Remedial Law (Evidence) Memory Aid Ateneo Central

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The key takeaways are the different classifications and types of evidence under Philippine law.

The different classifications of evidence discussed are real evidence, documentary evidence, and testimonial evidence.

The different types of evidence discussed include direct evidence, circumstantial evidence, primary evidence, secondary evidence, positive evidence, and negative evidence.

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REMEDIAL LAW (EVIDENCE)


MEMORY AID
ATENEO CENTRAL BAR OPERATIONS 2001

EVIDENCE

1. Definitions
a. Factum probandum – ultimate fact or the fact sought to be established
b. Factum probans – evidentiary fact or the fact by which the factum probandum is
to be established
2. Classification of evidence
a. Object (Real)
 That which is directly addressed to the senses of the court and consists of
tangible things exhibited or demonstrated in open court, in an ocular
inspection, or at a place designated by the court for its view or observation of
an exhibition, experiment or demonstration
Documentary
 Evidence supplied by written instruments or derived from conventional
symbols, such as letter, by which ideas are represented on material
substances
Testimonial
 That which is submitted to the court through the testimony or deposition of a
witness
b. Relevant
 Evidence having any value in reason as tending to prove any matter provable
in an action
 Relevancy – logical relation of evidentiary fact to fact in issue
Material
 Evidence directed to prove a fact in issue
Competent
 One that is not excluded by law in particular case
c. Direct
 That which proves the fact in dispute without the aid of any inference or
presumption
Circumstantial
 The proof of the facts other than the fact in issue from which, taken either
singly or collectively, the existence of the particular fact in dispute may be
inferred as a necessary or probable consequence
d. Cumulative
 Evidence of the same kind and to the same state of facts
Corroborative
 Additional evidence of a different character to the same point for higher
probative value
e. Prima facie
 That which standing alone, unexplained or uncontradicted is sufficient to
maintain a proposition
Conclusive
 Class of evidence which the law does not allow to be contradicted
f. Primary or Best
 That which the law regards as affording greatest certainty of the fact in
question
Secondary or Substitutionary
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 That which is inferior to the primary evidence and is permitted by law only
when the best evidence is not available
g. Positive
 The witness affirms that a fact did or did not occur
Negative
 The witness states that he did not see or know of the occurrence of a fact

RULE 129 WHAT NEED NOT BE PROVED


1. What do not need to be proved:
a. Matters of judicial notice
b. Judicial admissions
c. Facts presumed
d. Allegations in complaint or answer which are immaterial to the issue
e. Facts admitted or not denied in the answer, provided they have been
sufficiently alleged
f. Those which are the subject of an agreed stipulation of facts between the
parties, as well as judicial admissions made in the course of the proceedings
g. Technical admission – when defendant fails to specifically deny the
allegations of plaintiff
2. Doctrine of processual presumption – absent any evidence or admission, the foreign
law in question is presumed to be the same as that in the Philippines
3. Mandatory judicial notice [SLAPTONG]
a. States – existence, territory, political history, government, symbols of nationality
b. Law of nations
c. Admiralty and maritime courts and seals
d. Philippine – political constitution and history
e. Official acts
 Court cannot take judicial notice of a law or regulation that is not yet effective
 Decisions of SC are proper subjects of mandatory judicial notice
f. Laws of nature
g. Measure of time
h. Geographical division
4. Discretionary judicial notice
a. Matters which are of public knowledge
 Common and general knowledge
 Indisputable
b. Matters capable of unquestionable demonstration
c. Ought to be known by judges because of their judicial functions
 Newspaper reports not subject to judicial notice
 Courts cannot take judicial notice of custom. Custom must be proved as a
matter of fact.
 Pardon is granted by the Chief Executive and as such is a private act which must
be pleaded and proved by the person pardoned.
5. Judicial Admissions:
 Verbal or written; made by a party in course of the proceedings in the same case
 May only be contradicted by showing that:
a. Made through palpable mistake; or
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b. No such admission was made.


 Admissions made in a pleading later amended: lose their status as judicial
admissions; become merely extra-judicial admissions which must be offered.
 A stipulation made during a criminal proceeding is tantamount to a judicial
admission and need not be signed as required by R118, §4 to be binding on the
accused.
 A court cannot take judicial notice of an admission made by a party in another
case even if the latter case is pending before the same sala or judge, except:
a. In the absence of objection;
b. With knowledge or upon request of the parties.

RULE 130 RULES OF ADMISSIBILITY


1. Admissibility of object evidence
a. Relevant to fact in evidence
b. Object must be authenticated before it is admitted
2. Production of documents under this rule and Under Rule 27 (modes of discovery),
distinguished
RULE 130 RULE 27
Production is procured by mere notice to Production is by proper motion in the trial
adverse party, and requirements for such court, and is permitted only upon good
notice must be complied with as a cause shown (mode of discovery)
condition precedent for the subsequent
evidence by the proponent
Presupposes that the document to be Contemplates situation wherein document
produced is intended as evidence for the is either assumed to be favorable to the
proponent who is presumed to have party in possession thereof OR that the
knowledge of its contents, secondary party seeking its production is not
evidence thereof being available in case of sufficiently informed of the contents of the
its non-production same

