Petitioner Vs Vs Respondent: First Division
Petitioner Vs Vs Respondent: First Division
Petitioner Vs Vs Respondent: First Division
DECISION
DEL CASTILLO , J : p
It is well within the Court's discretion to reject the presentation of evidence which it
judiciously believes irrelevant and impertinent to the proceeding on hand. TIaCcD
SO ORDERED. 1 5
There is also no denial of due process when the trial court did not allow petitioner to
introduce as evidence the CA Decision in CA-G.R. SP No. 51795. It is well within the court's
discretion to reject the presentation of evidence which it judiciously believes irrelevant and
impertinent to the proceeding on hand. This is specially true when the evidence sought to
be presented in a criminal proceeding as in this case, concerns an administrative matter.
As the Sandiganbayan aptly remarked:
The RTC committed no error in judgment when it did not allow the
Accused-appellant to present the Decision of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP
No. 51795 (Jose R. Catacutan vs. O ce of the Ombudsman) . The ndings in
administrative cases are not binding upon the court trying a criminal case, even if
the criminal proceedings are based on the same facts and incidents which gave
rise to the administrative matter. The dismissal of a criminal case does not
foreclose administrative action or necessarily gives the accused a clean bill of
health in all respects. In the same way, the dismissal of an administrative case
does not operate to terminate a criminal proceeding with the same subject matter.
. . . 27
This action undertaken by the trial court and sustained by the appellate court was
not without legal precedent. In Paredes v. Court of Appeals, 2 8 this Court ruled:
It is indeed a fundamental principle of administrative law that
administrative cases are independent from criminal actions for the same act or
omission. Thus, an absolution from a criminal charge is not a bar to an
administrative prosecution, or vice versa. One thing is administrative liability;
quite another thing is the criminal liability for the same act.
xxx xxx xxx
On the basis of the afore-mentioned precedents, the Court has no option but to
declare that the courts below correctly disallowed the introduction in evidence of the CA
Decision. "Due process of law is not denied by the exclusion of irrelevant, immaterial, or
CD Technologies Asia, Inc. © 2018 cdasiaonline.com
incompetent evidence, or testimony of an incompetent witness. It is not an error to refuse
evidence which although admissible for certain purposes, is not admissible for the
purpose which counsel states as the ground for offering it." 3 0
At any rate, even assuming that the trial court erroneously rejected the introduction
as evidence of the CA Decision, petitioner is not left without legal recourse. Petitioner
could have availed of the remedy provided in Section 40, Rule 132 of the Rules of Court
which provides:
Section 40. Tender of excluded evidence. — If documents or things
offered in evidence are excluded by the court, the offeror may have the same
attached to or made part of the record. If the evidence excluded is oral, the offeror
may state for the record the name and other personal circumstances of the
witness and the substance of the proposed testimony.
As observed by the appellate court, if the petitioner is keen on having the RTC admit
the CA's Decision for whatever it may be worth, he could have included the same in his
offer of exhibits. If an exhibit sought to be presented in evidence is rejected, the party
producing it should ask the court's permission to have the exhibit attached to the record.
As things stand, the CA Decision does not form part of the records of the case, thus
it has no probative weight. Any evidence that a party desires to submit for the
consideration of the court must be formally offered by him otherwise it is excluded and
rejected and cannot even be taken cognizance of on appeal. The rules of procedure and
jurisprudence do not sanction the grant of evidentiary value to evidence which was not
formally offered. HaIESC
Under said provision of law, three essential elements must thus be satisfied, viz.:
1. The accused must be a public officer discharging administrative, judicial or
official functions;
2. He must have acted with manifest partiality, evident bad faith or
inexcusable negligence; and
3. His action caused any undue injury to any party, including the government
or gave any private party unwarranted bene ts, advantage or preference in
the discharge of his functions. 3 1
All the above enumerated elements of the offense charged have been successfully
CD Technologies Asia, Inc. © 2018 cdasiaonline.com
proven by the prosecution.
