Jose Vs Suarez
Jose Vs Suarez
Jose Vs Suarez
DECISION
TINGA, J.:
Petitioners filed this case assailing the Decision[1] of the Court of Appeals in
CA-G.R. CEB SP No. 00397 dated 17 August 2006 which affirmed the
Orders[2] of the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Cebu City, Branch 19 restraining
Branches 2 and 5 of the Municipal Trial Court in Cities (MTCC) of Cebu City
from proceeding with the criminal cases for violation of Batas Pambansa Bilang
22 (B.P. Blg. 22) filed against respondentPurita Suarez.
Thereafter, at the instance of Carolina, several cases for violation of B.P. Blg.
22[6] were filed against respondent Purita before the MTCC ofCebu City,
Branches 2 and 5. Purita, in turn filed motions to suspend the criminal
proceedings on the ground of prejudicial question, on the theory that the checks
subject of the B.P. Blg. 22 cases are void for being contra bonos mores or for
having been issued in payment of the iniquitous and unconscionable interest
imposed by petitioners. The motions were denied.[7]
Respondents thereafter filed before the RTC a Motion for Writ of Preliminary
Injunction with Temporary Restraining Order[8] seeking to restrain
the MTCCs from further proceeding with the B.P. Blg. 22 cases on the ground
of prejudicial question. Petitioners opposed the motion. Nevertheless, the RTC
through its 20 December 2004 Order[9] issued a writ of preliminary injunction,
thereby enjoining the MTCCs from proceeding with the cases against
Purita. Petitioners sought reconsideration of the order but their motion was
denied due course in the RTCs 3 February 2005 Order.[10]
Respondents, for their part, state that the possibility of a ruling in the civil case
to the effect that the subject checks are contra bonos mores and hence null and
void constitutes a prejudicial question in the B.P. Blg. 22 cases. Thus,
proceeding with the trial in the criminal cases without awaiting the outcome of
the civil case is fraught with mischievous consequences.[15] They cite the case
of Medel v. Court of Appeals,[16]wherein the Court nullified the interest rate of
5.5% per month for being contra bonos mores under Article 1306 of
the Civil Code, and recomputed the interest due at the rate of 1% per month.
[17]
Thus, if their loans are computed at 1% per month, it would mean that the
checks subject of the B.P. Blg. 22 cases are not only fully paid but are also in
fact overpaid. They also invoke the case of Danao v. Court of
Appeals[18]wherein the Court allegedly ruled that there is no violation of B.P.
Blg. 22 if the dishonored checks have been paid.[19] They claim that since the
5% interest per day was not contained in any written agreement, per Article
1956[20] of the Civil Code, petitioners are bound to return the total interest they
collected from respondents. Respondents point out that they incorporated in
their complaint an application for preliminary injunction and temporary
restraining order to restrain Carolina from enforcing the interest and from filing
criminal cases for violation of B.P. Blg. 22. Quoting the RTC, respondents
explain:
Since there was no proof at that time that plaintiff sustain or are about
to sustain damages or prejudice if the acts complained of are not
enjoined, the application was not acted upon by the Court. When the
attention of the Court was invited by the plaintiffs of the refusal of the
MTC, Branches 2 and 5, to suspend the criminal proceedings despite
being appraised of the pendency of this case, the Court has to act
accordingly.[21]
Respondents maintain that they are not guilty of forum shopping because after
the denial by the MTCCs of their motion to suspend proceedings,their only
available remedy was the filing of an application for preliminary injunction in
the existing civil case filed earlier than the B.P. Blg. 22 cases. In any case,
respondents argue that the rule on forum shopping is not intended to deprive a
party to a case of a legitimate remedy.[22]Finally, they claim that the case falls
under the exceptions to the rule that the prosecution of criminal cases may not
be enjoined by a writ of injunction, considering that in this case there is a
prejudicial question which is sub judice, and that there is persecution rather
than prosecution.[23]
We find that there is none and thus we resolve to grant the petition.
Now the prejudicial question posed by respondents is simply this: whether the
daily interest rate of 5% is void, such that the checks issued by respondents to
cover said interest are likewise void for being contra bonos mores, and thus the
cases for B.P. Blg. 22 will no longer prosper.
In the first place, the validity or invalidity of the interest rate is not
determinative of the guilt of respondents in the criminal
cases. The Court hasconsistently declared that the cause or reason for the
The nature and policy of B.P. Blg. 22 were aptly enunciated by the Court
in Meriz v. People,[27] when it stated:
x x x. [B.P. Blg.] 22 does not appear to concern itself with what
might actually be envisioned by the parties, its primordial intention
being to instead ensure the stability and commercial value of checks
as being virtual substitutes for currency. It is a policy that can easily
be eroded if one has yet to determine the reason for which checks are
issued, or the terms and conditions for their issuance, before an
appropriate application of the legislative enactment can be made. The
gravamen of the offense under [B.P. Blg.] 22 is the act of making or
issuing a worthless check or a check that is dishonored upon
presentment for payment. The act effectively declares the offense to
be one of malum prohibitum. The only valid query then is whether the
law has been breached,
i.e., by the mere act of issuing a bad check, without so much regard as
to the criminal intent of the issuer.[28]
There being no prejudicial question, the RTC and, consequently, the Court of
Appeals gravely erred when they allowed the suspension of the proceedings in
the B.P. Blg. 22 cases.
We find that respondents are guilty of forum shopping. There is forum shopping
when a party seeks to obtain remedies in an action in one court, which had
already been solicited, and in other courts and other proceedings in other
tribunals. Forum shopping is the act of one party against another, when an
adverse judgment has been rendered in one forum, of seeking another and
possibly favorable opinion in another forum other than by appeal or by special
civil action of certiorari; or the institution of two or more acts or proceedings
grounded on the same cause on the supposition that one or the other court would
make a favorable disposition.[30]
Medel v. CA is the case upon which respondents anchor their claim that the
interest due on their loans is only 1% per month and thus they have already
overpaid their obligation to petitioners. In Medel, the Court declared that the
rate of 5.5% interest per month on a P500,000.00 loan is iniquitous,
unconscionable and hence contrary to morals, and must equitably be reduced to
12% per annum. While the Medel case made a finding that the stipulated
interest rate is excessive and thus may be equitably reduced by the courts, we do
not see how a reduction of the interest rate, should there be any, or a subsequent
declaration that the amount due has been fully paid, will have an effect on the
determination of whether or notPurita had in fact issued bouncing checks.