawyer, he must refrain from using unnecessary words and statements which may
not be necessary in the resolution of the incidents raised therein. (OBC Report
dated 11 December 2007, p. 59; id., p. 1715)
[31] Atty. Pea argues
that petitioners and their counsel violated the rule against forum-shopping
when they filed three separate petitions for certiorari questioning the
decision of the Court of Appeals raising the same issues and reliefs before
this Court. (OBC Report dated 11 December 2007, p. 60; id., p. 1716)
[32] Petitioners and
their counsel should be given an opportunity to aptly defend himself to produce
witness/es and/or evidence relative thereto and to be heard by himself or by
counsel. (OBC Report dated 11 December 2007, p. 61; id., p. 1717)
[33] OBC Report dated 11 December 2007, pp. 47-62; id., pp. 1703-1718.
[34] Code of Professional Responsibility, Canon 11.
[35] Code of Professional Responsibility, Canon 11, Rule 11.03.
[36] Code of Professional Responsibility, Canon 11, Rule 11.04.
[37] Saberon v. Larong, A.C. No. 6567, 16 April 2008, 551 SCRA 359, citing Rubio v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 84032, 29 August 1989, 177 SCRA 60, 63.
[38] Id., citing Torres v. Javier, A.C. No. 5910, 21 September 2005, 470 SCRA 408, 421; Nuez v. Astorga, A.C. No. 6131, 28 February 2005, 452 SCRA 353, 364, citing Hueysuwan-Florido v. Florido, 465 Phil. 1, 7 (2004); Cruz v. Cabrera, A.C. No. 5737, October 25, 2004, 441 SCRA 211, 219.
[39] Ng v. Alar, A.C. No. 7252, 22 November 2006, 507 SCRA 465, citing Hueysuwan-Florido v. Florido, A.C. No. 5624,20 January 2004, 420 SCRA 132, 136-137.
[40] Respondent Peas Urgent Motion to Inhibit and to Resolve Respondents Urgent Omnibus Motion dated 30 January 2006, at 2-3; rollo (Vol. 1), pp. 17-18.
[41] SC TSN dated 03 March 2002, at 55-58; rollo (Vol. 3), pp. 1052-1055.
[42] SC Resolution dated 03 March 2003, p. 3; rollo (Vol. 1), p. 40.
[43] Annex 1 of the SC Resolution dated 28 April 2003; id., pp. 8-9.
[44] Annex 2 of the SC Resolution dated 28 April 2003; id., pp. 10-15.
[45] Mere suspicion that a judge is partial is not enough. There should be clear and convincing evidence to prove the charge of bias and partiality. Extrinsic evidence is required to establish bias, bad faith, malice or corrupt purpose, in addition to the palpable error that may be inferred from the decision or order itself. (Sinnott v. Barte, A. M. No. RTJ-99-1453, 14 December 2001, 423 Phil. 522)
[46] 2. With all due respect, it is important to note that one of the matters taken up or issues in A.C. No. 6332 was the issuance, by Justice Antonio T. Carpio, of a Resolution dated 13 November 2002 and the anomalous/unusual circumstances regarding the same for it being contrary to the Agenda of November 2002 of the First Division of this Honorable Court. Further, this incident was the subject of an executive hearing wherein the First Division interrogated respondent/petitioner Pea as to who in the Supreme Court supplied the questioned Agenda to him. During this executive hearing, the Honorable Justice Carpio was confrontational and hostile to respondent/petitioner Pea for exposing the questioned Agenda and raising issues therein. (Respondent Peas Motion to Inhibit dated 20 January 2010, p. 2)
[47] 3. One of the matters taken up and/or issues in A.C. No. 6332 was the issuance, by Justice Antonio T. Carpio, of a Resolution dated 13 November 2002 and the anomalous/unusual circumstances regarding the same for it being contrary to the Agenda of November 2002 of the First Division of this Honorable Court. Further, this incident was the subject of an executive hearing wherein the First Division interrogated me as to who in the Supreme Court supplied me the questioned Agenda. During this executive hearing, the Honorable Justice Carpio was confrontational and hostile to me for exposing the questioned Agenda and raising issues therein. (Respondent Peas Motion to Inhibit dated 22 August 2011, p. 2)
[48] Respondent Peas Letter dated 16 September 2011, p. 2-4, which is Annex A of his Supplement to the Very Urgent Motion for Re-Raffle dated 20 September 2011.
[49] In Re: Raquel D. J. Razon, et al., A. M. No. P-06-2243, 26 September 2006, 503 SCRA 52.
