LegMed Cases
LegMed Cases
LegMed Cases
Around midnight o 25 May 196, Corazon started to experience mild labor pains prompting Corazon and Rogelio Nogales ,"Spouses Nogales", to see
Dr. Lstrada at his home. Ater examining Corazon, Dr. Lstrada adised her immediate admission to the Capitol Medical Center ,"CMC",.
On 26 May 196, Corazon was admitted at 2:30 a.m. at the CMC ater the sta nurse noted the written admission request
8
o Dr. Lstrada. Upon
Corazon's admission at the CMC, Rogelio Nogales ,"Rogelio", executed and signed the "Consent on Admission and Agreement"
9
and "Admission
Agreement."
10
Corazon was then brought to the labor room o the CMC.
Dr. Rosa Uy ,"Dr. Uy",, who was then a resident physician o CMC, conducted an internal examination o Corazon. Dr. Uy then called up Dr. Lstrada to
notiy him o her indings.
Based on the Doctor's Order Sheet,
11
around 3:00 a.m., Dr. Lstrada ordered or 10 mg. o alium to be administered immediately by intramuscular
injection. Dr. Lstrada later ordered the start o intraenous administration o syntocinon admixed with dextrose, 5, in lactated Ringers' solution, at the
rate o eight to ten micro-drops per minute.
According to the Nurse's Obseration Notes,
12
Dr. Joel Lnriquez ,"Dr. Lnriquez",, an anesthesiologist at CMC, was notiied at 4:15 a.m. o Corazon's
admission. Subsequently, when asked i he needed the serices o an anesthesiologist, Dr. Lstrada reused. Despite Dr. Lstrada's reusal, Dr. Lnriquez
stayed to obsere Corazon's condition.
At 6:00 a.m., Corazon was transerred to Deliery Room No. 1 o the CMC. At 6:10 a.m., Corazon's bag o water ruptured spontaneously. At 6:12 a.m.,
Corazon's cerix was ully dilated. At 6:13 a.m., Corazon started to experience conulsions.
At 6:15 a.m., Dr. Lstrada ordered the injection o ten grams o magnesium sulate. loweer, Dr. Lly Villalor ,"Dr. Villalor",, who was assisting Dr.
Lstrada, administered only 2.5 grams o magnesium sulate.
At 6:22 a.m., Dr. Lstrada, assisted by Dr. Villalor, applied low orceps to extract Corazon's baby. In the process, a 1.0 x 2.5 cm. piece o cerical tissue
was allegedly torn. 1he baby came out in an apnic, cyanotic, weak and injured condition. Consequently, the baby had to be intubated and resuscitated by
Dr. Lnriquez and Dr. Payumo.
At 6:2 a.m., Corazon began to maniest moderate aginal bleeding which rapidly became prouse. Corazon's blood pressure dropped rom 130,80 to
60,40 within ie minutes. 1here was continuous prouse aginal bleeding. 1he assisting nurse administered hemacel through a gauge 19 needle as a side
drip to the ongoing intraenous injection o dextrose.
At :45 a.m., Dr. Lstrada ordered blood typing and cross matching with bottled blood. It took approximately 30 minutes or the CMC laboratory, headed
by Dr. Perpetua Lacson ,"Dr. Lacson",, to comply with Dr. Lstrada's order and delier the blood.
At 8:00 a.m., Dr. Noe Lspinola ,"Dr. Lspinola",, head o the Obstetrics-Gynecology Department o the CMC, was apprised o Corazon's condition by
telephone. Upon being inormed that Corazon was bleeding prousely, Dr. Lspinola ordered immediate hysterectomy. Rogelio was made to sign a
"Consent to Operation."
13
Due to the inclement weather then, Dr. Lspinola, who was etched rom his residence by an ambulance, arried at the CMC about an hour later or at 9:00
a.m. le examined the patient and ordered some resuscitatie measures to be administered. Despite Dr. Lspinola's eorts, Corazon died at 9:15 a.m. 1he
cause o death was "hemorrhage, post partum."
14
On 14 May 1980, petitioners iled a complaint or damages
15
with the Regional 1rial Court
16
o Manila against CMC, Dr. Lstrada, Dr. Villalor, Dr. Uy,
Dr. Lnriquez, Dr. Lacson, Dr. Lspinola, and a certain Nurse J. Dumlao or the death o Corazon. Petitioners mainly contended that deendant physicians
and CMC personnel were negligent in the treatment and management o Corazon's condition. Petitioners charged CMC with negligence in the selection
and superision o deendant physicians and hospital sta.
lor ailing to ile their answer to the complaint despite serice o summons, the trial court declared Dr. Lstrada, Dr. Lnriquez, and Nurse Dumlao in
deault.
1
CMC, Dr. Villalor, Dr. Uy, Dr. Lspinola, and Dr. Lacson iled their respectie answers denying and opposing the allegations in the complaint.
Subsequently, trial ensued.
Ater more than 11 years o trial, the trial court rendered judgment on 22 Noember 1993 inding Dr. Lstrada solely liable or damages. 1he trial court
ruled as ollows:
1he ictim was under his pre-natal care, apparently, his ault began rom his incorrect and inadequate management and lack o treatment o the
pre-eclamptic condition o his patient. It is not disputed that he misapplied the orceps in causing the deliery because it resulted in a large
cerical tear which had caused the prouse bleeding which he also ailed to control with the application o inadequate injection o magnesium
sulate by his assistant Dra. Lly Villalor. Dr. Lstrada een ailed to notice the erroneous administration by nurse Dumlao o hemacel by way o
side drip, instead o direct intraenous injection, and his ailure to consult a senior obstetrician at an early stage o the problem.
On the part howeer o Dra. Lly Villalor, Dra. Rosa Uy, Dr. Joel Lnriquez, Dr. Lacson, Dr. Lspinola, nurse J. Dumlao and CMC, the Court
inds no legal justiication to ind them ciilly liable.
On the part o Dra. Lly Villalor, she was only taking orders rom Dr. Lstrada, the principal physician o Corazon Nogales. She can only make
suggestions in the manner the patient maybe treated but she cannot impose her will as to do so would be to substitute her good judgment to
that o Dr. Lstrada. I she ailed to correctly diagnose the true cause o the bleeding which in this case appears to be a cerical laceration, it
cannot be saely concluded by the Court that Dra. Villalor had the correct diagnosis and she ailed to inorm Dr. Lstrada. No eidence was
introduced to show that indeed Dra. Villalor had discoered that there was laceration at the cerical area o the patient's internal organ.
On the part o nurse Dumlao, there is no showing that when she administered the hemacel as a side drip, she did it on her own. I the correct
procedure was directly thru the eins, it could only be because this was what was probably the orders o Dr. Lstrada.
\hile the eidence o the plaintis shows that Dr. Noe Lspinola, who was the Chie o the Department o Obstetrics and Gynecology who
attended to the patient Mrs. Nogales, it was only at 9:00 a.m. 1hat he was able to reach the hospital because o typhoon Didang ,Lxhibit 2,.
\hile he was able to gie prescription in the manner Corazon Nogales may be treated, the prescription was based on the inormation gien to
him by phone and he acted on the basis o acts as presented to him, belieing in good aith that such is the correct remedy. le was not with
Dr. Lstrada when the patient was brought to the hospital at 2:30 o'clock a.m. So, whateer errors that Dr. Lstrada committed on the patient
beore 9:00 o'clock a.m. are certainly the errors o Dr. Lstrada and cannot be the mistake o Dr. Noe Lspinola. lis ailure to come to the
hospital on time was due to ortuitous eent.
On the part o Dr. Joel Lnriquez, while he was present in the deliery room, it is not incumbent upon him to call the attenti on o Dr. Lstrada,
Dra. Villalor and also o Nurse Dumlao on the alleged errors committed by them. Besides, as anesthesiologist, he has no authority to control
the actuations o Dr. Lstrada and Dra. Villalor. lor the Court to assume that there were errors being committed in the presence o Dr.
Lnriquez would be to dwell on conjectures and speculations.
On the ciil liability o Dr. Perpetua Lacson, |s|he is a hematologist and in-charge o the blood bank o the CMC. 1he Court cannot accept the
theory o the plaintis that there was delay in deliering the blood needed by the patient. It was testiied, that in order that this blood will be
made aailable, a laboratory test has to be conducted to determine the type o blood, cross matching and other matters consistent with medical
science so, the lapse o 30 minutes maybe considered a reasonable time to do all o these things, and not a delay as the plaintis would want the
Court to beliee.
Admittedly, Dra. Rosa Uy is a resident physician o the Capitol Medical Center. She was sued because o her alleged ailure to notice the
incompetence and negligence o Dr. Lstrada. loweer, there is no eidence to support such theory. No eidence was adduced to show that
Dra. Rosa Uy as a resident physician o Capitol Medical Center, had knowledge o the mismanagement o the patient Corazon Nogales, and that
notwithstanding such knowledge, she tolerated the same to happen.
In the pre-trial order, plaintis and CMC agreed that deendant CMC did not hae any hand or participation in the selection or hiring o Dr.
Lstrada or his assistant Dra. Lly Villalor as attending physician|s| o the deceased. In other words, the two ,2, doctors were not employees o
the hospital and thereore the hospital did not hae control oer their proessional conduct. \hen Mrs. Nogales was brought to the hospital, it
was an emergency case and deendant CMC had no choice but to admit her. Such being the case, there is thereore no legal ground to apply the
proisions o Article 216 and 2180 o the New Ciil Code reerring to the icarious liability o an employer or the negligence o its employees.
I eer in this case there is ault or negligence in the treatment o the deceased on the part o the attending physicians who were employed by the
amily o the deceased, such ciil liability should be borne by the attending physicians under the principle o "respondeat superior".
\lLRLlORL, premises considered, judgment is hereby rendered inding deendant Dr. Lstrada o Number 13 Pitimini St. San lrancisco del
Monte, Quezon City ciilly liable to pay plaintis: 1, By way o actual damages in the amount o P105,000.00, 2, By way o moral damages in
the amount o P00,000.00, 3, Attorney's ees in the amount o P100,000.00 and to pay the costs o suit.
lor ailure o the plaintis to adduce eidence to support its |sic| allegations against the other deendants, the complaint is hereby ordered
dismissed. \hile the Court looks with disaor the iling o the present complaint against the other deendants by the herein plaintis, as in a
way it has caused them personal inconenience and slight damage on their name and reputation, the Court cannot accepts |sic| howeer, the
theory o the remaining deendants that plaintis were motiated in bad aith in the iling o this complaint. lor this reason deendants'
counterclaims are hereby ordered dismissed.
SO ORDLRLD.
18
Petitioners appealed the trial court's decision. Petitioners claimed that aside rom Dr. Lstrada, the remaining respondents should be held equally liable or
negligence. Petitioners pointed out the extent o each respondent's alleged liability.
On 6 lebruary 1998, the Court o Appeals airmed the decision o the trial court.
19
Petitioners iled a motion or reconsideration which the Court o
Appeals denied in its Resolution o 21 March 2000.
20
lence, this petition.
Meanwhile, petitioners iled a Maniestation dated 12 April 2002
21
stating that respondents Dr. Lstrada, Dr. Lnriquez, Dr. Villalor, and Nurse Dumlao
"need no longer be notiied o the petition because they are absolutely not inoled in the issue raised beore the |Court|, regarding the liability o
|CMC|."
22
Petitioners stressed that the subject matter o this petition is the liability o CMC or the negligence o Dr. Lstrada.
23
1he Court issued a Resolution dated 9 September 2002
24
dispensing with the requirement to submit the correct and present addresses o respondents Dr.
Lstrada, Dr. Lnriquez, Dr. Villalor, and Nurse Dumlao. 1he Court stated that with the iling o petitioners' Maniestation, it should be understood that
they are claiming only against respondents CMC, Dr. Lspinola, Dr. Lacson, and Dr. Uy who hae iled their respectie comments. Petitioners are
oregoing urther claims against respondents Dr. Lstrada, Dr. Lnriquez, Dr. Villalor, and Nurse Dumlao.
1he Court noted that Dr. Lstrada did not appeal the decision o the Court o Appeals airming the decision o the Regional 1rial Court. Accordingly, the
decision o the Court o Appeals, airming the trial court's judgment, is already inal as against Dr. Oscar Lstrada.
Petitioners iled a motion or reconsideration
25
o the Court's 9 September 2002 Resolution claiming that Dr. Lnriquez, Dr. Villalor and Nurse Dumlao
were notiied o the petition at their counsels' last known addresses. Petitioners reiterated their imputation o negligence on these respondents. 1he Court
denied petitioners' Motion or Reconsideration in its 18 lebruary 2004 Resolution.
26
1he Court of Appeals' Ruling
In its Decision o 6 lebruary 1998, the Court o Appeals upheld the trial court's ruling. 1he Court o Appeals rejected petitioners' iew that the doctrine
in Dartivg r. Cbarte.tov Covvvvit, Mevoriat o.itat
2
applies to this case. According to the Court o Appeals, the present case diers rom the Dartivg case
since Dr. Lstrada is an independent contractor-physician whereas the Dartivg case inoled a physician and a nurse who were employees o the hospital.
Citing other American cases, the Court o Appeals urther held that the mere act that a hospital permitted a physician to practice medicine and use its
acilities is not suicient to render the hospital liable or the physician's negligence.
28
A hospital is not responsible or the negligence o a physician who is
an independent contractor.
29
1he Court o Appeals ound the cases o Daria.ov r. Covote
30
and Cavbett r. vva aivg terev. o.itat
31
applicable to this case. Quoting Cavbett, the
Court o Appeals stated that where there is no proo that deendant physician was an employee o deendant hospital or that deendant hospital had
reason to know that any acts o malpractice would take place, deendant hospital could not be held liable or its ailure to interene in the relationship o
physician-patient between deendant physician and plainti.
On the liability o the other respondents, the Court o Appeals applied the "borrowed serant" doctrine considering that Dr. Lstrada was an independent
contractor who was merely exercising hospital priileges. 1his doctrine proides that once the surgeon enters the operating room and takes charge o the
proceedings, the acts or omissions o operating room personnel, and any negligence associated with such acts or omissions, are imputable to the
surgeon.
32
\hile the assisting physicians and nurses may be employed by the hospital, or engaged by the patient, they normally become the temporary
serants or agents o the surgeon in charge while the operation is in progress, and liability may be imposed upon the surgeon or their negligent acts under
the doctrine o re.ovaeat .verior.
33
1he Court o Appeals concluded that since Rogelio engaged Dr. Lstrada as the attending physician o his wie, any liability or malpractice must be Dr.
Lstrada's sole responsibility.
\hile it ound the amount o damages air and reasonable, the Court o Appeals held that no interest could be imposed on unliquidated claims or
damages.
1he Issue
Basically, the issue in this case is whether CMC is icariously liable or the negligence o Dr. Lstrada. 1he resolution o this issue rests, on the other hand,
on the ascertainment o the relationship between Dr. Lstrada and CMC. 1he Court also beliees that a determination o the extent o liability o the other
respondents is ineitable to inally and completely dispose o the present controersy.
1he Ruling of the Court
1he petition is partly meritorious.
