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Comilang V Belen
Comilang V Belen
The Facts
State Prosecutor Comilang, by virtue of Oce of the Regional State Prosecutor
(ORSP) Order No. 05-07 dated February 7, 2005, was designated to assist the
Oce of the City Prosecutor of Calamba City in the prosecution of cases. On
February 16, 2005, he appeared before Judge Belen of the RTC of Calamba City,
Branch 36, manifesting his inability to appear on Thursdays because of his
inquest duties in the Provincial Prosecutor's Oce of Laguna. Thus, on February
21, 2005, he moved that all cases scheduled for hearing on February 24, 2005
before Judge Belen be deferred because he was set to appear for preliminary
investigation in the Provincial Prosecutor's Oce on the same day.
Instead of granting the motion, Judge Belen issued his February 24, 2005 Order
in Criminal Case No. 12654-2003-C entitled People of the Philippines v. Jenelyn
Estacio ("Estacio Case") requiring him to (1) explain why he did not inform the
court of his previously-scheduled preliminary investigation and (2) pay a ne of
P500.00 for the cancellation of all the scheduled hearings.
In response, State Prosecutor Comilang led his Explanation with Motion for
Reconsideration, followed by a Reiterative Supplemental Motion for
Reconsideration with Early Resolution. On May 30, 2005, Judge Belen directed
him to explain why he should not be cited for contempt for the unsubstantiated,
callous and reckless charges extant in his Reiterative Supplemental Motion, and
to pay the postponement fee in the amount of P1,200.00 for the 12 postponed
cases during the February 17, 2005 hearing.
In his comment/explanation, State Prosecutor Comilang explained that the
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Lagman against Judge Belen when he was still a practicing lawyer, docketed as
Criminal Case No. 15332-SP and pending before Branch 32 of the RTC of San
Pablo City. This libel case eventually became the basis for Administrative Case
No. 6687 for disbarment against Judge Belen.
To further show Judge Belen's agrant violation of his oath of oce, State
Prosecutors Comilang and Lagman jointly led a letter-complaint 11 dated
September 28, 2007 addressed to the Oce of the Chief Justice, which the OCA
treated as a supplemental complaint. They averred that State Prosecutor Jorge
Baculi, who found probable cause to indict Judge Belen with libel in Criminal Case
No. 15332-SP, was also harassed and oppressed by Judge Belen with his baseless
and malicious citation for contempt and with the use of foul, unethical and
insulting statements.
The Action and Recommendation of the OCA
The OCA directed Judge Belen to comment on State Prosecutors Comilang and
Lagman's charges against him.
aSCHcA
In his Joint Comment 12 dated March 7, 2008, Judge Belen claimed that the
allegations against him are factually misplaced and jurisprudentially
unmeritorious, as his assailed orders were issued in accordance with the Rules of
Court and settled jurisprudence. He explained that the writ of preliminary
injunction issued by the CA only enjoined him from enforcing, executing and
implementing the May 30, 2005 Order and December 12, 2005 Decision, but it
never prohibited him from asking State Prosecutor Comilang to explain his
failure to comply with the order requiring the posting of supersedeas bond to
defer the implementation of the mentioned judgment, in accordance with
Section 11, Rule 71 of the Rules of Court. He thus prayed for the dismissal of the
instant administrative complaint, claiming to have discharged his judicial
functions not in a gross, deliberate and malicious manner.
In its Report 13 dated November 27, 2009, the OCA found Judge Belen to have
violated Section 4, Rule 71 of the Rules of Court by failing to separately docket or
consolidate with the principal case (the Estacio Case) the indirect contempt
charge against State Prosecutor Comilang. It also found Judge Belen to have
blatantly violated the injunctive writ of the CA when he issued the orders
requiring State Prosecutor Comilang to explain why he failed to post a
supersedeas bond which, given the antecedents of his administrative cases,
showed manifest bias and partiality tantamount to bad faith and grave abuse of
authority.
Judge Belen was likewise found to have violated the following provisions of the
Code of Judicial Conduct:
Canon 2 A JUDGE SHOULD AVOID IMPROPRIETY AND THE
APPEARANCE OF IMPROPRIETY IN ALL ACTIVITIES
Rule 2.01 A judge should so behave at all times as to promote public
condence in the integrity and impartiality of the judiciary.
Canon 3 A JUDGE SHOULD PERFORM OFFICIAL DUTIES HONESTLY,
AND WITH IMPARTIALITY AND DILIGENCE ADJUDICATIVE
RESPONSIBILITIES
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Rule 3.01 A judge shall be faithful to the law and maintain professional
competence.
Thus, the OCA recommended, inter alia, that Judge Belen be adjudged guilty of
manifest bias and partiality, grave abuse of authority and gross ignorance of the
law and accordingly, be dismissed from the service with forfeiture of all benets
except accrued leave credits, if any, and with prejudice to reemployment in the
government or any subdivision, agency or instrumentality thereof, including
government-owned and controlled corporations and government nancial
institutions.
