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'3Republir of tbe ilbilippines


~upreme <!Court
;ffmanila
SECOND DIVISION

. PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, G.R. No. 193681


Plaintiff,

Pres~nt:
MALAYAN ... INSURANCE
COMPANY, INC. and HELEN Y. BRION, J., Acting Chairperson,
DEE, DEL CASTILLO,
Private Complainants..,Petitioners, PEREZ,
PERLAS-BERNABE~ and

- versus - LEONEN, * JJ.

PHILIP PICCIO, . MIA Promulgated:


GATMAYTAN, MA.
ANNABELLA RELOVA SANTOS, AUG D 6 2014 ~~
JOHN JOSEPH GUTIERREZ,
JOCELYN UPANO,. JOSE
·DIZON, ROLANDO PAREJA,
WONINA BONIFACIO, ELVIRA
CRUZ, CORNELIO ZAFRA,
VICENTE · ORTUOSTE,
VICTORIA GOMEZ JACINTO,
JUVENCIO PERECHE,
.
JR.,
~

RICARDO LORAYES, PETER


SUCHIANCO, and. TRENNIE
MONSOD,
· Respondents.
x-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------x

RESOLUTION

PERLAS-BERNABE, J.:

Assailed in this. petition for review on certiorari 1 is the Resolution 2


dated September 15, 2009 of the Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. CR No.

Designated Addit.ional Member per Raffle dated December 18, 2013.


Rollo, pp. I 0-32. ~
Id. at 55-67. Penned by Associate Justice Arturo G. Tayag, with Associate Justices Conrado M.
Vasquez, Jr. and Hakim S. Abdulwahid, concurring.

~
Resolution 2 G.R. No. 193681

31549 which granted respondents’ motion for reconsideration of the


Resolution3 dated January 21, 2009, thereby dismissing petitioners’ notice of
appeal 4 from the dismissal of Criminal Case No. 06-8755 for libel on the
ground that petitioners had no personality to appear for the State and appeal
the criminal aspect of a case because the Office of the Solicitor General
(OSG) did not give its conformity to the same. Assailed further is the
Resolution 6 dated September 2, 2010 denying petitioners’ motion for
reconsideration of the September 15, 2009 Resolution of the CA for lack of
merit.

The Facts

On October 18, 2005, Jessie John P. Gimenez, President of the


Philippine Integrated Advertising Agency – the advertising arm of the
Yuchengco Group of Companies, to which Malayan Insurance Company, Inc.
is a corporate member – filed a Complaint-Affidavit for libel before the
Office of the City Prosecutor of Makati City against a group called the
Parents Enabling Parents Coalition, Inc. (PEPCI) for posting on the website
www.pepcoalition.com on August 25, 2005 an article entitled “Back to the
Trenches: A Call to Arms, AY/HELEN Chose the War Dance with Coalition.”
As alleged in the complaint, such publication was highly defamatory and
libelous against the Yuchengco family and the Yuchengco Group of
Companies, particularly petitioners Malayan Insurance Co., Inc. and Helen Y.
Dee (petitioners).7

The Office of the City Prosecutor of Makati City 8 found probable


cause to indict 16 trustees, officers and/or members of PEPCI, namely,
respondents Philip Piccio, Mia Gatmaytan, Ma. Annabella Relova Santos,
John Joseph Gutierrez, Jocelyn Upano (Upano), Jose Dizon, Rolando Pareja,
Wonina Bonifacio (Bonifacio), Elvira Cruz, Cornelio Zafra, Vicente
Ortuoste (Ortuoste), Victoria Gomez Jacinto, Juvencio Pereche, Jr. (Pereche,
Jr.), Ricardo Lorayes, Peter Suchianco, and Trennie Monsod (respondents)
for 13 counts of libel.9

The criminal information in I.S. No. 1-11-11995 was soon after raffled
to the Regional Trial Court of Makati City, Branch 139 (RTC) and was
docketed as Criminal Case No. 06-875. Upon motion of respondents
Bonifacio, Upano, Ortuoste, and Pereche, Jr., the RTC, in an Order dated
May 23, 2007, quashed the criminal information for libel and dismissed the

3
Id. at 50-53.
4
Id. at 71-72.
5
Entitled “People of the Philippines and Alfonso Yuchengco, et al. v. Philip Piccio, et al.,” which was
filed before the Regional Trial Court of Makati City, Branch 139.
6
Rollo, pp. 69-70.
7
Id. at 55. See also id. at 16-19.
8
Through 1st Assistant City Prosecutor Romulo I. Rañola and approved by City Prosecutor Feliciano
Aspi.
9
Rollo, pp. 20 and 56.
Resolution 3 G.R. No. 193681

case for lack of jurisdiction,10 holding that the criminal information failed to
allege where the article was printed and first published or where the
offended parties reside. 11 It subsequently denied petitioners’ motion for
reconsideration in an Order dated February 11, 2008.12

