In Re Plagiarism Case Against Justice Del Castillo
In Re Plagiarism Case Against Justice Del Castillo
In Re Plagiarism Case Against Justice Del Castillo
RESOLUTION
PER CURIAM:
Petitioners Isabelita C. Vinuya, et al., all members of the Malaya Lolas
Organization, seek reconsideration of the decision of the Court dated October 12,
2010 that dismissed their charges of plagiarism, twisting of cited materials, and gross
neglect against Justice Mariano Del Castillo in connection with the decision he wrote
for the Court in G.R. No. 162230, entitled Vinuya v. Romulo.[1]
Mainly, petitioners claim that the Court has by its decision legalized or
approved of the commission of plagiarism in the Philippines.This claim is
absurd. The Court, like everyone else, condemns plagiarism as the world in general
understands and uses the term.
Plagiarism, a term not defined by statute, has a popular or common
definition. To plagiarize, says Webster, is to steal and pass off as ones own the ideas
or words of another. Stealing implies malicious taking. Blacks Law Dictionary, the
worlds leading English law dictionary quoted by the Court in its decision, defines
plagiarism as the deliberate and knowing presentation of another person's original
ideas or creative expressions as ones own.[2] The presentation of another persons
ideas as ones own must be deliberate or premeditateda taking with ill intent.
There is no commonly-used dictionary in the world that embraces in the
meaning of plagiarism errors in attribution by mere accident or in good faith.
Certain educational institutions of course assume different norms in its
application. For instance, the Loyola Schools Code of Academic Integrity ordains
that plagiarism is identified not through intent but through the act itself. The
objective act of falsely attributing to ones self what is not ones work, whether
intentional or out of neglect, is sufficient to conclude that plagiarism has
occurred. Students who plead ignorance or appeal to lack of malice are not
excused.[3]
But the Courts decision in the present case does not set aside such norm. The
decision makes this clear, thus:
To paraphrase Bast and Samuels, while the academic
publishing model is based on the originality of the writers thesis, the
judicial system is based on the doctrine of stare decisis, which
encourages courts to cite historical legal data, precedents, and related
studies in their decisions. The judge is not expected to produce
original scholarship in every respect. The strength of a decision lies in
the soundness and general acceptance of the precedents and long held
legal opinions it draws from.[4]
Original scholarship is highly valued in the academe and rightly so. A college
thesis, for instance, should contain dissertations embodying results of original
research, substantiating a specific view.[5] This must be so since the writing is
intended to earn for the student an academic degree, honor, or distinction. He earns
no credit nor deserves it who takes the research of others, copies their dissertations,
and proclaims these as his own. There should be no question that a cheat deserves
neither reward nor sympathy.
But the policy adopted by schools of disregarding the element of malicious
intent found in dictionaries is evidently more in the nature of establishing what
evidence is sufficient to prove the commission of such dishonest conduct than in
rewriting the meaning of plagiarism. Since it would be easy enough for a student to
plead ignorance or lack of malice even as he has copied the work of others, certain
schools have adopted the policy of treating the mere presence of such copied work
in his paper sufficient objective evidence of plagiarism. Surely, however, if on its
face the students work shows as a whole that he has but committed an obvious
mistake or a clerical error in one of hundreds of citations in his thesis, the school
will not be so unreasonable as to cancel his diploma.
In contrast, decisions of courts are not written to earn merit, accolade, or prize
as an original piece of work or art. Deciding disputes is a service rendered by the
government for the public good. Judges issue decisions to resolve everyday conflicts
involving people of flesh and blood who ache for speedy justice or juridical beings
which have rights and obligations in law that need to be protected. The interest of
society in written decisions is not that they are originally crafted but that they are
fair and correct in the context of the particular disputes involved. Justice, not
originality, form, and style, is the object of every decision of a court of law.
There is a basic reason for individual judges of whatever level of courts,
including the Supreme Court, not to use original or unique language when reinstating
the laws involved in the cases they decide. Their duty is to apply the laws as these
are written. But laws include, under the doctrine of stare decisis, judicial
interpretations of such laws as are applied to specific situations. Under this doctrine,
Courts are to stand by precedent and not to disturb settled point. Once the Court has
laid down a principle of law as applicable to a certain state of facts, it will adhere to
that principle, and apply it to all future cases, where facts are substantially the same;
regardless of whether the parties or property are the same.[6]
And because judicial precedents are not always clearly delineated, they are
quite often entangled in apparent inconsistencies or even in contradictions,
prompting experts in the law to build up regarding such matters a large body of
commentaries or annotations that, in themselves, often become part of legal writings
upon which lawyers and judges draw materials for their theories or solutions in
particular cases. And, because of the need to be precise and correct, judges and
practitioners alike, by practice and tradition, usually lift passages from such
precedents and writings, at times omitting, without malicious intent, attributions to
the originators.
Is this dishonest? No. Duncan Webb, writing for the International Bar
Association puts it succinctly. When practicing lawyers (which include judges) write
about the law, they effectively place their ideas, their language, and their work in the
public domain, to be affirmed, adopted, criticized, or rejected. Being in the public
domain, other lawyers can thus freely use these without fear of committing some
wrong or incurring some liability. Thus:
The tendency to copy in law is readily explicable. In law
accuracy of words is everything. Legal disputes often centre round
the way in which obligations have been expressed in legal documents
and how the facts of the real world fit the meaning of the words in
which the obligation is contained. This, in conjunction with the riskaversion of lawyers means that refuge will often be sought in
articulations that have been tried and tested. In a sense therefore the
community of lawyers have together contributed to this body of
knowledge, language, and expression which is common property and
may be utilized, developed and bettered by anyone.[7]
The implicit right of judges to use legal materials regarded as belonging to the
public domain is not unique to the Philippines. As Joyce C. George, whom Justice
Maria Lourdes Sereno cites in her dissenting opinion, observed in her Judicial
Opinion Writing Handbook:
A judge writing to resolve a dispute, whether trial or appellate,
is exempted from a charge of plagiarism even if ideas, words or
If the Court were to inquire into the issue of plagiarism respecting its past
decisions from the time of Chief Justice Cayetano S. Arellano to the present, it is
likely to discover that it has not on occasion acknowledged the originators of
passages and views found in its decisions. These omissions are true for many of the
decisions that have been penned and are being penned daily by magistrates from the
Court of Appeals, the Sandiganbayan, the Court of Tax Appeals, the Regional Trial
Courts nationwide and with them, the municipal trial courts and other first level
courts. Never in the judiciarys more than 100 years of history has the lack of
attribution been regarded and demeaned as plagiarism.
This is not to say that the magistrates of our courts are mere copycats. They
are not. Their decisions analyze the often conflicting facts of each case and sort out
the relevant from the irrelevant. They identify and formulate the issue or issues that
need to be resolved and evaluate each of the laws, rulings, principles, or authorities
that the parties to the case invoke. The decisions then draw their apt conclusions
regarding whether or not such laws, rulings, principles, or authorities apply to the
particular cases before the Court. These efforts, reduced in writing, are the product
of the judges creativity. It is hereactually the substance of their decisionsthat their
genius, originality, and honest labor can be found, of which they should be proud.
In Vinuya, Justice Del Castillo examined and summarized the facts as seen by
the opposing sides in a way that no one has ever done.He identified and formulated
the core of the issues that the parties raised. And when he had done this, he discussed
the state of the law relevant to their resolution. It was here that he drew materials
from various sources, including the three foreign authors cited in the charges against
him. He compared the divergent views these present as they developed in history. He
then explained why the Court must reject some views in light of the peculiar facts of
the case and applied those that suit such facts. Finally, he drew from his discussions
of the facts and the law the right solution to the dispute in the case. On the whole,
his work was original. He had but done an honest work.
The Court will not, therefore, consistent with established practice in the
Philippines and elsewhere, dare permit the filing of actions to annul the decisions
promulgated by its judges or expose them to charges of plagiarism for honest work
done.