On the Liability of CMC
Dr. Lstrada's negligence in handling the treatment and management o Corazon's condition which ultimately resulted in Corazon's death is no longer in
issue. Dr. Lstrada did not appeal the decision o the Court o Appeals which airmed the ruling o the trial court inding Dr. Lstrada solely liable or
damages. Accordingly, the inding o the trial court on Dr. Lstrada's negligence is already inal.
Petitioners maintain that CMC is icariously liable or Dr. Lstrada's negligence based on Article 2180 in relation to Article 216 o the Ciil Code. 1hese
proisions pertinently state:
Art. 2180. 1he obligation imposed by article 216 is demandable not only or one's own acts or omissions, but also or those o persons or
whom one is responsible.
x x x x
Lmployers shall be liable or the damages caused by their employees and household helpers acting within the scope o their assigned tasks, een
though the ormer are not engaged in any business or industry.
x x x x
1he responsibility treated o in this article shall cease when the persons herein mentioned proe that they obsered all the diligence o a good
ather o a amily to preent damage.
Art. 216. \hoeer by act or omission causes damage to another, there being ault or negligence, is obliged to pay or the damage done. Such
ault or negligence, i there is no pre-existing contractual relation between the parties, is called a quasi-delict and is goerned by the proisions o
this Chapter.
Similarly, in the United States, a hospital which is the employer, master, or principal o a physician employee, serant, or agent, may be held liable or the
physician's negligence under the doctrine o re.ovaeat .verior.
34
In the present case, petitioners maintain that CMC, in allowing Dr. Lstrada to practice and admit patients at CMC, should be liable or Dr. Lstrada's
malpractice. Rogelio claims that he knew Dr. Lstrada as an accredited physician o CMC, though he discoered later that Dr. Lstrada was not a salaried
employee o the CMC.
35
Rogelio urther claims that he was dealing with CMC, whose primary concern was the treatment and management o his wie's
condition. Dr. Lstrada just happened to be the speciic person he talked to representing CMC.
36
Moreoer, the act that CMC made Rogelio sign a
Consent on Admission and Admission Agreement
3
and a Consent to Operation printed on the letterhead o CMC indicates that CMC considered Dr.
Lstrada as a member o its medical sta.
On the other hand, CMC disclaims liability by asserting that Dr. Lstrada was a mere isiting physician and that it admitted Corazon because her physical
condition then was classiied an emergency obstetrics case.
38
CMC alleges that Dr. Lstrada is an independent contractor "or whose actuations CMC would be a total stranger." CMC maintains that it had no control
or superision oer Dr. Lstrada in the exercise o his medical proession.
1he Court had the occasion to determine the relationship between a hospital and a consultant or isiting physician and the li ability o such hospital or that
physician's negligence in Ravo. r. Covrt of .eat.,
39
to wit:
In the irst place, hospitals exercise signiicant control in the hiring and iring o consultants and in the conduct o their work within the hospital
premises. Doctors who apply or "consultant" slots, isiting or attending, are required to submit proo o completion o resi dency, their
educational qualiications, generally, eidence o accreditation by the appropriate board ,diplomate,, eidence o ellowship in most cases, and
reerences. 1hese requirements are careully scrutinized by members o the hospital administration or by a reiew committee set up by the
hospital who either accept or reject the application. 1his is particularly true with respondent hospital.
Ater a physician is accepted, either as a isiting or attending consultant, he is normally required to attend clinico-pathological conerences,
conduct bedside rounds or clerks, interns and residents, moderate grand rounds and patient audits and perorm other tasks and responsibilities,
or the priilege o being able to maintain a clinic in the hospital, and,or or the priilege o admitting patients into the hospital. In addition to
these, the physician's perormance as a specialist is generally ealuated by a peer reiew committee on the basis o mortality and morbidity
statistics, and eedback rom patients, nurses, interns and residents. A consultant remiss in his duties, or a consultant who regularly alls short o
the minimum standards acceptable to the hospital or its peer reiew committee, is normally politely terminated.
In other words, priate hospitals, hire, ire and exercise real control oer their attending and isiting "consultant" sta. While "consultants"
are not, technically employees, a point which respondent hospital asserts in denying all responsibility for the patient's condition, the
control exercised, the hiring, and the right to terminate consultants all fulfill the important hallmarks of an employer-employee
relationship, with the exception of the payment of wages. In assessing whether such a relationship in fact exists, the control test is
determining. Accordingly, on the basis of the foregoing, we rule that for the purpose of allocating responsibility in medical
negligence cases, an employer-employee relationship in effect exists between hospitals and their attending and visiting
physicians. 1his being the case, the question now arises as to whether or not respondent hospital is solidarily liable wi th respondent doctors or
petitioner's condition.
1he basis or holding an employer solidarily responsible or the negligence o its employee is ound in Article 2180 o the Ciil Code which
considers a person accountable not only or his own acts but also or those o others based on the ormer's responsibility under a relationship o
patria potestas. x x x
40
,Lmphasis supplied,
\hile the Court in Ravo. did not expound on the control test, such test essentially determines whether an employment relationship exists between a
physician and a hospital based on the exercise o control oer the physician as to details. Speciically, the employer ,or the hospital, must hae the right to
control both the means and the details o the process by which the employee ,or the physician, is to accomplish his task.
41
Ater a thorough examination o the oluminous records o this case, the Court inds no single eidence pointing to CMC's exercise o control oer Dr.
Lstrada's treatment and management o Corazon's condition. It is undisputed that throughout Corazon's pregnancy, she was under the exclusie prenatal
care o Dr. Lstrada. At the time o Corazon's admission at CMC and during her deliery, it was Dr. Lstrada, assisted by Dr. Villalor, who attended to
Corazon. 1here was no showing that CMC had a part in diagnosing Corazon's condition. \hile Dr. Lstrada enjoyed sta priileges at CMC, such act
alone did not make him an employee o CMC.
42
CMC merely allowed Dr. Lstrada to use its acilities
43
when Corazon was about to gie birth, which CMC
considered an emergency. Considering these circumstances, Dr. Lstrada is not an employee o CMC, but an independent contractor.
1he question now is whether CMC is automatically exempt rom liability considering that Dr. Lstrada is an independent contractor-physician.
In general, a hospital is not liable or the negligence o an independent contractor-physician. 1here is, howeer, an exception to this principle. 1he hospital
may be liable i the physician is the "ostensible" agent o the hospital.
44
1his exception is also known as the "doctrine o apparent authority."
45
In Citbert r.
,cavore Mvviciat o.itat,
46
the Illinois Supreme Court explained the doctrine o apparent authority in this wise:
|U|nder the doctrine o apparent authority a hospital can be held icariously liable or the negligent acts o a physician proiding care at the
hospital, regardless o whether the physician is an independent contractor, unless the patient knows, or should hae known, that the physician is
an independent contractor. 1he elements o the action hae been set out as ollows:
"lor a hospital to be liable under the doctrine o apparent authority, a plainti must show that: ,1, the hospital, or its agent, acted in a manner
that would lead a reasonable person to conclude that the indiidual who was alleged to be negligent was an employee or agent o the hospital, ,2,
where the acts o the agent create the appearance o authority, the plainti must also proe that the hospital had knowledge o and acquiesced in
them, and ,3, the plainti acted in reliance upon the conduct o the hospital or its agent, consistent with ordinary care and prudence."
1he element o "holding out" on the part o the hospital does not require an express representation by the hospital that the person alleged to be
negligent is an employee. Rather, the element is satisied i the hospital holds itsel out as a proider o emergency room care without inorming
the patient that the care is proided by independent contractors.
1he element o justiiable reliance on the part o the plainti is satisied i the plainti relies upon the hospital to proide complete emergency
room care, rather than upon a speciic physician.
1he doctrine o apparent authority essentially inoles two actors to determine the liability o an independent-contractor physician.
1he irst actor ocuses on the hospital's maniestations and is sometimes described as an inquiry whether the hospital acted in a manner which would lead
a reasonable person to conclude that the indiidual who was alleged to be negligent was an employee or agent o the hospital.
4
In this regard, the
hospital need not make express representations to the patient that the treating physician is an employee of the hospital, rather a
representation may be general and implied.
48
1he doctrine o apparent authority is a species o the doctrine o estoppel. Article 1431 o the Ciil Code proides that "|t|hrough estoppel, an admission
or representation is rendered conclusie upon the person making it, and cannot be denied or disproed as against the person relying thereon." Lstoppel
rests on this rule: "\heneer a party has, by his own declaration, act, or omission, intentionally and deliberately led another to beliee a particular thing
true, and to act upon such belie, he cannot, in any litigation arising out o such declaration, act or omission, be permitted to alsiy it."
49
In the instant case, CMC impliedly held out Dr. Lstrada as a member o its medical sta. 1hrough CMC's acts, CMC clothed Dr. Lstrada with apparent
authority thereby leading the Spouses Nogales to beliee that Dr. Lstrada was an employee or agent o CMC. CMC cannot now repudiate such authority.
lirst, CMC granted sta priileges to Dr. Lstrada. CMC extended its medical sta and acilities to Dr. Lstrada. Upon Dr. Lstrada's request or Corazon's
admission, CMC, through its personnel, readily accommodated Corazon and updated Dr. Lstrada o her condition.
Second, CMC made Rogelio sign consent orms printed on CMC letterhead. Prior to Corazon's admission and supposed hysterectomy, CMC asked
Rogelio to sign release orms, the contents o which reinorced Rogelio's belie that Dr. Lstrada was a member o CMC's medical sta.
50
1he Consent on
Admission and Agreement explicitly proides:
KNO\ ALL MLN B\ 1lLSL PRLSLN1S:
I, Rogelio Nogales, o legal age, a resident o 194 M. l. Del Pilar St., Malate Mla., being the ather,mother,brother,sister,spouse,relatie,
guardian,or person in custody o Ma. Corazon, and representing his,her amily, o my own olition and ree will, do consent and submit said
Ma. Corazon to Dr. Oscar Lstrada ,hereinater reerred to as Physician, or cure, treatment, retreatment, or emergency measures, that the
Physician, personally or by and through the Capitol Medical Center and/or its staff, may use, adapt, or employ such means, forms or
methods of cure, treatment, retreatment, or emergency measures as he may see best and most expedient, that Ma. Corazon and I
will comply with any and all rules, regulations, directions, and instructions of the Physician, the Capitol Medical Center and/or its
staff, and, that I will not hold liable or responsible and hereby waie and oreer discharge and hold ree the Physician, the Capitol Medical
Center and,or its sta, rom any and all claims o whateer kind o nature, arising rom directly or indirectly, or by reason o said cure,
treatment, or retreatment, or emergency measures or interention o said physician, the Capitol Medical Center and,or its sta.
x x x x
51
,Lmphasis supplied,
\hile the Consent to Operation pertinently reads, thus:
I, ROGLLIO NOGALLS, x x x, o my own olition and ree will, do consent and submit said CORAZON NOGALLS to lysterectomy, by
the Surgical Staff and Anesthesiologists of Capitol Medical Centerand,or whateer succeeding operations, treatment, or emergency
measures as may be necessary and most expedient, and, that I will not hold liable or responsible and hereby waie and oreer discharge and
hold ree the Surgeon, his assistants, anesthesiologists, the Capitol Medical Center and,or its sta, rom any and all claims o whateer kind o
nature, arising rom directly or indirectly, or by reason o said operation or operations, treatment, or emergency measures, or interention o the
Surgeon, his assistants, anesthesiologists, the Capitol Medical Center and,or its sta.
52
,Lmphasis supplied,
\ithout any indication in these consent orms that Dr. Lstrada was an independent contractor-physician, the Spouses Nogales could not hae known that
Dr. Lstrada was an independent contractor. Signiicantly, no one rom CMC inormed the Spouses Nogales that Dr. Lstrada was an independent
contractor. On the contrary, Dr. Atencio, who was then a member o CMC Board o Directors, testiied that Dr. Lstrada was part o CMC's surgical
sta.
53
1hird, Dr. Lstrada's reerral o Corazon's prouse aginal bleeding to Dr. Lspinola, who was then the lead o the Obstetrics and Gynecology Department
o CMC, gae the impression that Dr. Lstrada as a member o CMC's medical sta was collaborating with other CMC-employed specialists in treating
Corazon.
1he second actor ocuses on the patient's reliance. It is sometimes characterized as an inquiry on whether the plainti acted in reliance upon the conduct
o the hospital or its agent, consistent with ordinary care and prudence.
54
1he records show that the Spouses Nogales relied upon a perceied employment relationship with CMC in accepting Dr. Lstrada's serices. Rogelio
testiied that he and his wie speciically chose Dr. Lstrada to handle Corazon's deliery not only because o their riend's recommendation, but more
importantly because o Dr. Lstrada's "connection with a reputable hospital, the |CMC|."
55
In other words, Dr. Lstrada's relationship with CMC played a
signiicant role in the Spouses Nogales' decision in accepting Dr. Lstrada's serices as the obstetrician-gynecologist or Corazon's deliery. Moreoer, as
earlier stated, there is no showing that beore and during Corazon's coninement at CMC, the Spouses Nogales knew or should hae known that Dr.
Lstrada was not an employee o CMC.
lurther, the Spouses Nogales looked to CMC to proide the best medical care and support serices or Corazon's deliery. 1he Court notes that prior to
Corazon's ourth pregnancy, she used to gie birth inside a clinic. Considering Corazon's age then, the Spouses Nogales decided to hae their ourth child
deliered at CMC, which Rogelio regarded one o the best hospitals at the time.
56
1his is precisely because the Spouses Nogales eared that Corazon might
experience complications during her deliery which would be better addressed and treated in a modern and big hospital such as CMC. Moreoer, Rogelio's
consent in Corazon's hysterectomy to be perormed by a dierent physician, namely Dr. Lspinola, is a clear indication o Rogelio's conidence in CMC's
surgical sta.
CMC's deense that all it did was "to extend to |Corazon| its acilities" is untenable. 1he Court cannot close its eyes to the reality that hospitals, such as
CMC, are in the business o treatment. In this regard, the Court agrees with the obseration made by the Court o Appeals o North Carolina in Diggs .
Noant lealth, Inc.,
5
to wit:
"1he conception that the hospital does not undertake to treat the patient, does not undertake to act through its doctors and nurses, but
undertakes instead simply to procure them to act upon their own responsibility, no longer relects the act. Present day hospitals, as their
manner of operation plainly demonstrates, do far more than furnish facilities for treatment. 1hey regularly employ on a salary basis a
large staff of physicians, nurses and internes sic, as well as administrative and manual workers, and they charge patients for
medical care and treatment, collecting for such services, if necessary, by legal action. Certainly, the person who avails himself of
'hospital facilities' expects that the hospital will attempt to cure him, not that its nurses or other employees will act on their own
responsibility." x x x ,Lmphasis supplied,
Likewise unconincing is CMC's argument that petitioners are estopped rom claiming damages based on the Consent on Admission and Consent to
Operation. Both release orms consist o two parts. 1he irst part gae CMC permission to administer to Corazon any orm o recognized medical
treatment which the CMC medical sta deemed adisable. 1he second part o the documents, which may properly be described as the releasing part,
releases CMC and its employees "rom any and all claims" arising rom or by reason o the treatment and operation.
