Source: http://elibrary.judiciary.gov.ph/thebookshelf/showdocs/1/46251
Timestamp: 2019-04-22 12:42:22+00:00

Document:
JOHNSON LEE, PETITIONER, VS. PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES AND NEUGENE MARKETING, INC., RESPONDENTS.
There were two stock dividend declarations, one on June 7, 1980 in the amount of P60,000.00 and another on May 2, 1981 for P40,000.00. On May 15, 1986 Eugenio Flores, Jr. assigned/divested himself of his shares in favor of Sonny Moreno, 1,050 shares; Arsenio Yang, Jr., 700 shares and Charles O. Sy, 700 shares.
On June 11, 1987, the NMI sold and delivered to the Victorias Milling Company, Inc. (VMCI), in Victorias, Negros Occidental, 77,500 pieces of empty white bags for the price of P565,750.00. NMI issued Charge Invoice No. 0809 dated June 11, 1987 to VMCI covering said sale. On June 18, 1987, VMCI purchased 100,000 pieces of empty white bags from NMI for P730,000.00 for which NMI issued Charge Invoice No. 0810. On June 25, 1987, VMCI again purchased 28,000 pieces of empty white bags from NMI for the price of P204,400.00 and the latter issued Charge Invoice No. 0811 dated June 25, 1987. Inayment of said purchases from NMI, VMCI drew and issued two Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI) Checks: Check No. 068706 dated August 3, 1987 in the amount of P565,750.00 and Check No. 068993 dated August 19, 1987 in the amount of P934,400.00. Both checks were payable to the order of NMI.
On October 13, 1987, stockholders owning two-thirds (2/3) of the subscribed capital stock of NMI voted to call a stockholders’ meeting. One of the items in the agenda was the dissolution of the corporation.
Accordingly, notices were again sent to all stockholders of record, all of whom properly acknowledged the said notices, that a meeting was to be held on November 30, 1987 to consider the dissolution of the corporation. Again the stockholders who attended the October 24, 1987 meeting were present. Upon motion duly seconded, the dissolution was approved. Per Resolution of the Board of Directors, the law firm of Reyes, Treyes & Fudolin Law Office was appointed as trustee to collect all the receivables of the corporation.
Name of Stockholders Total as of Nov. 30.
Pursuant to Section 11 of the Corporation Code, the Securities and Exchange Commission approved the dissolution of the corporation on March 1, 1988 subject to compliance of the requirements, such as the sending of notices to stockholders and publication thereof in a newspaper of general circulation, among others.
On March 22, 1988, Joson Lee, Sonny Moreno, Leoncio Tan and Nicanor Martin filed a petition with the Securities and Investigation Clearing Department (SICD) of the Commission praying, among other things, for the annulment or nullification of the Certification of Filing of Resolution of Voluntary Dissolution of NMI for being contrary to law and its by-laws.
In the meantime, the trustee wrote the petitioner, Johnson Lee, on March 8, 1988 requesting him to turn over to it the P1,500,150.00 he received in payment of the empty bags sold by NMI to VCMI. However, he failed to do so.
A verified complaint for three (3) counts of estafa was filed against the petitioner and Sonny Moreno with the City Prosecutor’s Office. Appended to the complaint were photocopies of Charge Invoice Nos. 0809, 0810, and 0811, issued by NMI to VMCI.
That sometime in the month of August 1987, in the City of Bacolod, Philippines, and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the herein accused, Johnson Lee, being then the President and Sonny Moreno, the General Manager of Neugene Marketing, Inc., with the duty and responsibility to collect, turn over and deliver their collections to the herein offended party, Neugene Marketing, Inc., a corporation organized and existing by and under the laws of the Philippines, represented herein by its Trustees, Roger Reyes, Ernesto Treyes, and Eutiquio Fudolin, the said accused conspiring, confederating, and acting in concert far from complying with the aforementioned obligation having collected the amount of P565,750.00 covered by BPI Check No. 068766 (sic) dated August 3, 1987 as payment of Victorias Milling Company, a customer of the herein offended party, with intent of gain, and with unfaithfulness or abuse of confidence failed and refused to deliver the aforementioned amount to the herein offended party, up to the present, in spite of proper demands, but instead, did, then and there willfully, unlawfully and feloniously convert[ed] and/or misappropriated the same to their personal use and benefit to the damage and prejudice of the herein offended party in the aforementioned amount of FIVE HUNDRED SIXTY-FIVE THOUSAND SEVEN HUNDRED FIFTY (P565,750.00) PESOS, Philippine Currency.