CHDTIS
The Issue
The sole issue to be resolved by the Court is whether Judge Belen's actuations
showed manifest partiality and bias, evident bad faith, grave abuse of authority
and gross ignorance of the law warranting his dismissal from service as RTC
Judge of Branch 36, Calamba City.
The Ruling of the Court
After a careful evaluation of the records of the instant case, the Court concurs
with the ndings and recommendations of the OCA, but only in part.
Section 4, Rule 71 of the Rules of Court provides:
Section 4.How proceedings commenced. Proceedings for indirect
contempt may be initiated motu proprio by the court against
which the contempt was committed by an order or any other
formal charge requiring the respondent to show cause why he should
not be punished for contempt.
In all other cases, charges for indirect contempt shall be
commenced by a veried petition with supporting particulars and
certied true copies of documents or papers involved therein, and upon
full compliance with the requirements for ling initiatory pleadings for civil
actions in the court concerned. If the contempt charges arose out of or
are related to a principal action pending in the court, the petition for
contempt shall allege that fact but said petition shall be
docketed, heard and decided separately, unless the court in its
discretion orders the consolidation of the contempt charge and
the principal action for joint hearing and decision. (Emphasis
supplied)
Indirect contempt proceedings, therefore, may be initiated only in two ways: (1)
motu proprio by the court through an order or any other formal charge requiring
the respondent to show cause why he should not be punished for contempt; or
(2) by a veried petition and upon compliance with the requirements for
initiatory pleadings. 14 In the second instance, the veried petition for contempt
shall be docketed, heard and decided separately unless the court in its discretion
orders the contempt charge, which arose out of or related to the principal action,
to be consolidated with the main action for joint hearing and decision.
In this case, the contempt charge was commenced not through a veried
petition, but by Judge Belen motu proprio through the issuance of an order
requiring State Prosecutor Comilang to show cause why he should not be cited
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for indirect contempt. As such, the requirements of the rules that the veried
petition for contempt be docketed, heard and decided separately or consolidated
with the principal action nd no application. Consequently, Judge Belen was
justied in not directing the contempt charge against State Prosecutor Comilang
to be docketed separately or consolidated with the principal action, i.e., the
Estacio Case.
HAICcD
However, Judge Belen blatantly violated the injunctive writ issued by the CA
enjoining the implementation of his May 30, 2005 Order and December 12, 2005
Decision in CA-G.R. SP No. 94069.
A preliminary injunction is a provisional remedy, an adjunct to the main case
subject to the latter's outcome. Its sole objective is to preserve the status quo
until the court hears fully the merits of the case. Its primary purpose is not to
correct a wrong already consummated, or to redress an injury already sustained,
or to punish wrongful acts already committed, but to preserve and protect the
rights of the litigants during the pendency of the case. 15 The status quo should
be that existing ante litem motam or at the time of the ling of the case. 16
The CA's Resolution
17
In order not to render the issues in this case moot and academic, We had
in our Resolution of April 24, 2006 granted a Temporary Restraining Order
for 60 days from notice directing the respondent Judge to refrain from
executing his order of May 30, 2005 and decision of December 12, 2005
declaring petitioner in contempt of court and ordering him to pay a
postponement fee of P1,200 and penalty of P20,000. Considering that
the TRO is about to expire, for the same reasons provided under Section
3(b) and (c) Rule 58 of the Rules of Court, let a writ of preliminary
injunction issue, to be eective during the pendency of this case, ordering
the respondent Judge to refrain from enforcing his disputed issuances of
May 30, 2005 and December 12, 2005. The petitioner is exempted from
posting the bond, since no private interests are aected in this case.
As aptly pointed out by the OCA, the CA's disquisition is clear and categorical. In
complete disobedience to the said Resolution, however, Judge Belen proceeded to
issue (1) the September 6, 2007 Order 18 requiring State Prosecutor Comilang to
explain his refusal to le the supersedeas bond and to require his presence in
court on September 26, 2007, as well as to explain why he should not be cited
for indirect contempt; (2) the September 26, 2007 Order 19 seeking State
Prosecutor Comilang's explanation for his deance of the subpoena requiring his
presence at the hearing of even date, and directing, once again, his attendance at
the next hearing on October 1, 2007 and to explain once more why he should not
be cited for indirect contempt; and (3) the October 1, 2007 Order 20 nding State
Prosecutor Comilang guilty of indirect contempt and sentencing him to pay a ne
of P30,000.00 and to suer two days' imprisonment.
Hence, in requiring State Prosecutor Comilang to explain his non-ling of a
supersedeas bond, in issuing subpoenas to compel his attendance before court
hearings relative to the contempt proceedings, and nally, in nding him guilty
of indirect contempt for his non-compliance with the issued subpoenas, Judge
Belen eectively defeated the status quo which the writ of preliminary
injunction aimed to preserve.