1he documents do not expressly release CMC rom liability or injury to Corazon due to negligence during her treatment or operation. Neither do the
consent orms expressly exempt CMC rom liability or Corazon's death due to negligence during such treatment or operation. Such release orms, being
in the nature o contracts o adhesion, are construed strictly against hospitals. Besides, a blanket release in aor o hospitals "rom any and all claims,"
which includes claims due to bad aith or gross negligence, would be contrary to public policy and thus oid.
Len simple negligence is not subject to blanket release in aor o establishments like hospitals but may only mitigate liability depending on the
circumstances.
58
\hen a person needing urgent medical attention rushes to a hospital, he cannot bargain on equal ooting with the hospital on the terms
o admission and operation. Such a person is literally at the mercy o the hospital. 1here can be no clearer example o a contract o adhesion than one
arising rom such a dire situation. 1hus, the release orms o CMC cannot reliee CMC rom liability or the negligent medical treatment o Corazon.
On the Liability of the Other Respondents
Despite this Court's pronouncement in its 9 September 2002
59
Resolution that the iling o petitioners' Maniestation conined petitioners' claim only
against CMC, Dr. Lspinola, Dr. Lacson, and Dr. Uy, who hae iled their comments, the Court deems it proper to resole the indiidual liabi lity o the
remaining respondents to put an end inally to this more than two-decade old controersy.
a) Dr. Lly Villaflor
Petitioners blame Dr. Lly Villalor or ailing to diagnose the cause o Corazon's bleeding and to suggest the correct remedy to Dr. Lstrada.
60
Petitioners
assert that it was Dr. Villalor's duty to correct the error o Nurse Dumlao in the administration o hemacel.
1he Court is not persuaded. Dr. Villalor admitted administering a lower dosage o magnesium sulate. loweer, this was ater inorming Dr. Lstrada that
Corazon was no longer in conulsion and that her blood pressure went down to a dangerous leel.
61
At that moment, Dr. Lstrada instructed Dr. Villalor
to reduce the dosage o magnesium sulate rom 10 to 2.5 grams. Since petitioners did not dispute Dr. Villalor's allegation, Dr. Villalor's deense remains
uncontroerted. Dr. Villalor's act o administering a lower dosage o magnesium sulate was not out o her own olition or was in contraention o Dr.
Lstrada's order.
b) Dr. Rosa Uy
Dr. Rosa Uy's alleged negligence consisted o her ailure ,1, to call the attention o Dr. Lstrada on the incorrect dosage o magnesium sulate administered
by Dr. Villalor, ,2, to take correctie measures, and ,3, to correct Nurse Dumlao's wrong method o hemacel administration.
1he Court beliees Dr. Uy's claim that as a second year resident physician then at CMC, she was merely authorized to take the clinical history and physical
examination o Corazon.
62
loweer, that routine internal examination did not i.o facto make Dr. Uy liable or the errors committed by Dr. Lstrada.
lurther, petitioners' imputation o negligence rests on their baseless assumption that Dr. Uy was present at the deliery room. Nothing shows that Dr. Uy
participated in deliering Corazon's baby. lurther, it is unexpected rom Dr. Uy, a mere resident physician at that time, to call the attention o a more
experienced specialist, i eer she was present at the deliery room.
c) Dr. Joel Lnriquez
Petitioners ault Dr. Joel Lnriquez also or not calling the attention o Dr. Lstrada, Dr. Villalor, and Nurse Dumlao about their errors.
63
Petitioners insist
that Dr. Lnriquez should hae taken, or at least suggested, correctie measures to rectiy such errors.
1he Court is not coninced. Dr. Lnriquez is an anesthesiologist whose ield o expertise is deinitely not obstetrics and gynecology. As such, Dr. Lnriquez
was not expected to correct Dr. Lstrada's errors. Besides, there was no eidence o Dr. Lnriquez's knowledge o any error committed by Dr. Lstrada and
his ailure to act upon such obseration.
d) Dr. Perpetua Lacson
Petitioners ault Dr. Perpetua Lacson or her purported delay in the deliery o blood Corazon needed.
64
Petitioners claim that Dr. Lacson was remiss in
her duty o superising the blood bank sta.
As ound by the trial court, there was no unreasonable delay in the deliery o blood rom the time o the request until the transusion to Corazon. Dr.
Lacson competently explained the procedure beore blood could be gien to the patient.
65
1aking into account the bleeding time, clotting time and cross-
matching, Dr. Lacson stated that it would take approximately 45-60 minutes beore blood could be ready or transusion.
66
lurther, no eidence exists that
Dr. Lacson neglected her duties as head o the blood bank.
e) Dr. Noe Lspinola
Petitioners argue that Dr. Lspinola should not hae ordered immediate hysterectomy without determining the underlying cause o Corazon's bleeding. Dr.
Lspinola should hae irst considered the possibility o cerical injury, and adised a thorough examination o the cerix, instead o belieing outright Dr.
Lstrada's diagnosis that the cause o bleeding was uterine atony.
Dr. Lspinola's order to do hysterectomy which was based on the inormation he receied by phone is not negligence. 1he Court agrees with the trial
court's obseration that Dr. Lspinola, upon hearing such inormation about Corazon's condition, belieed in good aith that hysterectomy was the correct
remedy. At any rate, the hysterectomy did not push through because upon Dr. Lspinola's arrial, it was already too late. At the time, Corazon was
practically dead.
f) Nurse J. Dumlao
In Moore r. Cvtbrie o.itat vc.,
6
the US Court o Appeals, lourth Circuit, held that to recoer, a patient complaining o injuries allegedly resulting when
the nurse negligently injected medicine to him intraenously instead o intramuscularly had to show that ,1, an intraenous injection constituted a lack o
reasonable and ordinary care, ,2, the nurse injected medicine intraenously, and ,3, such injection was the proximate cause o his injury.
In the present case, there is no eidence o Nurse Dumlao's alleged ailure to ollow Dr. Lstrada's speciic instructions. Len assuming Nurse Dumlao
deied Dr. Lstrada's order, there is no showing that side-drip administration o hemacel proximately caused Corazon's death. No eidence linking
Corazon's death and the alleged wrongul hemacel administration was introduced. 1hereore, there is no basis to hold Nurse Dumlao liable or negligence.
On the Award of Interest on Damages
1he award o interest on damages is proper and allowed under Article 2211 o the Ciil Code, which states that in crimes and quasi-delicts, interest as a
part o the damages may, in a proper case, be adjudicated in the discretion o the court.
68
WHLRLIORL, the Court PAR1LY GRAN1S the petition. 1he Court inds respondent Capitol Medical Center icariously liable or the negligence o
Dr. Oscar Lstrada. 1he amounts o P105,000 as actual damages andP00,000 as moral damages should each earn legal interest at the rate o six percent
,6, per annum computed rom the date o the judgment o the trial court. 1he Court airms the rest o the Decision dated 6 lebruary 1998 and
Resolution dated 21 March 2000 o the Court o Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 45641.
SO ORDLRLD.
Qvi.vvbivg, ]., Cbairer.ov, Cario Morate., 1ivga, ava 1eta.co, ]r., ]]., concur.
G.R. No. J26297 January 3J, 2007
PROILSSIONAL SLRVICLS, INC., Petitioner,
s.
NA1IVIDAD and LNRIQUL AGANA, Respondents.
x - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - x
G.R. No. J26467 January 3J, 2007
NA1IVIDAD (Substituted by her children MARCLLINO AGANA III, LNRIQUL AGANA, JR., LMMA AGANA ANDAYA, JLSUS
AGANA, and RAYMUND AGANA) and LNRIQUL AGANA, Petitioners,
s.
JUAN IULN1LS, Respondent.
x- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - x
G.R. No. J27S90 January 3J, 2007
MIGULL AMPIL, Petitioner,
s.
NA1IVIDAD AGANA and LNRIQUL AGANA, Respondents.
D L C I S I O N
SANDOVAL-GU1ILRRLZ, J.:
Hospitals, having undertaken one of mankinds most important and delicate endeavors, must assume the grave responsibility of pursuing it with
appropriate care. 1he care and serice dispensed through this high trust, howeer technical, complex and esoteric its character may be, must meet
standards o responsibility commensurate with the undertaking to presere and protect the health, and indeed, the ery lies o those placed in the
hospitals keeping.
1
Assailed in these three consolidated petitions for review on certiorari is the Court of Appeals Decision
2
dated September 6, 1996 in CA-G.R. CV No.
42062 and CA-G.R. SP No. 32198 airming with modiication the Decision
3
dated March 1, 1993 o the Regional 1rial Court ,R1C,, Branch 96, Quezon
City in Ciil Case No. Q-43322 and nulliying its Order dated September 21, 1993.
1he acts, as culled rom the records, are:
On April 4, 1984, Natiidad Agana was rushed to the Medical City General lospital ,Medical City lospital, because o diiculty o bowel moement and
bloody anal discharge. Ater a series o medical examinations, Dr. Miguel Ampil, petitioner in G.R. No. 12590, diagnosed her to be suering rom
"cancer o the sigmoid."
On April 11, 1984, Dr. Ampil, assisted by the medical sta
4
o the Medical City lospital, perormed an anterior resection surgery on Natiidad. le ound
that the malignancy in her sigmoid area had spread on her let oary, necessitating the remoal o certain portions o it. 1hus, Dr. Ampil obtained the
consent of Natividads husband, Enrique Agana, to permit Dr. Juan Fuentes, respondent in G.R. No. 126467, to perorm hysterectomy on her.
Ater Dr. luentes had completed the hysterectomy, Dr. Ampil took oer, completed the operation and closed the incision.
loweer, the operation appeared to be lawed. In the corresponding Record o Operation dated April 11, 1984, the attending nurses entered these
remarks:
"sponge count lacking 2
"announced to surgeon searched ,sic, done but to no aail continue or closure."
On April 24, 1984, Natiidad was released rom the hospital. ler hospital and medical bills, including the doctors fees, amounted to P60,000.00.
Ater a couple o days, Natiidad complained o excruciating pain in her anal region. She consulted both Dr. Ampil and Dr. luentes about it. 1hey told
her that the pain was the natural consequence o the surgery. Dr. Ampil then recommended that she consult an oncologist to examine the cancerous nodes
which were not remoed during the operation.
On May 9, 1984, Natiidad, accompanied by her husband, went to the United States to seek urther treatment. Ater our months o consultations and
laboratory examinations, Natiidad was told she was ree o cancer. lence, she was adised to return to the Philippines.
On August 31, 1984, Natiidad lew back to the Philippines, still suering rom pains. 1wo weeks thereater, her daughter ound a piece o gauze
protruding rom her agina. Upon being inormed about it, Dr. Ampil proceeded to her house where he managed to extract by hand a piece o gauze
measuring 1.5 inches in width. le then assured her that the pains would soon anish.
Dr. Ampils assurance did not come true. Instead, the pains intensified, prompting Natividad to seek treatment at the Polymedic General lospital. \hile
conined there, Dr. Ramon Gutierrez detected the presence o another oreign object in her agina -- a oul-smelling gauze measuring 1.5 inches in width
which badly inected her aginal ault. A recto-aginal istula had ormed in her reproductie organs which orced stool to excrete through the agina.
Another surgical operation was needed to remedy the damage. 1hus, in October 1984, Natiidad underwent another surgery.
On Noember 12, 1984, Natiidad and her husband iled with the R1C, Branch 96, Quezon City a complaint or damages against the Proessional
Serices, Inc. ,PSI,, owner o the Medical City lospital, Dr. Ampil, and Dr. luentes, docketed as Ciil Case No. Q-43322. 1hey alleged that the latter are
liable for negligence for leaving two pieces of gauze inside Natividads body and malpractice for concealing their acts of negligence.
Meanwhile, Lnrique Agana also iled with the Proessional Regulation Commission ,PRC, an administratie complaint or gross negligence and
malpractice against Dr. Ampil and Dr. luentes, docketed as Administratie Case No. 1690. 1he PRC Board o Medicine heard the case only with respect
to Dr. luentes because it ailed to acquire jurisdiction oer Dr. Ampil who was then in the United States.
On lebruary 16, 1986, pending the outcome o the aboe cases, Natiidad died and was duly substituted by her aboe-named children ,the Aganas,.
On March 1, 1993, the R1C rendered its Decision in aor o the Aganas, inding PSI, Dr. Ampil and Dr. luentes liable or negligence and malpractice,
the decretal part o which reads:
\lLRLlORL, judgment is hereby rendered or the plaintis ordering the deendants PROlLSSIONAL SLRVICLS, INC., DR. MIGULL AMPIL and
DR. JUAN lULN1LS to pay to the plaintis, jointly and seerally, except in respect o the award or exemplary damages and the interest thereon which
are the liabilities o deendants Dr. Ampil and Dr. luentes only, as ollows:
1. As actual damages, the ollowing amounts:
a. 1he equialent in Philippine Currency o the total o US>19,900.00 at the rate o P21.60-US>1.00, as reimbursement o actual
expenses incurred in the United States o America,
b. 1he sum o P4,800.00 as trael taxes o plaintis and their physician daughter,
c. 1he total sum o P45,802.50, representing the cost o hospitalization at Polymedic lospital, medical ees, and cost o the saline
solution,
2. As moral damages, the sum o P2,000,000.00,
3. As exemplary damages, the sum o P300,000.00,
4. As attorneys fees, the sum of P250,000.00;
5. Legal interest on items 1 ,a,, ,b,, and ,c,, 2, and 3 hereinaboe, rom date o iling o the complaint until ull payment, and
6. Costs o suit.
SO ORDLRLD.
Aggrieed, PSI, Dr. luentes and Dr. Ampil interposed an appeal to the Court o Appeals, docketed as CA-G.R. CV No. 42062.
Incidentally, on April 3, 1993, the Aganas iled with the R1C a motion or a partial execution o its Decision, which was granted in an Order dated May 11,
1993. 1hereater, the sheri leied upon certain properties o Dr. Ampil and sold them or P451,25.00 and deliered the amount to the Aganas.
lollowing their receipt o the money, the Aganas entered into an agreement with PSI and Dr. luentes to indeinitely suspend any urther execution o the
R1C Decision. loweer, not long thereater, the Aganas again iled a motion or an alias writ o execution against the properties o PSI and Dr. luentes.
On September 21, 1993, the R1C granted the motion and issued the corresponding writ, prompting Dr. luentes to ile with the Court o Appeals a
petition or certiorari and prohibition, with prayer or preliminary injunction, docketed as CA-G.R. SP No. 32198. During its pendency, the Court o
Appeals issued a Resolution
5
dated October 29, 1993 granting Dr. Fuentes prayer for injunctive relief.
On January 24, 1994, CA-G.R. SP No. 32198 was consolidated with CA-G.R. CV No. 42062.
Meanwhile, on January 23, 1995, the PRC Board o Medicine rendered its Decision
6
in Administratie Case No. 1690 dismissing the case against Dr.
luentes. 1he Board held that the prosecution ailed to show that Dr. luentes was the one who let the two pieces o gauze inside Natividads body; and
that he concealed such act rom Natiidad.