This rule should apply to practicing lawyers as well. Counsels for the petitioners,
like all lawyers handling cases before courts and administrative tribunals, cannot
object to this. Although as a rule they receive compensation for every pleading or
paper they file in court or for every opinion they render to clients, lawyers also need
to strive for technical accuracy in their writings. They should not be exposed to
charges of plagiarism in what they write so long as they do not depart, as officers of
the court, from the objective of assisting the Court in the administration of justice.
As Duncan Webb said:
In presenting legal argument most lawyers will have recourse
to either previous decisions of the courts, frequently lifting whole
sections of a judges words to lend weight to a particular point either
with or without attribution. The words of scholars are also sometimes
given weight, depending on reputation. Some encyclopaedic works
are given particular authority. In England this place is given to
Halsburys Laws of England which is widely considered
authoritative. A lawyer can do little better than to frame an argument
or claim to fit with the articulation of the law in Halsburys. While in
many cases the very purpose of the citation is to claim the authority
of the author, this is not always the case. Frequently commentary or
dicta of lesser standing will be adopted by legal authors, largely
without attribution.
xxxx
The converse point is that originality in the law is viewed with
skepticism. It is only the arrogant fool or the truly gifted who will
depart entirely from the established template and reformulate an
existing idea in the belief that in doing so they will improve it. While
The Court probably should not have entertained at all the charges of
plagiarism against Justice Del Castillo, coming from the losing party. But it is a case
of first impression and petitioners, joined by some faculty members of the University
of the Philippines school of law, have unfairly maligned him with the charges of
plagiarism, twisting of cited materials, and gross neglect for failing to attribute lifted
passages from three foreign authors. These charges as already stated are false,
applying the meaning of plagiarism as the world in general knows it.
True, Justice Del Castillo failed to attribute to the foreign authors materials
that he lifted from their works and used in writing the decision for the Court in
the Vinuya case. But, as the Court said, the evidence as found by its Ethics
Committee shows that the attribution to these authors appeared in the beginning
drafts of the decision. Unfortunately, as testified to by a highly qualified and
experienced court-employed researcher, she accidentally deleted the same at the
time she was cleaning up the final draft. The Court believed her since, among other
reasons, she had no motive for omitting the attribution. The foreign authors
concerned, like the dozens of other sources she cited in her research, had high
reputations in international law.
Notably, those foreign authors expressly attributed the controversial passages
found in their works to earlier writings by others. The authors concerned were not
themselves the originators. As it happened, although the ponencia of Justice Del
Castillo accidentally deleted the attribution to them, there remained in the final draft
of the decision attributions of the same passages to the earlier writings from which
those authors borrowed their ideas in the first place. In short, with the remaining
attributions after the erroneous clean-up, the passages as it finally appeared in
the Vinuya decision still showed on their face that the lifted ideas did not belong to
Justice Del Castillo but to others. He did not pass them off as his own.
With our ruling, the Court need not dwell long on petitioners allegations that
Justice Del Castillo had also committed plagiarism in writing for the Court his
decision in another case, Ang Ladlad v. Commission on Elections.[10] Petitioners are
nit-picking. Upon close examination and as Justice Del Castillo amply demonstrated
in his comment to the motion for reconsideration, he in fact made attributions to
passages in such decision that he borrowed from his sources although they at times
suffered in formatting lapses.
Considering its above ruling, the Court sees no point in further passing upon
the motion of the Integrated Bar of the Philippines for leave to file and admit motion
for reconsideration-in-intervention dated January 5, 2011 and Dr. Peter Payoyos
claim of other instances of alleged plagiarism in the Vinuya decision.
ACCORDINGLY,
the
reconsideration for lack of merit.
motion
for
SO ORDERED.
DISSENTING OPINION
CARPIO, J.:
I dissent on two grounds. First, this Court has no jurisdiction to decide in an administrative
case whether a sitting Justice of this Court has committed misconduct in office as this power
belongs exclusively to Congress. Second, in writing judicial decisions a judge must comply with the
Law on Copyright1 as the judge has no power to exempt himself from the mandatory requirements of
the law.
I. Disciplining Authority of Impeachable Officers
Under the Constitution, the sole disciplining authority of all impeachable officers, including Justices
of this Court, is Congress. Section 3(1), Article XI of the Constitution provides that, "The House of
Representatives shall have the exclusive power to initiate all cases of impeachment." Likewise,
Section 3(6) of the same Article provides that, "The Senate shall have the sole power to try and
decide cases of impeachment." These provisions constitute Congress as the exclusive authority to
discipline all impeachable officers for any impeachable offense, including "betrayal of public
trust," a "catchall phrase"2 to cover any misconduct involving breach of public trust by an
impeachable officer.
While impeachment is often described as a political process, it also functions as the equivalent of
administrative disciplinary proceedings against impeachable officers. Impeachable officers are not
subject to administrative disciplinary proceedings either by the Executive or Judicial branch, in the
same manner that non-impeachable officers are subject. Thus, impeachment by Congress takes
the place of administrative disciplinary proceedings against impeachable officers as there is
no other authority that can administratively discipline impeachable officers.3 Removal from
office and disqualification to hold public office,4 which is the penalty for an impeachable offense,5 is
also the most severe penalty that can be imposed in administrative disciplinary proceedings.
Also, I wonder if the Committee also took into consideration the fact that the UP Law Constitution
Project in its Volume I, entitled: Annotated Provision had, in fact, made this an alternative proposal,
the transfer of administrative supervision from the Supreme Court to the Ministry of Justice.
Thank you.
MR. CONCEPCION: May I refer the question to Commissioner Regalado?
THE PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Sarmiento): Commissioner Regalado is recognized.
MR. REGALADO: Thank you, Mr. Presiding Officer.
We did invite Minister Neptali Gonzales, who was the proponent for the transfer of supervision of the
lower courts to the Ministry of Justice. I even personally called up and sent a letter or a short note
inviting him, but the good Minister unfortunately was enmeshed in a lot of official commitments. We
wanted to hear him because the Solicitor General of his office, Sedfrey Ordoez, appeared before
us, and asked for the maintenance of the present arrangement wherein the supervision over lower
courts is with the Supreme Court. But aside from that, although there were no resource persons, we
did further studies on the feasibility of transferring the supervision over the lower courts to the
Ministry of Justice. All those things were taken into consideration motu proprio.10
For sure, the disciplinary authority of the Supreme Court over judges is expressly govened by
another provision, that is, Section 11, Article VIII of the Constitution. Section 11 provides:
Section 11. xxx The Supreme Court en banc shall have the power to discipline judges of lower
courts, or order their dismissal by a vote of a majority of the Members who actually took part in the
deliberations on the issues in the case and voted thereon. (Emphasis supplied)
Clearly, the disciplinary authority of the Supreme Court over judges is found in Section 11 of Article
VIII. However, this disciplinary authority is expressly limited to lower court judges, and does not
incude Supreme Court Justices, precisely because the Constitution expressly vests exclusively on
Congress the power to discipline Supreme Court Justices. By excluding Supreme Court Justices,
Section 11 withholdsfrom the Supreme Court en banc the power to discipline its own members.
The Judicial Conduct and Disability Act of 1980 of the United States, which gives judicial
councilscomposed of federal judges the power to discipline federal judges short of removal from
office, doesnot apply to Justices of the United States Supreme Court who are subject to discipline
only by the United States Congress. Morever, a similar law cannot be enacted in the Philippines
bacause all lower court judges are subject to discipline by the Supreme Court en banc under Section
11, Article VIII of the Constitution. Thus, reference to the Judicial Conduct and Disability Act of
1980 is inappropriate in this jurisdiction.
I submit that this Court recall the Resolution of 12 October 2010 subject of the present motion for
reconsideration for lack of jurisdiction to decide the administrative complaint against Justice Mariano
C. Del Castillo.
II. The Judge Must Follow the Law on Copyright
a. Copying from Works of the Government
In writing judicial decisions, a judge should make the proper attribution in copying passages from
anyjudicial decision, statute, regulation, or other Works of the Government. The Manual of
Judicial Writing adopted11 by this Court provides how such attribution should be made.
However, the failure to make such attribution does not violate the Law on Copyright.12 The law
expressly provides that Works of the Government are not subject to copyright.13 This means that
there is neither a legal right by anyone to demand attribution, nor any legal obligation from anyone to
make an attribution, when Works of the Government are copied. The failure to make the proper
attribution of a Work of the Government is not actionable but is merely a case of sloppy writing.