The cases were docketed as Criminal Cases Nos. 10010 and 10011.
During the trial, the original copies of Charge Invoice Nos. 0809, 0810 and 0811, and of BPI Check Nos. 068766 and 068993 were not in the custody of the prosecution.
To prove the loss, destruction or non-availability of the original copies of the charge invoices and checks, as well as the authenticity and due execution thereof, the prosecution presented Ban Hua Flores, who testified that she saw the two checks in the office of the petitioner at the Singson Building, Plaza Moraga, Sta. Cruz, Manila. Sometime in 1987, she went to the office of the VMCI and inquired if it still had copies of the two checks and the clerk thereat informed her that it would be difficult to locate the checks as they were stored in the bodega, where many other checks were kept. Flores also testified that the signatures at the dorsal portion of the checks were those of the petitioner, the President of NMI, with whom she had been working, and that he indorsed and deposited the same on September 4, 1987 with the Solidbank, instead of the BPI Plaza Cervantes branch in Manila, the official depository bank of NMI. According to Flores, she was able to secure microfilm copies of the checks from Solidbank, and was sure that the copies of the checks and invoices were faithful reproductions of the original copies thereof.
Testifying for the prosecution in obedience to a subpoena issued by the court, Merlita Bayaban, Manager for Corporate Affairs of VMCI, declared that the records section of VMCI, which had custody of all checks and other corporate records, was near her office. She testified that the checks, including their other records, were lost during the flood in 1985. She also testified on the Certification issued by Carolina Diaz, the Comptroller of VMCI, confirming the loss of the two checks. She, however, admitted that she did not see the original copies of the checks and that she was not a signatory thereto.
Thereafter, the prosecution formally offered in evidence the counter-affidavit of the petitioner during the preliminary investigation, as well as the charge invoices and checks, viz.
To prove that Victorias Milling Co., Inc. (VMC) ordered 77,500 pieces of empty bags from NMI on June 11, 1987 and that these bags were delivered to VMC.
To prove that VMC ordered 100,000 pieces of empty bags from NMI on June 18, 1987 and that these bags were delivered to VMC.
Signature found on the dorsal side of Exhibit “K” which Mrs. Flores identified as the signature of Accused Johnson Lee.
To prove that the accused Lee received and was in possession of Exhibit “K” and that he indorsed and deposited the same.
To prove that Exhibit “K” was deposited by accused Lee in the Solidbank which is not the official depository bank of NMI, the official NMI depository bank being the BPI Plaza Cervantes Branch.
To prove that the accused Lee received and was in possession of Exhibit “L” and that he indorsed and deposited the same.
To prove that Exhibit “L” was deposited by accused Lee in the Solidbank which is not the official depository bank of NMI, the Official NMI depository bank being the BPI Plaza Cervantes Branch.
To prove the genuineness, due execution and authenticity of Exhibit “O”, which both of the accused also admitted.
Paragraph 6 of Exhibit “O” found On page 2 thereof.
Same purpose as in Exhibit “O”.
The accused objected to the admission of the photocopies of the checks and charge invoices on the ground that the best evidence were the original copies thereof. On April 12, 2002, the trial court issued an Order admitting the counter-affidavit of the petitioner, as well as the photocopies of the checks and charge invoices, on the ground that the prosecution had adduced preponderant evidence that the original copies of the said charges and checks were lost, destroyed or non-available. The accused filed a motion for reconsideration of the order, claiming that the prosecution failed to prove the authenticity and due execution of the offered documents, a prerequisite to the admission thereof as secondary evidence. They also filed a Motion for Leave to File a Demurrer to Evidence. The trial court denied both motions.