On September 6, 1996, the Court o Appeals rendered its Decision jointly disposing o CA-G.R. CV No. 42062 and CA-G.R. SP No. 32198, thus:
\lLRLlORL, except or the modiication that the case against deendant-appellant Dr. Juan luentes is hereby DISMISSLD, and with the
pronouncement that deendant-appellant Dr. Miguel Ampil is liable to reimburse deendant-appellant Proessional Serices, Inc., whateer amount the
latter will pay or had paid to the plaintis-appellees, the decision appealed rom is hereby AllIRMLD and the instant appeal DISMISSLD.
Concomitant with the aboe, the petition or certiorari and prohibition iled by herein deendant-appellant Dr. Juan luentes in CA-G.R. SP No. 32198 is
hereby GRAN1LD and the challenged order o the respondent judge dated September 21, 1993, as well as the alias writ o execution issued pursuant
thereto are hereby NULLIlILD and SL1 ASIDL. 1he bond posted by the petitioner in connection with the writ o preliminary injunction issued by this
Court on Noember 29, 1993 is hereby cancelled.
Costs against deendants-appellants Dr. Miguel Ampil and Proessional Serices, Inc.
SO ORDLRLD.
Only Dr. Ampil iled a motion or reconsideration, but it was denied in a Resolution
1he medico-legal officer later testified that Noras injury appeared to be a burn and that a droplight when placed near the
skin or about 10 minutes could cause such burn.
8
le dismissed the likelihood that the wound was caused by a blood pressure cu as the scar was not
around the arm, but just on one side o the arm.
9
On May 22, 1992, Noras injury was referred to a plastic surgeon at the Dr. Jesus Delgado Memorial Hospital for skin grafting.
10
ler wound was coered
with skin sourced rom her abdomen, which consequently bore a scar as well. About a year ater, on April 30, 1993, scar reision had to be perormed at
the same hospital.
11
The surgical operation left a healed linear scar in Noras left arm about three inches in length, the thickest portion rising about one-
ourth ,1,4, o an inch rom the surace o the skin. 1he costs o the skin grating and the scar reision were shouldered by the hospital.
12
Unortunately, Noras arm would never be the same.1a``,bi1.vet Aside rom the unsightly mark, the pain in her let arm remains. \hen sleeping, she has
to cradle her wounded arm. ler moements now are also restricted. ler children cannot play with the let side o her body as they might accidentally
bump the injured arm, which aches at the slightest touch.
1hus, on June 21, 1993, respondent spouses iled a complaint
13
or damages against petitioner, Dr. Abad, and the hospital. linding in aor o respondent
spouses, the trial court decreed:
In iew o the oregoing consideration, judgment is hereby rendered in aor o the plaintis and against the deendants, directing the latters, ,.ic, jointly
and seerally
,a, to pay the sum o lie lundred 1housand Pesos ,P500,000.00, in moral damages,
,b, to pay the sum o One lundred lity 1housand Pesos ,P150,000.00, exemplary damages,
,c, to pay the sum o Lighty 1housand Pesos ,P80,000.00, nominal damages,
(d) to pay Fifty Thousand Pesos (P50,000.00) for and as attorneys fees; and
,e, to pay Six 1housand Pesos ,P6,000.00, litigation expenses.
SO ORDLRLD.
14
Petitioner, Dr. Abad, and the hospital all appealed to the Court o Appeals, which airmed with modiication the trial court decision, thus:
\lLRLlORL, in iew o all the oregoing, and inding no reersible error in the appealed Decision dated March 3, 199 o Branch 98 o the Regional
1rial Court o Quezon City in Ciil Case No. Q-93-16562, the same is hereby AllIRMLD, with the ollowing MODIlICA1IONS:
1. Ordering deendant-appellant Dra. Milagros |L.| Cantre only to pay plaintis-appellees John Daid Go and Nora S. Go the sum o
P200,000.00 as moral damages,
2. Deleting the award [of] exemplary damages, attorneys fees and expenses of litigation;1arbi1.vet
3. Dismissing the complaint with respect to deendants-appellants Dr. Rainerio S. Abad and Delgado Clinic, Inc.,
4. Dismissing the counterclaims o deendants-appellants or lack o merit, and
5. Ordering deendant-appellant Dra. Milagros |L.| Cantre only to pay the costs.
SO ORDLRLD.
15
Petitioners motion for reconsideration was denied by the Court of Appeals. Hence, the instant petition assigning the followi ng as errors and issues:
I.
\lL1lLR OR NO1, 1lL LO\LR COUR1, AND 1lL COUR1 Ol APPLALS COMMI11LD GRAVL ABUSL Ol 1lLIR DISCRL1ION
\lLN, NO1\I1lS1ANDING 1lA1 BO1l PAR1ILS lAVL RLS1LD 1lLIR RLSPLC1IVL CASLS, 1lL LO\LR COUR1 ADMI11LD
1lL ADDI1IONAL LXlIBI1S lUR1lLR OllLRLD B\ RLSPONDLN1S NO1 1LS1IlILD 1O B\ AN\ \I1NLSS AND 1lIS DLCISION
Ol 1lL LO\LR COUR1 \AS UPlLLD B\ 1lL COUR1 Ol APPLALS LIKL\ISL COMMI11ING GRAVL ABUSL Ol DISCRL1ION,
II.
\lL1lLR OR NO1 1lL LO\LR COUR1 COMMI11LD GRAVL ABUSL Ol I1S DISCRL1ION \lLN, CON1RAR\ 1O
PRLPONDLRANCL Ol LVIDLNCL PRLSLN1LD B\ 1lL PL1I1IONLR, I1 RULLD 1lA1 1lL PL1I1IONLR lAS NO1 AMPL\
SlO\LD 1lA1 1lL DROPLIGl1 DID NO1 1OUCl 1lL BOD\ Ol MRS. NORA GO, AND 1lIS DLCISION Ol 1lL LO\LR COUR1
\AS UPlLLD B\ 1lL COUR1 Ol APPLALS LIKL\ISL COMMI11ING GRAVL ABUSL Ol DISCRL1ION,
III.
\lL1lLR OR NO1 1lL LO\LR COUR1 COMMI11LD GRAVL ABUSL Ol I1S DISCRL1ION \lLN, CON1RAR\ 1O
PRLPONDLRANCL Ol LVIDLNCL PRLSLN1LD B\ 1lL PL1I1IONLR, I1 RULLD 1lA1 PL1I1IONLR DRA. CAN1RL \AS NO1
ABLL 1O AMPL\ LXPLAIN lO\ 1lL INJUR\ ,BLIS1LRS, IN 1lL LLl1 INNLR ARM Ol RLSPONDLN1 MRS. GO CAML ABOU1,
IV.
\lL1lLR OR NO1 1lL COUR1 Ol APPLALS COMMI11LD GRAVL ABUSL Ol I1S DISCRL1ION \lLN I1 MADL A RULING ON
THE RESPONDENTS INJURY QUOTING THE TESTIMONY OF SOMEONE WHO WAS NOT PRESENT AND HAS NOT SEEN THE
ORIGINAL, lRLSl INJUR\ Ol RLSPONDLN1 MRS. NORA GO,
V.
\lL1lLR OR NO1 1lL COUR1 Ol APPLALS GRAVLL\ ABUSING I1S DISCRL1ION RULLD 1lA1 PL1I1IONLR DRA. CAN1RL
SlOULD lAVL IN1LNDLD 1O INlLIC1 1lL INJUR\ 1O SAVL 1lL LIlL Ol RLSPONDLN1 MRS. GO,
VI.
\lL1lLR OR NO1 1lL LO\LR COUR1 AND 1lL COUR1 |Ol| APPLALS COMMI11LD GRAVL ABUSL Ol DISCRL1ION \lLN,
CON1RAR\ 1O 1lL DL1AILLD PROCLDURLS DONL B\ PL1I1IONLR, BO1l RULLD 1lA1 1lL RLSPONDLN1 \AS LLl1 1O
1lL CARL Ol 1lL NURSING S1All,
VII.
\lL1lLR OR NO1 1lL LO\LR COUR1 COMMI11LD GRAVL ABUSL Ol DISCRL1ION \lLN, CON1RAR\ 1O 1lL MLDICAL
PURPOSLS Ol COSML1IC SURGLR\, I1 RULLD 1lA1 1lL COSML1IC SURGLR\ MADL 1lL SCARS LVLN MORL UGL\ AND
DLCLARLD 1lL COSML1IC SURGLR\ A lAILURL,
VIII.
\lL1lLR OR NO1 1lL LO\LR COUR1 GRAVLL\ ABUSL Ol ,C) DISCRETION WHEN, CONTRARY TO RESPONDENTS
CON1RAR\ 1LS1IMONILS AND 1lL ABSLNCL Ol AN\ 1LS1IMON\, I1 RULLD 1lA1 1lL\ ARL LN1I1LLD 1O DAMAGLS AND
\lICl \AS UPlLLD, AL1lOUGl MODIlILD, B\ 1lL COUR1 Ol APPLALS LIKL\ISL ABUSING I1S DISCRL1ION.
16
Petitioner contends that additional documentary exhibits not testiied to by any witness are inadmissible in eidence because they depried her o her
constitutional right to conront the witnesses against her. Petitioner insists the droplight could not have touched Noras body. She maintains the injury was
due to the constant taking of Noras blood pressure. Petitioner also insinuates the Court of Appeals was misled by the testimony o the medico-legal
oicer who neer saw the original injury beore plastic surgery was perormed. linally, petitioner stresses that plastic surgery was not intended to restore
respondents injury to its original state but rather to prevent further complication.
Respondents, howeer, counter that the genuineness and due execution of the additional documentary exhibits were duly admitted by petitioners counsel.
Respondents point out that petitioners blood pressure cuff theory is highly improbable, being unprecedented in medical history and that the injury was
deinitely caused by the droplight. At any rate, they argue, een i the injury was brought about by the blood pressure cu, petitioner was still negligent in
her duties as Noras attending physician.
Simply put, the threshold issues or resolution are: ,1, Are the questioned additional exhibits admissible in eidence ,2, Is petitioner liable or the injury
suered by respondent Nora Go 1hereater, the inquiry is whether the appellate court committed grae abuse o discretion in its assailed issuances.
As to the fir.t issue, we agree with the Court o Appeals that said exhibits are admissible in eidence. \e note that the questioned exhibits consist mostly
of Noras medical records, which were produced by the hospital during trial pursuant to a subpoena avce. tecvv. Petitioners counsel admitted the existence
o the same when they were ormally oered or admission by the trial court. In any case, gien the particular circumstances o this case, a ruling on the
negligence o petitioner may be made based on the re. i.a toqvitvr doctrine een in the absence o such additional exhibits.
Petitioners contention that the medico-legal officer who conducted Noras physical examination never saw her original injury before plastic surgery was
perormed is without basis and contradicted by the records. Records show that the medico-legal oicer conducted the physical examination on May ,
1992, while the skin grating and the scar reision were perormed on Nora on May 22, 1992 and April 30, 1993, respectiely.
Coming now to the substantie matter, is petitioner liable or the injury suered by respondent Nora Go
1he lippocratic Oath mandates physicians to gie primordial consideration to the well-being o their patients. I a doctor ails to lie up to this precept,
he is accountable or his acts. 1his notwithstanding, courts ace a unique restraint in adjudicating medical negligence cases because physicians are not
guarantors o care and, they neer set out to intentionally cause injury to their patients. loweer, intent is immaterial in negligence cases because where
negligence exists and is proen, it automatically gies the injured a right to reparation or the damage caused.
1
In cases inoling medical negligence, the doctrine o re. i.a toqvitvr allows the mere existence o an injury to justiy a presumption o negligence on the
part o the person who controls the instrument causing the injury, proided that the ollowing requisites concur:
1. The accident is of a kind which ordinarily does not occur in the absence of someones negligence;
2. It is caused by an instrumentality within the exclusie control o the deendant or deendants, and
3. 1he possibility o contributing conduct which would make the plainti responsible is eliminated.
18
As to the first requirement, the gaping wound on Noras arm is certainly not an ordinary occurrence in the act o deliering a baby, ar remoed as the arm
is rom the organs inoled in the process o giing birth. Such injury could not hae happened unless negligence had set in somewhere.
Second, whether the injury was caused by the droplight or by the blood pressure cu is o no moment. Both instruments are deemed within the exclusie
control o the physician in charge under the "captain o the ship" doctrine. 1his doctrine holds the surgeon in charge o an operation liable or the
negligence of his assistants during the time when those assistants are under the surgeons control.
19
In this particular case, it can be logically inerred that
petitioner, the senior consultant in charge during the delivery of Noras baby, exercised control over the assistants assigned to both the use o the droplight
and the taking of Noras blood pressure. Hence, the use of the droplight and the blood pressure cuff is also within petitioners exclusive control.
Third, the gaping wound on Noras left arm, by its very nature and considering her condition, could only be caused by somethi ng external to her and
outside her control as she was unconscious while in hypoolemic shock. lence, Nora could not, by any stretch o the imagination, hae contributed to her
own injury.
Petitioners defense that Noras wound was caused not by the droplight but by the constant taking of her blood pressure, even i the latter was necessary
gien her condition, does not absole her rom liability. As testiied to by the medico-legal oicer, Dr. Arizala, Jr., the medical practice is to delate the
blood pressure cu immediately ater each use. Otherwise, the inlated band can cause injury to the patient similar to what could hae happened in this
case. Thus, if Noras wound was caused by the blood pressure cuff, then the taking of Noras blood pressure must have been done so negligently as to
hae inlicted a gaping wound on her arm,
20
or which petitioner cannot escape liability under the "captain o the ship" doctrine.
Further, petitioners argument that the failed plastic surgery was not intended as a cosmetic procedure, but rather as a measure to preent complication
does not help her case. It does not negate negligence on her part.
Based on the oregoing, the presumption that petitioner was negligent in the exercise o her proession stands unrebutted. In this connection, the Ciil
Code proides:
AR1. 216. \hoeer by act or omission causes damage to another, there being ault or negligence, is obliged to pay or the damage done.
AR1. 221. Moral damages include physical suering, mental anguish, right, serious anxiety, besmirched reputation, wounded eelings, moral shock,
social humiliation, and similar injury. 1hough incapable o pecuniary computation, moral damages may be recoered i they are the proximate result o the
defendants wrongful act or omission.
Clearly, under the law, petitioner is obliged to pay Nora or moral damages suered by the latter as a proximate result o petitioners negligence.
We note, however, that petitioner has served well as Noras obstetrician or her past three successul delieries. 1his is the irst time petitioner is being
held liable or damages due to negligence in the practice o her proession. 1he act that petitioner promptly took care o Noras wound before infection
and other complications set in is also indicative of petitioners good intentions. We also take note of the fact that Nora was suffering rom a critical
condition when the injury happened, such that saving her life became petitioners elemental concern. Nonetheless, it should be stressed that all these could
not justiy negligence on the part o petitioner.
lence, considering the speciic circumstances in the instant case, we ind no grae abuse o discretion in the assailed decision and resolution o the Court
o Appeals. Further, we rule that the Court of Appeals award of Two Hundred Thousand Pesos (P200,000, as moral damages in aor o respondents and
against petitioner is just and equitable.