[50] 3. Once again, I wish to express my sincerest apologies to the members of the Honorable Court whom I may have offended by the use of the two copies of the Supplemental Agenda in my motion. It was never my intention to undermine the integrity of the Honorable Court or any of its members. If I had made remarks which gave the impression, I am certainly very sorry. My aim was only to get to the truth. (Respondent Peas Affidavit dated 27 June 2003, p. 1; rollo [Vol. 1], p. 68)
[51] 2. At the outset, respondent wishes to apologize for the distress his statements may have caused the members of this Honorable Court. While such distress may have been the unavoidable consequence of his motion to inhibit the ponente, it was certainly not his intended result. (Respondent Peas Compliance dated 03 April 2003; rollo [G.R. No. 145817], Vol. 2, pp. 1333-1340).
[52] Respondent Peas Reply (to Petitioners Opposition to Motion to Urgent Motion
to Inhibit) dated 31 October 2001; rollo (Vol.
1), pp.
85-108.
[53] Respondent Peas Opposition (to Urgent Motion for Leave to Admit Urgent Motion for Reconsideration of the Resolution dated 14 February 2001 and 13 December 2000) dated 23 April 2001, at 4-5, rollo (Vol. 3), pp. 1116-1117.
[54] Respondent Peas Reply (to Petitioners Opposition to Motion to Urgent Motion to Inhibit) dated 31 October 2001, at 1; id., p. 1128.
[55] Id., at 14; id., p. 1141.
[56] Id.
[57] Respondent Peas Motion to Inhibit dated 18 February 2002, at 5; id., p. 1156.
[58] 1. Peas Motion to Inhibit (Re: Justice Artemio V. Panganiban) dated 12 January 2001; 2. Motion to Inhibit (Re: Justice Panganiban) dated 18 February 2002; 3. Reply (Re: Justice Panganiban) dated 15 March 2001; 4. Motion to Inhibit (Re: Justice Panganiban) dated 28 December 2004; 5. Motion for Inhibition (Re: Justice Panganiban) dated 28 December 2004; and 6. Reiteratory Motion to Recuse dated 03 March 2006 (Re: Justice Panganiban).
[59] Respondent Peas Motion to Inhibit dated 18 February 2002, pp. 2-3; rollo (G.R. No. 145817), Vol. 1, pp. 901-902.
[60] Respondent Peas Motion to Inhibit dated 07 January 2008, p. 3; rollo (G.R. No. 145817), Vol. 3, p. 1953.
[61] The Court is concerned with the repeated attempts of Atty. Pea throughout the entire course of these proceedings (whether through a direct motion to inhibit, administrative ethics complaint, or, indirectly, through a motion for re-raffle) to cause the inhibition of members of this Court. Eleven (11) Justices so far have all been asked by Atty. Pea to inhibit themselves. Atty. Peas inclination to disqualify members of the Court, whom he perceives to be potentially adversarial to his cause, has certainly caused unwarranted and unnecessary delay in the resolution of the case. (SC Resolution dated 17 October 2011 in the consolidated petitions docketed as G.R. Nos. 145817, 145822 and 162562)
[62] G.R. Nos. 159486-88, 25 November 2003, 416 SCRA 465.
[63] Resolution dated 28 April 2003, at 4; rollo (Vol. 1), p. 6.
[64] The Clerk of Court and the Division Clerks of Court shall ensure that all pleadings, communications, documents, and other papers duly filed in a case shall be reported in the Agenda for the consideration by the Court en banc or the Division. The Agenda items for each case shall adequately apprise the Court of relevant matters for its consideration. (Internal Rules of the Supreme Court [A. M. No. 10-4-20-SC, as amended], Rule 11, Sec. 1)
[65] Respondent Peas Urgent Motion to Inhibit and to Resolve Respondents Urgent Omnibus Motion dated 30 January 2003, at 4-5; rollo (Vol. 1), pp. 19-20.
[66] TSN dated 03 March 2002, pp. 38-44; rollo (Vol. 3), pp. 1036-1042.
[67] TSN dated 03 March 2002, pp. 98-99; id., pp. 1094-1095.
[68] In the verification portion of his Motion to Inhibit, respondent Pea under oath swore and stated that he had caused the preparation of the motion, and that all the allegations therein were true and correct, based on his knowledge as well as the records of the case. (Respondent Peas Urgent Motion to Inhibit and to Resolve Respondents Urgent Omnibus Motion dated 30 January 2003, at 7-8; rollo [Vol. 1], pp. 22-23)
[69] A lawyer owes candor, fairness and good faith to the Court. (Code of Professional Responsibility, Canon 10)
[70] Code of Professional Responsibility, Rule 10.01.