BEST EVIDENCE RULE


1. General Rule: When the subject of an inquiry is the contents of a document, no
evidence shall be admissible other than the original document itself. (If only the fact
of execution/existence/surrounding circumstances only is involved, Rule does not
apply)
2. Exceptions to Best Evidence Rule:
a. Original is lost or destroyed, or cannot be produced in court without bad faith on
the part of the offeror;
b. When the original is in the custody of the party against whom the evidence is
offered, and the latter fails to produce it after reasonable notice;
c. When the original consists of numerous accounts or other documents which
cannot be examined in court without great loss of time and the only fact sought to
be established is the general result of the whole; and
d. When the original is a public record in the custody of a public officer or is
recorded in a public office.
3. Meaning of “original” document
a. The one the contents of which are the subject of an inquiry
b. If in 2 or more copies executed:
ii. At or about the same time; AND
iii. With identical contents
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 Then all copies are originals


c. If entry is
i. Repeated in regular course of business, with
ii. One being copied from another;
iii. At or near the time of the transaction,
 Then all entries are originals
4. If original is unavailable:
 Order of proof (but can be changed at court’s discretion):
a. Existence
b. Execution: Established by
i. Person who executed it;
ii. The person before whom its execution was acknowledged
iii. Any person who was present and saw it executed, and recognized the
signature;
iv. Any person to whom the parties to the instrument had previously
confessed the execution thereof
c. Loss or Destruction
 If there are several original copies, all copies must be accounted for
before secondary evidence may be received.
d. Contents
5. Proof of Contents of Lost Original or Original in custody/control of adverse party
(Secondary Evidence) – in order stated:
a. A copy
b. A recital of its contents in an authentic document
c. Testimony of witnesses
6. What must be proven if original in possession of adverse party
a. Opponent’s possession of original
b. Reasonable notice to opponent to produce the original
c. Satisfactory proof of its existence
d. Failure or refusal of opponent to produce original in
court
 By opponent’s failure to produce the document on demand, he is now
forbidden to produce the document in order to contradict the other party’s
copy/evidence of its contents

PAROL EVIDENCE RULE


1. General Rule: When the terms of an agreement have been reduced into writing, it is
considered as containing all the terms agreed upon, and there can be, between the
parties and their successors in interest, no evidence of such terms other than the
contents of the written agreement
2. Exceptions to the Parol Evidence Rule: when a party puts in issue in his pleadings:
[FIVE]
a. Intrinsic ambiguity, mistake or imperfection in the
written agreement
b. Failure of the written agreement to express the true
intent of the parties;
c. Validity of the written agreement; OR
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MEMORY AID
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d. Existence of other terms agreed upon subsequent to


the execution of the written agreement
NOTE: Parol = evidence aliunde whether oral or written which tends to deny or
contradict documented agreement.
 A “Receipt” or a “Deed” is not an exclusive memorial and facts contained therein
may be shown irrespective of the terms of the document.
 Distinction must be made between “statements of fact” expressed in an
instrument and the “terms” of the contractual act. The former may be varied by
parol evidence.
3. Parol Evidence Rule and Best Evidence Rule Distinguished
PAROL EVIDENCE RULE BEST EVIDENCE RULE
Presupposes that the original document is The original writing is not available and/or
available in court there is a dispute as to whether said writing
is the original
Prohibits the varying of the terms of a Prohibits the introduction of substitutionary
written agreement evidence in lieu of the original documents,
regardless of whether or not it varies the
contents of the original
With the exception of wills, applies only to Applies to all kinds of writings
documents which are contractual in nature
(written agreements)
Can be involved only when the controversy Can be invoked by any party to an action,
is between the parties to the written regardless of whether such party
agreements, their privies or any party participated in the writing involved
affected thereby (does not apply to
complete strangers)

QUALIFICATION OF WITNESSES
1. Persons Disqualified from becoming witnesses due to mental incapacity or
immaturity:
a. Those whose mental condition, at the time of their production for examination, is
such that they are incapable of intelligently making known their perceptions to
others; or
 A mental retardate is not, for this reason alone, disqualified from being a
witness.
b. Children whose mental maturity is such as to render them incapable of
perceiving the facts respecting which they are examined and of relating them
truthfully.

MARITAL DISQUALIFICATION RULE


1. Marital Disqualification
 Wife may testify against the husband in a criminal case for falsification, where the
husband made it appear that the wife gave her consent to the sale of a conjugal
house (considered as a crime committed against the wife)
 If husband-accused defends himself by imputing the crime to the wife, he is
deemed to have waived all objections to the wife’s testimony against him.

DEAD MAN’S STATUTE


1. Requisites for Application of Dead Man’s Statute [PACO]
a. The witness is a Party or assignor of a party to a case, or of a person on whose
behalf a case is prosecuted;
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 Dead Man Statute not applicable to a corporation’s officers and stockholders


in a suit instituted by the corporation. Thus, the officers and stockholders
may testify.
b. The action is Against an executor, administrator or other representative of a
deceased person, or against a person of unsound mind;
 Heirs of deceased person are considered “representatives” of a deceased
person.
c. The subject matter of the action is a Claim or demand against the estate of such
deceased person, or against such person of unsound mind;
d. The testimony refers to any matter of Fact occurring before the death of such
deceased person, or before such person became of unsound mind.
 Not covered by the Rule:
i. Counterclaim by defendant (plaintiff may testify in his
defense)
ii. Deceased contracted with plaintiff thru an agent of the deceased/insane (in
the contract which is the subject of the action) who is still alive and can testify
(but the testimony is limited to the acts performed by the agent)
iii. If adverse party is called as a witness by the representative of the
deceased/incompetent or if representative introduced evidence as to the
transactions or communications with the deceased/incompetent
iv. To cadastral proceedings, where there is no defendant or plaintiff