Respondent judge committed grave abuse of discretion equivalent to lack or excess of jurisdiction, in admitting in evidence the People’s documentary evidence, consisting of mere unauthenticated photocopies, in flagrant violation of the Best Evidence Rule (Sec. 3, 4, 5 and 6, Rule 130), despite the repeated vehement objections of the petitioner, thereby wantonly refusing to exclude such clearly inadmissible evidence, which actuation as embodied in his two (2) assailed Orders, is capricious, whimsical and patently erroneous, as to amount to an evasion of positive duty or to a virtual refusal to perform the duty enjoined or to act at all in contemplation of law, and the remedy of ordinary appeal would not afford petitioner adequate and expeditious relief, for while available eventually, such remedy is cumbersome for it requires petitioner to undergo a useless and time-consuming trial, and thus becomes an oppressive exercise of judicial authority; hence, the imperative necessity for the issuance of a temporary restraining order or preliminary injunction requiring respondent judge to refrain from further proceeding with Crim. Cases Nos. 10010 and 10011 until the Petition shall have been disposed of, otherwise, failure of justice is sure to ensue.
On March 14, 2003, the Court of Appeals rendered judgment dismissing the petition for lack of merit.
The Court of Appeals ruled that the charge invoices and the checks were not the best evidence to prove receipt by the accused of the amounts allegedly misappropriated; hence, the best evidence rule does not apply. It also held that even if the contents of the checks were the subject of inquiry, based on the proofs adduced by the prosecution, such checks are admissible in evidence. The Court of Appeals declared that, in any event, the prosecution proved the loss or destruction or non-availability of the checks and charge invoices. The petitioner’s motion for reconsideration of the decision suffered the same fate.
CAN (sic) PRIVATE DOCUMENT OFFERED AS AUTHENTIC BE RECEIVED IN EVIDENCE WITHOUT PROOF OF ITS DUE EXECUTION AND AUTHENTICITY?
CAN SECONDARY EVIDENCE BE ADMITTED WITHOUT PROOF OF ITS LOSS OR UNAVAILABILITY AND EXECUTION OF THE ORIGINAL?
DID THE COURT OF APPEALS ERR WHEN IT RULED THAT THE FAILURE TO PRODUCE THE ORIGINAL OF A DOCUMENTARY EVIDENCE, CONSISTING OF PRIVATE INSTRUMENTS DOES NOT VIOLATE THE BEST EVIDENCE RULE, INASMUCH AS RECEIPT BY THE PETITIONER OF THE AMOUNT ALLEGEDLY MISAPPROPRIATED MAY BE PROVED BY EVIDENCE OTHER THAN THE ORIGINAL OF THE SAID PRIVATE DOCUMENTS?
IS THE FINDING OF THE COURT OF APPEALS THAT THE FACT OF LOSS OR DESTRUCTION OF THE CHECKS AND THE CHARGE INVOICES HAS BEEN ESTABLISHED BY OTHER EVIDENCE, DEVOID OF SUPPORT BY THE EVIDENCE ON RECORD AND IS, THEREFORE, A BARE CONCLUSION OR A FINDING BASED ON SURMISE AND CONJECTURES?
IS ANOTHER FINDING, IN THE FORM OF ASSUMPTION, OF THE COURT OF APPEALS THAT SINCE THE WITNESSES FOR THE PROSECUTION ARE OFFICERS WITH AUTHORITY TO KEEP THE QUESTIONED DOCUMENTS, THEY NECESSARILY TOOK AND CONDUCTED A THOROUGH SEARCH FOR THE MISSING DOCUMENTS, A MERE CONJECTURE OR SURMISE OR A FINDING GROUNDED ENTIRELY ON SPECULATION?
DID THE COURT OF APPEALS VIOLATE THE DICTUM OF THE COLD NEUTRALITY OF AN IMPARTIAL JUDGE WHEN IT DENIED PETITIONER’S MOTION FOR INHIBITION GROUNDED ON ITS DISPLAY OF UNDUE INTERESTS AND WHEN A MEMBER THEREOF HAS SEEN IT FIT AND APPROPRIATE TO RECUSE HERSELF?