Clearly, there is no legal obligation, by a judge or by any person, to make an attribution when
copying Works of the Government.
However, misquoting or twisting, with or without attribution, any judicial decision, statute, regulation
or other Works of the Government in judicial writing, if done to mislead the parties or the public,
is actionable. Under Canon 3 of the Code of Judicial Conduct, a judge "should perform official
duties honestly."14 Rule 3.01]15 and Rule 3.0216 of the Code provide that a judge must be faithful to
the law, maintain professional competence, and strive diligently to ascertain the facts and the
applicable law.
The foregoing applies to any non-copyrightable work, and any work in the public domain, whether
local or foreign.
b. Copying from Pleadings of Parties
In writing judicial decisions, the judge may copy passages from the pleadings of the parties with
proper attribution to the author of the pleading. However, the failure to make the proper attribution is
not actionable.
Pleadings are submitted to the court precisely so that the pleas, or the arguments written on the
pleadings, are accepted by the judge. There is an implied offer by the pleader that the judge
may make any use of the pleadings in resolving the case. If the judge accepts the pleaders
arguments, he may copy such arguments to expedite the resolution of the case. In writing his
decision, the judge does not claim as his own the arguments he adopts from the pleadings of the
parties. Besides, the legal arguments in the pleadings are in most cases merely reiterations of
judicial precedents, which are Works of the Government.
However, misquoting or twisting, with or without attribution, any passage from the pleadings of the
parties,if done to mislead the parties or the public, is actionable. Under Canon 3 of the Code of
Judicial Conduct, a judge "should perform official duties honestly." Rule 3.01 and Rule 3.02 of the
Code provide that a judge must be faithful to the law, maintain professional competence, and strive
diligently to ascertain the facts and the applicable law.
c. Copying from Textbooks, Journals and other Non-Government Works
In writing judicial decisions, the judge may copy passages from textbooks, journals and other nongovernment works with proper attribution. However, whether the failure to make the proper
attribution is actionable or not depends on the nature of the passages copied.
If the work copied without proper attribution is copyrighted, the failure to make such attribution
violates Section 193 of the Intellectual Property Code, which provides:
Section 193. Scope of Moral Rights. The author of a work shall, independently of the economic
rights in Section 177 or the grant of an assignment or license with respect to such right, have the
right:
193.1. To require that the authorship of the works be attributed to him, in particular, the right
that his name, as far as practicable, be indicated in a prominent way on the copies, and in
connection with the public use of his work;
xxxx
193.3 To object to any distortion, mutilation or other modification of, or other derogatory action in
relation to his work which would be prejudicial to his honor or reputation;
x x x x. (Emphasis supplied)
Section 184(k) of the Intellectual Property Code expressly allows, as a limitation on the copyright or
economic rights of the author, "any use made of a work for the purpose of any judicial
proceedingsx x x."17 Section 184(k) clearly authorizes a judge to copy copyrighted works for "any
use" in judicial proceedings, which means the judge, in writing his decision, can copy passages
beyond the quantitative limitations of "fair-use" under Section 184(b). This is the significance of
Section 184(k), allowing the judge to copy lengthy passages of copyrighted work even beyond what
is required by fair-use. Section 184(k) is silent on the obligation of the judge to make the proper
attribution, unlike Section 184(b) on fair-use by the public which expressly requires a proper
attribution.
However, Section 193 nevertheless requires anyone, including a judge writing a judicial decision, to
make the proper attribution to show respect for the moral rights of the author. Thus, while the author
has no right to demand economic compensation from the judge or the government for the unlimited
and public use of his work in a judicial decision, the law requires that "the authorship of the works
be attributed to him x x x in connection with the public use of his work." In short, the judge is
legally obligated to make the proper attribution because Section 193 protects the moral rights of the
author.
The moral rights under Section 193 of the Intellectual Property Code arise only if the work of an
author is copyrighted. If the work is not copyrighted, then there are no moral rights to the work. If the
passages in a textbook, journal article, or other non-work of the government are merely quotations
from Works of the Government, like sentences or paragraphs taken from judicial decisions, then
such passages if copied by a judge do not require attribution because such passages, by
themselves, are Works of the Government. The same is true for works in the public domain.
However, the arrangement or presentation of passages copied from Works of the Government may
be subject to copyright,18 and a judge copying such arrangement or presentation, together with the
passages, may have to make the proper attribution. If the passages are those of the author himself,
and not copied from Works of the Government or from works in the public domain, then clearly there
is a legal obligation on the part of the judge to make the proper attribution. Failure by the judge to
make such attribution violates not only Section 193 of the Intellectual Property Code, but also Canon
3 of the Code of Judicial Conduct.
The moral rights of an author are independent of the authors economic rights to his work in the
sense that even if the author assigns his work, the moral rights to the work remain with him, being
inalienable.19Any violation of an authors moral rights entitles him to the same remedies as a violation
of the economic rights to the work,20 whether such economic rights are still with him or have been
assigned to another party. Thus, while called "moral rights," these rights are legally enforceable.
Two essential elements of an authors moral rights are the right to attribution and the right to
integrity. The right to attribution or paternity21 is the right of the author to be recognized as the
originator or father of his work, a right expressly recognized in Section 193.1 of the Intellectual
Property Code. The right to integrity is the right of the author to prevent any distortion or
misrepresentation of his work, a right expressly recognized in Section 193.3 of the Code. The
Legislature incorporated the moral rights of an author in the Intellectual Property Code in compliance
with the treaty obligations of the Philippines under the Berne Convention, which requires treaty
states to enact legislation protecting the moral rights of authors.22
The rationale behind moral rights is explained in a local intellectual property textbook, citing
American jurisprudence:
The term moral rights has its origins in the civil law and is a translation of the French le droit moral,
which is meant to capture those rights of a spiritual, non-economic and personal nature. The rights
spring from a belief that an artist in the process of creation injects his spirit into the work and that the
artists personality, as well as the integrity of the work, should therefore be protected and preserved.
Because they are personal to the artist, moral rights exist independently of an artists copyright in his
or her work.While the rubric of moral rights encompasses many varieties of rights, two are
protected in nearly every jurisdiction recognizing their existence: attribution and integrity.
The right of attribution generally consists of the right of an artist to be recognized by name as
the author of his work or to publish anonymously or pseudonymously, the right to prevent
the authors work from being attributed to someone else, and to prevent the use of the
authors name on works created by others, including distorted editions of the authors
original work. The right of integrity allows the author to prevent any deforming or mutilating
changes to his work, even after title of the work has been transferred. In some jurisdictions, the
integrity right also protects artwork from destruction. Whether or not a work of art is protected from
destruction represents a fundamentally different perception of the purpose of moral rights. If integrity
is meant to stress the public interest in preserving a nations culture, destruction is prohibited; if the
right is meant to emphasize the authors personality, destruction is seen as less harmful than the
continued display of deformed or mutilated work that misrepresents the artist and destruction may
proceed.23 (Emphasis supplied)
When a judge respects the right to attribution and integrity of an author, then the judge observes
intellectual honesty in writing his decisions. Writing decisions is the most important official duty of a
judge, more so of appellate court judges. Conversely, if a judge fails to respect an authors right to
attribution and integrity, then the judge fails to observe intellectual honesty in the performance of his
official duties, a violation of Canon 3 of the Code of Judicial Conduct.
The duty of a judge to respect the moral rights of an author is certainly not burdensome on the
performance of his official duties. All the reference materials that a judge needs in writing judicial
decisions are either Works of the Government or works in the public domain. A judge must base
his decision on the facts and the law,24 and the facts and the law are all in the public
domain. There is no need for a judge to refer to copyrighted works. When a judge ventures to
refer to copyrighted works by copying passages from such works, he immediately knows he is
treading on protected works, and should readily respect the rights of the authors of those works. The
judge, whose most important function is to write judicial decisions, must be the first to respect the
rights of writers whose lives and passions are dedicated to writing for the education of humankind.