PRIVILEGED COMMUNICATIONS:
1. Kinds of Privileged Communications:
a. Marital privilege
b. Attorney-client
c. Doctor-patient
d. Priest-Penitent
e. Public Officer’s Privilege
2. Requisites for Marital Privilege
a. Valid marital relation must have existed
b. Privilege is claimed with respect to a communication made
by one spouse to another during the marriage;
c. Communication was made in confidence
3. Marital disqualification and marital privilege distinguished
MARITAL DISQUALIFICATION MARITAL PRIVILEGE
Can be invoked only if one of the spouses Can be claimed whether or not the spouse
is a part to the action is a party to the action
Right to invoke belongs to the spouse who Right to invoke belongs to the spouse
is a party to the action making the communication
Applies only if the marriage is existing at Can be claimed even after the marriage
the time the testimony is offered has been dissolved
Constitutes a total prohibition against any Applies only to confidential
testimony for or against the spouse of the communications between spouses made
witness (with certain exceptions) during the marriage

4. Attorney-Client Privilege
a. There is an attorney-client relationship
b. There is a communication made by the client to the attorney
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c. Such communication was made in the course of, or with a view to,
professional employment
 Extends to attorney’s secretary, stenographer or clerk; requires consent of both
employer and the client to testify as to matters learned in their professional
capacity
 Exceptions:
i. Actions brought by client against his attorney
ii. Communications made in presence of third persons
iii. Communications regarding an intended crime
 General Rule: Lawyer may not invoke the privilege and refuse to divulge the
name of his client
Exception:
i. If there is a probability that the revealing the client’s name
would implicate the client to the activity for which he sought
the lawyer’s advice;
ii. The disclosure would open the client to civil liability;
iii. Where the identity is intended to be confidential
 Privilege not confined to verbal or written communications, but extends to all
information communicated by the client to the attorney by other means, such as
when the attorney is called to witness the preparation of a document.
5. Requisites for Physician-Patient privilege [CRANB]
a. The action is a Civil case
b. The Relation of physician-patient existed
c. The information was Acquired by the physician while attending to the
patient in his professional capacity
d. The information was Necessary for the performance of his
professional duty
e. The disclosure of the information would tend to Blacken the
character of the patient
 A patient’s husband is not prohibited from testifying on a report prepared by his
wife’s psychiatrist since he is not the treating physician (although it would be
hearsay)
 A physician is not prohibited from giving expert testimony in response to a strictly
hypothetical question in a lawsuit involving the physical or mental condition of a
patient he has treated professionally.
6. Requisites for Priest-Penitent Privilege
a. Confession was made or advice given by the priest in his professional
character in the course of the discipline enjoined by the church to which the
priest or minister belongs;
b. The confession must be confidential and penitent in character
7. Requisites for Public Officer’s Privilege
a. Communication made to a public officer in official confidence
b. Public interest would suffer by the disclosure
8. “Newsman’s privilege” – a publisher, editor, columnist or duly accredited reporter
cannot be compelled to disclose the source of news report or information appearing
in the publication which is related in confidence, the disclosure of which is not
demanded by the security of the state.

ADMISSIONS AND CONFESSIONS


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1. Admission and Confession distinguished


ADMISSION CONFESSION
Statement of fact which does not involve Involves acknowledgment of guilt or liability
an acknowledgment of guilt or liability

May be express or tacit Must be express


May be made by third persons, and in Can be made only by the party himself,
certain cases, are admissible against a and in some cases, are admissible against
party his co-accused

NOTE: If a justification is alleged, it is merely an admission.


 Right against self-incrimination applies to the re-enactment of the crime by the
accused
2. Requisites for admissibility of an admission
a. Involves a matter of fact, not of law
b. Categorical and definite
c. Knowingly and voluntarily made
d. Adverse to the admitter's interest, otherwise, self-serving and inadmissible as
hearsay
3. Admissions and Declarations against self-interest distinguished
ADMISSIONS DECLARATION AGAINST INTEREST
Need not be, though will greatly enhance Must have been made against the
probative weight if made against the proprietary or pecuniary interest of the
interest of the declarant parties
Made by the party himself and is a primary Must have been made by a person who is
evidence and competent though he be either deceased or unable to testify
present in court and ready to testify
Can be made at any time Must have been made ante litem motam

4. Compromises
 Civil Cases: not admission of liability
 Criminal Cases: implied admission of guilt.
Except: quasi-offenses or those allowed by law to be compromised, or when
made to avoid risks of criminal actions against him.
 Also, offer to pay expenses occasioned by injury not admissible as proof of civil
or criminal liability for the injury.
 A plea of forgiveness made with the knowledge, consent or acquiescence of the
accused is tantamount to an offer to compromise by the accused.
 If the purpose of the offer is to buy peace and avoid litigation, then the offer is
inadmissible.
5. Requisites for Admission by Silence (Adaptive Admissions)
a. The party heard and understood the statement
b. He was at liberty to interpose a denial
c. Statement was with respect to some matter affecting his rights or in
which he was then interested, and calling, naturally, for an answer
d. Facts were within his knowledge
e. Facts admitted or inference to be drawn from his silence is material
to the issue
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 If private complainant in a rape case fails to rebut testimonies of defense


witnesses that she and accused were sweethearts and that they had previous
sexual encounters, she is deemed to have impliedly admitted the truth of the
facts asserted by said witnesses.
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6. Res inter alios acta alteri nocero non debet