The petitioner avers that the prosecution failed to prove the loss, destruction or non-availability of the original copies of the checks and charge invoices; that diligent efforts were undertaken to locate the original copies of the checks and invoices; and that said efforts were futile. He asserts that the witness competent to prove the loss or destruction of the original of the checks would be the records custodian of VMCI. Bayaban was not a competent witness thereon, considering that she merely testified that the clerk of the VMCI failed to locate the original copies of the checks because the latter was lazy to search for the same. The petitioner posits that the prosecution failed to prove the due execution and authenticity of the charge invoices and the two checks through the testimonies of Flores and Bayaban. He contends that Bayaban even admitted that she was not privy to and had no knowledge of the execution of the said checks and of the signatories of the checks. The petitioner further avers that, although the appellate court held that the photocopies of the checks were admissible in evidence based on other proofs adduced by the prosecution, it failed to specify the other proofs adverted to by it.
In its Comment on the petition, the Office of the Solicitor General asserts that through the testimony of Bayaban, the due execution and authenticity of the checks were proved by the prosecution as well as the admissions of the petitioner in his counter-affidavit during the preliminary investigation. It further averred that through the testimonies of Bayaban and Flores, it proved, with reasonable certainty, the loss or destruction of the original copies of the checks and the charge invoices.
The issues for resolution are as follows: (a) whether or not the petition at bar is the proper remedy of the petitioner; and (b) whether or not the trial court committed a grave abuse of its discretion amounting to excess or lack of jurisdiction in admitting in evidence the photocopies of the checks and charge invoices in lieu of the original copies thereof.
In People v. Court of Appeals, we held that for a petition for certiorari or prohibition to be granted, it must set out and demonstrate, plainly and distinctly, all the facts essential to establish a right to a writ. The petitioner must allege in his petition and establish facts to show that any other existing remedy is not speedy or adequate and that (a) the writ is directed against a tribunal, board or officer exercising judicial or quasi-judicial functions; (b) such tribunal, board or officer has acted without or in excess of jurisdiction, or with grave abuse of discretion amounting to excess or lack of jurisdiction; and, (c) there is no appeal or any plain, speedy and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law.
The trial court acts without jurisdiction if it does not have the legal power to determine the case; there is excess of jurisdiction where the respondent, being clothed with the power to determine the case, oversteps its authority as determined by law. There is grave abuse of discretion where the public respondent acts in a capricious, whimsical, arbitrary or despotic manner in the exercise of its judgment as to be said to be equivalent to lack of jurisdiction. Mere abuse of discretion is not enough. A remedy is plain, speedy and adequate if it will promptly relieve the petitioner from the injurious effects of that judgment and the acts of the tribunal or inferior court. A petition for certiorari cannot co-exist with an appeal or any other adequate remedy. The existence and the availability of the right to appeal are antithetical to the availment of the special civil action for certiorari. These two remedies are mutually exclusive.
In this case, there is no dispute that the RTC had jurisdiction over the cases filed by the public respondent against the petitioner for estafa. The Order admitting in evidence the photocopies of the charge invoices and checks was issued by the RTC in the exercise of its jurisdiction. Even if erroneous, the same is a mere error of judgment and not of jurisdiction. Additionally, the admission of secondary evidence in lieu of the original copies predicated on proof of the offeror of the conditions sine qua non to the admission of the said evidence is a factual issue addressed to the sound discretion of the trial court. Unless grave abuse of discretion amounting to excess or lack of jurisdiction is shown to have been committed by the trial court, the resolution of the trial court admitting secondary evidence must be sustained. The remedy of the petitioner, after the admission of the photocopies of the charge invoices and the checks, was to adduce his evidence, and if after trial, he is convicted, to appeal the decision to the appropriate appellate court. Moreover, under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court, as amended, only questions of law may be properly raised.
In other words, certiorari will issue only to correct errors of jurisdiction and not to correct errors of procedure or mistakes in the court’s findings and conclusions. An interlocutory order may be assailed by certiorari or prohibition only when it is shown that the court acted without or in excess of jurisdiction or with grave abuse of discretion. However, this Court generally frowns upon this remedial measure as regards interlocutory orders. To tolerate the practice of allowing interlocutory orders to be the subject of review by certiorari will not only delay the administration of justice but will also unduly burden the courts.