[71] Samala v. Valencia, A. C. No. 5439, 22 January 2007, 512 SCRA 1, citing Young v. Batuegas, 451 Phil. 155 (2003).
[72] Id.
[73] TSN dated 03 March 2002, at 73; rollo (Vol. 3), pp. 1070.
[74] Respondent Peas Urgent Motion to Inhibit and to Resolve Respondents Urgent Omnibus Motion dated 30 January 2003, at 4-5; rollo (Vol. 1), pp. 19-20.
[75] Court personnel shall not disclose to any unauthorized person
any confidential information acquired by them while employed in the judiciary,
whether such information came from authorized or unauthorized sources.
Confidential
information means information not yet made a matter of public record relating to
pending cases, as well as information not yet made public concerning the work
of any justice or judge relating to pending cases, including notes, drafts,
research papers, internal discussions, internal memoranda, records of internal
deliberations and similar papers.
The
notes, drafts, research papers, internal discussions, internal memoranda,
records of internal deliberations and similar papers that a justice or judge
uses in preparing a decision, resolution or order shall remain confidential
even after the decision, resolution or order is made public. (Code of Conduct
for Court Personnel, AM No. 03-06-13-SC, Canon II, Sec. 1)
[76] The Offices of the Clerk of Court and of the Division Clerks of Court are bound by strict confidentiality on the action or actions taken by the Court prior to the approval of the draft of the minutes of the court session release of the resolutions embodying the Court action or actions. (Internal Rules of the Supreme Court, as amended, Rule 11, Sec. 5, par. 1)
[77] 11. I had no reason to doubt the documents authenticity simply because there was no reason for anyone to bother or go to the extent of manufacturing documents for the benefit of someone who does not even know him. The documents contained a detailed list of the incidents deliberated by this Honorable Court on 13 November 2002. Definitely, not just anyone could have access to such information. (Respondent Peas Affidavit dated 27 June 2003, at 3; rollo [Vol. 1], p. 70)
[78] Respondent Peas Motion to Vacate/Recall dated 20 February 2010; rollo (G. R. No. 145822), Vol. 2, pp. 3286-3293.
[79] Annex 5 of respondent Peas Motion to Vacate/Recall dated 20 February 2010; rollo (G. R. No. 145822), Vol. 2, pp. 3305-3366.
[80] OBC Report dated 11 December 2007; rollo (Vol. 4), pp. 1657-1718.
[81] 12. Respondent is not just speculating here. He is CERTAIN that the ponente has a special interest in this case. Recently, he also found out that the ponente made a special request to bring this case along with him when he transferred from the Third Division to the First Division. Respondent has a copy of the Resolution of this Honorable Court granting such request (hereto attached as Annex D). Indeed this circumstance, considered with all the foregoing circumstances, ineluctably demonstrate that a major anomaly occurred here. (Peas Urgent Motion to Inhibit and to Resolve Respondents Urgent Omnibus Motion dated 30 January 2003, pp. 5-6; rollo [Vol. 1], pp. 20-21)
[82] Let this case be TRANSFERRED to the First Division, the same being assigned to a Member thereof. [Internal Matter] (Rollo [Vol. 1], p. 33)
[83] 12. Moreover, I subsequently received another mail from
apparently the same sender, this time containing a pink copy of this Honorable
Courts 4 September 2002 Resolution (annex D, Urgent Motion to Inhibit)
transferring this case from the Third Division to the First Division. The receipt of this last document somehow
confirmed to me that whoever sent the copies of the Supplemental Agenda really
had access to the records of this Honorable Court. (Peas Affidavit dated
27 June 2003, p. 3; rollo [Vol. 1], p. 70)
[84] Effect of reorganization of Divisions on assigned cases. In the reorganization of the membership of Divisions, cases already assigned to a Member-in-Charge shall be transferred to the Division to which the Member-in-Charge moves, subject to the rule on the resolution of motions for reconsideration under Section 7 of this Rule. The Member-in-Charge is the Member given the responsibility of overseeing the progress and disposition of a case assigned by raffle. (Internal Rules of the Supreme Court [A. M. No. 10-4-20-SC, as amended], Rule 2, Sec. 9)
[85] In this regard, respondent made an irresponsible suspicion. As an internal policy of the Court, the case will automatically be transferred to the Division to which the ponente of the case is a Member thereof. (OBC Report dated 11 December 2007, p. 50; rollo [Vol. 4], p. 1706)
[86] Annex A of Peas Reply (to Petitioners Opposition to Motion to Urgent Motion to Inhibit) dated 31 October 2001; rollo (G. R. No. 145822), Vol. 2, pp. 2776-2834.