a. First branch
 Section 20, the rights of a party cannot be prejudiced by an act, declaration or
omission of another
 EXCEPTIONS: where the third person is a partner, agent, joint owner, joint
debtor or has a joint interest with the party, or is a co-conspirator or a privy of
the party, during the existence of the partnership, conspiracy, etc. as
established by evidence other than such act or declaration, or while holding
title to property in relation to such
b. Second branch
 Sec. 34, evidence that one did or did not do a certain thing at one time not
admissible to prove that he did or did not do the same/similar thing at another
time
 Exceptions: [KISSHICUP] it may be received to prove a specific intent or
knowledge, identity, plan, system, scheme, habit, custom, or usage
7. Admission by a Co-Partner or Agent
a. Partnership, agency or joint interest is established by evidence other
than the act or declaration
b. Act or declaration is within the scope of the partnership, agency or
joint interest
c. Act or declaration must have been made during the existence of the
partnership, agency or joint interest
8. Admission by Co-conspirator
 Requisites apply only to extrajudicial acts or statements, and not to testimony
during trial
a. Conspiracy is shown by evidence other than the act or
declaration
b. Admission was made during existence of the conspiracy
c. Admission relates to the conspiracy itself
 An extra-judicial confession of an accused is not admissible in evidence against
his co-accused when the latter had not been given the opportunity to hear him
testify and cross-examine him. Such confession is not admissible as an
Admission by co-conspirator because it was made after the conspiracy had
ended and after the commission of the crime.
9. Admissions by Privies
a. Must be a relation of privity between the party and the declarant
b. Admission was made while declarant as predecessor in interest,
while holding title to the property
c. Admission is in relation to said property
 HOWEVER, such evidence is still not admissible to contradict the terms of the
written instrument
10. Opinion of a witness
a. Expert – special knowledge, skill experience or training
b. Ordinary
i. Identity of person about whom he has adequate
knowledge
ii. Handwriting, if with sufficient familiarity
iii. Mental sanity, if sufficiently acquainted
iv. Impressions on emotion, behavior, condition or
appearance which he has observed
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v. Ordinary matters common to all men of common


perception
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HEARSAY RULE
1. Exceptions to hearsay rule
a. Dying declaration – ante mortem or in articulo mortis
b. Declaration against interest
c. Act or declaration against pedigree
d. Family reputation or traditions regarding pedigree
e. Common reputation
f. Res gestae
g. Entries in course of business
h. Entries in official records
i. Commercial lists and the like
j. Learned treatises
i. Court takes judicial notice; or
ii. Testified to by an expert
k. Testimony or deposition at a former proceeding
 Newspaper clippings are hearsay and have no evidentiary value unless
substantiated by persons with personal knowledge of the facts.
2. Doctrine of independently relevant statements
 Independent of whether the facts stated are true, they are relevant since they are
the facts in issue or are circumstantial evidence of the facts in issue
 Not covered by the hearsay rule
 Example: The statements or writings attributed to a person who is not on the
witness stand are being offered, not to prove the truth of the facts stated therein,
but only to prove that such statements were actually made or such writings were
executed, or to prove the tenor thereof.
3. Requisites of Declaration Against Interest
a. Declarant dead or unable to testify
 Mere absence from jurisdiction does not make declarant “unable to testify.”
Exception contemplates that the declarant is dead, mentally incompetent or
physically incapacitated
b. Declaration was against his own interest
c. Reasonable man in declarant’s position would not have made the declaration
unless he believed it to be true
 Declarations by accused against his interest are inadmissible if done in violation
of his constitutional rights
4. Requisites of Act or Declaration about Pedigree
a. Declarant dead or unable to testify
b. Declarant is related to the person whose pedigree is in question
c. Made ante litem motam
d. Relationship between declarant and person whose pedigree is in
question showed by evidence other than the declaration
5. Requisites of Family Reputation/Tradition regarding Pedigree
a. Reputation or tradition exists in family of person whose
pedigree is in question
b. Reputation or tradition existed previous to the controversy
c. Witness testifying thereon is a surviving member of that
family, by either affinity or consanguinity
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 A person’s statement as to the date of his birth and age, as he learned of these
from his parents or relatives, is an ante litem motam declaration of family
reputation.
6. Requisites of Common Reputation
a. Facts to which the reputation refers are of public or general interest
b. Reputation is ancient (or more than 30 years old)
c. Reputation must have been formed among a class of persons who
were in a position to have some sources of information and to contribute
intelligently to the formation of the opinion
d. Reputation must exist ante litem motam
 HOWEVER, if the reputation concerns marriage or moral character, the
requisite that the reputation must be ancient does NOT apply
7. Requisites of Dying Declarations
a. Declaration must concern cause and surrounding circumstances of declarant’s
death
 Cannot be admitted to establish fact of robbery; strictly limited to criminal
prosecutions for homicide/murder as evidence of the cause and surrounding
circumstances of the death
b. Declaration was made under consciousness of impending death
c. Declaration was freely and voluntarily made
d. Declarant’s testimony, if alive, would have been competent (eg: dying declaration
would not be admissible if it consisted of hearsay, or of the declarant’s opinion)
8. Res gestae
 2 kinds/classes:
a. Spontaneous statements;
 Requisites:
i. There is a startling occurrence
ii. Statement must relate to the circumstances of the occurrence
iii. Statement is unconscious and unpremeditated
 Factors to be considered in determining spontaneity of statement:
i. Time that elapsed between occurrence and the making of the
statement
ii. Place where statement was made
iii. Condition of the declarant when he made the statement
iv. Presence or absence of intervening occurrences between the
occurrence and the statement
v. Nature and circumstances of the statement itself
b. Verbal acts:
 Requisites:
i. Res gestae or principal act must be equivocal
ii. Act material to issue
iii. Statements must accompany equivocal act
iv. Statements must give legal significance to equivocal act
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9. Res gestae and Dying Declarations distinguished


RES GESTAE DYING DECLARATIONS
Statement of the killer himself after or Can be made only by the victim
during the killing, or that of a third person
(e.g., victim)
Statement may precede, accompany or be Made only after the homicidal attack has
made after the homicidal act was been committed
committed
Justified by the spontaneity of the Trustworthiness is based upon its being
statement given under awareness of impending death