We find that the allegations of the petitioners are not sufficient grounds to qualify as abuse of discretion warranting the issuance of a writ of certiorari. The petitioners present factual contentions to absolve them from the criminal charge of estafa. The criminal cases concern corporate funds petitioners allegedly received as payment for plastic bought by Victorias Milling Corporation from NMI. They refused to turn over the money to the trustee after NMI’s dissolution on the ground that they were keeping the money for the protection of the corporation itself. Thus, the elements of misappropriation and damage are absent. They argue that there is no proof that, as officers of the corporation, they converted the said amount for their own personal benefit. They likewise claim that they already turned the money over to the majority stockholder of the defunct corporation.
Clearly, the said allegations are defenses that must be presented as evidence in the hearing of the criminal cases. They are inappropriate for consideration in a petition for certiorari before the appellate court inasmuch as they do not affect the jurisdiction of the trial court hearing the said criminal cases but instead are defenses that might absolve them from criminal liability. A petition for certiorari must be based on jurisdictional grounds because, as long as the respondent court acted with jurisdiction, any error committed by it in the exercise thereof will amount to nothing more than an error of judgment which can be reviewed or corrected on appeal.
Moreover, the petition for certiorari before the Court of Appeals was premature for the reason that there were other plain and adequate remedies at law available to the petitioners. Under Section 3(a) of Rule 1 of the Revised Rules of Criminal Procedure, the accused can move to quash the information on the ground that the facts do not constitute an offense. There is no showing that the petitioners, as the accused in the criminal cases, ever filed motions to quash the subject informations or that the same were denied. It cannot then be said that the lower court acted without or in excess of jurisdiction or with grave abuse of discretion to justify recourse to the extraordinary remedy of certiorari or prohibition.
But it must be stressed that, even if petitioners did file motions to quash, the denial thereof would not have automatically given rise to a cause of action under Rule 65 of the Rules of Court. The general rule is that, where a motion to quash is denied, the remedy is not certiorari but to go to trial without prejudice to reiterating the special defenses involved in said motion, and if, after trial on the merits an adverse decision is rendered, to appeal therefrom in the manner authorized by law. And, even in the exceptional case where such denial may be the subject of a special civil action for certiorari, a motion for reconsideration must first be filed to give the trial court an opportunity to correct its error. Finally, even if a motion for reconsideration was filed and denied, the remedy under Rule 65 would still be unavailable absent any showing of the grounds provided for in Section 1 thereof. The petition before the Court of Appeals, subject of this appeal, did not allege any of such grounds.
Furthermore, a petition for review under Rule 45 of the 1997 Revised Rules of Civil Procedure before this Court only allows questions of law. Inasmuch as petitioners’ defenses alleging circumstances that negate misappropriation definitely require appreciation of facts, i.e., testimonial and documentary evidence, this Court cannot assess the merit of the said claims.
Moreover, the factual findings of the Court of Appeals are conclusive on the Court unless the petitioner is able to establish that the findings of facts of the appellate court are not supported by or are contrary to the evidence; or if the appellate court ignored, misconstrued or misinterpreted vital facts and circumstances, which, if considered, could change or even reverse the outcome of the case. In this, the petitioner failed.
(d) When the original is a public record in the custody of a public officer or is recorded in a public office.
Before the onset of liberal rules of discovery, and modern technique of electronic copying, the best evidence rule was designed to guard against incomplete or fraudulent proof and the introduction of altered copies and the withholding of the originals. But the modern justification for the rule has expanded from the prevention of fraud to a recognition that writings occupy a central position in the law. The importance of the precise terms of writings in the world of legal relations, the fallibility of the human memory as reliable evidence of the terms, and the hazards of inaccurate or incomplete duplicate are the concerns addressed by the best evidence rule.
