Atty. Leon Maguera B.M. No. 793
Atty. Leon Maguera B.M. No. 793
Atty. Leon Maguera B.M. No. 793
SUPREME COURT
Manila
EN BANC
May a member of the Philippine Bar who was disbarred or suspended from the
practice of law in a foreign jurisdiction where he has also been admitted as an attorney
be meted the same sanction as a member of the Philippine Bar for the same infraction
committed in the foreign jurisdiction? There is a Rule of Court provision covering this
cases central issue. Up to this juncture, its reach and breadth have not undergone the
test of an unsettled case.
In a Letter dated August 20, 1996,[1] the District Court of Guam informed this Court of
the suspension of Atty. Leon G. Maquera (Maquera) from the practice of law in Guam for
two (2) years pursuant to the Decision rendered by the Superior Court of Guam on May
7, 1996 in Special Proceedings Case No. SP0075-94,[2] a disciplinary case filed by the
Guam Bar Ethics Committee against Maquera.
The Court referred the matter of Maqueras suspension in Guam to the Bar Confidant
for comment in its Resolution dated November 19, 1996.[3] Under Section 27, Rule 138 of
the Revised Rules of Court, the disbarment or suspension of a member of the Philippine
Bar in a foreign jurisdiction, where he has also been admitted as an attorney, is also a
ground for his disbarment or suspension in this realm, provided the foreign courts action
is by reason of an act or omission constituting deceit, malpractice or other gross
misconduct, grossly immoral conduct, or a violation of the lawyers oath.
In a Memorandum dated February 20, 1997, then Bar Confidant Atty. Erlinda C.
Verzosa recommended that the Court obtain copies of the record of Maqueras case since
the documents transmitted by the Guam District Court do not contain the factual and legal
bases for Maqueras suspension and are thus insufficient to enable her to determine
whether Maqueras acts or omissions which resulted in his suspension in Guam are
likewise violative of his oath as a member of the Philippine Bar.[4]
Pursuant to this Courts directive in its Resolution dated March 18, 1997,[5] the Bar
Confidant sent a letter dated November 13, 1997 to the District Court of Guam requesting
for certified copies of the record of the disciplinary case against Maquera and of the rules
violated by him.[6]
The Court received certified copies of the record of Maqueras case from the District
Court of Guam on December 8, 1997.[7]
Thereafter, Maqueras case was referred by the Court to the Integrated Bar of the
Philippines (IBP) for investigation report and recommendation within sixty (60) days from
the IBPs receipt of the case records.[8]
The IBP sent Maquera a Notice of Hearing requiring him to appear before the IBPs
Commission on Bar Discipline on July 28, 1998.[9] However, the notice was returned
unserved because Maquera had already moved from his last known address in Agana,
Guam and did not leave any forwarding address.[10]
On October 9, 2003, the IBP submitted to the Court its Report and
Recommendation and its Resolution No. XVI-2003-110, indefinitely suspending Maquera
from the practice of law within the Philippines until and unless he updates and pays his
IBP membership dues in full.[11]
The IBP found that Maquera was admitted to the Philippine Bar on February 28,
1958. On October 18, 1974, he was admitted to the practice of law in the territory of
Guam. He was suspended from the practice of law in Guam for misconduct, as he
acquired his clients property as payment for his legal services, then sold it and as a
consequence obtained an unreasonably high fee for handling his clients case. [12]
In its Decision, the Superior Court of Guam stated that on August 6, 1987, Edward
Benavente, the creditor of a certain Castro, obtained a judgment against Castro in a civil
case.Maquera served as Castros counsel in said case. Castros property subject of the
case, a parcel of land, was to be sold at a public auction in satisfaction of his obligation
to Benavente.Castro, however, retained the right of redemption over the property for one
year. The right of redemption could be exercised by paying the amount of the judgment
debt within the aforesaid period.[13]
At the auction sale, Benavente purchased Castros property for Five Hundred U.S.