10. Requisites of Entries in the course of business


a. Entrant is deceased or unable to testify
b. Entries made at or near the time of the transaction to which they relate
c. Entries made by entrant in his professional capacity or in the performance of a
duty
d. Entries were made in the ordinary or regular course of business
e. Entrant must have been in a position to know the facts therein stated
 Heirs of Conti vs. CA - baptismal certificates are admissible as entries in the
ordinary course of business, even absent the testimony of the officiating priest or
official recorder
11. Requisites of Entries in official records
a. Entry was made by public officer of the Philippines or by a person especially
enjoined by law to make such entry
b. Entry was made in the performance of entrant’s duty
c. Entrant must have been in a position to know the facts therein stated
 Baptismal certificates or parochial records are not public or official records and
are not proof of relationship or filiation of the child baptized.
12. Entries in the course of business and Entries in official records distinguished
ENTRIES IN THE COURSE OF BUSINESS ENTRIES IN OFFICIAL RECORDS
Sufficient that entrant made the entries entrant is a public officer in performance of
pursuant to a duty either legal, contractual, duty, or if a private individual, must have
moral or religious, or in the regular course acted pursuant to a specific legal duty
of business or duty (specially enjoined by law)
The person who made such entries must there is no such requirement for
be dead or unable to testify admissibility

13. Requisites of Testimony or Deposition in former proceeding


a. Witness whose testimony is offered is dead or unable to testify
b. Party against whom the evidence is offered, or his privy, was a party to
the former case or proceeding, judicial or administrative
c. Testimony or deposition relates to the same subject matter
d. Adverse party had opportunity to cross-examine
 Testimony given during preliminary investigation where the defense had the
opportunity to cross-examine the unavailable witness is admissible in the criminal
case
14. Modes of Extra-judicial Identification of Accused
a. Show-ups – where accused alone is brought face-to-face with the witness
for identification
b. Mug shots – where photographs are shown to the witness for
identification
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c. Line-ups – where a witness identifies the suspect from a group of persons


lined up for the purpose
 Identification will be admissible if it passes the totality of circumstances test
which considers the following factors:
i. The witness’ opportunity to view the criminal at the time of
the crime
ii. Witness’ degree of attention at that time
iii. Accuracy of any prior description by the witness
iv. The level of certainty demonstrated by the witness at the identification
v. Length of time between the crime and identification
vi. Suggestiveness of the identification procedure
15. The SC approved an additional exception to the hearsay rule in its A.M. no. 00-4-07-
SC approving the Proposed Rule on Examination of a Child Witness.*
 A statement made by a child describing any act or attempted act of child abuse
NOT otherwise admissible under the hearsay rule, may be admitted in evidence
in any criminal or non-criminal proceeding subject to the following rules:
a. Before such statement may be admitted, its proponent shall make
known to the adverse party the intention to offer such statement and
its particulars to allow him an opportunity to object.
ii. If the child is available
 The court shall require the child to be present at the presentation of
the hearsay statement for cross-examination by the adverse party.
iii. If the child is unavailable
 The fact of such circumstance must be proved by the proponent.
b. In ruling on the admissibility of such hearsay statement, the court shall
consider the time, content and circumstances thereof which provide
sufficient indicia of reliability. It shall consider the following factors:
i. Whether there is a motive to lie
ii. The general character of the declarant child
iii. Whether more than one person heard the statement
iv. Whether the statement was spontaneous
v. The timing of the statement and the relationship between the
declarant child and witness.
vi. Cross-examination could not show the lack of knowledge of the
declarant child.
vii. The possibility of faulty recollection of the declarant child;
viii. The circumstances surrounding the statement are such that there is
no reason to suppose the declarant child misrepresented the
involvement of the accused.
c. The child witness shall be considered unavailable in the following
situations:
i. Is deceased, suffers from physical infirmity, lack of memory, mental
illness or will be exposed to severe psychological injury;
ii. Is absent from the hearing and the proponent of his statement has been
unable to procure his attendance by process or other reasonable means.
d. When the child witness is unavailable, his hearsay testimony shall be
admitted only if corroborated by other admissible evidence.

*
The resolution came out last November 21, 2000. The rule took effect last December 15, 2000.
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RULE 131 BURDEN OF PROOF AND PRESUMPTIONS


1. Presumptions of law
a. May be conclusive or absolute, or disputable or rebuttable
b. A certain inference must be made whenever the facts appear which furnish the
basis of the inference
c. Reduced to fix rules and form a part of the system of jurisprudence
2. Presumptions of fact
a. A discretion is vested in the tribunal as to drawing the inference
b. Derived wholly and directly from the circs of the particular case by means of the
common experience of mankind
3. Burden of proof
 Onus probandi
 Obligation imposed upon a party who alleges the existence of facts necessary for
the prosecution of his action or defense to establish the same by the requisite
presentation of evidence
 In civil cases, it is on the party who would be defeated if no evidence is given on
either side; in criminal cases, the prosecution has the burden of proof.
 Does not shift; remains on party upon whom it is imposed
 Determined by pleadings filed by party
4. Burden of evidence
 Lies with party asserting affirmative allegations
 Shifts during trial, depending on exigencies of the case
 Determined by developments at trial or by provisions of law (presumptions,
judicial notice, admissions)
 In criminal cases, a negative fact must be proven if it is an essential element of
the crime.
 People vs. Macagaling – in a charge of illegal possession of firearms, the burden
is on the prosecution to prove that the accused had no license to possess the
same.
 People vs. Manalo – in a charge for selling regulated drugs without authority, it
was held that although the prosecution has the burden of proving a negative
averment which is an essential element of the crime (i.e. lack of license to sell),
the prosecution, in view of the difficulty of proving a negative allegation, need
only establish a prima facie case from the best evidence obtainable. In this case,
the lack of license was held to have been established by the circumstances that
the sale of the drug was consummated not in a drug store or hospital, and that it
was made at 10:00 PM.

