In Re Sycip Salazar Feliciano Hernandez and Castillo

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PETITION FOR AUTHORITY TO CONTINUE USE OF THE FIRM NAME "SYCIP, SALAZAR, FELICIANO, HERNANDEZ & CASTILLO" and

IN THE MATTER OF THE PETITION FOR AUTHORITY TO CONTINUE USE OF THE FIRM NAME "OZAETA, ROMULO, DE LEON, MABANTA & REYES." 1979 / Melencio-Herrera / Obligations of partners with regard to third persons > Partnership name Two firms ask that they be allowed to continue using the names of their firms despite the fact that Attys. Sycip and Ozaeta died. PETITIONERS ARGUMENTS 1. Under the law, a partnership is not prohibited from continuing its business under a firm name that includes the name of a deceased partner. NCC 1840 explicitly sanctions the practice. The use by the person or partnership continuing the business of the partnership name, or the name of a deceased partner as part thereof, shall not of itself make the individual property of the deceased partner liable for any debts contracted by such person or partnership. 2. In regulating other professions (accountancy and engineering), the legislature has authorized the adoption of firm names without any restriction as to the use of the name of a deceased partner. There is no fundamental policy that is offended by the continued use by a firm of professionals of a firm name, which includes the name of a deceased partner, at least where such firm name has acquired the characteristics of a "trade name." 3. The Canons of Professional Ethics are not transgressed by the continued use of the name of a deceased partner because Canon 33 of the Canons of Professional Ethics adopted by the American Bar Association declares that: The continued use of the name of a deceased or former partner when permissible by local custom, is not unethical but care should be taken that no imposition or deception is practiced through this use. 4. There is no possibility of imposition or deception because the deaths of their respective deceased partners were wellpublicized in all newspapers of general circulation for several days. The stationeries now being used by them carry new letterheads indicating the years when their respective deceased partners were connected with the firm. Petitioners will notify all leading national and international law directories of the fact of their deceased partners' deaths. 5. No local custom prohibits the continued use of a deceased partner's name in a professional firm's name. There is no Philippine custom or usage that recognizes that the name of a law firm identifies the firms individual members. 6. The continued use of a deceased partner's name in the firm name of law partnerships has been consistently allowed by U.S. Courts and is an accepted practice in the legal profession of most countries. ISSUE & HOLDING WON they may be allowed to continue using the current names of their firms. NO. Petitioners advised to drop the names SYCIP and OZAETA from their respective firm names. Names may be included in the listing of individuals who have been partners, indicating the years during which they served. RATIO JURISPRUDENCE The Deen case [1953] Court advised the firm to desist from including in their firm designation the name of C. D. Johnston, who has long been dead Register of Deeds of Manila v. China Banking Corporation [1958] In this case, the law firm of Perkins & Ponce Enrile moved to intervene as amicus curiae. The Court in a Resolution stated that it "would like to be informed why the name of Perkins is still being used although Atty. E. A. Perkins is already dead." The Court advised the firm to drop the name of E. A. Perkins from the firm name, and ruled that no practice should be allowed which even in a remote degree could give rise to the possibility of deception. Deen case cited in the ruling. Judicial decisions applying or interpreting the laws form part of the legal system. The Supreme Court in the Deen and Perkins cases laid down a legal rule against which no custom or practice to the contrary, even if proven, can prevail. This is not to speak of our civil law which clearly ordains that a partnership is dissolved by the death of any partner. Custom which are contrary to law, public order or public policy shall not be countenanced. The use in their partnership names of the names of deceased partners will run counter to NCC 1815. Art. 1815. Every partnership shall operate under a firm name, which may or may not include the name of one or more of the partners. Those who, not being members of the partnership, include their names in the firm name shall be subject to the liability of a partner. Names in a firm name of a partnership must either be those of living partners and in the case of non-partners, should be living persons who can be subjected to liability. NCC 1825 prohibits a third person from including his name in the firm name under pain of assuming the liability of a partner. The heirs of a deceased partner in a law firm cannot be held liable as the old members to the creditors of a firm particularly where they are non-lawyers. Canon 34 of the Canons of Professional Ethics prohibits an agreement for the payment to the widow and heirs of a deceased lawyer of a percentage, either gross or net, of the fees received from the future business of the deceased lawyer's clients, both because the recipients of such division are not lawyers and because such payments will not represent service or responsibility on the part of the recipient. Neither the widow nor the heirs can be held liable for transactions entered into after the death of their lawyer-predecessor. There being no benefits accruing, there can be no corresponding liability. The public relations value of the use of an old firm name can tend to create undue advantages and disadvantages in the practice of the profession. An able lawyer without connections will have to make a name for himself starting from scratch. Another able lawyer, who can join an old firm, can initially ride on that old firm's reputation established by deceased partners. ON ARGUMENT #1

