Velez Vs de Vera
Velez Vs de Vera
Velez Vs de Vera
Velez v. De Vera: *
on June 25, 2005, during its last regular meeting, the IBP board elected a new EVP in
the person of IBP Governor Jose Vicente B. Salazar.
On June 28, 2005, IBP National President Cadiz requested the Supreme Court's
approval of Atty. Salazar's election and assumption of office as national president, in
the event that Atty. de Vera would be disbarred or suspended from the practice of law;
or should his removal from his positions as member of the 2003-2005 board of
governors and as EVP of the IBP be approved by the Court.
Protesting the election of both Atty. Santiago and Atty. Salazar, respondent also
denied having committed acts inimical to the IBP and its board. He maintained that
his removal from his two positions had been done without due notice and due
process.
The Issues
The issues were as follows:
1.
AC 6697
2.
Whether, in the course of his practice of law, Respondent Atty. de Vera
committed malpractice amounting to moral turpitude in the State Bar of California
and in the Philippines
3.
Whether on May 13, 2005, the board of governors validly removed
respondent from his positions as governor and EVP of the IBP
4.
Whether Governor Salazar was validly elected as EVP on June 25, 2005,
and whether he could consequently assume the presidency of the IBP for the term
2005-2007
The Court's Ruling
First Issue:
Res Judicata
The Court unanimously held in a per curiam Decision that AC No. 6052 did not
constitute a bar to the filing of AC No. 6697. The two administrative cases involved
different subject matters and causes of action. In AC No. 6052, the subject matter
was the qualification of Atty. de Vera to run for the position of IBP governor for
Eastern Mindanao. In the present Administrative Complaint, the subject matter was
his privilege to practice law.
The two aforementioned cases did not seek the same relief. In the first case, the
complainants sought to prevent respondent from assuming his post as IBP governor
for Eastern Mindanao; the cause of action referred to his alleged violation of IBP
bylaws. In the second case, what was principally sought was his suspension or
disbarment; the primary cause of action was his alleged violation of the Lawyer's Oath
and the Code of Professional Responsibility.
Second Issue:
Moral Tur pitude
In resolving the second issue, the Court cited Maquera,[5] according to which a
judgment of suspension against a Filipino lawyer in a foreign jurisdiction may
transmute into a similar judgment of suspension in the Philippines, only if the basis
of the foreign courts action included any of the grounds for disbarment or
The Court ruled that the constitutional provision on due process safeguarded
life, liberty and property. The position of EVP of the IBP, however, was not a
property within the constitutional sense. Further, there was no right to security of
tenure over that position, as all that was required to remove any member of the board
of governors for cause was a resolution adopted by two thirds of the remaining board
members.
Furthermore, in administrative proceedings, the essence of due process was
simply the opportunity to explain ones side. The cross-examination of witnesses was
not indispensable to due process. Neither was an actual hearing always essential,
especially under the factual milieu of this case. Atty. de Veras actuations during the
IBP National Convention in question had been witnessed by all the members of the
board, upon whose shoulders the determination of the cause for removal of an IBP
governor was placed, subject to the approval of the Supreme Court.
Atty. de Vera received a copy of the Complaint against him; indeed, he was
present in the meeting when the matter was taken up. From the transcript of
stenographic notes of the meeting on May 13, 2005, in which he was removed, it was
patent that he had been given a fair opportunity to defend himself against the
accusations of Atty. Rivera.
Under the IBP rules, the expulsion of an IBP governor was done via a
Resolution adopted by two thirds of the remaining members. The phrase remaining
members excluded the complainant and the respondent. Of the 7 remaining
members qualified to vote, 5 voted for expulsion, while 2 voted against it. The five
votes still added up to the two thirds vote required for expulsion.
Removal for Cause
The removal of Atty. de Vera from his membership in the board of governors
ipso facto meant also his removal as EVP. The IBP board had shown no grave abuse of
discretion; thus, the Court found no reason to interfere in the resolution to remove
him.
The board had specific and sufficient guidelines in its rules and bylaws on how
to fill the vacancies left by the removal of Atty. de Vera. The 2003-2005 IBP board of
governors election of a new EVP, who would assume the presidency for the term
2005-2007, was well within the authority and prerogative granted to the board by the
IBP bylaws.
According to Article VII, specifically Section 47, [t]he EVP shall automatically
become president for the next succeeding term. The phrase for the next succeeding
term necessarily implied that the EVP who should succeed Atty. Cadiz as IBP
president for the next succeeding term (2005-2007) should come from the members
of the 2003-2005 IBP board of governors. Accordingly, the election of Governor
Santiago, and later of Governor Salazar upon the formers relinquishment of her EVP
position, was valid.
In Bar Matter 491, the Court said that it was the position of EVP that was
actually rotated among the nine regional governors. The rotation with respect to the
presidency was merely the result of the automatic succession rule of the IBP. Thus,
the rotation rule pertained in particular to the position of EVP; the automatic
succession rule, to the presidency.
Intrinsic to the IBP bylaws was the principle that one who was to assume the
highest position in its hierarchy must have been exposed to the demands and
responsibilities of national leadership. By electing the replacement EVP from among
the members of the 2003-2005 board of governors, the IBP stood to benefit from the
experience of the 2003-2005 EVP, who would have served in a national capacity prior
to the latters assumption of the highest position. Therefore, in electing Atty. Salazar
as EVP and thus ensuring a succession in the leadership of the IBP, its board of
governors acted in accordance with its bylaws.
*
[1]
[2]
AC No. 6697, Velez v. De Vera; Bar Matter No. 1227, Re: Oath-taking of Atty. Leonardo S. de Vera,
Incoming President of the IBP; AMNo. 05-5-15-SC, In the Matter of the Removal of Atty. Leonardo S. de
Vera from the IBP Board of Governors as EVP and Governor/In the Matter of the Letter-Complaint of Atty.
de Vera, July 25, 2006, per curiam.
In a meeting on January 14, 2005, 6 members (or two thirds) of the regular IBP board of
governors voted in favor of the Petition and 2 (Governor and EVP de Vera and Governor Carlos
L. Valdez) against.
The Petition questioned the legality and/or constitutionality of Republic Act No. 9227,
[3]
[4]
[5]
authorizing an increase in the salaries of judges and justices and in filing fees.
On April 22, 2005, at the CAP-Camp John Hay Convention Center, Baguio City.
May 13, 2005.
BM No. 793, 435 SCRA 417, July 30, 2004.