RULE 132 PRESENTATION OF EVIDENCE


1. Use immunity
 Prohibits use of the witness' compelled testimony and its fruits in any manner in
connection with the criminal prosecution of the witness
 Where the statute grants only use immunity, merely testifying and/or producing
evidence does not render the witness immune from prosecution despite his
invocation of the right against self-incrimination
2. Transactional immunity
 Grants immunity to the witness from prosecution for an offense to which his
compelled testimony related
3. When leading questions allowed
a. On cross
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b. On preliminary matters
c. Difficulty in getting direct and intelligible answers
d. Unwilling or hostile witness
e. Adverse party or an officer, director or a corporation or partnership which is an
adverse party
 A misleading question, though not objected to, will not be evidence of the fact
assumed by the improper question.
 NOTE: One who voluntarily offers a witness’ testimony is bound by such (i.e.
cannot impeach or contradict), except:
i. Hostile witness
ii. Adverse party or rep. of adverse party
iii. Not voluntarily offered but required by law (e.g., subscribing witnesses to a
will)
4. Impeaching witness of adverse party
a. Contradictory evidence from testimony in same case
b. Evidence of prior inconsistent statement
c. Evidence of bad character/general reputation for truth, honesty, integrity
d. Evidence of bias, interest, prejudice or incompetence
5. Impeaching own witness
 General Rule: Party not allowed to impeach own witness
Exceptions:
a. Unwilling or adverse witness so declared by the court
b. Witness who is also an adverse party
c. Witnesses required by law (e.g., subscribing witnesses to a
will)
 May be impeached in all respects as if called by other party, EXCEPT by
evidence of bad moral character
 When a witness who is partly cross-examined dies, his direct examination cannot
be expunged
6. Requisites of revival of present memory
a. Memorandum has been written by him or under his direction; and
b. Written by him:
i. When the fact occurred or immediately thereafter; or
ii. At any other time when the fact was fresh in his
memory and he knew that the same was correctly recorded
7. Requisites of Revival of Past Recollection
a. Witness retains no recollection of the particular facts;
b. But he his able to swear that the record or writing
correctly stated the transaction when made
8. Revival of present memory and Revival of past recollection distinguished
PRESENT RECOLLECTION REVIVED PAST RECOLLECTION RECORDED
Applies if the witness remembers the facts Applies where the witness does not recall
regarding his entries the facts involved
Entitled to greater weight Entitled to lesser weight
9. Additional modes of authenticating a private writing
a. Doctrine of self-authentication
 Where the facts in the writing could only have been known by the writer
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b. Rule of authentication by the adverse party


 Where reply of the adverse party refers to and affirms the sending and his
receipt of the letter in question, a copy of which the proponent is offering as
evidence
10. Authentication not required:
a. Ancient document
i. More than 30 years old
ii. Contains no alterations or circumstances of suspicion
iii. Produced from a custody in which it would naturally be found if genuine
b. Public document or record
c. Notarial document acknowledged, proved or certified
d. Authenticity and due execution has been expressly or impliedly admitted (e.g.,
actionable documents, failure to deny under oath)
 Computer printouts are inadmissible unless properly authenticated by a witness
attesting that they came from the computer system or that the data stored in the
system were not and could not have been tampered with before the same were
printed out.
11. Handwriting: evidence of genuineness
a. Witness actually saw person writing the instrument
b. Familiar with handwriting and witness can give opinion
c. Comparison of questioned handwriting and admitted genuine specimens
d. Expert evidence
OFFER AND OBJECTION
1. The court shall consider no evidence which has not been formally offered. The
purpose for which the evidence is offered must be specified.
Exception: If there was repeated reference thereto in the course of the trial by
adverse party’s counsel and of the court, indicating that the documents were part of
the prosecution’s evidence.
 Two requisites must concur (People vs. Napta)
a. The document must have been duly identified by testimony duly recorded.
b. The document must have been incorporated to the records of the case.
2. A party who has introduced evidence is not entitled as matter of right to withdraw it in
finding that it does not answer his purpose; BUT he may withdraw an offer of an
exhibit any time before the court has passed on its admissibility.
3. Evidence offered is presumed to be admissible or competent until the contrary has
been established.
 Thus, the opposing party must OBJECT to its introduction.
4. When to object
OFFER TIME TO OBJECT
Offered orally Made immediately after the offer is made
Question propounded in the course of the Shall be made as soon as the grounds
oral examination of a witness thereof shall become reasonably apparent
Offer of evidence in writing Shall be objected to within 3 days after
notice of the offer unless a different period
is allowed by the court.