Besides, Section 184(k) of the Intellectual Property Code already generously allows the judge
unlimited copying of copyrighted works in writing his judicial decisions. The Code, however, does not
exempt the judge from recognizing the moral rights of the author. The basic rule of human relations,
as embodied in Article 19 of the Civil Code, requires that the judge should give to the author of the
copyrighted work what is due him. Thus, Article 19 states: "Every person must, in the exercise of his
rights and in the performance of his duties, act with justice, give everyone his due, and observe
honesty and good faith."
d. Difference from the Academe
Academic writing, such as writing dissertations or articles in academic journals, is governed by
standards different from judicial decision writing. The failure to make the proper attribution for
passages copied from Works of the Government is not actionable against a judge when writing a
judicial decision. However, the same failure by a student or a faculty member may be deemed
plagiarism in the academe, meriting a severe administrative penalty. Nevertheless, the Judiciary
and the academe should have the same rule when it comes to copyrighted works. In every case,
there is a legal duty to make the proper attribution when copying passages from copyrighted
works because the law expressly requires such attribution without exception.
The academe requires that passages copied from Works of the Government, works in the public
domain, and non-copyrighted works should be properly attributed in the same way as copyrighted
works. The rationale is to separate the original work of the writer from the works of other authors in
order to determine the original contribution of the writer to the development of a particular art or
science. This rationale does not apply to the Judiciary, where adherence to jurisprudential
precedence is the rule. However, if a judge writes an article for a law journal, he is bound by the
same rules governing academic writing.25
ACCORDINGLY, I vote to RECALL the Resolution of 12 October 2010 subject of the present motion
for reconsideration as this Courts jurisdiction extends only to a determination whether the
administrative complaint against Justice Mariano C. Del Castillo constitutes contempt of this Court.
ANTONIO T. CARPIO
Associate Justice
Footnotes
1
Volume II, Records of the Constitutional Commission, p. 272. The following exchange took
place during the deliberations of the Constitutional Commission:
2
. . . culpable violation of the Constitution, treason, bribery, other high crimes, graft
and corruption or betrayal of public trust.
Just for the record, what would the Committee envision as a betrayal of the public
trust which is not otherwise covered by the other terms antecedent thereto?
MR. ROMULO: I think, if I may speak for the Committee and subject to further
comments of Commissioner de los Reyes, the concept is that this is a catchall
phrase. Really, it refers to his oath of office, in the end that the idea of a public trust
is connected with the oath of office of the officer, and if he violates that oath of office,
then he has betrayed that trust.
MR. REGALADO: Thank you.
MR. MONSOD: Madam President, may I ask Commissioner de los Reyes to perhaps
add to those remarks.
THE PRESIDENT: Commissioner de los Reyes is recognized.
MR. DE LOS REYES: The reason I proposed this amendment is that during the
Regular Batasang Pambansa when there was a move to impeach then President
Marcos, there were arguments to the effect that there is no ground for impeachment
because there is no proof that President Marcos committed criminal acts which are
punishable, or considered penal offenses. And so the term "betrayal of public
trust," as explained by Commissioner Romulo, is a catchall phrase to include
all acts which are not punishable by statutes as penal offenses but,
nonetheless, render the officer unfit to continue in office. It includes betrayal of
public interest, inexcusable negligence of duty, tyrannical abuse of power,
breach of official duty by malfeasance or misfeasance cronyism, favoritism,
etc. to the prejudice of public interest and which tend to bring the office into
disrepute. That is the purpose, Madam President. Thank you.
MR. ROMULO: If I may add another example, because Commissioner Regalado
asked a very good question. This concept would include, I think, obstruction of justice
since in his oath he swears to do justice to every man; so if he does anything that
obstructs justice, it could be construed as a betrayal of the public trust. Thank you.
(Emphasis supplied)
The 1993 Report of the National Commission on Judicial Discipline & Removal of the
United States (http://judicial-disciplinereform.org/judicial_complaints/1993_Report_Removal.pdf, pp. 17-18) concluded
thatimpeachment is the exclusive mode of removing federal judges from office, thus:
3
Nevertheless, the Commission concludes that Congress may not provide for removal
as a criminal penalty. If removal may lawfully follow on conviction for a federal judge,
then it may do so for the Vice President of the United States or perhaps even the
President. But if the constitutional grant of a term of office to the Vice President and
President prevails against any provision for removal in the criminal law, the same
should be true of the tenure the Constitution grants to judges. The Constitution quite
explicitly separates impeachment and removal from the ordinary criminal process.
The Commission does not believe that Congress's power to punish crimes is an
exception to judicial life tenure, or alternatively a way in which good behavior may be
inquired into, in the way that the impeachment process clearly is.
xxxx
The Commission concludes that a statute providing for the removal from office of
judges who serve on good behavior under Article III by means other than
impeachment and conviction would be unconstitutional. (Emphasis supplied;
citations omitted)
Section 3(7), Article XI of the Constitution provides: "Judgment in cases of impeachment
shall not extend further than removal from office and disqualification to hold any office under
the Republic of the Philippines, but the party convicted shall nevertheless be liable and
subject to prosecution, trial, and punishment according to law."
4
There are those who, with good reason, believe that removal from office is the maximum
penalty in impeachment and thus there can be lesser penalties like censure. See Joseph
Isenbergh, Impeachment and Presidential Immunity from Judicial Process, 18 Yale Law &
Policy Review 53 (1999).
5
See note 4.
Professor Laurence H. Tribe writes: "The independence of the process of impeachment and
criminal prosecution is highlighted by the case of Judge Alcee Hastings, who was acquitted
of bribery by a federal jury in 1983, but was subsequently impeached by the House and
convicted by the Senate for the same offense and for testifying falsely about it under oath
at his federal criminal trial. Similarly, Judge Walter Nixon was impeached by the House and
convicted by the Senate in 1989 for falsely testifying under oath before a federal grand jury
investigating Judge Nixons improper discussions with a state prosecutor in a case involving
a business acquaintances son, despite an earlier acquittal in a federal prosecution for
bribery arising out of those very events. And, although this precise sequence is not
addressed by Article I, Section 3, clause 7, it should also be possible for an official to be
acquitted by the Senate in an impeachment trial but subsequently convicted of the same
underlying acts in a federal court. The Senates acquittal, after all, could well represent a
determination merely that the charged offenses were not impeachable, or that the nation
would be harmed more than protected by pronouncing the official guilty." American
Constitutional Law, Volume 1 (3rd edition), pp. 159-160.
7
An author whose moral rights under the Law on Copyright are infringed by a judge in his
judicial decision may file a civil case in court against such judge. See discussion on The
Judge Must Follow the Law on Copyright,infra.
8
10
11
Part IV of RA No. 8293, otherwise known as the "Intellectual Property Code of the
Philippines."
12
Section 176 of RA No. 8293 provides: "Works of the Government. No copyright shall
subsist in any work of the Government of the Philippines. xxx."
13
Canon 3 of the Code of Judicial Conduct provides: "A judge should perform official duties
honestly, and with impartiality and diligence."
14
Rule 3.01 of the Code of Judicial Conduct provides: "A judge shall be faithful to the law and
maintain professional competence."
15
Rule 3.02 of the Code of Judicial Conduct provides: "In every case, a judge shall
endeavour diligently to ascertain the facts and the applicable law, unswayed by partisan
interests, public opinion or fear of criticism."
16
Section 184 (k) of RA No. 8293 provides: "Limitations on Copyright. 184.1. Notwithstanding
the provisions of Chapter V [on copyright and economic rights], the following acts shall not
constitute infringement of copyright:
17
(a) x x x x
xxxx
(k) Any use made of a work for the purpose of any judicial proceedings or for the
giving of professional advice by a legal practitioner."
18
Section 198.1 of the Intellectual Property Code provides that the "[moral] rights of an author
x x x shall not be assignable or subject to license."
19
20
21
22
Vicente B. Amador, Copyright under the Intellectual Property Code (1998), p. 570.
Id. p. 569, citing John Carter, John Swing and John Veronis v. Helmsley-Spear, Inc. and
Associates, U.S. Court of Appeals for 2nd Circuit, 1 December 1995.