Dollars (US$500.00), the amount which Castro was adjudged to pay him.[14]
On December 21, 1987, Castro, in consideration of Maqueras legal services in the
civil case involving Benavente, entered into an oral agreement with Maquera and
assigned his right of redemption in favor of the latter.[15]
On January 8, 1988, Maquera exercised Castros right of redemption by paying
Benavente US$525.00 in satisfaction of the judgment debt. Thereafter, Maquera had the
title to the property transferred in his name.[16]
On December 31, 1988, Maquera sold the property to C.S. Chang and C.C. Chang
for Three Hundred Twenty Thousand U.S. Dollars (US$320,000.00).[17]
On January 15, 1994, the Guam Bar Ethics Committee (Committee) conducted
hearings regarding Maqueras alleged misconduct.[18]
Subsequently, the Committee filed a Petition in the Superior Court of Guam praying
that Maquera be sanctioned for violations of Rules 1.5[19] and 1.8(a)[20] of the Model Rules
of Professional Conduct (Model Rules) in force in Guam. In its Petition, the Committee
claimed that Maquera obtained an unreasonably high fee for his services. The Committee
further alleged that Maquera himself admitted his failure to comply with the requirement
in Rule 1.8 (a) of the Model Rules that a lawyer shall not enter into a business transaction
with a client or knowingly acquire a pecuniary interest adverse to a client unless the
transaction and the terms governing the lawyers acquisition of such interest are fair and
reasonable to the client, and are fully disclosed to, and understood by the client and
reduced in writing.[21]
The Committee recommended that Maquera be: (1) suspended from the practice of
law in Guam for a period of two [2] years, however, with all but thirty (30) days of the
period of suspension deferred; (2) ordered to return to Castro the difference between the
sale price of the property to the Changs and the amount due him for legal services
rendered to Castro; (3) required to pay the costs of the disciplinary proceedings; and (4)
publicly reprimanded. It also recommended that other jurisdictions be informed that
Maquera has been subject to disciplinary action by the Superior Court of Guam.[22]
Maquera did not deny that Castro executed a quitclaim deed to the property in his
favor as compensation for past legal services and that the transaction, except for the deed
itself, was oral and was not made pursuant to a prior written agreement. However, he
contended that the transaction was made three days following the alleged termination of
the attorney-client relationship between them, and that the property did not constitute an
exorbitant fee for his legal services to Castro.[23]
On May 7, 1996, the Superior Court of Guam rendered its Decision[24] suspending
Maquera from the practice of law in Guam for a period of two (2) years and ordering him
to take the Multi-State Professional Responsibility Examination (MPRE) within that
period. The court found that the attorney-client relationship between Maquera and Castro
was not yet completely terminated when they entered into the oral agreement to transfer
Castros right of redemption to Maquera on December 21, 1987. It also held that Maquera
profited too much from the eventual transfer of Castros property to him since he was able
to sell the same to the Changs with more than US$200,000.00 in profit, whereas his legal
fees for services rendered to Castro amounted only to US$45,000.00. The court also
ordered him to take the MPRE upon his admission during the hearings of his case that
he was aware of the requirements of the Model Rules regarding business transactions
between an attorney and his client in a very general sort of way.[25]
On the basis of the Decision of the Superior Court of Guam, the IBP concluded that
although the said court found Maquera liable for misconduct, there is no evidence to
establish that [Maquera] committed a breach of ethics in the Philippines.[26] However, the
IBP still resolved to suspend him indefinitely for his failure to pay his annual dues as a
member of the IBP since 1977, which failure is, in turn, a ground for removal of the name
of the delinquent member from the Roll of Attorneys under Section 10, Rule 139-A of the
Revised Rules of Court.[27]
The power of the Court to disbar or suspend a lawyer for acts or omissions committed
in a foreign jurisdiction is found in Section 27, Rule 138 of the Revised Rules of Court, as
amended by Supreme Court Resolution dated February 13, 1992, which states:
favor. He contended that the sale was made at the instance of his clients because they
had no money to pay him for his services. The Court ruled that the lawyers acquisition of
the property of his clients under the circumstances obtaining therein rendered him liable
for malpractice. The Court held:
Whether the deed of sale in question was executed at the instance of the spouses
driven by financial necessity, as contended by the respondent, or at the latters behest,
as contended by the complainant, is of no moment. In either case an attorney occupies
a vantage position to press upon or dictate his terms to a harassed client, in breach of
the rule so amply protective of the confidential relations, which must necessarily exist
between attorney and client, and of the rights of both.