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Thus, this Court has consistently held that a judge is presumed to know
the law and when the law is so elementary, not to be aware of it
constitutes gross ignorance of the law. Verily, failure to follow basic legal
commands embodied in the law and the Rules constitutes gross
ignorance of the law, from which no one is excused, and surely not a
judge. 22
This is because judges are expected to exhibit more than just a cursory
acquaintance with statutes and procedural laws. They must know the laws
and apply them properly in good faith as judicial competence requires no less.
23 Moreover, refusal to honor an injunctive order of a higher court constitutes
contempt, 24 as in this case, where Judge Belen, in contumaciously defying the
injunctive order issued by the CA in CA-G.R. SP No. 94069, was found guilty of
indirect contempt in CA-G.R. SP No. 101081. 25
Judge Belen's actuations, therefore, cannot be considered as mere errors of
judgment that can be easily brushed aside. Obstinate disregard of basic and
established rule of law or procedure amounts to inexcusable abuse of authority
and gross ignorance of the law. Likewise, citing State Prosecutor Comilang for
indirect contempt notwithstanding the eectivity of the CA-issued writ of
injunction demonstrated his vexatious attitude and bad faith towards the former,
for which he must be held accountable and subjected to disciplinary action.
Accordingly, in imposing the proper penalty, the Court takes note of Judge
Belen's previous administrative cases where he was penalized in the following
manner:
Docket No.
Case Title
Charge
Mane v. Judge
Belen 26
Conduct
Unbecoming of a
Judge
Baculi v. Judge
Belen 27
Gross Ignorance
of the Law
Penalty
Reprimand, with warning
that a repetition of the
same or similar acts shall
merit a more serious
penalty
Suspended for 6 months
without salary and other
benets, with stern
warning that a repetition
of the same or similar acts
shall merit a more serious
penalty
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Correa v. Judge
Belen 28
Conduct
Unbecoming of a
Judge
Belen v. Judge
Belen 29
Violation of
Section 4 of
Canon 1 and
Section 1 of
Canon 4 of the
New Code of
Judicial Conduct
penalty
Fined for PhP10,000.00
with stern warning that a
repetition of the same or
similar acts shall merit a
more serious penalty
Fined for PhP11,000 with
stern warning that a
repetition of the same or
similar acts shall merit a
more serious penalty
Our conception of good judges has been, and is, of men who have a mastery of
the principles of law, who discharge their duties in accordance with law. 30 Hence,
with the foregoing disquisitions and Judge Belen's previous infractions, which are
all of serious nature and for which he had been severely warned, the Court
therefore adopts the recommendation of the OCA to mete the ultimate penalty
of dismissal against Judge Belen for grave abuse of authority and gross ignorance
of the law. The Court can no longer aord to be lenient in this case, lest it give
the public the impression that incompetence and repeated oenders are
tolerated in the judiciary. 31
EaISDC
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6.Id. at 23-24.
7.Id. at 27-30.
8.Id. at 97-100.
9.Order dated October 1, 2007, id. at 31-34.
10.Id. at 1-6.
11.Id. at 42-51.
12.Id. at 108-118.
13.Id. at 152-163.
14.Regalado v. Go, G.R. No. 167988, February 6, 2007, 514 SCRA 616, 629.
15.Bustamante v. Court of Appeals , G.R. No. 126371, April 17, 2002, 381 SCRA 171.
16.Maunlad Homes, Inc. vs. Union Bank of the Philippines, G.R. No. 179898,
December 23, 2008, 575 SCRA 336, 343.
17.Rollo, p. 73.
18.Supra note 3.
19.Supra note 6.
20.Supra note 8.
21.A.M. No. RTJ-04-1889, December 22, 2004, 447 SCRA 450, 459.
22.Citations omitted.
23.Atty. Bautista v. Judge Causapin, A.M. No. RTJ-07-2044, June 22, 2011.
24.Ysasi v. Fernandez, G.R. No. L-28593, December 16, 1968, 26 SCRA 393.
25.Rollo, pp. 143-150.
26.Atty. Melvin Mane v. Judge Medel Arnaldo Belen, A.M. No. RTJ-08-2119, June 30,
2008, 556 SCRA 555.
27.Prosecutor Baculi v. Judge Medel Arnaldo Belen, A.M. No. RTJ-09-2176, April 20,
2009, 586 SCRA 69.
28.Atty. Raul L. Correa vs. Judge Medel Arnaldo Belen , A.M. No. RTJ-10-2242, August
6, 2010, 627 SCRA 13.
29.Michael Belen vs. Judge Medel Arnaldo Belen , A.M. No. RTJ-08-2139, August 9,
2010, 627 SCRA 1.
30.Imelda R. Marcos v. Judge Fernando Vil Pamintuan, A.M. No. RTJ-07-2062, January
18, 2011, citing Borromeo v. Mariano, 41 Phil. 322, 333 (1921).
31.Marcos v. Judge Pamintuan, supra.
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