D E C I S I
O N
PAREDES, J.:
On September
4, 1959, the Chief of Police of Alaminos, Laguna, charged Simplicio Villanueva
with the Crime of Malicious Mischief before the Justice of the Peace Court of
said municipality. Said accused was represented by counsel de officio but
later on replaced by counsel de parte. The complainant in the same
case was represented by City Attorney Ariston Fule of San Pablo City, having
entered his appearance as private prosecutor, after securing the permission of
the Secretary of Justice. The condition of his appearance as such, was that
every time he would appear at the trial of the case, he would be considered on
official leave of absence, and that he would not receive any payment for his
services. The appearance of City Attorney Fule as private prosecutor was
questioned by the counsel for the accused, invoking the case of Aquino,
et al. vs. Blanco, et al., 79 Phil 647, wherein it was ruled that
“when an attorney had been appointed to the position of Assistant Provincial
Fiscal or City Fiscal and therein qualified, by operation of law, he ceased to
engage in private law practice.” Counsel then argued that the JP Court in
entertaining the appearance of City Attorney Fule in the case is a violation of
the above ruling. On December 17, 1960 the JP issued an order sustaining the
legality of the appearance of City Attorney Fule.
Under date
of January 4, 1961, counsel for the accused presented a “Motion to Inhibit Fiscal
Fule from Acting as Private Prosecutor in this Case,” this time invoking
Section 32, Rule 27, now Sec. 35, Rule 138, Revised Rules of Court, which bars
certain attorneys from practicing. Counsel claims that City Attorney Fule falls
under this limitation. The JP Court ruled on the motion by upholding the right
of Fule to appear and further stating that he (Fule) was not actually engaged
in private law practice. This Order was appealed to the CFI of Laguna, presided
by the Hon. Hilarion U. Jarencio, which rendered judgment on December 20, 1961,
the pertinent portions of which read:
The present
case is one for malicious mischief. There being no reservation by the offended
party of the civil liability, the civil action was deemed impliedly instituted
with the criminal action. The offended party had, therefore, the right to
intervene in the case and be represented by a legal counsel because of her
interest in the civil liability of the accused.
Sec. 31,
Rule 127 of the Rules of Court provides that in the court of a justice of the
peace a party may conduct his litigation in person, with the aid of an agent or
friend appointed by him for that purpose, or with the aid of an attorney.
Assistant City Attorney Fule appeared in the Justice of the Peace Court as an
agent or friend of the offended party. It does not appear that he was being
paid for his services or that his appearance was in a professional capacity. As
Assistant City Attorney of San Pablo he had no control or intervention
whatsoever in the prosecution of crimes committed in the municipality of
Alaminos, Laguna, because the prosecution of criminal cases coming from
Alaminos are handled by the Office of the Provincial Fiscal and not by the City
Attorney of San Pablo. There could be no possible conflict in the duties of
Assistant City Attorney Fule as Assistant City Attorney of San Pablo and as
private prosecutor in this criminal case. On the other hand, as already pointed
out, the offended party in this criminal case had a right to be represented by
an agent or a friend to protect her rights in the civil action which was
impliedly instituted together with the criminal action.
In view of
the foregoing, this Court holds that Asst. City Attorney Ariston D. Fule may
appear before the Justice of the Peace Court of Alaminos, Laguna as private
prosecutor in this criminal case as an agent or a friend of the offended party.
WHEREFORE,
the appeal from the order of the Justice of the Peace Court of Alaminos,
Laguna, allowing the appearance of Ariston D. Fule as private prosecutor is
dismissed, without costs.
The above
decision is the subject of the instant proceeding.
The appeal
should be dismissed, for patently being without merits.
Aside from
the considerations advanced by the learned trial judge, heretofore reproduced,
and which we consider plausible, the fallacy of the theory of defense counsel
lies in his confused interpretation of Section 32 of Rule 127 (now Sec. 35,
Rule 138, Revised Rules), which provides that “no judge or other official or
employee of the superior courts or of the office of the Solicitor General,
shall engage in private practice as a member of the bar or give professional
advice to clients.” He claims that City Attorney Fule, in appearing as private
prosecutor in the case was engaging in private practice. We believe that the
isolated appearance of City Attorney Fule did not constitute private practice
within the meaning and contemplation of the Rules. Practice is more than an
isolated appearance, for it consists in frequent or customary actions, a
succession of acts of the same kind. In other words, it is frequent habitual
exercise (State vs. Cotner, 127, p. 1, 87 Kan. 864, 42 LRA, M.S. 768). Practice
of law to fall within the prohibition of statute has been interpreted as
customarily or habitually holding one’s self out to the public, as customarily
and demanding payment for such services (State vs. Bryan, 4 S.E. 522, 98 N.C.
644, 647). The appearance as counsel on one occasion is not conclusive as
determinative of engagement in the private practice of law. The following
observation of the Solicitor General is noteworthy:
Essentially,
the word private practice of law implies that one must have presented himself
to be in the active and continued practice of the legal profession and that his
professional services are available to the public for a compensation, as a
source of his livelihood or in consideration of his said services.
For one
thing, it has never been refuted that City Attorney Fule had been given
permission by his immediate superior, the Secretary of Justice, to represent
the complainant in the case at bar, who is a relative.
CONFORMABLY
WITH ALL THE FOREGOING, the decision appealed from should be, as it is hereby
affirmed, in all respects, with costs against appellant..
CASE DIGEST
FACTS
14 SCRA 109
– Legal Ethics – Practice of Law – Isolated Appearance
In 1959,
Villanueva was charged with Malicious Mischief in the municipality of Alaminos
in Laguna. In said case, the private offended party asked his lawyer friend,
Ariston Fule to prosecute said case. Apparently, Fule was the fiscal in San
Pablo, Laguna. Villanueva the opposed the appearance of Fule as counsel for the
offended party as he said that according to the Rules of Court when an attorney
had been appointed to the position of Assistant Provincial Fiscal or City
Fiscal and therein qualified, by operation of law, he ceased to engage in
private law practice.
ISSUE: Whether or not Ariston Fule is engaged in private
law practice.
HELD: No. Private practice of law implies that
one must have presented himself to be in the active and continued practice of
the legal profession and that his professional services are available to the
public for a compensation, as a source of his livelihood or in consideration of
his said services. In the case at bar, Fule is not being compensated but rather
he’s doing it for free for his friend who happened to be the offended party.
Practice is more than an isolated appearance, for it consists in frequent or
customary actions, a succession of acts of the same kind. In other words, it is
frequent habitual exercise. Further, the fact that the Secretary of Justice
approved Fule’s appearance for his friend should be given credence.
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