NCC 1840 is within Chapter 3 of Title IX entitled "Dissolution and Winding Up." It primarily deals with the exemption from liability in cases of a dissolved partnership, of the individual property of the deceased partner for debts contracted by the person or partnership, which continues the business using the partnership name or the name of the deceased partner as part thereof. What the law contemplates therein is a hold-over situation preparatory to formal reorganization. Secondly, NCC 1840 treats more of a commercial partnership with a good will to protect rather than of a professional partnership [with no saleable goodwill but whose reputation depends on the personal qualifications of its individual members]. A saleable goodwill can exist only in a commercial partnership, not in a professional partnership consisting of lawyers. ON ARGUMENT #2 A partnership for the practice of law cannot be likened to partnerships formed by other professionals or for business. The law on accountancy specifically allows the use of a trade name in connection with the practice of accountancy. A partnership for the practice of law is not a legal entity. It is a mere relationship or association for a particular purpose. It is not a partnership formed to carry on trade or business or of holding property. The use of a nom de plume, assumed or trade name in law practice is improper. Primary characteristics which distinguish the legal profession from business 1. A duty of public service, of which the emolument is a byproduct, and in which one may attain the highest eminence without making much money 2. A relation as an "officer of court" to the administration of justice involving thorough sincerity, integrity, and reliability 3. A relation to clients in the highest degree fiduciary 4. A relation to colleagues at the bar characterized by candor, fairness, and unwillingness to resort to current business methods of advertising and encroachment on their practice, or dealing directly with their clients The right to practice law does not only presuppose in its possessor integrity, legal standing and attainment, but also the exercise of a special privilege, highly personal and partaking of the nature of a public trust. ON ARGUMENT #3 Canon 33 does not consider as unethical the continued use of the name of a deceased or former partner when such a practice is permissible by local custom, but the Canon warns that care should be taken that no imposition or deception is practiced. In the Philippines, no local custom permits or allows the continued use of a deceased or former partner's name. Firm names, under our custom, identify the more active and/or more senior members or partners of the law firm. The possibility of deception upon the public, real or consequential, where the name of a deceased partner continues to be used cannot be ruled out. A person in search of legal counsel might be guided by the familiar ring of a distinguished name appearing in a firm title. ON ARGUMENT #6 U.S. Courts have allowed the continued use of a deceased partner's name because it is sanctioned by custom. Not so in this jurisdiction where there is no local custom that sanctions the practice. Custom has been defined as a rule of conduct formed by repetition of acts, uniformly observed (practiced) as a social rule, legally binding and obligatory. Courts take no judicial notice of custom. A custom must be proved as a fact, according to the rules of evidence. A local custom as a source of right cannot be considered by a court of justice unless such custom is properly established by competent evidence like any other fact. Merely because something is done as a matter of practice does not mean that Courts can rely on the same for purposes of adjudication as a juridical custom. Juridical custom must be differentiated from social custom. The former can supplement statutory law or be applied in the absence of such statute. Not so with the latter. The practice of law is related to the administration of justice and should not be considered like an ordinary "money-making trade." Petitioners' desire to preserve the identity of their firms in the eyes of the public must bow to legal and ethical impediment. Petitions DENIED CONCURRENCE OF J. FERNANDO It is out of delicadeza that the undersigned did not participate in the disposition of these petitions. Sycip Salazar started with partnership of Quisumbing, Sycip, and Quisumbing, the senior partner, the late Ramon Quisumbing, being the father-in-law of the undersigned, and the most junior partner then, Norberto J. Quisumbing, being his brother- in-law. DISSENT OF J. AQUINO The petition may be granted with the condition that it be indicated in the letterheads of the two firms (as the case may be) that A. Sycip, former J. Ozaeta and H. Ozaeta are dead or the period when they served as partners should be stated therein. The purpose of the two firms in continuing the use of the names of their deceased founders is to retain the clients who had customarily sought the legal services of Attys. Sycip and Ozaeta and to benefit from the goodwill attached to the names of those respected and esteemed law practitioners. That is a legitimate motivation. The retention of their names is not illegal per se.

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