21
WHLRLIORL, the petition is DLNILD. 1he Decision dated October 3, 2002 and Resolution dated Noember 19, 2003 o the Court o Appeals in
CA-G.R. CV No. 58184 are AIIIRMLD.
No pronouncement as to costs.
SO ORDLRLD.
G.R. No. J942S9 March J6, 20JJ
PLOPLL OI 1HL PHILIPPINLS, Plainti-Appellee,
s.
JIMMY ALVLRIO, Accused-Appellant.
D L C I S I O N
VLLASCO, JR., J.:
1he Case
1his is an appeal rom the March 25, 2010 Decision
1
o the Court o Appeals ,CA, in CA-G.R. CR-l.C. No. 00020, which airmed the August 26, 2004
Decision in Criminal Case No. CB-02-195 o the Regional 1rial Court ,R1C,, Branch 3 in Caibiran, Naal, Biliran.
2
1he R1C conicted accused Jimmy
Alerio ,Alerio, o rape.
1he Iacts
1he charge against Alerio stemmed rom the ollowing Inormation:
That on or about the 3rd day of June, 2002, at about 2:00 oclock early dawn, more or less, at [PPP],
3
Philippines, and within the jurisdiction o this
Honorable Court, while [AAA] was on her way to her grandmothers house from the benefit dance, herein accused, a cousin of herein complainant, with
lewd designs, and by means o orce and intimidation, get hold o her arm and did then and there drag her to the back o the barangay hall, by holding her
hair and forcibly laid her to the ground, willfully, unlawfully and feloniously poked her a short bladed weapon known as pisao forcibly took off her pants
and panty and succeeded in haing carnal knowledge with her against her will to her damage and prejudice.
Contrary to law.
4
On July 3, 2003, Alerio, with the assistance o his counsel de oicio, was arraigned, and he pleaded "not guilty" to the charge against him. Ater the pre-
trial, trial on the merits ensued.
During the trial, the prosecution oered the sole testimony o the priate complainant. On the other hand, the deense presented accused Alerio, lenry
1oledo ,1oledo,, and Lily 1oledo as its witnesses.
The Prosecutions Version of Facts
In the aternoon o June 2, 2002, AAA, along with her riends Belen Sabanag ,Sabanag, and Aileen Sinangote ,Sinangote,, went to the house o her
grandmother to attend a dance eent.
5
At around 8:30 in the eening, they proceeded to the dance hall because the dance would start at around 9
oclock.
6
During the dance, Sabanag and Sinangote danced with Alerio but AAA did not.
On Noember 29, 2001, the NLRC issued a Resolution reersing the decision o the Labor Arbiter. 1he dispositie portion o the resolution reads:
\lLRLlORL, the assailed decision dated October 19, 2000 is SL1 ASIDL and RLVLRSLD. Accordingly, the respondent-appellee is hereby
ordered to immediately reinstate complainant to his ormer position without loss o seniority rights and other beneits and payment o his ull
backwages rom the time o his actual dismissal up to the time o his reinstatement.
All other claims are dismissed or lack o merit.
8
1he NLRC upheld the claim o the respondent that his successie absences due to seere toothache was known to management. It ruled that the medical
certificates issued by the doctor and dentist who attended to the respondent substantiated the latters medical problem. It also declared that the lack o
notarization o the said certiicates was not a valid justification for their rejection as evidence. The NLRC declared that the respondents absence for ten
,10, consecutie days could not be classiied as gross and habitual neglect o duty under Article 282 o the Labor Code.
1he NLRC resoled to deny the motion or reconsideration o the petitioner, per its Resolution
9
dated August 26, 2002.
1he petitioner, thereater, iled a petition or certiorari under Rule 65 o the Rules o Court beore the CA, docketed as CA-G.R. SP No. 3602. It raised
the ollowing issues:
\hether or not the public respondent graely abused it|s| discretion, amounting to lack or excess o jurisdiction in reersing the decision o the
labor arbiter a quo and inding that priate respondent Alejandro A. Ltis was illegally dismissed.
\hether or not public respondent graely abused its discretion in reinstating priate respondent Alejandro A. Ltis to his ormer position
without loss o seniority rights and awarding him ull backwages.
10
In its Decision
11
dated April 10, 2003, the CA airmed in toto the Noember 29, 2001 Resolution o the NLRC.
1he CA agreed with the ruling o the NLRC that medical certiicates need not be notarized in order to be admitted in eidence and accorded ull probatie
weight. It held that the medical certiicates which bore the names and licenses o the doctor and the dentist who attended to the respondent adequately
substantiated the latters illness, as well as the tooth extraction procedure performed on him by the dentist. The CA concluded that since the respondents
absences were substantiated, the petitioners termination of his employment was without legal and factual basis.
1he CA similarly pointed out that een i the ten-day absence o the respondent was unauthorized, the same was not equialent to gross and habitual
neglect of duty. The CA took into consideration the respondents unblemished service, from 1993 up to the time of his dismissal, and the latters proven
dedication to his job eidenced by no less than the ollowing awards: 1op 1echnician o the \ear ,1995,, Member o the Lxclusie P40,000.00 Club, and
Model Lmployee o the \ear ,1995,.
1he motion or reconsideration o the petitioner was denied by the appellate court. lence, the petition at bar.
1he petitioner raises the following issues for the Courts resolution:
I
\lL1lLR OR NO1 1lL lONORABLL COUR1 Ol APPLALS COMMI11LD RLVLRSIBLL LRROR IN GIVING MUCl
LVIDLN1IAR\ \LIGl1 1O 1lL MLDICAL CLR1IlICA1LS SUBMI11LD B\ 1lL PRIVA1L RLSPONDLN1.
II
\lL1lLR OR NO1 1lL lONORABLL LABOR ARBI1LR COMMI11LD A RLVLRSIBLL LRROR IN RULING 1lA1 PRIVA1L
RLSPONDLN1 \AS ILLLGALL\ DISMISSLD.
12
As had been enunciated in numerous cases, the issues that can be deled with in a petition or reiew under Rule 45 are limited to questions o law. 1he
Court is not tasked to calibrate and assess the probatie weight o eidence adduced by the parties during trial all oer again.
13
\ell-established is the
principle that indings o act o quasi-judicial bodies, like the NLRC, are accorded with respect, een inality, i supported by substantial
eidence.
14
loweer, i, as in this case, the indings o the Labor Arbiter clash with those o the NLRC and CA, this Court is compelled to go oer the
records o the case, as well as the submissions o the parties, and resole the actual issues.
The petitioner avers that the respondents absences were unauthorized, and that the latter failed to notify the petitioner in writing o such absences, the
reasons thereor, and his (respondents) whereabouts as prescribed by the company rules. The petitioner avers that its security guard caught the respondent
at home, it to work. 1he petitioner urther asserts that it was justiied in dismissing the respondent under Section 6.1.1, Article III o the Company Rules
which reads:
An employee who commits unauthorized absences continuously or ie ,5, consecutie working days without notice shall be considered as
haing abandoned his job and shall be terminated or cause with applicable laws.
The petitioner contends that the respondents dismissal was also justified under Article 282(b) of the Labor Code, which provides that an employer may
dismiss an employee due to gross and habitual neglect o his duties.
1he contention o the petitioner has no merit.
1he NLRC ruled that the respondent notiied the petitioner o his illness through the company nurse, and that the petitioner een dispatched a security
guard to the respondents house to ascertain the reason of his absences, thus:
1he termination by respondent-appellee of complainants service despite knowledge of complainants ailment, as shown by the telephone calls
made by the latter to the company nurse and the actual confirmation made by respondents company guard, who personally visi ted
complainants residence, clearly establishes the illegality of complainants dismissal. The documentary testimonies of the nurse, Miss Rosita dela
Cruz, regarding complainants telephone calls and the confirmation made by respondents security guard, Mr. Dumagan, are eidentiary matters
which are releant and material and must be considered to the ullest by the Labor Arbiter a quo. 1hese circumstantial acts were miserably set
aside by the Labor Arbiter a quo wherein he concluded that complainant committed gross neglect o duty on alleged continued absences is to
our mind, not ully substantiated and ought not be gien credence by this Commission. 1ime and again, this 1ribunal impresses that, in labor
proceedings, in case o doubt, the doubt must be reasonably in aor o labor. Maybe doubts hang in this case but these doubts must be
resoled in aor o labor as mandated by law and our jurisprudence. lrom the acts o this case, it is only but reasonable to conclude that
complainants service was, indeed, terminated without legal or alid cause. \here the law protects the right o employer to alidly exercise
management prerogatie such as to terminate the serices o an employee, such exercise must be with legal cause as enumerated in Article 282
o the Labor Code or by authorized cause as deined in Article 283 o the Labor Code.
15
1he CA airmed the indings o acts o the NLRC.
\e agree with the rulings of the NLRC and the CA. We note that the company rules do not require that the notice of an employees absence and the
reasons thereor be in writing and or such notice to be gien to any speciic oice and,or employee o the petitioner. lence, the notice may be erbal, it
is enough then that an oicer or employee o the petitioner, competent and responsible enough to receie such notice or and in behal o the petitioner,
was inormed o such absence and the corresponding reason.
1he eidence on record shows that the respondent inormed the petitioner o his illness through the company nurse. 1he security guard who was
dispatched by the petitioner to verify the information received by the company nurse, confirmed the respondents illness. We ind and so hold that the
respondent complied with the requisite o giing notice o his illness and the reason or his absences to the petitioner.
We reject the petitioners contention that the medical certificates adduced in evidence by the respondent to prove (a) his illness, the nature and the
duration o the procedures perormed by the dentist on him, and ,b, the period during which he was incapacitated to work are inadmissible in eidence
and barren o probatie weight simply because they were not notarized, and the medical certiicate dated September 23, 199 was not written on paper
bearing the dentists letterhead. Neither do we agree with the petitioners argument that even assuming that the respondent was ill and had been adised by
his dentist to rest, the same does not appear on the medical certiicate dated September 23, 199, hence, it behooed the respondent to report or work on
September 23, 199. 1he ruling o the Court in Maligsa . Atty. Cabanting
16
is not applicable in this case.
It bears stressing that the petitioner made the same arguments in the NLRC and the CA, and both tribunals ruled as ollows:
lirst, \e concur with the ratiocination o respondent NLRC when it ruled that a medical certiicate need not be notarized, to quote:
xxx. le was dismissed by reason o the act that the Medical Certiicate submitted by the complainant should not be gien credence
or not being notarized and that no aidait was submitted by the nurse to proe that the complainant, indeed, called the
respondents office by telephone.
Ater ull scrutiny and judicious ealuation o the records o this case, \e ind the appeal to be meritorious. Regrettably, the Labor
Arbiter a quo clearly failed to appreciate complainants pieces of evidence. Nowhere in our jurisprudence requires that all medical
certiicates be notarized to be accepted as a alid eidence. In this case, there is |neither| diiculty nor an obstacle to claim that the
medical certiicates presented by complainant are genuine and authentic. Indeed, the physician and the dentist who examined the
complainant, aside rom their respectie letterheads, had written their respectie license numbers below their names and signatures.
1hese acts hae not been impugned nor rebutted by respondent-appellee throughout the proceedings o his case. Common sense
dictates that an ordinary worker does not need to hae these medical certiicates to be notarized or proper presentation to his
company to proe his ailment, hence, the Labor Arbiter a quo, in cognizance with the liberality and the appreciation on the rules on
eidence, must not negate the acceptance o these medical certiicates as alid pieces o eidence.
We believe, as we ought to hold, that the medical certificates can prove clearly and convincingly the complainants allegation that he
consulted a physician because o tooth inlammation on September 23, 199 and a dentist who later adised him to rest and, thus,
clinically extended his tooth extraction due to seere pain and inlammation. Admittingly, it was only on October 4, 199 that
complainants tooth was finally extracted.
lrom these disquisitions, it is clear that the absences o priate respondent are justiiable.
1
\e agree with the NLRC and the appellate court. In light o the indings o acts o the NLRC and the CA, the petitioner cannot ind solace in the ruling
o this Court in Maligsa . Atty. Cabantnig.
18
\hile the records do not reeal that the respondent iled the required leae o absence or the period during which he suered rom a toothache, he
immediately reported or work upon recoery, armed with medical certiicates to attest to the cause o his absence. 1he respondent could not hae
anticipated the cause o his illness, thus, to require prior approal would be unreasonable.
19
\hile it is true that the petitioner had objected to the eracity
o the medical certiicates because o lack o notarization, it has been said that eriication o documents is not necessary in order that the said documents
could be considered as substantial eidence.
20
1he medical certiicates were properly signed by the physicians, hence, they bear all the earmarks o
regularity in their issuance and are entitled to ull probatie weight.
21
1he petitioner, likewise, ailed to proe the actual basis or its dismissal o the respondent on the ground o gross and habitual negligence under Article
282,b, o the Labor Code o the Philippines, or een under Section 6.1.1, Rule III o the Company Rules.
Dismissal is the ultimate penalty that can be meted to an employee. 1hus, it must be based on just cause and must be supported by clear and conincing
eidence.
22
1o eect a alid dismissal, the law requires not only that there be just and alid cause or termination, it, likewise, enjoins the employer to
aord the employee the opportunity to be heard and to deend himsel.
23
Article 282 o the Labor Code enumerates the just causes or the termination o
employment by the employer:
AR1. 282. 1LRMINA1ION B\ LMPLO\LR
An employer may terminate an employment or any o the ollowing causes:
,a, Serious misconduct or willul disobedience by the employee o the lawul orders o his employer or representatie in connection with his
work,
,b, Gross and habitual neglect by the employee o his duties.
1o warrant remoal rom serice, the negligence should not merely be gross but also habitual. Gross negligence implies a want or absence o or ailure to
exercise slight care or diligence, or the entire absence o care. It einces a thoughtless disregard o consequences without exerting any eort to aoid
them.
24
1he petitioner has not suiciently shown that the respondent had willully disobeyed the company rules and regulation. 1he petitioner also ailed
to proe that the respondent abandoned his job. 1he bare act that the respondent incurred excusable and unaoidable absences does not amount to an
abandonment o his employment.
The petitioners claim of gross and habitual neglect of duty pales in comparison to the respondents unblemished record. The respondent did not incur any
intermittent absences. lis only recorded absence was the consecutie ten-day unauthorized absence, albeit due to painul and unbearable toothache. 1he
petitioners claim that the respondent had manifested poor work attitude was belied by its own recognition of the respondents dedication to his job as
evidenced by the latters awards: Top 1echnician o the \ear ,1995,, Member o the LxclusieP40,000.00 Club, and Model Lmployee o the \ear ,1995,.
IN LIGH1 OI ALL 1HL IORLGOING, the petition is DLNILD DUL COURSL. 1he Decision o the Court o Appeals in CA-G.R. SP No. 3602
is AllIRMLD.
SO ORDLRLD.
SLCOND DIVISION
RICO ROMMLL A1ILNZA,
Petitioner,
- ersus -
BOARD OI MLDICINL and LDI1HA SIOSON,
Respondents.
G.R. No. J77407
Present:
NAClURA,
.ctivg Cbairer.ov,
PLRAL1A,
DLL CAS1ILLO,
VILLARAMA, JR.,
and
MLNDOZA, ]].