[32]
The Superior Court of Guam also hinted that Maqueras acquisition of Castros right of
redemption, his subsequent exercise of said right, and his act of selling the redeemed
property for huge profits were tainted with deceit and bad faith when it concluded that
Maquera charged Castro an exorbitant fee for his legal services. The court held that since
the assignment of the right of redemption to Maquera was in payment for his legal
services, and since the property redeemed by him had a market value of US$248,220.00
as of December 21, 1987 (the date when the right of redemption was assigned to him),
he is liable for misconduct for accepting payment for his legal services way beyond his
actual fees which amounted only to US$45,000.00.
Maqueras acts in Guam which resulted in his two (2)-year suspension from the
practice of law in that jurisdiction are also valid grounds for his suspension from the
practice of law in the Philippines. Such acts are violative of a lawyers sworn duty to act
with fidelity toward his clients. They are also violative of the Code of Professional
Responsibility, specifically, Canon 17 which states that [a] lawyer owes fidelity to the
cause of his client and shall be mindful the trust and confidence reposed in him; and Rule
1.01 which prohibits lawyers from engaging in unlawful, dishonest, immoral or deceitful
conduct. The requirement of good moral character is not only a condition precedent to
admission to the Philippine Bar but is also a continuing requirement to maintain ones
goods standing in the legal profession.[33]
It bears stressing that the Guam Superior Courts judgment ordering Maqueras
suspension from the practice of law in Guam does not automatically result in his
suspension or disbarment in the Philippines. Under Section 27,[34] Rule 138 of the Revised
Rules of Court, the acts which led to his suspension in Guam are mere grounds for
disbarment or suspension in this jurisdiction, at that only if the basis of the foreign courts
action includes any of the grounds for disbarment or suspension in this
jurisdiction.[35] Likewise, the judgment of the Superior Court of Guam only
constitutes prima facie evidence of Maqueras unethical acts as a lawyer.[36] More
fundamentally, due process demands that he be given the opportunity to defend himself
and to present testimonial and documentary evidence on the matter in an investigation to
be conducted in accordance with Rule 139-B of the Revised Rules of Court. Said rule
mandates that a respondent lawyer must in all cases be notified of the charges against
him. It is only after reasonable notice and failure on the part of the respondent lawyer to
[1]
Rollo, p. 1.
[2]
[3]
Rollo, p. 11.
[4]
Id. at 14-15.
[5]
In said Resolution, Court directed the Bar Confidant to obtain copies of the entire record of Maqueras
case from the appropriate authorities in Guam.
[6]
Rollo, p. 16.
[7]
Report of the Bar Confidant dated January 21, 1998, Id. at 39. In compliance with the requirements for
the admissibility of public documents issued by a foreign jurisdiction under Sections 24 and 25 in
relation to Section 19(a), Rule 132 of the Revised Rules of Court, the Deputy Clerk of Court of the
District Court of Guam certified that the documents comprising the record of Maqueras case
transmitted to this Court are true copies of the original on file with the District Court of Guam (See
Id. at 20 and 33).
[8]
[9]
[10]
[11]
Id.
[12]
Id., at 69-70.
[13]
Decision of the Superior Court of Guam dated May 7, 1996, Id. at 50.
[14]
Ibid.
[15]
Id.
[16]
Id.
[17]
Id.
[18]
Id
[19]
The record of the case does not contain a copy of the text of Rule 1.5 of the Model Rules of Professional
Conduct but the Decision of the Guam Superior Court states that Rule 1.5 prohibits a lawyer from
obtaining an unreasonably high fee for his services (Rollo, p. 52).
[20]
Rule 1.8 (a). A lawyer shall not enter into a business transaction with a client or knowingly acquire an
ownership, possessory, security or other pecuniary interest adverse to a client unless:
1. the transaction and terms on which the lawyer acquires the interest are fair and reasonable to the client
and are fully disclosed and transmitted in writing to the client in a manner which can reasonably be
understood by the client;
2. the client is given a reasonable opportunity too seek the advice of independent counsel in the transaction;
and
3. the client consents in writing thereto. (Ibid)
[21]
Decision of the Superior Court of Guam dated May 7, 1996, Id. at 52-53.