First, petitioner could not have committed the acts imputed against him during the
time material to this case were it not for his being a public o cer, that is, as the O cer-in-
Charge (Principal) of SNSAT. As such public o cer, he exercised o cial duties and
functions, which include the exercise of administrative supervision over the school such as
taking charge of personnel management and nances, as well as implementing instruction
as far as appointment of teachers. 3 2
Second, petitioner acted with evident bad faith in refusing to implement the
appointments of private complainants. As the Sandiganbayan aptly remarked:
The records clearly indicate that the refusal of Catacutan to implement the
subject promotion was no longer anchored on any law or civil service rule as early
[as] the July 14, 1997 letter of the CHED Regional Director addressing the four
issues raised by the Accused-appellant in the latter's protest letter. . . . In light of
the undisputed evidence presented to the trial court that Catacutan's reason for
not implementing the appointments was a personal dislike or ill feelings towards
Posesano, this Court believes that Catacutan's refusal was impelled by an ill
motive or dishonest purpose characteristic of bad faith. . . .
xxx xxx xxx
In the August 1, 1997 [m]emorandum issued by the CHED Regional
Director, Catacutan was once again directed, in strong words, to cease and desist
from further questioning what has been lawfully acted upon by competent
authorities. Catacutan deliberately ignored the memorandum and even
challenged the private complainants to le a case against him. Such arrogance is
indicative of the bad faith of the accused-appellant.
Yet again, the [CSC] Regional Director wrote the Accused-appellant on
September 5, 1997, clarifying with nality the validity of the appointment. Still,
Accused-appellant failed to implement the subject promotions. This stubborn
refusal to implement the clear and repeated directive of competent authorities
established the evident bad faith of Catacutan and belies any of his claims to the
contrary. 3 3
Third, undue injury to the private complainants was duly proven to the point of moral
certainty. Here, the private complainants suffered undue injury when they were not able to
assume their o cial duties as Vocational Supervisors III despite the issuance of their valid
appointments. As borne out by the records, they were able to assume their new positions
only on November 19, 1997. So in the interregnum from June to November 1997, private
complainants failed to enjoy the bene ts of an increased salary corresponding to their
newly appointed positions. Likewise established is that as a result of petitioner's
unjusti ed and inordinate refusal to implement their valid appointments notwithstanding
clear and mandatory directives from his superiors, the private complainants suffered
mental anguish, sleepless nights, serious anxiety warranting the award of moral damages
under Article 2217 of the New Civil Code.
CD Technologies Asia, Inc. © 2018 cdasiaonline.com
At this point, the Court just needs to stress that the foregoing are factual matters
that were threshed out and decided upon by the trial court which were subsequently
a rmed by the Sandiganbayan. Where the factual ndings of both the trial court and the
appellate court coincide, the same are binding on this Court. In any event, apart from these
factual ndings of the lower courts, this Court in its own assessment and review of the
records considers the findings in order.
WHEREFORE , the petition is DENIED and the assailed Decision of the
Sandiganbayan promulgated on December 7, 2006 is AFFIRMED .
SO ORDERED .
Corona, C.J., Leonardo-de Castro, Bersamin and Villarama, Jr., JJ., concur.
Footnotes
1.Rollo, pp. 48-65; penned by Associate Justice Jose R. Hernandez and concurred in by
Associate Justices Gregory S. Ong and Rodolfo A. Ponferrada.
2.Id. at 30-36; penned by Judge Floripinas C. Buyser.
4.Exhibits "B " and "C", Folder of Exhibits No. II, pp. 310-311.
11.Rollo, p. 51.
12.Exhibits "1 " and "1-A", Folder of Exhibits No. II, pp. 427-428.
14.Supra note 2.
15.Rollo, p. 36.
16.Id. at 37-42.
17.Id. at 46-47.
18.Id. at 48-65.
19.Id. at 66.
20.Id. at 78-88.
21.Id. at 402-417.
CD Technologies Asia, Inc. © 2018 cdasiaonline.com
22.Id. at 17.
26.Equitable PCI Banking Corporation v. RCBC Capital Corporation, G.R. No. 182248,
December 18, 2008, 574 SCRA 858, 883.
27.Rollo, p. 57.
28.G.R. No. 169534, July 30, 2007, 528 SCRA 577, 587-589.
29.G.R. Nos. 175930-31, February 11, 2008, 544 SCRA 324, 345.
31.Ong v. People, G.R. No. 176546, September 25, 2009, 601 SCRA 47, 53-54.
34.Pleyto v. Philippine National Police Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (PNP-
CIDG), G.R. No. 169982, November 23, 2007, 538 SCRA 534, 590.