23
Article 8 of the Civil Code provides: "Judicial decisions applying or interpreting the laws or
the Constitution shall form part of the legal system of the Philippines."
24
In the Matter of Hon. Thomas E. Brennan, Jr., Judge, 55th District, Mason, Michigan, 433
Mich. 1204, 447 N.W.2d 712 (6 November 1989) . In this case, Judge Brennan, Jr. submitted
an article to a law review for publication. The article failed to acknowledge several passages
copied from law journal articles of two other authors. The Michigan Judicial Tenure
Commission recommended to the Supreme Court of Michigan that Judge Brennan, Jr. be
publicly censured for misconduct. Interestingly, Judge Brennan, Jr. (a state judge) admitted
his misconduct and made the following manifestation:
25
Respondent Thomas E. Brennan, Jr., of the 55th District Court, Ingham County,
Michigan, acknowledges notice and receipt of the Judicial Tenure Commission's
Decision and Recommendation for Order of Discipline dated September 12, 1989,
and stipulates to the Judicial Tenure Commission's findings as recited in paragraphs
one (1) through six (6) thereof;
Respondent further affirmatively acknowledges the impropriety of his conduct
as set forth in the Decision and Recommendation for Order of Discipline, and
pursuant to MCR 9.221(C), consents to the Commission's recommendation that
he be publicly censured.
Respondent further concurs in the request of the Judicial Tenure Commission that an
order embodying the foregoing disciplinary action be entered immediately by the
Michigan Supreme Court. (Emphasis supplied)
DISSENTING OPINION
SERENO, J.:
Judges need not strain themselves to meet inapplicable standards of research and attribution of
sources in their judicial opinions, nor seek to achieve the scholarly rigidity or thoroughness observed
in academic work. They need to answer to only two standards diligence and honesty. By honesty
here is meant that good faith attempt to attribute to the author his original words and analysis.
Even if a judge has to rely in large part on the drafts of his legal researchers, the work of a diligent
and honest judge will never display the severe plagiarism evident in the Vinuya Decision published
under the name of Justice Mariano C. del Castillo. A judge will only find himself in the same
predicament as Justice del Castillo if two situations coincide: (1) the judge wittingly or unwittingly
entrusts a legal researcher with the task of drafting his judicial opinion, and the legal researcher
decides to commit severe plagiarism; and (2) the judge: (a) does not read and study the draft
decision himself; (b) even if he does read and study the same, the "red flags" that are self-evident in
the draft decision completely escape him; or (c) despite having seen the red flags, he ignores them.
We use the words "severe plagiarism" here deliberately because not only were three (3) works of the
four (4) complaining authors1 plagiarized in Vinuya, text from the following copyrighted works was
copied without attribution as well: essays contributed by Robert McCorquodale and Phoebe Okowa
to the book International Law, edited by Malcolm Evans; an article written by Mariana Salazar
Albornoz, entitled Legal Nature and Legal Consequences of Diplomatic Protection: Contemporary
Challenges; an article written by Elizabeth Prochaska, entitled Testing the Limits of Diplomatic
Protection: Khadr v. The Prime Minister of Canada; a report by Larry Niksch, entitled Japanese
Militarys Comfort Women; and an article by James Ladino, entitled Ianfu: No Comfort Yet for Korean
Comfort Women and the Impact of House Resolution 121. In addition, incorporated into Vinuya were
excerpts from a decision of an international tribunal without any signal given to the reader that the
words were not those of Justice del Castillo of the Philippine Supreme Court but the words of
another tribunal. While there are views that a judge cannot be guilty of plagiarism for failure to
recognize foreign decisions as source materials in ones judicial writing as when Justice Antonio C.
Carpio opines that a judge cannot be guilty on this score alone it is beyond debate that there is a
duty of care to attribute to these foreign and international judicial decisions properly, and that one
should never present these materials as if they are ones own.
An estimate of the extent of the plagiarism in the Vinuya Decision has been made by my office. The
best approximation available to us, using the "word count" feature of Microsoft Word, reveals that
52.9% of the words used in the Vinuya Decisions discussion on international law, which begins in
page 24 and continues to the end (2,869 out of 5,419 words), are copied without attribution from
other works.
The Vinuya Decision, therefore, because of the severity of the plagiarism attending it, is the worst
possible context for the Majority to draw, in its Decision dated 12 October 2010 and in its Resolution
denying the Motion for Reconsideration, the following conclusions:
1. that plagiarism requires the element of "malicious intent";
2. that calibrating its ruling in response to the outcry of the academic community after the
Majority Decision was issued the rules against plagiarism applicable to the academic
community do not apply to judicial decisions;
3. that the standard of attribution applicable to judicial decisions is effectively, no standard at
all a judge cannot be guilty of plagiarism as understood by the academic world, and neither
is he liable for copying without attribution, even from copyrighted materials;
4. that this lack of liability extends as well to benefit lawyers in the submission of their
pleadings before courts; and
5. that on the whole, the Vinuya Decision is the product of hard, honest, original work.
In the course of the resolution of the Motion for Reconsideration, I have found myself counteraccused of having copied the works of others without attribution. I have debunked each of these
claims and lay them bare in this Dissent. I have even proven that it was one of my co-authored
works that was copied without attribution being given to me and to my co-authors. The theory
propounded against me is that I cannot conclude that the Vinuya Decision is partly a product of
plagiarism unless I am willing to call myself a plagiarist as well. I emphasize, however, my original
thesis that a diligent and honest judge or researcher will never find himself to have plagiarized,
even unwittingly, to the same extent that plagiarism occurred in the Vinuya Decision. Herein lies the
safety of a researcher a habit of trying to give recognition where recognition is due. Should any of
my works, wherein I failed to make proper attribution, surface, I will do what I have recommended
that the author of the Vinuya Decision do: acknowledge the wrong, apologize to the wronged, and
correct the work. See pages 58 to 75 herein for a discussion on the counter-accusations leveled
against me.
Irrespective of the outcome of my analysis, let it be stated that this Dissent does not make any
pronouncement regarding the jurisdiction of this Court over the complaint for plagiarism against
Justice del Castillo. My esteemed colleague Justice Carpio is convinced that Congress is the sole
disciplining authority of all impeachable officers, including Justices of the Supreme Court. He
characterizes plagiarism as a betrayal of public trust, and thus, "impeachment by Congress takes the
place of administrative disciplinary proceedings against impeachable officers as there is no other
power that can administratively discipline impeachable officers."2
I. The Flow of the Analysis in This Dissent
A. Parameters
To allay any concern from members of the judiciary, I have been very careful to underscore the
limitations of my analysis of the Vinuya Decision. My Dissent of 12 October 2010 is very clear:
In a certain sense, there should have been less incentive to plagiarize law review articles because
the currency of judges is stare decisis. One wonders how the issue should have been treated had
what was plagiarized been a court ruling, but that is not at issue here. The analysis in this opinion
is therefore confined to the peculiar situation of a judge who issues a decision that
plagiarizes law review articles, not to his copying of precedents or parts of the pleadings of
the parties to a case.3
To be categorical, a judge or legal researcher cannot be guilty for using doctrines that have been
incorporated into the mainstream and are standard terms of trade. Neither is a judge required to use
quotation marks or blockquotes every time there is a reference to allegations in the pleadings of
parties, or when he is discussing legal arguments using already accepted legal doctrines. It is when
he ventures into using the original words of others, especially those of legal scholars, that he must
be particularly careful. He cannot write to pass off the words of others, especially those of others
pioneering works, as his own. To do so is dishonest. It has also been suggested that Justice del
Castillo cannot be guilty of plagiarism as he never read the work of Mariana Salazar Albornoz. That
argument is neither here nor there. At the very least, the words he copied were those of another in
an important original analysis of the state of international law on rape.
B. Structure of the Technical Analysis in This Dissent
The structure and rigidity of the Technical Analysis in this Dissent is necessary to fulfill two
purposes: (1) to enable the reader to examine whether I have scientific and objective basis to
conclude that severe plagiarism characterizes theVinuya Decision; and (2) to examine whether I am
willing to subject my work to the same standards to which I have subjected the Vinuya Decision.