5. When is a motion to strike out answer proper?


a. When the witness answered the question before the counsel has a chance to
object
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b. Where a question which is not objectionable may be followed by an objectionable


unresponsive answer
c. Where a witness has volunteered statements in such a way that the party has not
been able to object thereto
d. Where a witness testifies without a question being addressed to him
e. Where a witness testifies beyond the ruling of the court prescribing the limits
within which he may answer
f. When a witness dies or becomes incapacitated to testify and the other party has
not been given the opportunity to cross-examine the witness.
 There must be an objection first before a motion to strike. If the party slept on
his right to object, he cannot later on avail a motion to strike to exclude the
evidence.
6. When is a motion to strike out improper?
a. A party cannot insist that competent and relevant evidence be stricken
out for reasons going to his weight, sufficiency or credibility
b. One cannot move to strike it out because it proves unfavorable to him
7. If court improperly excludes an otherwise admissible evidence, remedy is to tender
the excluded evidence, also known as offer of proof:
b. Documentary – by attaching the document or making it part
of the record
c. Testimonial – by stating the personal circumstances of
witness and the substance of proposed testimony

RULE 133 WEIGHT AND SUFFICIENCY OF EVIDENCE


1. Proof beyond reasonable doubt
 Does not mean such degree of proof as, excluding possibility of error, produces
absolute certainty
 Moral certainty only is required, or that degree of proof which produces
conviction in an unprejudiced mind
2. Circumstantial evidence to sustain conviction must:
a. More than one circumstance
b. Facts from which inferences are derived are proven
c. Combination of all circumstances such as to produce conviction beyond
reasonable doubt
3. Substantial evidence
 That amount of relevant evidence which a reasonable mind might accept as
adequate to justify a conclusion.

PERTINENT PROVISIONS OF THE IMPLEMENTING RULES OF THE E-COMMERCE ACT:


CHAPTER II LEGAL RECOGNITION OF ELECTRONIC DATA MESSAGES AND ELECTRONIC DOCUMENTS

Section 7. Legal Recognition of Electronic Data Messages and Electronic Documents. -


Information shall not be denied validity or enforceability solely on the ground that it is in
the form of an electronic data message or electronic document, purporting to give rise to
such legal effect. Electronic data messages or electronic documents shall have the legal
effect, validity or enforceability as any other document or legal writing. In particular,
subject to the provisions of the Act and these Rules:
a. A requirement under law that information is in writing is satisfied if the
information is in the form of an electronic data message or electronic
document.
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b. A requirement under law for a person to provide information in writing to


another person is satisfied by the provision of the information in an electronic
data message or electronic document.
c. A requirement under law for a person to provide information to another person
in a specified non-electronic form is satisfied by the provision of the
information in an electronic data message or electronic document if the
information is provided in the same or substantially the same form.
d. Nothing limits the operation of any requirement under law for information to be
posted or displayed in specified manner, time or location; or for any
information or document to be communicated by a specified method unless
and until a functional equivalent shall have been developed, installed, and
implemented.

Section 8. Incorporation by Reference. - Information shall not be denied validity or


enforceability solely on the ground that it is not contained in an electronic data message
or electronic document but is merely incorporated by reference therein.

Section 9. Use Not Mandatory. - Without prejudice to the application of Section 27 of the
Act and Section 37 of these Rules, nothing in the Act or these Rules requires a person to
use or accept information contained in electronic data messages, electronic documents,
or electronic signatures, but a person's consent to do so may be inferred from the
person's conduct.
Section 10. Writing. - Where the law requires a document to be in writing, or obliges the
parties to conform to a writing, or provides consequences in the event information is not
presented or retained in its original form, an electronic document or electronic data
message will be sufficient if the latter:
a. Maintains its integrity and reliability; and
b. Can be authenticated so as to be usable for subsequent reference, in that:
i. It has remained complete and unaltered, apart from the addition of
any endorsement and any authorized change, or any change which
arises in the normal course of communication, storage and display;
and
ii. It is reliable in the light of the purpose for which it was generated and
in the light of all relevant circumstances.

Section 11. Original. - Where the law requires that a document be presented or retained
in its original form, that requirement is met by an electronic document or electronic data
message if –
a. There exists a reliable assurance as to the integrity of the electronic document
or electronic data message from the time when it was first generated in its final
form and such integrity is shown by evidence aliunde (that is, evidence other
than the electronic data message itself) or otherwise; and
b. The electronic document or electronic data message is capable of being
displayed to the person to whom it is to be presented.
c. For the purposes of paragraph (a) above:
i. The criteria for assessing integrity shall be whether the information has
remained complete and unaltered, apart from the addition of any
endorsement and any change which arises in the normal course of
communication, storage and display; and
ii. The standard of reliability required shall be assessed in the light of the
purpose for which the information was generated and in the light of all
relevant circumstances.
An electronic data message or electronic document meeting and complying with
the requirements of Sections 6 or 7 of the Act shall be the best evidence of the
agreement and transaction contained therein.

Section 12. Solemn Contracts. - No provision of the Act shall apply to vary any and all
requirements of existing laws and relevant judicial pronouncements respecting
formalities required in the execution of documents for their validity. Hence, when the law
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requires that a contract be in some form in order that it may be valid or enforceable, or
that a contract is proved in a certain way, that requirement is absolute and
indispensable.

LEGAL RECOGNITION OF ELECTRONIC SIGNATURES

Section 13. Legal Recognition of Electronic Signatures. An electronic signature relating


to an electronic document or electronic data message shall be equivalent to the
signature of a person on a written document if the signature:
a. Is an electronic signature as defined in Section 6(g) of these Rules; and
b. Is proved by showing that a prescribed procedure, not alterable by the parties
interested in the electronic document or electronic data message, existed
under which:
i. A method is used to identify the party sought to be bound and to indicate
said party’s access to the electronic document or electronic data
message necessary for his consent or approval through the electronic
signature;
ii. Said method is reliable and appropriate for the purpose for which the
electronic document or electronic data message was generated or
communicated, in the light of all circumstances, including any relevant
agreement;
iii. It is necessary for the party sought to be bound, in order to proceed
further with the transaction, to have executed or provided the electronic
signature; and,
iv. The other party is authorized and enabled to verify the electronic
signature and to make the decision to proceed with the transaction
authenticated by the same.
v. The parties may agree to adopt supplementary or alternative procedures
provided that the requirements of paragraph (b) are complied with.
For purposes of subparagraphs (i) and (ii) of paragraph (b), the factors referred
to in Annex “2” may be taken into account.

