Cruz V Mijares
Cruz V Mijares
Cruz V Mijares
Mijares
G.R. No. 154464 | Sept 11, 2008 | J. Nachura
FACTS
Petitioner Cruz sought permission to enter his
appearance for and on his behalf, before the RTC in a
civil case for Abatement of Nuisance. Petitioner, a fourth
year law student, anchors his claim on Section 34 of
Rule 138 of the Rules of Court that a nonlawyer may
appear before any court and conduct his litigation
personally.
During the pretrial, Judge Priscilla Mijares required the
petitioner to secure a written permission from the Court
Administrator before he could be allowed to appear as
counsel for himself, a partylitigant. Atty. Stanley Cabrera,
counsel for Benjamin Mina, Jr., filed a Motion to Dismiss
instead of a pretrial brief to which petitioner Cruz
vehemently objected alleging that a Motion to Dismiss is
not allowed after the Answer had been filed. Judge
Mijares then remarked, Hay naku, masama yung
marunong pa sa Huwes. Ok? and proceeded to hear
the pending Motion to Dismiss and calendared the next
hearing.
Petitioner Cruz filed a Manifestation and Motion to
Inhibit, praying for the voluntary inhibition of Judge
Mijares. The Motion alleged that expected partiality on
the part of the respondent judge in the conduct of the
trial could be inferred from the contumacious remarks of
Judge Mijares during the pretrial. It asserts that the
judge, in uttering an uncalled for remark, reflects a
negative frame of mind, which engenders
the belief that justice will not be served.
In an Order, Judge Mijares denied the motion for
inhibition stating that throwing tenuous allegations of
partiality based on the said remark is not enough to
warrant her voluntary inhibition, considering that it was
said even prior to the start of pretrial. Petitioner filed a
MR of the said order.
Judge Mijares denied the motion with finality. In the
same Order, the trial court held that for the failure of
petitioner Cruz to submit the promised document and
jurisprudence, and for his failure to satisfy the
requirements or conditions under Rule 138A of the Rules
of Court, his appearance was denied.
In MR, petitioner reiterated that the basis of his
appearance was not Rule 138A, but Section 34 of Rule
138. He contended that the two Rules were distinct and
are applicable to different circumstances, but the
respondent judge denied the same, still invoking Rule
138A. Petitioner filed this case with SC.
ISSUES
1) W/N the extraordinary writs of certiorari,
prohibition and mandamus under Rule 65 of the
1997 Rules of Court may issue
2) W/N respondent court acted with grave abuse of
discretion amounting to lack or excess of
it
erred
in
denying
petitioners
OTHER ARGUMENTS
Right to counsel may not be waived only applies in
criminal cases
Bar Matter 730 a law student may appear as an agent
or a friend of a party litigant, without need of the
supervision of a lawyer, before inferior courts