One interesting note. My professional record had been vetted by the Judicial and Bar Council prior to
my appointment to this Court. My previous works those of an academic and those of a pleader
are presently being, and, I expect will continue to be, thoroughly scrutinized. While those previous
works form part of the basis of my appointment, inasmuch as they are proof of my competence and
expertise, they cannot serve as a basis to determine whether I am now performing my duties as a
judge satisfactorily. One can view the scrutiny as an unwarranted collateral attack on my record.
This did not happen until my Dissent of 12 October 2010.
The first part of the Technical Analysis consists of new tables of comparison presenting more
instances of plagiarism as they occur in the Vinuya Decision. Two of these tables deal with copied
works that previously appeared in my earlier Dissent: A Fiduciary Theory of Jus Cogens, by Evan J.
Criddle and Evan Fox-Decent, and Breaking the Silence: Rape as an International Crime by Mark
Ellis; however, the entries for these tables present instances of plagiarism not discussed or
presented in my Dissent of 12 October 2010. Following the tables are lists of violations of rules
against plagiarism, each list item corresponding to one table entry.
Following the presentation of the tables, the process whereby plagiarism could have been committed
in Vinuya is examined. The severe extent of plagiarism, which is already evident in the tables, is
discussed further, followed by an analysis of the systematic commission of plagiarism in Vinuya.
This analysis consists of the detailed dissection of specific parts of the Vinuya decision: the text of
the body in pages 31-32, and the first paragraph of footnote 65. The research process purportedly
used by the legal researcher of Vinuya is then broken down into separate steps that illustrate the
decision points at which an honest and diligent researcher would have ensured that proper
attribution to sources be given. This is then followed by a closer examination of the deletion of
existing citations and the features of Microsoft Word relevant to the deletion of footnotes.
II. Technical Analysis of Plagiarism in Vinuya
A. More Plagiarism
Below are new tables of comparison excluding materials in tables already discussed in my
earlier Dissent to the majority Decision in AM 10-7-17-SC of excerpts from the Decision in Vinuya
vis-a-vis text from one (1) book on international law, five (5) foreign law journal articles, and a
copyrighted report of the United States Congressional Research Service. While the degree of
seriousness of the offense of unattributed copying varies with the kind of material copied, the extent
of the copying conveys the level of honesty or dishonesty of the work done with respect to the
Vinuya Decision. The extent of copying enumerated in these tables also renders incredible the claim
of mechanical failure, as well as the alleged lack of intent on the part of the researcher to not give
proper attribution.
The materials for comparison were first identified in the Motion for Reconsideration and in the letter
of Dr. Peter B. Payoyo, a Filipino legal scholar residing in the Netherlands, addressed to the Chief
Justice dated 28 October 2010. These excerpts were independently verified, and compared with the
corresponding portions from the original works. In the course of independent verification, we came
across three more unattributed copied works.
TABLES OF COMPARISON
To aid an objective analysis of the extent and manner of the plagiarism committed in
the Vinuya Decision, below are tables of comparison that will compare three written works: (1) the
plagiarized work; (2) the Vinuya Decision; and (3) the purported "original" source analyzed or cited
by the concerned authors and by the Vinuya Decision. The left column pertains to the literary works
allegedly plagiarized by the legal researcher in the Vinuya Decision. The middle column refers to the
pertinent passage in the Vinuya Decision that makes unattributed use of the copied work. According
to the Majority Resolution, these citations made to original sources (e.g. to the international law
cases being referenced to support a certain point) in the Vinuya Decision are sufficient to refute the
charges of non-attribution. To address this claim, I have chosen to add a third column to present the
text of the source referred to in the nearest (location-wise and/or context-wise) citation or attribution
made in the Vinuya Decision. This will allow us to determine whether the analysis, reference and/or
collation of original sources were those of the allegedly plagiarized authors or are Vinuya originals.
In addition, this three-column presentation will also allow us to examine the claim being made by
Justice del Castillo that at least two of the authors whose works are allegedly plagiarized in
the Vinuya Decision themselves violated academic scholarship rules against plagiarism.
TABLE A: Comparison of Evan J. Criddle & Evan Fox-Decents article in the Yale Journal of
International Law, entitled A Fiduciary Theory of Jus Cogens (2009) and the Supreme Courts 28
April 2010 Decision in Vinuya v. Executive Secretary.
The Allegedly
Plagiarized Work
Evan J. Criddle & Evan FoxDecent, A Fiduciary Theory of
The Decision
Vinuya v. Executive Secretary,
G.R. No. 162230, 28 April 2010.
International
Source Being
Analyzed by
Criddle and
Fox-Decent
...It is an
essential
principle of any
court, whether
national or
international,
that the judges
may only
recognize legal
rules which they
hold to be valid.
There is nothing
to show that it
was intended to
disregard that
legal principle
when this Court
was instituted,
or that it was to
be obliged to
found its
decisions on
the ideas of the
partieswhich
may be entirely
wrongas to the
law to be
applied in a
given case.
The Court
would never, for
instance, apply
a convention
the terms of
which were
contrary to
public morality.
But, in my view,
a tribunal finds
itself in the
same position if
a convention
adduced by the
parties is in
reality null and
void, owing to a
flaw in its origin.
The attitude of
the tribunal
should, in my
opinion, be
governed in
such a case by
considerations
of international
public policy,
even when
jurisdiction is
conferred on
the Court by
virtue of a
Special
Agreement.
Source:
The Oscar
Chinn Case
(U.K. v. Belg.),
1934 P.C.I.J.
(ser. A/B) No.
63, at 149-50
(Dec. 12)
(separate
opinion of
Judge
Schcking).
2. While the ICJ recently endorsed
the jus cogens concept for the
first time in its 2006 Judgment
on Preliminary Objections in
Armed Activities on the Territory
of the Congo (Congo v.
Rwanda), it declined to clarify jus
cogens's legal status or to
specify any criteria for identifying
peremptory norms.[67]
[64]....The
Court observes,
however, as it
has already had
occasion to
emphasize, that
"the erga
omnescharacter
of a norm and
the rule of
consent to
jurisdiction are
two different
things"..., and
that the mere
fact that rights
and
obligations erga
omnes may be
at issue in a
dispute would
not give the
Court
jurisdiction to
entertain that
dispute.
The same
applies to the
relationship
between
peremptory
norms of
general
international
law (jus
cogens)and the
establishment
of the Courts
jurisdiction: the
fact that a
dispute relates
to compliance
with a norm
having such a
character,
which is
assuredly the
case with
regard to the
prohibition of
genocide,
cannot of itself
provide a basis
for the
jurisdiction of
the Court to
entertain that
dispute. Under
the Courts
Statute that
jurisdiction is
always based
on the consent
of the parties.
Source:
Armed Activities
on the Territory
of the Congo
(Dem. Rep.
Congo v.
Rwanda), 2006
I.C.J. 6, 31-32
(Feb. 3).
torture are
alleged.
Source:
Al-Adsani v
United
Kingdom, App.
No. 35763/97,
34 Eur. H.R.
Rep. 11, par. 61
(2002)(21 Nov.
2001).
TABLE B: Comparison of Mark Elliss article entitled Breaking the Silence: Rape as an International
Crime (2006-2007) and the Supreme Courts 28 April 2010 Decision in Vinuya v. Executive
Secretary.
The Allegedly
Copied Work
Mark Elliss article entitled
Breaking the Silence:
Rape as an International
Crime 38 Case W. Res. J.
Intl. L. 225(2006-2007).
1. A major step in this legal
development came in
1949, when rape and
sexual assault were
included in the Geneva
Conventions.... Rape is
included in the following
acts committed against
persons protected by the
1949 Geneva
Conventions: "wilful killing,
torture or inhuman
treatment, including
biological experiments;
wilfully causing great
suffering or serious injury
to body or health."
[65] Fourth Geneva
Convention, supra note
23, art. 147.
(p. 236 of Ellis)
The Decision
Vinuya v. Executive
Secretary, G.R. No.
162230, 28 April 2010.
[Article 50/51/147]
Grave breaches to which
the preceding Article
relates shall be those
involving any of the
following acts, if
committed against
persons protected by
the Convention: willful
killing, torture or inhuman
treatment, including
biological experiments,
wilfully causing great
suffering or serious injury
to body or health.