Promulgated:
lebruary 9, 2011
x------------------------------------------------------------------------------------x
DLCISION
NACHURA, J.:
Beore us is a petition or reiew on certiorari under Rule 45 o the Rules o Court, assailing the Decision
|1|
dated September 22, 2006 o the Court o
Appeals ,CA, in CA-G.R. SP No. 855. 1he CA dismissed the petition or certiorari iled by petitioner Rico Rommel Atienza ,Atienza,, which, in turn,
assailed the Orders
|2|
issued by public respondent Board o Medicine ,BOM, in Administratie Case No. 1882.
1he acts, airly summarized by the appellate court, ollow.
Due to her lumbar pains, priate respondent Lditha Sioson went to Rizal Medical Center ,RMC, or check-up on lebruary 4,
1995. Sometime in 1999, due to the same problem, she was reerred to Dr. Pedro Lantin III o RMC who, accordingly, ordered
seeral diagnostic laboratory tests. 1he tests reealed that her right kidney is normal. It was ascertained, howeer, that her let kidney
is non-unctioning and non-isualizing. 1hus, she underwent kidney operation in September, 1999.
On February 18, 2000, private respondents husband, Romeo Sioson (as complainant), filed a complaint for gross negligence
and,or incompetence beore the |BOM| against the doctors who allegedly participated in the ateul kidney operation, namely: Dr.
Judd dela Vega, Dr. Pedro Lantin, III, Dr. Gerardo Antonio llorendo and petitioner Rico Rommel Atienza.
It was alleged in the complaint that the gross negligence and,or incompetence committed by the said doctors, including
petitioner, consists of the removal of private respondents fully functional right kidney, instead of the left non-unctioning and non-
isualizing kidney.
1he complaint was heard by the |BOM|. Ater complainant Romeo Sioson presented his eidence, priate respondent Lditha
Sioson, also named as complainant there, iled her ormal oer o documentary eidence. Attached to the ormal oer o
documentary evidence are her Exhibits A to D, which she offered for the purpose of proving that her kidneys were both in their
proper anatomical locations at the time she was operated. She described her exhibits, as ollows:
EXHIBIT A the certiied photocopy o the X-ray Request orm dated December 12, 1996, which is
also marked as Annex 2 as it was actually originally the Annex to x x x Dr. Pedro Lantin, IIIs counter affidavit
iled with the City Prosecutor o Pasig City in connection with the criminal complaint iled by |Romeo Sioson|
with the said oice, on which are handwritten entries which are the interpretation o the results o the ultrasound
examination. Incidentally, this exhibit happens to be the same as or identical to the certiied photocopy o the
document marked as Annex 2 to the Counter-Aidait dated March 15, 2000, iled by x x x Dr. Pedro Lantin,
III, on May 4, 2000, with this lonorable Board in answer to this complaint,
EXHIBIT B the certiied photo copy o the X-ray request orm dated January 30, 199, which is also
marked as Annex 3 as it was actually likewise originally an Annex to x x x Dr. Pedro Lantin, IIIs counter-
aidait iled with the Oice o the City Prosecutor o Pasig City in connection with the criminal complaint iled
by the herein complainant with the said oice, on which are handwritten entries which are the interpretation o
the results o the examination. Incidentally, this exhibit happens to be also the same as or identical to the certiied
photo copy of the document marked as Annex 3 which is likewise dated January 30, 1997, which is appended as
such Annex 3 to the counter-aidait dated March 15, 2000, iled by x x x Dr. Pedro Lantin, III on May 4,
2000, with this lonorable Board in answer to this complaint.
EXHIBIT C the certiied photocopy o the X-ray request orm dated March 16, 1996, which is also
marked as Annex 4, on which are handwritten entries which are the interpretation of the results o the
examination.
EXHIBIT D the certiied photocopy o the X-ray request orm dated May 20, 1999, which is also
marked as Annex 16, on which are handwritten entries which are the interpretation of the results of the
examination. Incidentally, this exhibit appears to be the drat o the typewritten inal report o the same
examination which is the document appended as Annexes 4 and 1 respectively to the counter-aidaits iled by
x x x Dr. Judd dela Vega and Dr. Pedro Lantin, III in answer to the complaint. In the case o Dr. dela Vega
however, the document which is marked as Annex 4 is not a certified photocopy, while in the case of Dr.
Lantin, the document marked as Annex 1 is a certified photocopy. Both documents are of the same date and
typewritten contents are the same as that which are written on Exhibit D.
Petitioner filed his comments/objections to private respondents [Editha Siosons] formal offer of exhibits. He alleged that
said exhibits are inadmissible because the same are mere photocopies, not properly identiied and authenticated, and intended to
establish matters which are hearsay. le added that the exhibits are incompetent to proe the purpose or which they are oered.
Dispositions of the Board of Medicine
1he ormal oer o documentary exhibits o priate respondent |Lditha Sioson| was admitted by the |BOM| per its Order
dated May 26, 2004. It reads:
The Formal Offer of Documentary Evidence of [Romeo Sioson], the Comments,Objections o |herein
petitioner| Atienza, |therein respondents| De la Vega and Lantin, and the Maniestation o |therein| respondent
llorendo are hereby ADMI11LD by the |BOM| or whateer purpose they may sere in the resolution o this
case.
Let the hearing be set on July 19, 2004 all at 1:30 p.m. for the reception of the evidence of the
respondents.
SO ORDERED.
Petitioner moed or reconsideration o the aboementioned Order basically on the same reasons stated in his
comment,objections to the ormal oer o exhibits.
1he |BOM| denied the motion or reconsideration o petitioner in its Order dated October 8, 2004. It concluded that it
should irst admit the eidence being oered so that it can determine its probatie alue when it decides the case. According to the
Board, it can determine whether the eidence is releant or not i it will take a look at it through the process o admission. x x x.
|3|
Disagreeing with the BOM, and as preiously aderted to, Atienza iled a petition or certiorari with the CA, assailing the BOMs Orders which
admitted Editha Siosons (Edithas) Formal Offer of Documentary Evidence. The CA dismissed the petition for certiorari or lack o merit.
lence, this recourse positing the ollowing issues:
I. PROCLDURAL ISSUL:
\lL1lLR PL1I1IONLR A1ILNZA AVAILLD Ol 1lL PROPLR RLMLD\ \lLN lL lILLD 1lL PL1I1ION
lOR CR1OR.R DA1LD 06 DLCLMBLR 2004 \I1l 1lL COUR1 Ol APPLALS UNDLR RULL 65 Ol 1lL
RULLS Ol COUR1 1O ASSAIL 1lL ORDLRS DA1LD 26 MA\ 2004 AND 08 OC1OBLR 2004 Ol
RLSPONDLN1 BOARD.
II. SUBS1AN1IVL ISSUL:
\lL1lLR 1lL COUR1 Ol APPLALS COMMI11LD GRAVL RLVLRSIBLL LRROR AND DLCIDLD A
QULS1ION Ol SUBS1ANCL IN A \A\ NO1 IN ACCORDANCL \I1l LA\ AND 1lL APPLICABLL
DLCISIONS Ol 1lL lONORABLL COUR1 \lLN I1 UPlLLD 1lL ADMISSION Ol INCOMPL1LN1 AND
INADMISSIBLL LVIDLNCL B\ RLSPONDLN1 BOARD, \lICl CAN RLSUL1 IN 1lL DLPRIVA1ION Ol
PROlLSSIONAL LICLNSL A PROPERTY RIGHT OR ONES LIVELIHOOD.
|4|
\e ind no reason to depart rom the ruling o the CA.
Petitioner is correct when he asserts that a petition or certiorari is the proper remedy to assail the Orders o the BOM, admitting in eidence the
exhibits o Lditha. As the assailed Orders were interlocutory, these cannot be the subject o an appeal separate rom the judgment that completely or
inally disposes o the case.
|5|
At that stage, where there is no appeal, or any plain, speedy, and adequate remedy in the ordinary course o law, the only and
remaining remedy let to petitioner is a petition or certiorari under Rule 65 o the Rules o Court on the ground o grae abuse o discretion amounting to
lack or excess o jurisdiction.
loweer, the writ o certiorari will not issue absent a showing that the BOM has acted without or in excess o jurisdiction or with grae abuse o
discretion. Embedded in the CAs finding that the BOM did not exceed its jurisdiction or act in grae abuse o discretion is the issue o whether the
exhibits o Lditha contained in her lormal Oer o Documentary Lidence are inadmissible.
Petitioner argues that the exhibits ormally oered in eidence by Lditha: ,1, iolate the best eidence rule, ,2, hae not been properly identiied
and authenticated, ,3, are completely hearsay, and ,4, are incompetent to proe their purpose. 1hus, petitioner contends that the exhibits are inadmissible
eidence.
\e disagree.
1o begin with, it is well-settled that the rules o eidence are not strictly applied in proceedings beore administratie bodies such as the
BOM.
|6|
Although trial courts are enjoined to obsere strict enorcement o the rules o eidence,
||
in connection with eidence which may appear to be
o doubtul releancy, incompetency, or admissibility, we hae held that:
|I|t is the saest policy to be liberal, not rejecting them on doubtul or technical grounds, but admitting them unless plainly irreleant,
immaterial or incompetent, or the reason that their rejection places them beyond the consideration o the court, i they are thereater
ound releant or competent, on the other hand, their admission, i they turn out later to be irreleant or incompetent, can easily be
remedied by completely discarding them or ignoring them.
|8|
lrom the oregoing, we emphasize the distinction between the admissibility o eidence and the probatie weight to be accorded the same pieces o
eidence.P^OC biivg ava 1rav.ort Cororatiov r. Covrt of .eat.
|9|
teaches:
Admissibility o eidence reers to the question o whether or not the circumstance ,or eidence, is to be considered at all. On the
other hand, the probatie alue o eidence reers to the question o whether or not it proes an issue.
Second, petitioners insistence that the admission of Edithas exhibits violated his substantive rights leading to the loss of his medical license is
misplaced. Petitioner mistakenly relies on Section 20, Article I o the Proessional Regulation Commission Rules o Procedure, which reads:
Section 20. Administratie inestigation shall be conducted in accordance with these Rules. 1he Rules o Court shall only
apply in these proceedings by analogy or on a suppletory character and wheneer practicable and conenient. 1echnical errors in the
admission o eidence which do not prejudice the substantie rights o either party shall not itiate the proceedings.
|10|
As pointed out by the appellate court, the admission o the exhibits did not prejudice the substantie rights o petitioner because, at any rate, the
act sought to be proed thereby, that the two kidneys o Lditha were in their proper anatomical locations at the time she was operated on, is presumed
under Section 3, Rule 131 o the Rules o Court:
Sec. 3. Di.vtabte re.vvtiov.. 1he ollowing presumptions are satisactory i uncontradicted, but may be contradicted and
oercome by other eidence:
x x x x
,y, 1hat things hae happened according to the ordinary course o nature and the ordinary habits o lie.
1he exhibits are certiied photocopies o X-ray Request lorms dated December 12, 1996, January 30, 199, March 16, 1996, and May 20, 1999,
iled in connection with Edithas medical case. The documents contain handwritten entries interpreting the results of the examination. 1hese exhibits were
actually attached as annexes to Dr. Pedro Lantin IIIs counter affidavit filed with the Office of the City Prosecutor o Pasig City, which was inestigating
the criminal complaint or negligence iled by Lditha against the doctors o Rizal Medical Center ,RMC, who handled her surgical procedure. 1o lay the
predicate or her case, Lditha oered the exhibits in evidence to prove that her kidneys were both in their proper anatomical locations at the time of her
operation.
The fact sought to be established by the admission of Edithas exhibits, that her kidneys were both in their proper anatomical locations at the
time of her operation, need not be proved as it is covered by mandatory judicial notice.
|11|
Unquestionably, the rules o eidence are merely the means or ascertaining the truth respecting a matter o act.
|12|
1hus, they likewise proide
or some acts which are established and need not be proed, such as those coered by judicial notice, both mandatory and discretionary.
|13|
Laws o
nature inoling the physical sciences, speciically biology,
|14|
include the structural make-up and composition o liing things such as human beings. In this
case, we may take judicial notice that Edithas kidneys beore, and at the time o, her operation, as with most human beings, were in their proper
anatomical locations.
1hird, contrary to the assertion o petitioner, the best eidence rule is inapplicable. Section 3 o Rule 130 proides:
J. Best Lvidence Rule
Sec. 3. Origivat aocvvevt vv.t be roavcea; ecetiov.. \hen the subject o inquiry is the contents o a document, no eidence
shall be admissible other than the original document itsel, except in the ollowing cases:
,a, \hen the original has been lost or destroyed, or cannot be produced in court, without bad aith on the part o the
oeror,
,b, \hen the original is in the custody or under the control o the party against whom the eidence is oered, and the
latter ails to produce it ater reasonable notice,
,c, \hen the original consists o numerous accounts or other documents which cannot be examined in court without
great loss o time and the act sought to be established rom them is only the general result o the whole, and
,d, \hen the original is a public record in the custody o a public oicer or is recorded in a public oice.
1he subject o inquiry in this case is whether respondent doctors beore the BOM are liable or gross negligence in remoing the right unctioning
kidney o Lditha instead o the let non-functioning kidney, not the proper anatomical locations of Edithas kidneys. As previously discussed, the proper
anatomical locations of Edithas kidneys at the time of her operation at the RMC may be established not only through the exhi bits oered in eidence.
linally, these exhibits do not constitute hearsay eidence o the anatomical locations of Edithas kidneys. To further drive home the point, the
anatomical positions, whether left or right, of Edithas kidneys, and the removal of one or both, may still be established through a belated ultrasound or x-
ray o her abdominal area.
In act, the introduction o secondary eidence, such as copies o the exhibits, is allowed.
|15|
\itness Dr. Nancy Aquino testiied that the Records
Ofice of RMC no longer had the originals of the exhibits because [it] transferred from the previous building, x x x to the new building.
|16|
Ultimately,
since the originals cannot be produced, the BOM properly admitted Edithas formal offer of evidence and, thereafter, the BOM shall determine the
probatie alue thereo when it decides the case.
WHLRLIORL, the petition is DLNILD. 1he Decision o the Court o Appeals in CA-G.R. SP No. 855 is AIIIRMLD. Costs against
petitioner.
SO ORDLRLD.
LN BANC
G.R. Nos. 96027-28. March 08, 200S
BRIG. GLN. LU1HLR A. CUS1ODIO
*
, CAP1. ROMLO M. BAU1IS1A, 2
nd
L1. JLSUS D. CAS1RO, SG1. CLARO L. LA1, SG1.
ARNULIO B. DL MLSA, CJC ROGLLIO B. MORLNO, CJC MARIO L. LAZAGA, SG1. IILOMLNO D. MIRANDA, SG1.
ROLANDO C. DL GUZMAN, SG1. LRNLS1O M. MA1LO, SG1. RODOLIO M. DLSOLONG, AJC CORDOVA G. LS1LLO,
MSG1. PABLO S. MAR1INLZ, SG1. RUBLN AQUINO, SG1. ARNULIO AR1A1LS, AJC ILLIZARDO 1ARAN, petitioners,
vs. SANDIGANBAYAN and PLOPLL OI 1HL PHILIPPINLS, respondents.
