Mendez v. People

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G.R. No.

179962 June 11, 2014


DR. JOEL C. MENDEZ, Petitioner,
vs.
PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES and COURT OF TAX APPEALS, Respondents.

Before the Court is a petition for certiorari and prohibition under Rule 651 filed by Dr. Joel C. Mendez
(petitioner) assailing the June 12, 2007 and August 13, 2007 resolutions of the Court of Tax Appeals
(CTA) The assailed resolutions granted the prosecution's Motion to Amend Information with Leave of
Court and denied the petitioner's motion for reconsideration.

Section 14, Rule 110 of the Revised Rules of Criminal Procedure governs the matter of amending the
information:
Amendment or substitution. — A complaint or information may be amended, in form or in substance,
without leave of court, at any time before the accused enters his plea. After the plea and during the trial,
a formal amendment may only be made with leave of court and when it can be done without causing
prejudice to the rights of the accused.

FACTS:

 The Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) filed a complaint-affidavit with the Department of Justice
against the petitioner Mendez. The BIR alleged that Mendez had been operating as a single
proprietor doing business and/or exercising his profession for taxable years 2001 to 2003 under
the 6 trade names and registration addresses.
 BIR alleged that petitioner failed to file his income tax returns for taxable years 2001 to 2003
and, consequently evaded his obligation to pay the correct amount of taxes due the
government.
 Petitioner Mendez admitted that he has been operating as a single proprietor under these trade
names in Quezon City, Makati, Dagupan and San Fernando. However, he countered that he did
not file his income tax returns in these places because his business establishments were
registered only in 2003 at the earliest; thus, these business establishments were not yet in
existence at the time of his alleged failure to file his income tax return.
 After a preliminary investigation, State Prosecutor Navera found probable cause against
petitioner for non-filing of income tax returns for taxable years 2001 and 2002 and for failure to
supply correct and accurate information as to his true income for taxable year 2003, in violation
of the National Internal Revenue Code.
 It was filed with the CTA charging the petitioner with violation of Section 255 of Republic Act No.
8424 (Tax Reform Act of 1997).
 At Quezon City, and within the jurisdiction of [the CTA] accused Mendez, a duly registered
taxpayer, and sole proprietor of "Weigh Less Center" with principal office at No. 31 Roces
Avenue, Quezon City, and with several branches in Quezon City, Makati, San Fernando and
Dagupan City, did then and there, wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously fail to file his Income Tax
Return (ITR) with the Bureau of Internal Revenue for the taxable year 2001, to the damage and
prejudice of the Government in the estimated amount of ₱1,089,439.08, exclusive of penalties,
surcharges and interest.
 Mendez was arraigned and pleaded not guilty on March 5, 2007.
 The prosecution filed a "Motion to Amend Information with Leave of Court” that the accused
doing business in several branches and wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously fail to file his income
tax return (ITR) with the Bureau of Internal Revenue for income earned for the taxable year
2001, to the damage and prejudice of the Government in the estimated amount of
₱1,089,439.08, exclusive of penalties, surcharges and interest (underscoring and boldfacing in
the original)
 The petitioner failed to file his comment to the motion within the required period, thus the CTA
granted the prosecution’s motion. The CTA ruled that the prosecution’s amendment is merely a
formal one as it "merely states with additional precision something already contained in the
original information."
 The petitioner failed to show that the defenses applicable under the original information can no
longer be used under the amended information since both the original and the amended
information charges the petitioner with the same offense (violation of Section 255).
 The CTA observed that the change of name of his business to include the phrase "Mendez
Medical Group" does not alter the fact the [petitioner] is being charged with failure to file his
Income Tax Return. The places where the accused conducts business does not affect the Court’s
jurisdiction... nor ... change the nature of the offense charged, as only one [ITR] is demanded of
every taxpayer. We likewise see no substantial difference on the information with the insertion
of the phrase ‘for income earned’ for it merely stated the normal subject matter found in every
income tax return.
 The petitioner filed the present petition after the CTA denied his motion for reconsideration.
 The petitioner claims in his petition that the prosecution’s amendment is a substantial
amendment prohibited under Section 14, Rule 110 of the Revised Rules of Criminal Procedure.
It is substantial in nature because its additional allegations alter the prosecution’s theory of the
case so as to cause surprise to him and affect the form of his defense. Thus, he was not properly
informed of the nature and cause of the accusation against him.
 Petitioner claims that to change the allegation on the locations of his business from San
Fernando, Pampanga and Dagupan City to Muntinlupa and Mandaluyong cities would cause
surprise to him on the form of defense he would have to assume.
 The petitioner adds that the change in the date of the commission of the crime from 2001 to
2002 would also alter his defense considering that the difference in taxable years would mean
requiring a different set of defense evidence. The same is true with the new allegation of
"Mendez Medical Group" since it deprived him of the right, during the preliminary investigation,
to present evidence against the alleged operation and or existence of this entity. In sum, the
amendments sought change the subject of the offense and thus substantial.
 However CTA, the respondent claim that the petitioner availed of the wrong remedy in
questioning the CTA resolutions. Under Rule 9, Section 9 of the Revised Rules of CTA, the
remedy of appeal to the CTA en banc is the proper remedy, to be availed of within fifteen days
from receipt of the assailed resolution. The filing of the present petition was clearly a substitute
for a lost appeal. Even assuming that certiorari is the proper remedy, the CTA did not commit an
error of jurisdiction or act with grave abuse of discretion. On the contrary, the assailed
resolutions were in accord with jurisprudence. The amended information could not have caused
surprise to the petitioner since the amendments do not change the nature and cause of
accusation against him. The offense the petitioner probably committed and the acts or
omissions involved remain the same under the original and the amended information, i.e., his
failure to file his ITR in 2002 for income earned in 2001 from the operation of his businesses.