Source:
Geneva Convention (I) for
the Amelioration of the
Condition of the Wounded
and Sick in Armed Forces
in the Field, 75 U.N.T.S.
Amelioration of the
Condition of Wounded,
Sick and Shipwrecked
Members of Armed Forces
at Sea, art. 3(1)(c), 75
U.N.T.S. 85; Geneva
Convention Relative to the
Treatment of Prisoners of
War, art. 3(1)(c), 75
U.N.T.S. 973; Fourth
Geneva Convention, supra
note 23, art. 3(1)(c).
(p. 28, footnote 65 of
Vinuya)
[65] Rape as a violation
of the laws or customs of
war generally consists of
violations of Article 3 of
the 1949 Geneva
Conventions, which, in
part, prohibits "violence to
life and person, in
particular mutilation, cruel
treatment and torture;
outrages upon personal
dignity, in particular
humiliating and degrading
treatment." (SeeGeneva
Convention for the
Amelioration of the
66 See Geneva
Condition of the Wounded
Convention for the
and Sick in Armed Forces
Amelioration of the
Condition of the Wounded in the Field, art. 3(1)(c), 75
and Sick in Armed Forces U.N.T.S. 31; Geneva
in the Field, art. 3(1)(c), 75 Convention for the
Amelioration of the
U.N.T.S. 31; Geneva
Condition of Wounded,
Convention for the
Sick and Shipwrecked
Amelioration of the
Members of Armed Forces
Condition of Wounded,
at Sea, art. 3(1)(c), 75
Sick and Shipwrecked
Members of Armed Forces U.N.T.S. 85; Geneva
Convention Relative to the
at Sea, art. 3(1)(c), 75
Treatment of Prisoners of
U.N.T.S. 85; Geneva
Convention Relative to the War, art. 3(1)(c), 75
Treatment of Prisoners of U.N.T.S. 973; Fourth
Geneva Convention, supra
War, art. 3(1)(c), 75
note 23, art. 3(1)(c).
U.N.T.S. 973; Fourth
Geneva Convention, supra
note 23, art. 3(1)(c)....
(p. 28, footnote 65 of
Vinuya)
Article 27
Women shall be especially
protected against any
attack on their honour, in
particular against rape,
enforced prostitution, or
any form of indecent
assault.
Source:
Geneva Convention (IV)
Relative to the Protection
of Civilian Persons in Time
of War, 75 U.N.T.S. 287.
Article 76.-Protection of
women
1. Women shall be the
object of special respect
and shall be protected in
particular against rape,
forced prostitution and any
other form of indecent
assault.
Source:
Protocol Additional to the
Geneva Conventions of 12
August 1949, and relating
to the Protection of Victims
of International Armed
Conflicts (Protocol I), 1125
U.N.T.S. 3.
TABLE C: Comparison of Robert McCorquodales work, entitled The Individual and the International
Legal System,4and Phoebe Okowas work, entitled Issues of Admissibility and the Law on
International Responsibility,5 both of which were published in Malcolm Evanss book (International
Law), and the Supreme Courts Decision in Vinuya v. Executive Secretary, G.R. No. 162230, 28
April 2010.
The Allegedly
Copied Work
1.
The Decision
Essays published in
Malcolm Evans,
International Law (ed.,
2006).
Vinuya v. Executive
Secretary, G.R. No.
162230, 28 April 2010.
International Source
Being Analyzed and
Used by McCorquodale
/ Okowa
Note:
Page 231 of the Appeal
from a Judgment of the
Hungaro-Czechoslovak
Mixed Arbitral Tribunal
case the citation
nearest in location and in
context to the passage
does not contain a
discussion on
"persuad[ing] a
government to bring a
claim on the individuals
behalf."
The reference to Appeal
from a Judgment of the
Hungaro-Czechoslovak
Mixed Arbitral Tribunal
case occurs
inMcCorquodale as
footnote 14, four
sentences before the
passage copied by
Vinuya, and is made
following the quote, it is
scarcely necessary to
point out that the capacity
to possess civil rights
does not necessarily
imply the capacity to
exercise those rights
oneself.
In McCorquodale, the
citation following the
discussion on how "it is
not the individuals
international rights that
are being asserted but
the States own rights" is
written thus in footnote
16: [16] Panevezeys-
Saldutiskis Railway,
Judgment, PCIJ, Ser A/B,
No 76, p 4. CfLaGrand
(Germany v United States
of America), Merits,
Judgment, ICJ Reports
2001, p 466, para 42.
2.
The conceptual
understanding that
individuals have rights and
responsibilities in the
international legal system
does not automatically
mean that they have the
ability to bring international
claims to assert their rights
or are able to claim an
immunity to prevent their
responsibilities being
enforced (Hohfeld, above).
Thus the PCIJ declared
that it is scarcely
necessary to point out that
the capacity to possess
civil rights does not
necessarily imply the
capacity to exercise those
rights oneself.[14]
[14] Appeal from a
Judgment of the
Hungaro/Czechoslovak
Mixed Arbitral Tribunal,
Judgment, 1933, PCIJ,
Ser A/B, No 61, p 208 at p
231
Again, it is scarcely
necessary to point out
that the capacity to
possess civil rights does
not necessarily imply the
capacity to exercise those
rights oneself. No
argument against the
University's personality in
law can therefore be
deduced from the fact
that it did not enjoy the
free disposal of the
property in question....
Source:
Appeal from a Judgment
of the HungaroCzechoslovak Mixed
Arbitral Tribunal (Peter
Pzmny University v.
Czechoslovakia), 1933
P.C.I.J. 208, (ser. A/B)
No. 61, at 231 (Dec. 15).
Note:
In Okowas essay, this
statement follows a
paragraph in which she
discusses Kaundain the
context of discretionary
diplomatic protection.
Thus, for the pertinent
of diplomatic
protection.[17]
passages
ofKaunda please see
entry 5 of this table.
...
107. ...On no view would
it be appropriate to order
the Secretary of State to
make any specific
representations to the
United States, even in the
face of what appears to
be a clear breach of a
[77] A decision as to
whether, and if so, what
protection should be
given, is an aspect of
foreign policy which is
essentially the function of
the executive. The timing
of representations if they
are to be made, the
language in which they
should be couched, and
the sanctions (if any)
which should follow if
such representations are
rejected are matters with
which courts are ill
equipped to deal.
Source:
Kaunda v. President of
the Republic of South
Africa, 44 I.L.M. 173,
pars. 65-77 (2005) (C. Ct.
S. Afr.).
TABLE D: Comparison of Mariana Salazar Albornozs article, Legal Nature and Legal
Consequences of Diplomatic Protection: Contemporary Challenges, and the Supreme Courts
Decision in Vinuya et. al. v. Executive Secretary, G.R. No. 162230, 28 April 2010.
The Allegedly
Copied Work
The Decision
[85] Mavrommatis
Palestine Concessions
case, supra note 9, p. 12.
The emphasis is ours. This
traditional view was
repeated by the PCIJ in
the Panevezys-Saldutiskis
Railway Case, the Case
Concerning the Payment
of Various Serbian Loans
issued in France,
Judgment of July 12,
1929, PCIJ Reports,
Series A No. 20; and in the
Case Concerning the
Factory at Chorzow,
Judgment of September
13, 1928, Merits, PCIJ
Reports, Series A No. 17.
The ICJ has adopted it in
the Reparation for injuries
suffered in the service of
the United Nations
Advisory Opinion: ICJ
Reports 1949, p. 174; the
Nottebohm Case (second
phase) Judgment of April
6th, 1955: ICJ Reports
1955, p. 4 at p. 24; the
Interhandel Case
(Judgment of March 21st,
1959: ICJ Reports 1959, p.