On February 29, 2008, the People of the Philippines (People), through


the private prosecutors, and with the conformity of public prosecutor
Benjamin S. Vermug, Jr., filed a Notice of Appeal.13 Soon after, petitioners
filed the Brief for the Private Complainants-Appellants14 as directed by the
CA. The OSG, for its part, however, sought suspension of the period to file
the required brief pending information and endorsement from the
Department of Justice (DOJ) on whether it is the People or the private
complainant that should file the same.15

Subsequently, the OSG filed a Manifestation and Motion 16 dated


October 20, 2008 stating that it had received an advisory from the DOJ that
the latter had no information about the case and, thus, prayed that it be
excused from filing the appellant’s brief.

Meanwhile, respondents Bonifacio, Upano, Ortuoste, and Pereche, Jr.


filed a Motion to Dismiss Appeal,17 citing as grounds for dismissal the fact
that the Brief for the Private Complainants-Appellants filed by petitioners
did not carry the conforme of the OSG and that ordinary appeal was not the
appropriate remedy. In a Resolution18 dated January 21, 2009 the CA denied
the said motion and directed respondents to file their appellee’s brief.19

Instead of filing the required appellee’s brief, respondents moved for


the reconsideration of the aforesaid Resolution, prompting petitioners and
the OSG to file their respective comments.20

In their Comment/ Opposition21 to the said motion for reconsideration,


petitioners insisted that the trial court’s order of dismissal was a final order
from which an appeal was available; that the notice of appeal was signed by
the public prosecutor and therefore valid; and that jurisprudence shows that
the conformity of the OSG is not required when grave errors are committed
by the trial court or where there is lack of due process.

10
Id. at 56.
11
Id. at 22 and 23.
12
Id. at 23 and 56.
13
Id. at 56. See id. at 71-72.
14
Id. at 74-116.
15
See Manifestation and Motion to Suspend Period to File Appellant’s Brief; id. at 117-118.
16
Id. at 120-122.
17
(With Prayer to Hold in Abeyance Submission of Appellees’ Brief); id. at 124-129.
18
Id. at 50-53.
19
Id. at 24 and 58.
20
Id.
21
Id. at 130-140.
Resolution 4 G.R. No. 193681

In its Comment,22 the OSG concurred in the propriety of the remedy


of an appeal against the assailed order, but nonetheless, asserted that the
appeal, without its conformity, must fail because under the law it is only the
OSG that should represent the People in criminal cases.

The CA Ruling

In a Resolution dated September 15, 2009, the CA dismissed the


appeal on the ground that the OSG had not given its conformity to the said
appeal.23

Petitioners filed a motion for reconsideration 24 but the same was


denied by the CA in a Resolution25 dated September 2, 2010, hence, this
petition.

The Issue Before the Court

The sole issue in this case is whether or not petitioners, being mere
private complainants, may appeal an order of the trial court dismissing a
criminal case even without the OSG’s conformity.

The Court’s Ruling

The petition lacks merit.

The CA correctly dismissed the notice of appeal interposed by


petitioners against the May 23, 2007 Order of the RTC because they, being
mere private complainants, lacked the legal personality to appeal the
dismissal of Criminal Case No. 06-875 (resulting from the quashal of the
information therein on the ground of lack of jurisdiction).

To expound, it is well-settled that the authority to represent the State


in appeals of criminal cases before the Court and the CA is vested solely in
the OSG26 which is the law office of the Government whose specific powers
and functions include that of representing the Republic and/or the people
before any court in any action which affects the welfare of the people as the
ends of justice may require.27 Explicitly, Section 35(1), Chapter 12, Title III,
Book IV of the 1987 Administrative Code28 provides that:

22
Id. at 141-151.
23
Id. at 67.
24
Id. at 152-162.
25
Id. at 54-67.
26
Villareal v. Aliga, G.R. No 166995, January 13, 2014.
27
Gonzales v. Chavez, G.R. No. 97351, February 4, 1992, 205 SCRA 816, 845.
28
Executive Order No. 292, Series of 1987.
Resolution 5 G.R. No. 193681

SECTION 35. Powers and Functions. — The Office of the


Solicitor General shall represent the Government of the Philippines,
its agencies and instrumentalities and its officials and agents in any
litigation, proceeding, investigation or matter requiring the services of
lawyers. x x x. It shall have the following specific powers and functions:

(1) Represent the Government in the Supreme Court and the


Court of Appeals in all criminal proceedings; represent the Government
and its officers in the Supreme Court, the Court of Appeals, and all other
courts or tribunals in all civil actions and special proceedings in which the
Government or any officer thereof in his official capacity is a party.
(Emphases supplied)

Accordingly, jurisprudence holds that if there is a dismissal of a


criminal case by the trial court or if there is an acquittal of the accused, it is
only the OSG that may bring an appeal on the criminal aspect
representing the People. 29 The rationale therefor is rooted in the principle
that the party affected by the dismissal of the criminal action is the People
and not the petitioners who are mere complaining witnesses. For this reason,
the People are therefore deemed as the real parties in interest in the criminal
case and, therefore, only the OSG can represent them in criminal
proceedings pending in the CA or in this Court.30 In view of the corollary
principle that every action must be prosecuted or defended in the name of
the real party-in-interest who stands to be benefited or injured by the
judgment in the suit, or by the party entitled to the avails of the suit,31 an
appeal of the criminal case not filed by the People as represented by the
OSG is perforce dismissible. The private complainant or the offended party
may, however, file an appeal without the intervention of the OSG but only
insofar as the civil liability of the accused is concerned.32 He may also file a
special civil action for certiorari even without the intervention of the OSG,
but only to the end of preserving his interest in the civil aspect of the case. 33

Here, it is clear that petitioners did not file their appeal merely to
preserve their interest in the civil aspect of the case. Rather, by seeking the
reversal of the RTC’s quashal of the information in Criminal Case No. 06-
875 and thereby seeking that the said court be directed to set the case for
arraignment and to proceed with trial, 34 it is sufficiently clear that they
sought the reinstatement of the criminal prosecution of respondents for libel.
Being an obvious attempt to meddle into the criminal aspect of the case
without the conformity of the OSG, their recourse, in view of the above-
discussed principles, must necessarily fail. To repeat, the right to prosecute
criminal cases pertains exclusively to the People, which is therefore the
proper party to bring the appeal through the representation of the OSG.
29
See Soriano v. Judge Angeles, 393 Phil. 769, 776 (2000); and Bangayan, Jr. v. Bangayan, G.R. No.
172777, October 19, 2011, 569 SCRA 590, 598.
30
Jimenez v. Sorongon, G.R. No. 178607, December 5, 2012, 687 SCRA 151, 160.
31
Id. at 158-159.
32
Villareal v. Aliga, supra note 26.
33
See Ong v. Genio, G.R. No. 182336, December 23, 2009, 609 SCRA 188.
34
Rollo, p. 114.
Resolution 6 G.R. No. 193681

. .
Petitioners have no personality or legal stanqing to interpose an appeal in a
criminal proce©ding. Since the OSG had expressly withheld its conformity
and endorsemen! in the instant case, the CA, therefore, correctly dismissed
the appeal. It rnust, however, be cl~rified. that the aforesaid dismissal is
without prejudice to their filing of the appropriate action to preserve their
interests but only wi~h respect to the civil aspect of the libel case f~llowing
the parameters of Rule 111 of the Rules of Criminal Procedure.

WHEREFORE, the petition is DENIED. ThE;. Resolutions dated


September 15, 2009 and September 2, 2010 of the Court of Appeals in CA-
G.R. CR No. 31549 dismissing petitioners' appeal from the dismissal of the
criminal case for libel are hereby AFFIRMED.

SO ORDERED·.

UCL~ ·
.. · ESTELA lVi: 'ftERLAS-BERNABE
Associate Justice

WE CONCUR:·

CJuWlbAf~
ARTURO D. BRION
Associate Justice
Acting Chairperson

Associate Justice
JOSE(1!~EREZ
'Associate Justice
\

Associate Justice

..·
Resolution 7 G.R. No. 193681

ATTESTATION

I att~st that the conclusions· in the ~bove Resolution had been reached
in consultation before ·the case was assig~· the wrhof the opinion of
th.e Court's Division. LMf?A!lifJ W(~

... ARTURO D. BRION


Associate Justice
., Acting Chairperson, Second Division

CERTIFICATION

Pursuant to Section 13, Article VIII of the Constitution, and the


Division Acting Chairperson's Attestation, I certify that the conclusions in
the above Resolution had been reached in consultation before the case was
assigned to the writer of the opinion of the Court's Division:

MARIA LOURDES P.A. SERENO


Chief Justice
..·
~

..·

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