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Krohn V Court of Appeals

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KROHN v COURT OF APPEALS

G.R. No. 108854. June 14, 1994.


BELLOSILLO, J.

FACTS: Edgar Krohn, Jr. and Ma. Paz Fernandez were married. The relationship between the couple
developed into a stormy one which prompted Ma. Paz to undergo psychological testing in an effort to
ease the marital strain. The effort however proved futile and they eventually separated in fact.
When Edgar filed a petition for the annulment of his marriage, he cited the Confidential
Psychiatric Evaluation Report of Ma. Paz prepared and signed by Drs. Cornelio Banaag Jr., and Baltazar
Reyes. When Edgar took the witness stand and tried to testify on the contents of the Report, this was
objected to on the ground that it violated the rule on privileged communication between physician and
patient. The trial court, however, issued an Order admitting the Confidential Psychiatric Evaluation Report
in evidence.
Ma. Paz mainly argues that Sec. 24 (c), Rule 130 of the Rules of Court prohibits a physician from
testifying on matters which he may have acquired attending to a patient in a professional capacity, “that
with more reason should be third person be prohibited from testifying on privileged matters between a
physician and patient or from submitting any medical report, findings or evaluation prepared by a
physician which the latter has acquired as a result of his confidential and privileged relation with a patient.
Her thesis is that what cannot be done directly should not be allowed to be done indirectly.
Edgar, on the other hand, contends that the rules are very explicit: the prohibition applies only to
a physician. Thus, the legal prohibition to testify is not applicable to the case at bar where the person
sought to be barred from testifying on the privileged communication is the husband and not the physician
of the petitioner.
ISSUE: Whether or not the Confidential Psychiatric Evaluation Report offered by Edgar may be admitted.
RULING: YES. The Supreme Court ruled in favor of Edgar. Lim v Court of Appeals clearly lays down the
requisites in order that the privilege may be successfully invoked:
(a) the privilege is claimed in a civil case;
(b) the person against whom the privilege is claimed is one duly authorized to practice medicine,
surgery, or obstetrics;
(c) such person acquired the information while he was attending to the patient in his professional
capacity;
(d) the information was necessary to enable him to act in that capacity; and
(e) the information was confidential and, if disclosed, would blacken the reputation of the patient.
In this case, the person against whom the privilege is claimed is not one duly authorized to
practice medicine, surgery or obstetrics. He is simply the patient’s husband who wishes to testify on a
document executed by medical practitioners. Plainly and clearly, this does not fall within the claimed
prohibition. Neither can his testimony be considered a circumvention of the prohibition because his
testimony cannot have the force and effect of the testimony of the physician who examined the patient
and executed the report.
The counsel for Ma. Paz invoked the rule on privileged communications but never questioned the
testimony as hearsay. It was a fatal mistake. For, in failing to object to the testimony on the ground that
it was hearsay, counsel waived his right to make such objection and, consequently, the evidence offered
was admitted.
Non-physician testimony on a medical psychologist’s report is not covered by the physician
patient privilege. This is hearsay but there was no objection.

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