Rules of Procedure Modes of Discovery
Rules of Procedure Modes of Discovery
Rules of Procedure Modes of Discovery
service thereof, unless the court on motion and for good cause shown,
extends or shortens the time.
Perforce a party served with the written interrogatories is bound to
answer the questions propounded therein under pain of the penalties
provided for in Rule 29 of the Rules of Civil Procedure among which is the
dismissal of the complaint.
The various modes of discovery enumerated and provided for in the
Rules of Civil Procedure is expressly made applicable to criminal
proceedings (Agpalo, Handbook on Criminal Procedure, 2001 Edition, p.
351; citing Section 3, Rule 1 of the Rules of Civil Procedure).
It is of no moment that the questions are a sort of fishing expedition
considering that the new rules explicitly allow it. The Supreme Court of the
Philippines has repeatedly reminded the trial courts that they should
encourage the use of deposition procedure and allow the adverse party to
serve interrogatories to expedite the proceedings of the case.
In the aforementioned case of Republic of the Philippines vs.
Sandiganbayan (supra), it was pronounced that no longer can the timehonored cry of fishing expedition serve to preclude a party from inquiring
into the facts underlying his opponents case. Mutual knowledge of all the
relevant facts gathered by both parties is essential to proper litigation. To
that end, either party may compel the other to disgorge whatever facts he
has in his possession. The deposition-discovery procedure simply
advances the stage at which the disclosure can be compelled from the time
of trial to the period preceding it, thus reducing the possibility of surprise.
The case of Elena S. Ong versus Hon. Francisco V. Mazo, etc., et al.
(G.R. No. 145542, June 04, 2004), is enlightening for both the bench and
the bar. The Philippine Supreme Court said that the thrust of the Rules is
to even make the availment of the modes of discovery depositions,
interrogatories and request for admissions without much court
intervention since leave of court is not necessary to put into motion such
modes after an answer to the complaint has been served. The rationale
behind the recognition accorded the modes of discovery is that they enable
a party to discover the evidence of the adverse party and thus facilitate an
amicable settlement or expedite the trial of the case. Thus, to deny a party
the liberty to have his written interrogatories answered by his opponent, as
what the trial court did, on the premise that the interrogatories were a
fishing expedition, is to disregard the categorical pronouncement in
aforementioned case of Republic vs. Sandiganbayan that the time-honored