[22]
Id. at 53.
[23]
Id. at 54.
[24]
Id. at 49-50.
[25]
Id. at 49-60.
[26]
[27]
Id. at 73.
[28]
The following persons cannot acquire by purchase, even at a public or judicial auction, either in person or
through the mediation of another:
(5) Judges, justices, prosecuting attorneys, clerks of superior and inferior courts, and other officers and
employees connected with the administration of justice, the property and rights in litigation or levied
upon an execution before the court within whose jurisdiction or territory they exercise their
respective functions; this prohibition includes the act of acquiring by assignment and shall
apply to lawyers, with respect to the property and rights which may be the object of any
litigation in which they may take part by virtue of their profession. (Emphasis supplied)
[29]
Art. 1492. The prohibitions in the two preceding articles are applicable to sales in legal redemption,
compromises and renunciations (Civil Code; emphasis supplied).
[30]
Cruz v. Jacinto, Adm. Case No. 5235, March 22, 2000, 328 SCRA 636; Nakpil v. Valdes, Adm. Case No.
2040, March 4, 1998, 286 SCRA 758; Sotto v. Samson, G.R. No. L-16917, July 31, 1962, 5 SCRA
733.
[31]
[32]
[33]
Villanueva v. Sta. Ana, CBD Case No. 251, July 11, 1995, 245 SCRA 707; Cordova v. Cordova, Adm.
Case No. 3249, November 29, 1989, 179 SCRA 680.
[34]
Supra, p. 10.
[35]
Ibid.
[36]
The characterization of the judgment of a foreign court or disciplinary agency suspending or disbarring
of a member of the Philippine Bar for acts committed in that foreign jurisdiction as prima
facie evidence of the ground for suspension or disbarment is consistent with Section 48, Rule 139
of the Revised Rules of Court which provides that the judgment of a foreign court cannot be
enforced by execution in the Philippines, but only creates a right of action. Section 48 further states
that a foreign judgment against a person is only presumptive evidence of a right against that
person. Hence, the same may be repelled by evidence of clear mistake of law (seeNagarmull v.
Binalbagan-Isabela Sugar Co., Inc., 144 Phil 72 [1970]).
[37]
Investigation. Upon joinder issues or upon failure of the respondent to answer, the Investigator shall, with
deliberate speed, proceed with the investigation of the case. He shall have the power to issue
subpoenas and administer oaths. The respondent shall be given full opportunity to defend himself,
to present witnesses on his behalf, and be heard by himself and counsel. However, if upon
reasonable notice, the respondent fails to appear, the investigation shall proceed ex parte .
The Investigator shall terminate the investigation within three (3) months from the date of its
commencement, unless extended for good cause by the Board of Governors upon prior application.
Willful failure to refusal to obey a subpoena or any other lawful order issued by the Investigator shall be
dealt with as for indirect contempt of court. The corresponding charge shall be filed by the
Investigator before the IBP Board of Governors which shall require the alleged contemnor to show
cause within ten (10) days from notice. The IBP Board of Governors may thereafter conduct
hearings, if necessary, in accordance with the procedure set forth in this Rule for hearing before
the Investigator. Such hearing shall as far as practicable be terminated within fifteen (15) days form
its commencement. Thereafter, the IBP Board of Governors shall within a like period of fifteen (15)
days issue a resolution setting forth its findings and recommendations, which shall forthwith be
transmitted to the Supreme Court for final action and if warranted, the imposition of penalty.
See also Baldomar v. Paras, Adm. Case No. 4980, December 15, 2000, 348 SCRA 212; Cottam v. Laysa,
Adm. Case No. 4834, February 29, 2000, 326 SCRA 614.
[38]
IBP Report and Recommendation dated October 12, 2000, Rollo, pp. 72-73.
[39]
See also Santos v. Soliman, Adm. Case No. 4749, January 20, 2000, 322 SCRA 529; In the Matter of the
IBP Membership Dues Delinquency of Atty. M.A. Edillon, Adm. Case No. 1928, December 19,
1980, 101 SCRA 617.