The rule does not apply to proof of facts collateral to the issues such as the nature, appearance or condition of physical objects or to evidence relating to a matter which does not come from the foundation of the cause of action or defense; or when a party uses a document to prove the existence of an independent fact, as to which the writing is merely collated or incidental.
The offeror of secondary evidence is burdened to prove the predicates thereof: (a) the loss or destruction of the original without bad faith on the part of the proponent/offeror which can be shown by circumstantial evidence of routine practices of destruction of documents; (b) the proponent must prove by a fair preponderance of evidence as to raise a reasonable inference of the loss or destruction of the original copy; and (c) it must be shown that a diligent and bona fide but unsuccessful search has been made for the document in the proper place or places. It has been held that where the missing document is the foundation of the action, more strictness in proof is required than where the document is only collaterally involved.
If the document is one in which other persons are also interested, and which has been placed in the hands of a custodian for safekeeping, the custodian must be required to make a search and the fruitlessness of such search must be shown, before secondary evidence can be admitted. The certificate of the custody of the document is incompetent to prove the loss or destruction thereof. Such fact must be proved by some person who has knowledge of such loss.
When the original document is unavailable. – When the original document has been lost or destroyed, or cannot be produced in court, the offeror, upon proof of its execution or existence and the cause of its unavailability without bad faith on his part, may prove its contents by a copy, or by a recital of its contents in some authentic document, or by the testimony of witnesses in the order stated.
(b) By evidence of the genuineness of the signature or handwriting of the maker.
Any other private document need only be identified as that which it is claimed to be.
The testimony of an eyewitness as to the execution of a private document must be positive. He must state that the document was actually executed by the person whose name is subscribed thereto. The admission of that party against whom the document is offered, of the authenticity and due execution thereof, is admissible in evidence to prove the existence, authenticity and due execution of such document.
In this case, there is no dispute that the original copies of the checks were returned to VMCI after the same were negotiated and honored by the drawee bank. The originals of the charge invoices were kept by VMCI. There is also no dispute that the prosecution offered the photocopies of the invoices in evidence to prove the contents thereof, namely that: (a) VMCI purchased 203,500 empty bags from NMI for the total price of P1,500,150.00; (b) VMCI received the said goods in good order and condition; and (c) NMI charged VMCI for the purchase price of said goods. The prosecution offered the checks to prove the contents thereof as well as the following: (a) VMCI drew and delivered the checks to the NMI; (b) the said checks were endorsed by the petitioner; and (c) the said checks were deposited by the petitioner with the Solidbank which was not the official depository of NMI. Thus, the prosecution was burdened to prove the loss, destruction or its inability to produce in court without bad faith on its part of the original copies of the said invoices and checks without bad faith on its part.
We agree with the petitioner that the Certification signed by Carolina Diaz was inadmissible in evidence against him because of the failure of the prosecution to present her as witness and to testify on said certification.
Please inform this Honorable Court how were you able to appear this afternoon in connection with this case?
The Legal Department, through the instruction of our Chief Operating Officer, inquired from our Accounting through our comptroller, Carolina S. Diaz to produce the original copies of the two (2) checks which was mentioned in the subpoena issued by Prosecutor Esquilla. And then, through my direct Boss, the Chief Accountant, Mrs. Melanie Roa, instructed me to look into the two (2) checks. And since the record is under my Department, I immediately asked my subordinate to look for it. And, in fact, she was also under my supervision when we looked for the document. And I have already knowledge during the November 28, 1995 due to flash flood, we lost our records. And in fact, we have declaration to the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR). And we also exhausted some means to look for the documents, but we really cannot produce the original copies of the checks, even the Xerox, no more copies of the checks as requested.
Madam Witness, when you said that you instructed your subordinate to look for the record, specifically, the records being asked in the subpoena, the original copies of the checks, these two (2) checks, will you please inform this Honorable Court where these records in 1995 including these checks, of course, have been kept by your office?
It is kept at the Records Section Office just near my table. It is just over there. It is just over there. The distance is very near. We have the vault power cards and all old records were kept are downstairs and the new ones are kept upstairs. So, we don’t anticipate the flood and because that was the first time that we were hit by that flash flood.
