Digest #1 Legal Ethics

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A.M. No. 06-6-8-CA March 20, 2007 RE: COMPLAINT AGAINST JUSTICE ELVI JOHN S.

ASUNCION OF THE COURT OF APPEALS x----------------------------x A.M. No. 06-44-CA-J March 20, 2007 ATTY. ROBERTO C. PADILLA, Complainant, vs. ASSOCIATE JUSTICE ELVI JOHN S. ASUNCION, COURT OF APPEALS, Respondent. FACTS: These are 2 administrative cases against Justice Elvi John S. Asuncion of the Court of Appeals. The first one stemmed from an unsigned letter complaining that Justice Asuncion has been sitting on motions for reconsideration for six months to more than one year unless the parties come across. Justice Asuncion strongly denied this charge of inaction but admitted to somedelays in the resolution for some MRs and cited justifiable reasons such as the CAs reorganization and his heavy caseloads. An investigating committee asked Justice Asuncion to make a report on his backlogs and he only reported 9 cases allegedly unresolved by and pending with him. The findings of the investigator belie this assertion. The record shows that, as of September 30, 2006, the respondent had not resolved seventy-one (71) motions for reconsideration within the prescribed ninety-day period, and he had resolved one hundred seventy-nine (179) motions for reconsideration beyond the reglementary period. As of the same date, eighty-two (82) cases submitted for decision were still undecided, even after the lapse of the twelve-month period prescribed by the Constitution. He had also decided four hundred nine (409) cases beyond the one-year period. Notably, of the seventy-one (71) motions for reconsideration pending resolution, forty-six were filed in 2004 or earlier, with one dating all the way back to 2000. Five were filed in 2001, sixteen in 2002, ten in 2003, and thirteen in 2004 The second case is based on a verified complaint filed by Atty. Roberto C. Padilla, charging Justice Elvi John S. Asuncion with "culpable dereliction of duty, malicious delay in the administration of justice and gross ignorance of the law", in connection with CA-G.R. SP No. 60573, entitled "Philippine National Bank vs. NLRC and Erlinda Archinas". To better follow the complaint, the gist of the above mentioned case is the following: On May 28, 2001, with respondent Justice as ponente, the First Division of the Court of Appeals dismissed the PNB petition for certiorari with prayer for the issuance of a writ of preliminary injunction, affirming in its entirety the decision of the National Labor Relations Commission. On June 13, 2001, PNB filed a motion for reconsideration. On June 25, 2001, Archinas (private respondent in the petition for certiorari) filed her opposition to PNBs motion for reconsideration. On July 24, 2001, acting upon PNBs urgent motion for issuance of a TRO, respondent issued the resolution enjoining the public respondent from implementing the Writ of Execution. On October 30, 2001, the resolution ordering the maintenance of the status quo was issued. On November 5, 2001, Archinas filed her motion seeking reconsideration of the October 30, 2001 resolution. Archinas filed four (4) urgent motions for early resolution of the pending motion/s for reconsideration, on December 28, 2001, June 13, 2002, September 24, 2002, and August 23, 2005, Meantime, on July 5, 2004, respondent Justice Asuncion was assigned to CA Cebu Station. With this transfer, respondents caseload was assigned to Justice Zenarosa. On November 3, 2004, respondent was reassigned back to Manila. It was only on August 7, 2006 that respondent finally resolved the PNB motion for reconsideration. The Investigating Justicein his Report also found out that: "His interest in the case is manifest in that, despite his assignment in Cebu City on July 7, 2004, he did not unload the case to Justice Zenarosa (Office Order No. 212-04-CG). Worse, he recalled the case upon his return to the CA Manila station." ISSUE:

Whether or not the failure of a Judge/justice to decide a case within the required period constitutes gross inefficiency and would later on become serious misconduct that would justify dismissal from the service?

RULING: In this case of Justice Asuncion, the prolonged delay in deciding or resolving such a staggering number of cases/matters assigned to him, borders on serious misconduct which could subject the respondent to the maximum administrative sanction. To the Court, these are badges of bad faith and manifest undue interest attributable only to the respondent, and not to the other two justices of the CA Division. Accordingly, only the respondent must be made to suffer the consequences. Besides, the five-year delay in the resolution of the PNB motion for reconsideration would already constitute serious misconduct that would justify dismissal from the service. Such 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. While a judge is presumed to act with regularity and good faith in the performance of judicial functions, a blatant disregard of the clear and unmistakable provisions of a statute, as well as Supreme Court circulars enjoining strict compliance therewith, upends this presumption and subjects the magistrate to administrative sanctions. WHEREFORE, in A. M. No. 06-6-08, for having incurred undue delay in the disposal of pending motions for reconsideration in several cases, as recommended by the Investigating Justice, Associate Justice Elvi John S. Asuncion of the Court of Appeals is SUSPENDED from office without pay, allowances and other monetary benefits for a period of THREE MONTHS. In A. M. No. 06-44-CA-J, for gross ignorance of the law and manifest undue interest, Associate Justice Elvi John S. Asuncion of the Court of Appeals is hereby ordered DISMISSED FROM THE SERVICE with forfeiture of retirement benefits, except leave credits.

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