Hole of Justice
By
Peter G. Jimenea
RULE OF LAW – ON LACHES
Laches is not concerned merely with lapse of time unlike prescription.
The latter deals with the facts of delay, laches deals with the effect of
unreasonable delay, or failure/neglect for an unreasonable, unexplained length
of time to do that by which, exercising due diligence could have been done
earlier. (267 SCRA 339).
The failed P137M Housing Project of the Iloilo City government in Pavia,
Iloilo, is a story that won’t go away. The construction of 413 units of
low-cost houses for City Hall employees that started in 2001 has ended in 2009
without even a unit completed. Let this be a case study.
A case was file against the responsible city officials but it seems not
good for the Office of the Ombudsman. It slept their as graft-investigators has
failed to find a probable cause against the accused who messed-up with the
taxpayers’ money. What a weak defense to save face!
Probable cause needs only to rest on evidence showing that most likely
than not a crime has been committed. It demands more than suspicion and
requires less than evidence to justify indictment. The unauthorized payment of
P43M by the mayor to the contractor is already embraced in RA 3019.
But the decision approved and signed by Ombudsman Conchita Carpio Morales
slams the Information accusing Mayor Jerry Trenas, Melchor Tan, Edwin Bravo,
Catherine Tingson and Alex Trinidad for Violation of Sec. 3, Par (e) of RA 3019
as amended and ruled…it is HEREBY SET ASIDE.” Set aside only, nothing follows?
SEC. 16, ART. Iii of the 1987 Constitution reads: “All person shall have
the right to a speedy disposition of their cases before all judicial or
administrative bodies. Also SEC. 16, ART. IV of the 1973 Constitution likewise
guarantees the right of all persons to a speedy disposition of their cases.
Finding probable cause is not the reason or justification of the Ombudsman
for delay. Different weights cannot be assigned to different reasons or
justifications invoked by the State, such as failure of the accused to follow
up their pending cases with the office of the Ombudsman.
As respondent, it is not the duty of the accused to follow up the
prosecution of the case. Conversely, it was the responsibility of the Office of
the Ombudsman to expedite the same with reasonable timeliness in view of its
mandate to promptly act on all complaints lodged before it.
A defendant has no duty to bring himself to trial; the State has that
duty, as well as the duty of insuring that the trial is consistent with due
process. A deliberate attempt to delay the trial in order to hamper or
prejudice the defense should be weighted heavily against the State!
Jurisprudence dictates, “”A delay in the disposition of cases amounts to
a denial of justice, brings the Court to disrepute and ultimately erodes public
faith and confidence in the judiciary. (280 SCRA 637)
The SC finds the inordinate delay of more than six (6) years by the
Ombudsman in resolving the criminal complaints against the petitioner to be
violative of his Constitutionally guaranteed right to due process and to a
speedy disposition of cases against him. (Anchangco vs. Ombudsman, 268 SCRA
301)
Lex reprobate moram – the law disapproves of delay. Thus, for the unjust delay of the
Ombudsman, the Sandiganbayan approved to dismiss the graft case filed against
Petitioner Rafael Coscolluela. The Ombudsman has failed in probing his case for
5 years. (G.R. No. 191411, July 15, 2013).
Delay is a two-edge sword. It is the government that must bear the burden
of proving its case beyond reasonable doubt. What if the witnesses in the case
have gone away without informing the litigants of the decision? Time passed makes
it impossible for the government to carry its burden.
The Constitution and the Rules do not require impossibilities or
extraordinary efforts, diligence or exertion from the courts or prosecutors,
nor contemplate that such right shall deprive the State of the reasonable
opportunity to fairly prosecute criminals.
As vanguard against corruption and bureaucracy, the Office of the
Ombudsman must have a system of officials’ accountability to ensure that cases
before it are resolved with reasonable dispatch to equally expose those who are
responsible for its delays, as it ought to determine in this case.
Never had here been officials so derelict and irresolute in the
performance of duty than the Ombudsman and Deputies. The case against (Mayor)
now Cong. Jerry Trenas el al is already over 10 years and should have been dismissed
by now. But why set aside only? Why not dismiss the case? Is the Office of the
Ombudsman another syndicate we have to deal with? Just asking.
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