So, you want to impress this Honorable Court that those records which were kept downstairs your office were carried or destroyed by this flash flood which occurred in 1995 is that correct or is that what you mean?
And can you say that if these two (2) checks, subject of this case now, were there downstairs and was destroyed by the 1995 flash flood, can you say that before this Honorable Court?
Aside from these checks downstairs which were destroyed by this flash flood, what were the other records that were kept there that were lost also?
All our Bank Vouchers, some of our General Ledgers. Actually, I cannot memorize it, but in our declaration to the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) we have listings of those documents which were damaged by flash flood.
Alright, Madam Witness. So, when this subpoena/subpoena (sic) duces tecum was received by Victorias Milling Company, addressed to the Chief Operating Officer, do I get from you that this was referred to the Legal Affairs of VICMICO?
Slowly, the stenographer may not be able to catch up with you.
I see. Sorry, Your Honor. And from the Legal Affairs, where did it proceed, this subpoena or this was referred to by the Legal Affairs to whom?
To Mrs. Carolina Diaz, the Comptroller.
You mentioned that she is your immediate Boss?
I have also, next to her, Mrs. Melanie Roa, and I am next to her.
And you are holding office there at VICMICO together with the Comptroller, Carolina Diaz?
e are in the same building.
And does she has a cubicle of her own?
And your table up to her cubicle, how far is your table from her cubicle?
They are very near. I can see from my place her office and I can see anytime she went in and out of the room. Maybe from here up to that next room.
About 25 to 30 meters, more or less.
And, Madam Witness, may I know from you that who requested you to testify because this Certification bears the signature of Mrs. Diaz?
Ah, Mrs. Diaz, in fact, ah – there is a Memo from the Legal Affairs that we will submit the Certification to the Honorable Court and the Memo was addressed to Mrs. Diaz. And there was a note from Mrs. Diaz to my direct Boss, the Chief Accountant, and then I was tasked by my immediate Boss to attend to this.
How were you able to secure a Certification?
A Certification was issued also upon our recommendation to the Chief Accountant that we cannot produce anymore the original copies of the said document.
Who gave you that Certification so that you can bring that today in Court?
Do you have with you now the Certification?
And you are showing the original copy of the Certification?
I show to you the Certification dated December 6, 2001 issued by Carolina Diaz, Comptroller. Do you know whose signature is this?
That is the signature of Mrs. Carolina S. Diaz.
How do you know that this is her signature?
I’m very much familiar with her signature because in our day to day undertakings in the office, I can see this in the checks she signed, and in the Office Memorandum. And, in fact, I also prepare some of the communications for her signature.
For the record, Madam Witness, will you please read the first paragraph of that Certification issued by Carolina Diaz?
Your Honor, may I request that this Certification be marked as our Exhibit “X” temporarily.
I will change my Exhibit from Exhibit “X” and “X-1” to “Z” and “Z-1.” No further, Your Honor.
Do you want to cross?
Alright, cross for the accused Moreno. We will give the Manila lawyer the first shot.
CONDUCTED BY ATTY. SIMEON M.
Madam Witness, when you received the subpoena, it contained a photocopy of the checks that were being requested, is that correct?
Did it already contain a copy of the photocopy?
Ah. Attached to the subpoena.
Have you seen this photocopy when you received the subpoena? You did not see?
Ah, actually, the subpoena was directed to the Legal.
You did not see. You did not see the photocopy?
May I know the point of Compañero, Your Honor.
I remember it was presented to me by Mrs. Diaz.
Mrs. Diaz. So, let me just clear this up. The subpoena did not immediately go to the Legal, it was presented to you by Mrs. Diaz?
No, it was presented by the Legal to our Comptroller. Then . . .
There is an initial, “MGR.” Do you know who is that?
That is Mrs. Melanie G. Roa, our Chief Accountant.
And from then, when it reached you, you were the ones who sorted through the files, were you the one?
Ah, you were not the one?
Now, but you were certain – I withdraw that question. When you received the subpoena with the attached document, were you already aware that the records, the original, were destroyed or you were not yet aware?