[87] Peas Reply (to Petitioners Opposition to Motion to Urgent
Motion to Inhibit) dated 31 October 2001, p. 6; rollo (Vol. 1), at 90.
[88] xxx Excerpts of the minutes pertaining to a particular case quoted in a letter of the Clerk of Court or the Division Clerk of Court to the parties, and extended resolutions showing the actions of the court on the cases on the agenda shall be released to the parties only after the Chief Justice or the Division Chairperson has approved the minutes in writing. xxx (Internal Rules of the Supreme Court, as amended, Rule 11, Sec. 4)
[89] 13. I sincerely regret that the documents considered confidential by the Honorable Supreme Court had leaked out but there was nothing I could do about it. Once these documents were sent to me, my duty was to bring them to [the] attention of the Court which, in its wisdom, would know best what to do with them. (Respondent Peas Affidavit dated 27 June 2003, at 3; rollo [Vol. 1], pp. 70)
[90] The term noted means that the Court has merely taken cognizance of the existence of an act or declaration, without exercising a judicious deliberation or rendering a decision on the matter it does not imply agreement or approval. (Sebastian v. Bajar, A. C. No. 3731, 07 September 2007, 532 SCRA 435, citing Cojuangco, Jr. v. Palma, A.C. No. 2474, 30 June 2005, 462 SCRA 310, 321)
[91] Justice Carpios Agenda for 13 November 2002, Item 175 (a) & (f) as See RES.; rollo (Vol. 1), pp. 10-15.
[92] TSN dated 03 March 2002, at 77-83; rollo (Vol. 3), pp. 1073-1079.
[93] The Chief Justice or the Chairperson of the Division shall provide the Clerk of Court or the Division Clerk of Court the latter notes on the actions taken by the Court. The copy of the Agenda containing the handwritten notes of the Chief Justice or Division Chairperson shall serve as the basis for the preparation of the minutes of the session by the Office of the Clerk of Court or the Division Clerk of Court. Within three working days from the time the copy of the Agenda containing the handwritten actions of the Court is transmitted, the Clerk of Court or the Division Clerk of Court shall submit the draft of the minutes of the session for the approval by the Chief Justice or the Division Chairperson. (Internal Rules of the Court, as amended, Rule 11, Sec. 3 and 4)
[94] Revised Penal Code,
Art. 229 (Revelation of Secrets).
[95] Divulging valuable information of a confidential character, acquired by his office or by him on account of his official position to unauthorized persons, or releasing such information in advance of its authorized release date, xxx.(Republic Act No. 3019, Sec. 3 [k])
[96] Respondent Peas Comment (with Motions to Explain and for Full Investigation) dated 22 August 2003; rollo (Vol. 1), pp. 196-220.
[97] Rules of Court, Rule 7, Sec. 5.
[98] Code of Professional Responsibility, Canon 8.
[99] Code of Professional Responsibility, Rule 8.01.
[100] Barandon v. Ferrer, A. C. No. 5768, 26 March 2010, 616 SCRA 529, citing Saberon v. Larong, A.C. No. 6567, 16 April 2008, 551 SCRA 359, 368.
[101] Id., citing De la Rosa v. Court of Appeals Justices, 454 Phil. 718, 727 (2003).
[102] Uy v. Depasucat, id., citing Surigao Mineral Reservation Board v. Cloribel, G.R. No. L-27072, 09 January 1970, 31 SCRA 1.
[103] Peas Motion to Inhibit dated 18 February 2002; rollo (G. R. No. 145822), Vol. 2, pp. 2936-2945.
[104] Peas Very Urgent Motion to Inhibit dated 30 March 2011; rollo (G. R. No. 145822), Vol. 3, pp. 3964-3971.
[105] Peas Very Urgent Motion for Re-Raffle dated 01 September 2011; id., pp. 3972-3980.
[106] Peas Supplement to the Urgent Motion for Re-raffle dated 04 August 2008; rollo (G. R. No. 162562). Vol. 2, pp. 1339-1344.
[107] Peas Urgent Consolidated Motion for Re-Raffle dated 28 August 2008; id., pp. 1355-1362.
[108] Borlongan v. Pea, G. R.
No. 143591, 23 November 2007, 538
SCRA 221.
[109] However, herein private respondent-movant (Pea) would like to make it clear that he has full trust and confidence in the other members of the Third Division, Considering that only Associate Justice Nachura has exhibited extreme bias and prejudice against private respondent. (Peas Motion to Inhibit dated 07 January 2008, p. 6; rollo [G. R. No. 162562], Vol. 2, p. 1278)
[110] G. R. No. 144618, 15 August 2003, 456 Phil. 440.