Section 14. Presumption Relating to Electronic Signatures. - In any proceeding involving


an electronic signature, the proof of the electronic signature shall give rise to the
rebuttable presumption that:
a. The electronic signature is the signature of the person to whom it correlates;
and
b. The electronic signature was affixed by that person with the intention of
signing or approving the electronic data message or electronic document
unless the person relying on the electronically signed electronic data message
or electronic document knows or has notice of defects in or unreliability of the
signature or reliance on the electronic signature is not reasonable under the
circumstances.

MODES OF AUTHENTICATION

Section 15. Method of Authenticating Electronic Documents, Electronic Data Messages,


and Electronic Signatures. - Electronic documents, electronic data messages and
electronic signatures, shall be authenticated by demonstrating, substantiating and
validating a claimed identity of a user, device, or another entity in an information or
communication system.
Until the Supreme Court, by appropriate rules, shall have so provided, electronic
documents, electronic data messages and electronic signatures, shall be authenticated,
among other ways, in the following manner:
a. The electronic signature shall be authenticated by proof that a letter,
character, number or other symbol in electronic form representing the persons
named in and attached to or logically associated with an electronic data
message, electronic document, or that the appropriate methodology or
security procedures, when applicable, were employed or adopted by a person
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and executed or adopted by such person, with the intention of authenticating


or approving an electronic data message or electronic document;
b. The electronic data message or electronic document shall be authenticated by
proof that an appropriate security procedure, when applicable was adopted
and employed for the purpose of verifying the originator of an electronic data
message or electronic document, or detecting error or alteration in the
communication, content or storage of an electronic document or electronic
data message from a specific point, which, using algorithm or codes,
identifying words or numbers, encryptions, answers back or acknowledgement
procedures, or similar security devices.

Section 16. Burden of Authenticating Electronic Documents or Electronic Data


Messages. - The person seeking to introduce an electronic document or electronic data
message in any legal proceeding has the burden of proving its authenticity by evidence
capable of supporting a finding that the electronic data message or electronic document
is what the person claims it to be.

MODES FOR ESTABLISHING INTEGRITY

Section 17. Method of Establishing the Integrity of an Electronic Document or Electronic


Data Message. In the absence of evidence to the contrary, the integrity of the
information and communication system in which an electronic data message or
electronic document is recorded or stored may be established in any legal proceeding,
among other methods
a. By evidence that at all material times the information and communication
system or other similar device was operating in a manner that did not affect
the integrity of the electronic document or electronic data message, and there
are no other reasonable grounds to doubt the integrity of the information and
communication system;
b. By showing that the electronic document or electronic data message was
recorded or stored by a party to the proceedings who is adverse in interest to
the party using it; or
c. By showing that the electronic document or electronic data message was
recorded or stored in the usual and ordinary course of business by a person
who is not a party to the proceedings and who did not act under the control of
the party using the record.

ADMISSIBILITY AND EVIDENTIAL WEIGHT

Section 18. Admissibility and Evidential Weight of Electronic Data Messages and
Electronic Documents. - For evidentiary purposes, an electronic document or electronic
data message shall be the functional equivalent of a written document under existing
laws. In any legal proceeding, nothing in the application of the rules on evidence shall
deny the admissibility of an electronic data message or electronic document in evidence:
a. On the sole ground that it is in electronic form; or
b. On the ground that it is not in the standard written form.
The Act does not modify any statutory rule relating to the admissibility of
electronic data messages or electronic documents, except the rules relating to
authentication and best evidence.
In assessing the evidential weight of an electronic data message or electronic
document, the reliability of the manner in which it was generated, stored or
communicated, the reliability of the manner in which its originator was identified, and
other relevant factors shall be given due regard.

Section 19. Proof by Affidavit and Cross-Examination. - The matters referred to in


Section 12 of the Act on admissibility and evidentiary weight, and Section 9 of the Act on
the presumption of integrity of electronic signatures, may be presumed to have been
established by an affidavit given to the best of the deponent’s or affiant’s personal
knowledge subject to the rights of parties in interest to cross-examine such deponent or
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affiant as a matter of right. Such right of cross-examination may likewise be enjoyed by


a party to the proceedings who is adverse in interest to the party who has introduced the
affidavit or has caused the affidavit to be introduced.
Any party to the proceedings has the right to cross-examine a person referred to
in Section 11, paragraph 4, and sub-paragraph (c) of the Act.

RETENTION OF ELECTRONIC DATA MESSAGE AND ELECTRONIC DOCUMENT

Section 20. Retention of Electronic Data Message and Electronic Document. -


Notwithstanding any provision of law, rule or regulation to the contrary:
a. The requirement in any provision of law that certain documents be retained in
their original form is satisfied by retaining them in the form of an electronic data
message or electronic document which:
i. Remains accessible so as to be usable for subsequent reference;
ii. Is retained in the format in which it was generated, sent or received, or in
a format which can be demonstrated to accurately represent the
electronic data message or electronic document generated, sent or
received; and,
iii. Where applicable, enables the identification of its originator and
addressee, as well as the determination of the date and the time it was
sent or received.
b. The requirement referred to in paragraph (a) is satisfied by using the services of
a third party, provided that the conditions set forth in subparagraphs (i), (ii) and
(iii) of paragraph (a) are met.
c. Relevant government agencies tasked with enforcing or implementing applicable
laws relating to the retention of certain documents may, by appropriate
issuances, impose regulations to ensure the integrity, reliability of such
documents and the proper implementation of Section 13 of the Act.

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