Very much aware that the records were destroyed by the flash flood because it was not only in that case that we were tasked to look for the documents. There were also Examiners from the Bureau of Internal Revenue who asked for the documents prior to 1995 and that’s our reason, we cannot produce the documents.
Now, wait. Were you the only one who was aware that this file was destroyed or was it a matter that was known in your company?
It was known to everybody.
So, can you conclude that just upon receiving the subpoena and looking at the photocopy of the checks, you would immediately know that this was among the files that was destroyed by the flood?
Yes, because of the date, 1995.
So, despite that knowledge, it still went through the process and you still looked for it, is that correct?
So, despite of your knowledge that it was destroyed, you still looked for it?
Yeah, we still looked for it because there might be some files to prove that it was really our check issuance. So even our files, even our Bank Recon, we cannot produce it.
It bears stressing that the counter-affidavit of the petitioner was adduced in evidence by the prosecution precisely to prove the existence, authenticity and due execution of the original of the said charge invoices and checks and the trial court admitted the same for the said purpose.
Aforesaid charge invoices were subsequently paid by Victorias Milling Company in full and payments delivered to Johnson Lee and/or Sonny Moreno, as President and General Manager of Neugene Marketing, Inc.
As of the date of this Affidavit-Complaint, Johnson Lee and/or Sonny Moreno have failed to deliver aforesaid sum to the herein trustee contrary to law.
Johnson Lee and/or Sonny Moreno have no authority whatsoever to withhold aforesaid sum of P1,500,150.00 and their refusal to turn over aforesaid amount is evidence of a malicious and criminal intent to appropriate the same for their own personal benefit.
With the admissions of the petitioner in his counter-affidavit, the prosecution even no longer needed to adduce evidence aliunde to prove the existence, due execution and the authenticity of the charge invoices and the checks.
All told then, the prosecution mustered the requisite quantum of evidence to prove the predicates to the admission of the photocopies of the charge invoices and checks.
IN LIGHT OF ALL THE FOREGOING, the petition is DENIED. The assailed decision of the Court of Appeals is AFFIRMED. No costs.
Puno, J., (Chairman), Austria-Martinez and Tinga, JJ., concur.
 Annex “B,” CA Decision, p. 2.
 TSN, 27 July 2001, pp. 36-66.
 TSN, 7 February 2002, p. 53.
 Folder of Exhibits, pp. 4-5.
 Penned by Associate Justice Jose Sabio, Jr. with Associate Justices Portia Aliño Hormachuelos and Amelita G. Tolentino, concurring.
 G.R. No. 144332, June 10, 2004.
 Heung v. Frista, 559 So.2d 434.
 Alabama Power Co. v. City of Fort Wayne, 187 S.W.2d 632 (1939).
 Sanchez v. Court of Appeals, 279 SCRA 647 (1997).
 Condo Suite Club Travel, Inc. v. NLRC, 323 SCRA 679 (2000).
 Pioneer Insurance & Surety Corp. v. Hontanosas, 78 SCRA 447 (1977).
 Ley Construction & Development Corporation v. Hyatt Industrial Manufacturing Corporation, 339 SCRA 223 (2000).
 People v. Court of Appeals, 308 SCRA 687 (1999).
 Toh v. Court of Appeals, 344 SCRA 831 (2000).
 Tensorex Industrial Corporation v. Court of Appeals, 3[] SCRA 471 (1999).
 People v. Court of Appeals, supra.
 United States v. Shoels, 685 F. 2d, 379 (1982).
 Seiler v. Lucas Films Ltd., 808 F. 2d 13[] (1989).
 United States v. Gonzales-Benitez, 537 F. 1051.
 United States v. Balzano, 687 Fed. 6; Wright v. Farmers Co-op, 681 F. 2d. 549.
 32 Corpus Juris Secundum, Id. at 773.
 Serirner v. American Car and Foundry Co., 50 SW 1001.
 32 Corpus Juris Secundum, Evidence, p. 776.
 Nolan v. Salas, 7 Phil. 1 (1906).
 TSN, 7 February 2002, pp. 21-42.
 Annex “4,” CA Rollo, pp. 146-147.

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