ISSUE:

1. Whether or not the prosecution’s amendments made after the petitioner’s arraignment are
substantial in nature and must perforce be denied?

RULLINGS:

1. NO. The prosecution’s amendments made after the petitioner’s arraignment are substantial in
nature and must perforce.

Under the law, Section 14, Rule 110 of the Revised Rules of Criminal Procedure governs the
matter of amending the information:

Amendment or substitution. — A complaint or information may be amended, in


form or in substance, without leave of court, at any time before the accused enters his
plea. After the plea and during the trial, a formal amendment may only be made with
leave of court and when it can be done without causing prejudice to the rights of the
accused.

However, any amendment before plea, which downgrades the nature of the offense
charged in or excludes any accused from the complaint or information, can be made only upon
motion by the prosecutor, with notice to the offended party and with leave of court. The court
shall state its reasons in resolving the motion and copies of its order shall be furnished all
parties, especially the offended party.

There is no precise definition of what constitutes a substantial amendment. According


to jurisprudence, substantial matters in the complaint or information consist of the recital of
facts constituting the offense charged and determinative of the jurisdiction of the court. Under
Section 14, however, the prosecution is given the right to amend the information, regardless of
the nature of the amendment, so long as the amendment is sought before the accused enters
his plea, subject to the qualification under the second paragraph of Section 14, Rule 110.

Once the accused is arraigned and enters his plea, Section 14, Rule 110 of the Rules of Court
prohibits the prosecution from seeking a substantial amendment, particularly mentioning those
that may prejudice the rights of the accused; The theory in law is that since the accused officially
begins to prepare his defense against the accusation on the basis of the recitals in the
information read to him during arraignment, then the prosecution must establish its case on the
basis of the same information.

Amendments that do not charge another offense different from that charged in the original one;
or do not alter the prosecution’s theory of the case so as to cause surprise to the accused and
affect the form of defense he has or will assume are considered merely as formal amendments.
In the present case, the amendments sought by the prosecution pertains to (i) the
alleged change in the date in the commission of the crime from 2001 to 2002; (ii) the addition of
the phrase “doing business under the name and style of Mendez Medical Group”; (iii) the
change and/or addition of the branches of petitioner’s operation; and (iv) the addition of the
phrase “for income earned.” We cannot see how these amendments would adversely affect any
substantial right of the petitioner as accused.
The "change" in the date from 2001 to 2002 and the addition of the phrase "for income earned"
At the outset we note that the actual year of the commission of the offense has escaped both
the petitioner and prosecution. In its Motion to Amend the Information, the prosecution
mistakenly stated that the information it originally filed alleged the commission of the offense as
"on or about the 15th day of April, 2001" – even if the record is clear that that the actual year of
commission alleged is 2002. The petitioner makes a similar erroneous allegation in its petition
before the Court.

As to when the rights of an accused are prejudiced by an amendment made after he had
pleaded to the original information, Montenegro ruled that prejudice exists when a defense
under the original information would no longer be available after the amendment is made, and
when any evidence the accused might have, would be inapplicable to the Information as
amended. Applying this test, the Court disallowed the amendment for being substantial in
nature as the recital of facts constituting the offense charged was altered.

Therefore, the Court agree with the prosecution that petitioner has no reason to complain for
the inclusion of the phrase "Mendez Medical Group” and in the amended information, the
prosecution additionally alleged that petitioner is "doing business under the name and style of
‘Weigh Less Center’/Mendez Medical Group.’"

NOTES:

o A judgment or order is considered final if it disposes of the action or proceeding completely, or


terminates a particular stage of the same action; in such case, the remedy available to an
aggrieved party is appeal. If the order or resolution, however, merely resolves incidental matters
and leaves something more to be done to resolve the merits of the case, as in the present case,
the order is interlocutory and the aggrieved party’s only remedy after failing to obtain a
reconsideration of the ruling is a petition for certiorari under Rule 65.

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