R L S O L U 1 I O N
PUNO, J.:
Beore us is a Motion 1o Re-Open Case \ith Leae O Court iled by petitioners who were conicted and sentenced to rectv.iov eretva by the
Sandiganbayan in Criminal Cases Nos. 10010 and 10011 or the double murder o Senator Benigno Aquino, Jr. and Rolando Galman on August 21,
1983.
|1|
Petitioners were members of the military who acted as Senator Aquinos security detail upon his arrival in Manila from his three-year sojourn in the
United States. 1hey were charged, together with seeral other members o the military, beore the Sandiganbayan or the killing o Senator Aquino who
was atally shot as he was coming down rom the aircrat o China Airlines at the Manila International Airport. Petitioners were also indicted or the
killing o Rolando Galman who was also gunned down at the airport tarmac.
On December 2, 1985, the Sandiganbayan rendered a Decision in Criminal Cases Nos. 10010-10011 acquitting all the accused, which include the
petitioners. loweer, the proceedings beore the Sandiganbayan were later ound by this Court to be a sham trial. 1he Court thus nulliied said
proceedings, as well as the judgment o acquittal, and ordered a re-trial o the cases.
|2|
A re-trial ensued beore the Sandiganbayan.
In its decision dated September 28, 1990, the Sandiganbayan, while acquitting the other accused, ound the petitioners guilty as principals o the
crime o murder in both Criminal Cases Nos. 10010 and 10011. It sentenced them to rectv.iov eretva in each case.
|3|
1he judgment became inal ater this
Court denied petitioners petition for review of the Sandiganbayan decision for failure to show reversible error in the questioned decision,
|4|
as well as their
subsequent motion or reconsideration.
|5|
In August 2004, petitioners sought legal assistance rom the Chie Public Attorney who, in turn, requested the Independent lorensic Group o the
Uniersity o the Philippines to make a thorough reiew o the orensic eidence in the double murder case. 1he petitioners, assisted by the Public
Attorneys Office, now want to present the findings of the orensic group to this Court and ask the Court to allow the re-opening o the cases and the
holding o a third trial to determine the circumstances surrounding the death o Senator Benigno Aquino, Jr. and Rolando Galman.
Petitioners inoke the ollowing grounds or the re-opening o the case:
I
Lxistence o newly discoered pieces o eidence that were not aailable during the second trial o the aboe-entitled cases which could hae altered the
judgment o the Sandiganbayan, speciically:
A, Independent orensic eidence uncoering the alse orensic claims that led to the unjust coniction o the petitioners-moants.
B, A key deense eyewitness to the actual killing o Senator Benigno Aquino, Jr.
II
1here was a grae iolation o due process by reason o:
A, Insuicient legal assistance o counsel,
B, Depriation o right to counsel o choice,
C, 1estimonies o deense witnesses were under duress,
D, \illul suppression o eidence,
L, Use o alse orensic eidence that led to the unjust coniction o the petitioners-moants.
III
1here was serious misapprehension o acts on the part o the Sandiganbayan based on alse orensic eidence, which entitles petitioners-moants to a re-
trial.
|6|
Petitioners seek to present as new eidence the indings o the orensic group composed o Pro. Jerome B. Bailen, a orensic anthropologist rom
the Uniersity o the Philippines, Atty. Lrwin P. Lre, M.D., a medico-legal practitioner, Benito L. Molino, M.D., a orensic consultant and luman Rights
and Peace Adocate, and Anastacio N. Rosete, Jr., D.M.D., a orensic dentistry consultant. 1heir report essentially concludes that it was not possible,
based on the orensic study o the eidence in the double murder case, that C1C Rogelio Moreno ired at Senator Aquino as they descended the serice
stairway rom the aircrat. 1hey posit that Senator Aquino was shot while he was walking on the airport tarmac toward the waiting AVSLCOM an which
was supposed to transport him rom the airport to lort Boniacio. 1his is contrary to the inding o the Sandiganbayan in the second trial that it was C1C
Moreno, the security escort positioned behind Senator Aquino, who shot the latter. 1he report also suggests that the physical eidence in these cases may
hae been misinterpreted and manipulated to mislead the court. 1hus, petitioners assert that the September 28, 1990 decision o the Sandiganbayan
should be oided as it was based on alse orensic eidence. Petitioners submit that the reiew by the orensic group o the physical eidence in the
double murder case constitutes newly discovered evidence which would entitle them to a new trial under Rule 121 o the 2000 Rules o Criminal
Procedure. In addition to the report o the orensic group, petitioners seek to present the testimony o an alleged eyewitness, the drier o the waiting
AVSLCOM an, SPO4 Ruben M. Cantimbuhan. In his aidait submitted to this Court, SPO4 Cantimbuhan states that he saw a man in blue uniorm
similar to that o the Philippine Airlines maintenance crew, suddenly ire at Senator Aquino as the latter was about to board the an. 1he man in blue was
later identiied as Rolando Galman.
Petitioners pray that the Court issue a resolution:
1. [a]nnulling and setting aside this Honorable Courts Resolutions dated July 23, 1991 and September 10, 1991;
2. |a|nnulling and setting aside the Decision o the Sandiganbayan ,3
rd
Diision, dated September 28, 1990 in People s. Custodio, et al., Case
No. 10010-10011|,|
3. |o|rdering the re-opening o this case, |and|
4. |o|rdering the Sandiganbayan to allow the reception o additional deense eidence,re-trial in the aboe entitled cases.
||
1he issue now is whether petitioners are entitled to a third trial under Rule 121 o the 2000 Rules o Criminal Procedure.
1he pertinent sections o Rule 121 o the 2000 Rules o Criminal Procedure proide:
Section J. New 1rial or reconsideration. At any time beore a judgment o coniction becomes inal, the court may, on motion o the accused or at
its own instance but with the consent o the accused, grant a new trial or reconsideration.
Sec. 2. Grounds for a new trial. 1he court shall grant a new trial on any o the ollowing grounds:
,a, 1hat errors o law or irregularities prejudicial to the substantial rights o the accused hae been committed during the trial,
(b) 1hat new and material evidence has been discovered which the accused could not with reasonable diligence have discovered and
produced at the trial and which if introduced and admitted would probably change the judgment.
xxx
Sec. 6. Lffects of granting a new trial or reconsideration. 1he eects o granting a new trial or reconsideration are the ollowing:
,a, \hen a new trial is granted on the ground o errors o law or irregularities committed during the trial, all the proceedings and eidence aected
thereby shall be set aside and taken anew. 1he court may, in the interest o justice, allow the introduction o additional eidence.
,b, \hen a new trial is granted on the ground o newly discoered eidence, the eidence already adduced shall stand and the newly-discoered and
such other eidence as the court may, in the interest o justice, allow to be introduced shall be taken and considered together with the eidence already in
the record.
,c, In all cases, when the court grants new trial or reconsideration, the original judgment shall be set aside or acated and a new judgment rendered
accordingly. ;evba.i. .vtiea)
In line with the objectie o the Rules o Court to set guidelines in the dispensation o justice, but without shackling the hands that dispense it, the
remedy of new trial has been described as a new invention to temper the severity of a judgment or prevent the failure of justice.
|8|
1hus, the Rules allow
the courts to grant a new trial when there are errors o law or irregularities prejudicial to the substantial rights o the accused committed during the trial, or
when there exists newly discoered eidence. In the proceedings or new trial, the errors o law or irregularities are expunged rom the record or new
eidence is introduced. 1hereater, the original judgment is acated and a new one is rendered.
|9|
Under the Rules, a person conicted o a crime may aail o the remedy o new trial beore the judgment o coniction becomes inal. Petitioners
admit that the decision o the Sandiganbayan in Criminal Cases Nos. 10010 and 10011 became inal and executory upon denial o their petition or reiew
iled beore this Court and their motion or reconsideration. Lntry o judgment has in act been made on September 30, 1991.
|10|
Nonetheless, they
maintain that equitable considerations exist in this case to justiy the relaxation o the Rules and re-open the case to accord petitioners the opportunity to
present eidence that will exonerate them rom the charges against them. \e do not ind merit in their submission.
Petitioners anchor their motion on the ground o newly discoered eidence. Courts are generally reluctant in granting motions or new trial on the
ground o newly discoered eidence or it is presumed that the moing party has had ample opportunity to prepare his case careully and to secure all
the necessary eidence beore the trial. Such motions aretreated with great caution due to the danger o perjury and the maniest injustice o allowing a
party to allege that which may be the consequence o his own neglect to deeat an aderse judgment. lence, the moing party is oten required to rebut a
presumption that the judgment is correct and that there has been a lack o due diligence, and to establish other acts essential to warrant the granting o a
new trial on the ground o newly discoered eidence.
|11|
1his Court has repeatedly held that beore a new trial may be granted on the ground o newly
discoered eidence, it must be shown ,1, that the eidence was discoered ater trial, ,2, that such eidence could not hae been discoered and
produced at the trial een with the exercise o reasonable diligence, ,3, that it is material, not merely cumulatie, corroboratie, or impeaching, and ,4, the
eidence is o such weight that it would probably change the judgment i admitted. I the alleged newly discoered eidence could hae been ery well
presented during the trial with the exercise o reasonable diligence, the same cannot be considered newly discoered.
|12|
1hese standards, also known as the Berry rule, trace their origin to the 1851 case o Berry vs. State of Georgia
|13|
where the Supreme Court o
Georgia held:
Applications or new trial on account o newly discoered eidence, are not aored by the Courts. x x x Upon the ollowing points there seems to be a
pretty general concurrence o authority, iz, that it is incumbent on a party who asks or a new trial, on the ground o newly discoered eidence, to satisy
the Court, 1
st
. 1hat the eidence has come to his knowledge since the trial. 2d. 1hat it was not owing to the want o due diligence that it did not come
sooner. 3d. 1hat it is so material that it would produce a dierent erdict, i the new trial were granted. 4
th
. 1hat it is not cumulatie only iz, speaking
to acts, in relation to which there was eidence on the trial. 5
th
. 1hat the aidait o the witness himsel should be produced, or its absence accounted or.
And 6
th
, a new trial will not be granted, i the only object o the testimony is to impeach the character or credit o a witness. ;citatiov. ovittea)
1hese guidelines hae since been ollowed by our courts in determining the propriety o motions or new trial based on newly discoered eidence.
It should be emphasized that the applicant or new trial has the burden o showing that the new eidence he seeks to present has complied with the
requisites to justiy the holding o a new trial.
1he threshold question in resoling a motion or new trial based on newly discoered eidence is whether the proerred eidence is in act a
newly discovered evidence which could not have been discovered by due diligence. 1he question of whether evidence is newly discovered has two
aspects: a temporal one, i.e., when was the eidence discoered, and a predictive one, i.e., when should or could it hae been discoered. It is to the
latter that the requirement o due diligence has releance.
|14|
\e hae held that in order that a particular piece o eidence may be properly regarded as
newly discoered to justiy new trial, what is essential is not so much the time when the eidence oered irst sprang into existence nor the time when it
irst came to the knowledge o the party now submitting it, what is essential is that the oering party had exercised reasonable diligence in seeking to
locate such eidence beore or during trial but had nonetheless ailed to secure it.
|15|
1he Rules do not gie an exact deinition o due diligence, and whether the moant has exercised due diligence depends upon the particular
circumstances o each case.
|16|
Nonetheless, it has been obsered that the phrase is often equated with reasonable promptness to avoid prejudice to the
defendant. In other words, the concept of due diligence has both a time component and a good faith component. 1he moant or a new trial must
not only act in a timely ashion in gathering eidence in support o the motion, he must act reasonably and in good aith as well. Due diligence
contemplates that the deendant acts reasonably and in good aith to obtain the eidence, in light o the totality o the circumstances and the acts known
to him.
|1|
Applying the foregoing tests, we find that petitioners purported evidence does not qualify as newly discovered evidence that would justiy the re-
opening o the case and the holding o a third trial.
1he report o the orensic group may not be considered as newly discoered eidence as petitioners ailed to show that it was impossible or them to
secure an independent orensic study o the physical eidence during the trial o the double murder case. It appears from their report that the forensic
group used the same physical and testimonial evidence proferred during the trial, but made their own analysis and interpretation of said
evidence. 1hey cited the materials and methods that they used or their study, ri:
MA1LRIALS AND ML1lODS
MA1LRIALS:
a. Court records o the case, especially photographs o: a, the stairway where the late Sen. Aquino and his escorts descended, b, the part o the
tarmac where the lieless bodies o the late Sen. Aquino and Galman ell, and c, the autopsy conducted by the NBI Medico-legal team
headed by Dr. Mu|n|oz, and the autopsy report o the late Sen. Benigno Aquino|,| Jr. signed by Dr. Mu|n|oz and Dr. Solis,
b. 1he gun and lie ammunitions collected at the crime scene,
c. A reerence human skull photos and X-rays o the same to demonstrate wound location and bullet trajectory,
d. 1he reports o interiews and statements by the conicted military escorts, and other witnesses,
e. Re-enactment of the killing of Aquino based on the military escorts[] version, by the military escorts themselves in the Bilibid Prison and by
olunteers at the NAIA 1armac,
. Various books and articles on orensic and the medico-legal ield|,|
g. Results o lorensic experiments conducted in relation to the case.
ML1lODS:
a. Reiew o the orensic exhibits presented in the court,
b. Reiew o 1SNs releant to the orensic reiew,
c. Study o and research on the guns, slugs and ammunitions allegedly inoled in the crime,
d. Interiews,re-enactment of the crime based on the militarys accounts, both in the Bilibid Prison where the convicts are confined and the MIA
,now NAIA, stairway and tarmac,
e. Conduct o ocular inspection and measurements on the actual crime scene ,stairway and tarmac, at the old Manila International Airport ,now
NAIA,,
. Retracing the slugs trajectory based on the autopsy reports and experts testimonies using an actual human skull,
g. X-rays of the skull with the retraced trajectory based on the autopsy report and experts testimonies;
h. Laluation o the presented acts and opinions o local experts in relation to accepted orensic indings in international publications on
orensic science, particularly on guns and |gunshot| wound injuries,
i. lorensic experiments and simulations o eents in relation to this case.
|18|
1hese materials were aailable to the parties during the trial and there was nothing that preented the petitioners rom using them at the time to
support their theory that it was not the military, but Rolando Galman, who killed Senator Aquino. Petitioners, in their present motion, ailed to present any
new orensic eidence that could not hae been obtained by the deense at the time o the trial een with the exercise o due diligence. I they really
wanted to seek and oer the opinion o other orensic experts at the time regarding the physical eidence gathered at the scene o the crime, there was
ample opportunity or them to do so beore the case was inally submitted and decided.
|19|
A reading o the Sandiganbayan decision dated September 28, 1990 shows a thorough study by the court o the orensic eidence presented during
the trial, ri:
COUR1 lINDINGS
As to the physical
eidence
Great signiicance has to be accorded the trajectory o the single bullet that penetrated the head and caused the death o Sen. Benigno Aquino, Jr. Basic to
the question as to trajectory ought to be the indings during the autopsy. 1he prosector in the autopsy, Dr. Bienenido Munoz, NBI Medico-Legal Oicer,
reported in his Autopsy Report No. N-83-22-36, that the trajectory o the gunshot, the wound o entrance haing been located at the mastoid region, let,
below the external auditory meatus, and the exit wound having been at the anterior portion of the mandible, was forward, downward and medially.
