Berin Vs Barte Digest

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JOSIE BERIN and MERLY ALORRO, complainants, vs.

JUDGE FELIXBERTO
P. BARTE, Municipal Circuit Trial Court, Hamtic, Antique,respondent.
[A.M. No. MTJ-02-1443. July 31, 2002.]
MENDOZA, J p:

FACTS:
 This is a complaint for grave and serious misconduct against Judge Felixberto P. Barte,
Presiding Judge of the MCTC, Hamtic, Tobias Fornier and Anini-y, Antique.
 Complainants Josie Berin and Merly Alorro are real estate agents. They allege that
respondent judge asked them to look for a vendor of a lot for sale in Antique because the
Manila Mission of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, Inc. wanted to buy a
site for its church in Antique.
 Complainants claim that they found a vendor, Eleanor M. Checa-Santos, who owned a lot
consisting of 4,000 square meters, located in Barrio Caridad, Municipality of Now, Hamtic,
Antique.
 Respondent judge informed them three days later that the Church was willing to pay P2.3
million for the lot and agreed that complainants would each receive a commission of
P100,000.00 in case the sale took place; and that respondent judge would receive the
money from the vendee and then deliver the share of each of the complainants.
 Complainants said they wanted to have the agreement in writing, but respondent judge
refused, saying, "Do you have no trust in your Judge Barte?"
 Complainants alleged that the sale was consummated and respondent judge received the
purchase price, but, despite demands made by them for the payment of their commission,
respondent judge gave them only P10,000.00 each, telling them to "take it or leave it."
 Hence, this complaint.
 Respondent judge denied the charges against him. But he said that, complainant Merly
Alorro, whom he considered his friend, learned from complainant Josie Berin that the lot
in question was up for sale, and Alorro told him about it. Based on such information,
respondent judge said he was able to facilitate the sale of the land after almost two (2) years
of hard work. Since he was able to realize some amount from the sale, he decided to give
complainants a share for the information they gave him, although they never contributed
to the success of the transaction. He gave complainant Berin P7,000.00 and Merly Alorro
P12,000.00.
 Respondent judge contended that he cannot be held liable in this administrative proceeding
since the act complained of does not pertain to the performance of his official function as
judge.
 OCA agrees that respondent judge cannot be held liable for refusing to honor his obligation
under the alleged contract on the ground that the same has no relation to his official duties
as a judge and does not amount either to maladministration or willful intentional neglect
and failure to discharge the duties of a judge. However, it believes that respondent is liable
for violation of Canon 5, Rule 5.02 of the Code of Judicial Conduct and recommends
accordingly that he be fined P5,000.00.

ISSUE:
WON respondent judge committed an impropriety in acting as a broker in the sale of a real estate,
for which he admits receiving a commission.
HELD:
The people's confidence in the judicial system is founded not only on the competence and diligence
of the members of the bench, but also on their integrity and moral uprightness. He must not only
be honest but also appear to be so. He must not only be a "good judge," he must also appear to be
a "good person."

Article 14 of the Code of Commerce prohibits members of the judiciary and prosecutors
from engaging in commerce within their jurisdiction. It provides:
ART. 14. The following cannot engage in commerce, either in person or by
proxy, nor can they hold any office or have any direct, administrative, or financial
intervention in commercial or industrial companies within the limits of the
districts, provinces, or towns in which they discharge their duties:
1. Justices of the Supreme Court, judges and officials of the department of public
prosecution in active service. This provision shall not be applicable to mayors,
municipal judges, and municipal prosecuting attorneys nor those who by chance
are temporarily discharging the functions of judge or prosecuting attorney.
xxx xxx xxx
5. Those who by virtue of laws or special provisions may not engage in commerce
in a determinate territory.

However, in Macaruta v. Asuncion, it was held that Art. 14 is in the nature of political law and
since it was extended to this country by Spain it was necessarily abrogated upon the change of
sovereignty from Spain to the United States. Nevertheless, the Court admonished a judge who had
been found to have engaged in business "to be more discreet in his private and business activities,
because his conduct as a member of the Judiciary must not only be characterized by propriety but
must always be above suspicion."

After the decision in Macariola v. Asuncion, this Court adopted the Code of Judicial Conduct,
which took effect on October 20, 1989, the pertinent provision of which states:
Rule 5.02. — A judge shall refrain from financial and business dealings that tend
to reflect adversely on the court's impartiality, interfere with the proper
performance of judicial activities, or increase involvement with lawyers or
persons likely to come before the court. A judge should so manage investments
and other financial interests as to minimize the number of cases giving grounds
for disqualification.

This provision thus supplies the void left by the abrogation of Art. 14 of the Spanish Code of
Commerce. Indeed, it is not good for judges to engage in business except only to the extent allowed
by Rule 5.03 of the Code of Judicial Conduct which provides:
Subject to the provisions of the preceding rule, a judge may hold and manage
investments but should not serve as an officer, director, manager, advisor, or
employee of any business except as director of a family business of the judge.

As the OCA observed:


By allowing himself to act as agent in the sale of the subject property, respondent
judge has increased the possibility of his disqualification to act as an impartial
judge in the event that a dispute involving the said contract of sale arises. Also,
the possibility that the parties to the sale might plead before his court is not remote
and his business dealings with them might [not only] create suspicion as to his
fairness but also to [his ability to] render it in a manner that is free from any
suspicion as to its fairness and impartiality, and also as to the judge's integrity
(Martinez vs. Gironella, 65 SCRA 245). One who occupies an exalted position in
the administration of justice must at all times be free from the appearance of
impropriety (Jugueta vs. Boncaros, 60 SCRA 27).

WHEREFORE, respondent Judge Felixberto P. Barte is found GUILTY of violation of Canon


5.02 of the Code of Judicial Conduct and, considering this to be his first offense, is hereby FINED
in the amount of P2,000.00, with the ADMONITION to him to be more discreet and prudent in
his private dealings as in his judicial duties.

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