,Autopsy Report No. N-83-22-36, Exhibit NNNN-2-t-2)
A controersy as to this trajectory came about when, upon being cross-examined by counsel or the deense, Dr. Bienenido Munoz made a signiicant
turn-about by stating that the correct trajectory of the fatal bullet was upward, downward, and medially. 1he present position o Dr. Munoz is
premised upon the alleged act that he ound the petrous bone ractured, obiously hit by the atal bullet. le concluded, in iew o this inding, that the
atal bullet must hae gone upward rom the wound o entrance. Since the atal bullet exited at the mandible, it is his belie that the petrous bone delected
the trajectory o the bullet and, thus, the bullet proceeded downwards rom the petrous bone to the mandible.
1his opinion o Dr. Bienenido Munoz in this regard notwithstanding, \e hold that the trajectory o the atal bullet which ki lled Sen. Benigno Aquino, Jr.
was, indeed, forward, downward and medially. lor the reason that the wound o entrance was at a higher eleation than the wound o exit, there can be
no other conclusion but that the trajectory was downward. 1he bullet when traeling at a ast rate o speed takes a straight path rom the wound o
entrance to the wound o exit. It is unthinkable that the bullet, while projected upwards, would, instead o exiting to the roo o the head, go down to the
mandible because it was allegedly delected by a petrous bone which though hard is in act a mere spongy protuberance, akin to a cartilage.
Clear is proo o the downward trajectory o the atal bullet, lirst, as Dr. Pedro Solis and Dr. Ceerino Cunanan, the immediate superiors o Dr.
Bienenido Munoz, maniested beore the Court, that, since the wound o entrance appeared oaloid and there is what is known as a contusion collar
which was widest at the superior portion, indicating an acute angle o approach, a downward trajectory o the bullet is indicated. 1his phenomenon
indicates that the muzzle o the atal gun was at a leel higher than that o the point o entry o the atal bullet.
1here was no showing as to whether a probe could hae been made rom the wound o entrance to the petrous bone. Out o curiosity, Dr. Juanito Billote
tried to insert a probe rom the wound o exit into the petrous bone. le was unsuccessul notwithstanding our or ie attempts. I at all, this disproes
the theory o Dr. Munoz that the trajectory was upward, downward and medially. On the other hand, Dr. Juanito Billote and photographer Alexander
Loinaz witnessed the fact that Dr. Muoz[s] understudy, Alejandrino Javier, had successfully made a probe from the wound of entrance directly towards
the wound o exit. Alejandrino Jaier shouted with excitement upon his success and Alexander Loinaz promptly photographed this eent with
Alejandrino Jaier holding the protruding end o the probe at the mandible. (Exhibit XXXXX-39-A)
1o be sure, had the main bullet hit the petrous bone, this spongy mash o cartilage would hae been decimated or obliterated. 1he act that the main bullet
was o such orce, power and speed that it was able to bore a hole into the mandible and crack it, is an indication that it could not hae been stopped or
delected by a mere petrous bone. By its power and orce, it must hae been propelled by a powerul gun. It would hae been i mpossible or the main
bullet to hae been delected orm an upward course by a mere spongy protuberance. Granting that it was so delected, howeer, it could not hae
maintained the same power and orce as when it entered the skull at the mastoid region so as to crack the mandible and make i ts exit there.
But what caused the racture o the petrous bone \as there a cause o the racture, other than that the bullet had hit it Dr. Pedro Solis, maintaining the
conclusion that the trajectory o the bullet was downward, gae the ollowing alternatie explanations or the racture o the petrous bone:
lirst, the petrous bone could hae been hit by a splinter o the main bullet, particularly, that which was ound at the temporal region, and,
Second, the racture must hae been caused by the kinetic orce applied to the point o entrance at the mastoid region which had the tendency o being
radiated towards the petrous bone.
1hus, the racture in the occipital bone, o the temporal bone, and o the parietal bone, Dr. Pedro Solis pointed out, had been caused by the aoresaid
kinetic orce. \hen a orce is applied to the mastoid region o the head, Dr. Pedro Solis emphasized, a radiation o orces is distributed all oer the cranial
back, including, although not limited to, the parietal bone. 1he skull, Dr. Solis explains, is a box-like structure. 1he moment you apply pressure on the
portion, a distortion, tension or some other mechanical deect is caused. This radiation of forces produces what is known as the spider web linear
fracture which goes to different parts of the body. The so-called racturing o the petrous portion o the let temporal bone is one o the consequences o
the kinetic orce orceully applied to the mastoid region.
1he act that there was ound a racture o the petrous bone is not necessarily indicatie o the theory that the main bullet passed through the petrous
bone.
Doubt was expressed by Dr. Pedro Solis as to whether the metal ragments alleged by Dr. Bienenido Munoz to hae been ound by him inside the skull
or at the wound o exit were really parts o the main bullet which killed the Senator. \hen Dr. Pedro Solis examined these ragments, he ound that two
,2, o the ragments were larger in size, and were o such shapes, that they could not hae gone out o the wound o exit considering the size and shape o
the exit wound.
linding o a downward
trajectory o the
atal bullet atal
to the credibility
o deense witnesses.
1he inding that the atal bullet which killed Sen. Benigno Aquino, Jr. was directed downwards sustains the allegation o prosecution eyewitnesses to the
eect that Sen. Benigno Aquino, Jr. was shot by a military soldier at the bridge stairs while he was being brought down rom the plane. Rebecca Quijano
saw that the senator was shot by the military man who was directly behind the Senator while the Senator and he were descending the stairs. Rebecca
Quijanos testimony in this regard is echoed by Jessie Barcelona, Ramon Balang, Olivia Antimano, and Mario Laher, whose testi monies this Court inds
likewise as credible.
1he downward trajectory o the bullet haing been established, it stands to reason that the gun used in shooting the Senator was ired rom an eleation
higher than that o the wound o entrance at the back o the head o the Senator. 1his is consistent with the testimony o prosecution witnesses to the
eect that the actual killer o the Senator shot as he stood at the upper step o the stairs, the second or third behind Senator Aqui no, while Senator Aquino
and the military soldiers bringing him were at the bridge stairs. 1his is likewise consistent with the statement o Sandra Jean Burton that the shooting o
Senator Aquino occurred while the Senator was still on the bridge stairs, a conclusion deried rom the act that the atal shot was ired ten ,10, seconds
ater Senator Aquino crossed the serice door and was led down the bridge stairs.
It was the expert inding o Dr. Matsumi Suzuki that, as was gauged rom the sounds o the ootsteps o Senator Aquino, as the Senator went down the
bridge stairs, the shooting o the Senator occurred while the Senator had stepped on the 11
th
step rom the top.
At the ocular inspection conducted by this Court, with the prosecution and the deense in attendance, it should be noted that the ollowing acts were
established as regards the bridge stairs:
Observations:
1he length o one block coering the tarmac 196;
1he width o one block coering the tarmac 10;
1he distance rom the base o the staircase leading to the emergency tube to the Ninoy marker at the tarmac 126;
1here are 20 steps in the staircase including the landing,
1he distance rom the irst rung o the stairway up to the 20
th
rung which is the landing o stairs 208;
Distance rom the irst rung o the stairway up to the 20
th
rung until the edge o the exit door 2311;
Distance rom the 4
th
rung up to the exit door 21;
Distance rom the 5
th
rung up to the exit door 1911;
Length o one rung including railpost 34;
Space between two rungs o stairway 9;
\idth o each rung 11-1/2;
Length o each rung ,end to end, 29:
leight o railpost rom edge o rung to railing 25.
,underlining supplied,
|20|
1he Sandiganbayan again exhaustiely analyzed and discussed the orensic eidence in its resolution dated Noember 15, 1990 denying the motion
or reconsideration iled by the conicted accused. 1he court held:
1he Autopsy Report No. N-83-2236, Exhibit NNNN-2-t-2 indicated a downward trajectory of the fatal bullet when it stated that the atal bullet was
forward, downward, and medially . . .
xxx
II
1he wound o entrance haing been at a higher eleation than the wound o exit, there can be no other conclusion but that the trajectory was downward.
1he atal bullet, whether it be a Smith and \esson Caliber .35 magnum reoler or a .45 caliber, must hae traeled at a ast rate o speed and it stands to
reason that it took a straight path rom the wound o entrance to the wound o exit. A hole indicating this straight path was proen to hae existed. I, as
contended on cross-examination by Dr. Bienenido Munoz, that the bullet was projected upwards, it ought to hae exited at the roo o the head. 1he
theory that the atal bullet was delected by a mere petrous bone is inconceiable.
III
Since the wound o entrance appeared oaloid and there is what is known as a contusion collar which was widest at the superior portion, indicating an
acute angle o approach, a downward trajectory o the atal bullet is conclusiely indicated. 1his phenomenon indicates that the muzzle o the atal gun
was at a leel higher than that o the point o entry o the atal bullet.
IV
1here was no hole rom the petrous bone to the mandible where the atal bullet had exited and, thus, there is no support to the theory o Dr. Bienenido
Munoz that the atal bullet had hit the petrous bone on an upward trajectory and had been delected by the petrous bone towards the mandible. Dr.
Juanito Billotes testimony in this regard had amplified the matter with clarity.
xxx
1hese physical acts, notwithstanding the arguments and protestations o counsel or the deense as now and heretoore aowed, compel the Court to
maintain the holding: ,1, that the trajectory o the atal bullet which hit and killed Senator Benigno Aquino, Jr. was forward, downward and medially;
,2, that the Senator was shot by a person who stood at a higher eleation than he, and ,3, that the Senator was shot and killed by CIC Rogelio Moreno on
the bridge stairs and not on the tarmac, in conspiracy with the rest o the accused conicted herein.
|21|
1his Court airmed said indings o the Sandiganbayan when it denied the petition or reiew in its resolution o July 25, 1991. 1he Court ruled:
1he Court has careully considered and deliberated upon all the contentions o the petitioners but inds no basis or the all egation that the respondent
Sandiganbayan has graely erred in resoling the actual issues.
1he attempt to place a constitutional dimension in the petition is a labor in ain. Basically, only questions o act are raised. Not only is it axiomatic that
the actual indings o the Sandiganbayan are inal unless they all within speciically recognized exceptions to the rule but rom the petition and its annexes
alone, it is readily apparent that the respondent Court correctly resoled the actual issues.
xxx
1he trajectory o the atal bullet, whether or not the ictim was descending the stairway or was on the tarmac when shot, the circumstances showing
conspiracy, the participants in the conspiracy, the indiidual roles o the accused and their respectie parts in the conspiracy, the absence o eidence
against thirteen accused and their co-accused Col. Vicente B. 1igas, Jr., the lack o credibility o the witnesses against ormer Minister Jose D. Aspiras,
Director Jesus Z. Singson, Col. Arturo A. Custodio, lermilo Gosuico, Major General Prospero Olias, and the shooting o Rolando Galman are all actual
matters w|h|ich the respondent court discussed with airness and at length. The petitioners insistence that a few witnesses in their favor should be
belieed while that o some witnesses against them should be discredited goes into the question o credibility o witnesses, a matter which under the
records o this petition is best let to the judgment o the Sandiganbayan.
|22|
1he report of the forensic group essentially reiterates the theory presented by the defense during the trial of the double murder case.
Clearly, the report is not newly discoered, but rather recently sought, which is not allowed by the Rules.
|23|
I at all, it only seres to discredit the ersion
o the prosecution which had already been weighed and assessed, and thereater upheld by the Sandiganbayan.
1he same is true with the statement o the alleged eyewitness, SPO4 Cantimbuhan. lis narration merely corroborates the testimonies o other
deense witnesses during the trial that they saw Senator Aquino already walking on the airport tarmac toward the AVSLCOM an when a man in blue-gray
uniform darted from behind and fired at the back of the Senators head.
|24|
1he Sandiganbayan, howeer, did not gie weight to their account as it ound
the testimonies o prosecution eyewitnesses Rebecca Quijano and Jessie Barcelona more credible. Quijano and Barcelona testiied that they saw the
soldier behind Senator Aquino on the stairway aim and ire a gun on the latters nape. As earlier quoted, the Sandiganbayan ound their testimonies to be
more consistent with the physical eidence. SPO4 Cantimbuhans testimony will not in any way alter the courts decision in view of the eyewitness
account o Quijano and Barcelona, taken together with the physical eidence presented during the trial. Certainly, a new trial will only be allowed if the
new evidence is of such weight that it would probably change the judgment if admitted.
|25|
Also, new trial will not be granted if the new
evidence is merely cumulative, corroborative or impeaching.
As additional support to their motion or new trial, petitioners also claim that they were denied due process because they were depried o adequate
legal assistance by counsel. \e are not persuaded. 1he records will bear out that petitioners were ably represented by Atty. Rodolo U. Jimenez during
the trial and when the case was eleated to this Court. An experienced lawyer in criminal cases, Atty. Jimenez vigorously defended the petitioners cause
throughout the entire proceedings. 1he records show that the deense presented a substantial number o witnesses and exhibits during the trial. Ater the
Sandiganbayan rendered its decision, Atty. Jimenez iled a petition or reiew with this Court, inoking all conceiable grounds to acquit the petitioners.
\hen the Court denied the petition or reiew, he again iled a motion or reconsideration exhausting his deep reseroir o legal talent. \e thereore ind
petitioners claim to be unblushingly unsubstantiated. \e note that they did not allege any speciic acts in their present motion to show that Atty.
Jimenez had been remiss in his duties as counsel. Petitioners are thereore bound by the acts and decisions o their counsel as regards the conduct o the
case. 1he general rule is that the client is bound by the action o his counsel in the conduct o his case and cannot be heard to complain that the result o
the litigation might hae been dierent had his counsel proceeded dierently.
|26|
\e held in People vs. Umali:
|2|
In criminal as well as ciil cases, it has requently been held that the act that blunders and mistakes may hae been made i n the conduct o the proceedings
in the trial court, as a result o the ignorance, inexperience, or incompetence o counsel, does not urnish a ground or a new trial.
I such grounds were to be admitted as reasons or reopening cases, there would neer be an end to a suit so long as new counsel could be employed who
could allege and show that prior counsel had not been suiciently diligent, or experienced, or learned.
So it has been held that mistakes o attorneys as to the competency o a witness, the suiciency, releancy, materiality, or immateriality o a certain
eidence, the proper deense, or the burden o proo are not proper grounds or a new trial, and in general the client is bound by the action o his counsel
in the conduct o his case, and can not be heard to complain that the result o the litigation might hae been dierent had counsel proceeded
dierently. ;citatiov. ovittea)
Finally, we are not moved by petitioners assertion that the forensic evidence may hae been manipulated and misinterpreted during the trial o the
case. Again, petitioners did not allege concrete acts to support their crass claim. lence, we ind the same to be unounded and purely speculatie.
IN VILW WHLRLOI, the motion is DLNILD.
SO ORDLRLD.