6 at p. 27) and the
3.
diplomatic protection
belongs to or vests in the
State", a statement which
"gives recognition to the
Vattelian notion that an
injury to a national is an
indirect injury to the
State";[96] (ii) they affirm
its discretionary nature by
clarifying that diplomatic
protection is a "sovereign
prerogative" of the
State;[97] and stressing
that the state "has the right
to exercise diplomatic
protection on behalf of a
national. It is under no
duty or obligation to do
so."[98]
[96] ILC First Reading
Draft Articles on
Diplomatic Protection,
supra note 13, par. 60,
Commentary to Draft
Article 2, par. (1); see also,
Commentary to Draft
Article 1, par. (3), and text
of Draft Article 2.
[97] Report of the
International Law
Commission on the work
of its 50th session, supra
note 13, par. 77.
[98] ILC First Reading
Draft Articles on
Diplomatic Protection,
supra note 2, commentary
to Draft Article 2, par. (2).
Special Rapporteur
Dugard proposed that the
ILC adopt in its Draft
Articles a provision under
which States would be
internationally obliged to
exercise diplomatic
protection in favour of their
Article 4
1. Unless the injured
person is able to bring a
claim for such injury
before a competent
international court or
tribunal, the State of
his/her nationality has a
legal duty to exercise
diplomatic protection on
behalf of the injured
person upon request, if
the injury results from a
grave breach of a jus
cogens norm attributable
to another State.
2. The State of nationality
is relieved of this
obligation if:
(a) The exercise of
diplomatic protection
would seriously endanger
the overriding interests of
the State and/or its
people;
(b) Another State
exercises diplomatic
protection on behalf of
the injured person;
(c) The injured person
does not have the
effective and dominant
nationality of the State.
3. States are obliged to
provide in their municipal
law for the enforcement
of this right before a
competent domestic court
or other independent
national authority.
Source:
Special Rapporteur on
Diplomatic Protection,
80. Constitutional
provisions in a number of
States recognize the
right of the individual to
receive diplomatic
protection for injuries
suffered abroad. These
include: Albania, Belarus,
Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Bulgaria, Cambodia,
China,
Croatia, Estonia, Georgia,
Guyana, Hungary, Italy,
Kazakhstan, Lao
Peoples
Democratic Republic,
Latvia, Lithuania, Poland,
Portugal, Republic of
Korea,
Romania, Russian
Federation, Spain, the
former Yugoslav Republic
of Macedonia, Turkey,
Ukraine, Viet Nam and
Yugoslavia.
Source:
Special Rapporteur on
Diplomatic Protection,
First Rep. on Diplomatic
Protection, Intl. Law
Commn, UN Doc.
A/CN.4/506, at 30, par.
80 (7 March 2000) (by
John R. Dugard).
to extend diplomatic
protection to a
national,[29] but
international law imposes
no such obligation. The
position was clearly
stated by the International
Court of Justice in the
Barcelona Traction case:
TABLE E: Comparison of Elizabeth Prochaskas article, Testing the Limits of Diplomatic Protection:
Khadr v. The Prime Minister of Canada,6 and the Supreme Courts Decision in Vinuya v. Executive
Secretary, G.R. No. 162230, 28 April 2010.
The Allegedly
Copied Work
The Decision
Elizabeth Prochaska,
Vinuya v. Executive
Testing the Limits of
Secretary, G.R. No.
Diplomatic Protection:
162230, 28 April 2010.
Khadr v. The Prime
Minister of Canada (2009).
International Source
Being Analyzed By
Prochaska
Note:
The Report of the
International Law
Commission on the Work
of its Fifty-Second
Session, and the Special
Rapporteurs First on
Diplomatic Protection,
which are the nearest in
location and in context to
the passage, does not
contain a discussion on
Draft Article 19. See pp.
72-85 and 27-34
respectively.
(Footnote 62 of Vinuya)
TABLE F: Comparison of Larry Nikschs Report, Japanese Militarys Comfort Women, 10 April
2006,7 and the Supreme Courts Decision in Vinuya et. al. v. Executive Secretary, G.R. No. 162230,
28 April 2010.
The Allegedly
Copied Work
The Decision
Larry Niksch,
Japanese Militarys
Comfort Women, 10
April 2006.
Vinuya v. Executive
Secretary, G.R. No.
162230, 28 April 2010.
Minister to each
woman.
(paragraph 12
of Niksch)
Department of Social
Welfare and
Development.
Welfare and
Development.
Note:
TABLE G: Comparison of James Ladinos article, Ianfu: No Comfort Yet for Korean Comfort Women
and the Impact of House Resolution 121 and the Supreme Courts Decision in Vinuya v. Executive
Secretary, G.R. No. 162230, 28 April 2010.
The Allegedly
Copied Work
1
.
The Decision
Vinuya v. Executive
Secretary, G.R. No. 162230,
28 April 2010.
japan/English/womenstribunal
200 0/whatstribunal.html (last
visited Oct. 16, 2008).
(p. 345 of Ladino)
3
.
[105] Id.
[106] Chinkin, supra note
101, at 336.
(p. 345 of Ladino)
After examining the evidence
for more than a year, the
tribunal issued its final verdict
on December 4, 2001, finding
the former Emperor Hirohito
and the State of Japan guilty
of crimes against humanity
4
.
Today, Representative
Michael M. Honda (CA 15)
introduced a bipartisan
resolution before the U.S.
House of Representatives
calling on the government of
Japan to formally and
unambiguously apologize for
and acknowledge the tragedy
that comfort women endured
at the hands of its Imperial
Army during World War II.
press/ca15_honda/
COMFORTWOMEN.html.
Source:
Press Release of
Congressman Mike Honda,
Rep. Honda Calls on Japan to
Apologize for World War II
Exploitation of "Comfort
Women," 31 Jan. 2007,
available at
http://www.house.gov/list/
press/ca15_honda/
COMFORTWOMEN.html
5
.
Source cited:
34] H.R. Res. 121, 110th
Cong. (2007) (enacted).
6
.
Legal obstacles to
compensation must be
removed
Source cited:
N& type=IMPRESS&reference=
20071210BRI14639&second
Ref= ITEM-008-EN.
20071210BRI14639&second
Ref= ITEM-008-EN.
20071210BRI14639&secondR
ef= ITEM-008-EN
[132] Id.
[133] Id.
(p. 360 of Ladino)
7
.
http://taiwan.yam.org.tw/
womenweb/conf_women/
index_e.html. (last visited
Mar. 26, 2009).
http:// taiwan.yam.org.tw/
womenweb/conf_women/
index_e.html.
Note:
On the issue of comfort
women, the website only
refers to the attitude and
reaction of the following
governments: Taiwan, South
Korea, North Korea,
Philippines, China, Indonesia,
Malaysia, and Japan.
Source cited:
http://taiwan.yam.org.tw/wome
nwe
b/conf_women/index_e.html
the example to illustrate it, which were discussed in the corresponding footnote, are not
the ponentes own. No attribution to Criddle and Fox-Decent was made.
A.2 Similar to A.1, Criddle and Fox-Decents conclusion was copied word for word, including the
corresponding footnote, which was enclosed by parentheses and placed immediately after the
sentence to which it corresponds. No attribution to Criddle and Fox-Decent was made.
A.3 Similar to A.1 and A.2, this sentence from the article was copied verbatim, including its
corresponding footnote. No attribution to Criddle and Fox-Decent was made.
B.1 Save for a few words which were intentionally rearranged, the entire paragraph was lifted
verbatim from Elliss discussion on rape as an international crime. Two citations of cases from Ellis
were omitted. No attribution to Ellis was made.
B.2 Elliss identification of Article 3 of the 1949 Geneva Conventions as a general authority on rape
as a violation of the laws of war, and his summation thereof, was lifted word for word. His footnote
was also copied, including the intratext reference "supra note 23," enclosed in parentheses and
inserted after the corresponding text. No attribution to Ellis was made.
B.3 Elliss summary and analysis of Article 27 of the Fourth Geneva Convention was lifted word for
word. No attribution to Ellis was made.
B.4 Elliss conclusion regarding Protocol I of the Geneva Convention was appropriated, without any
attribution to Ellis. Elliss footnote was again copied. No attribution to Ellis was made.
C.1 McCorquodales analysis of individual claims within the international legal system was copied
word for word and inserted after the introductory clause "In the international sphere" in Vinuya. The
footnote McCorquodale appended to his analysis of individual claims (i.e. the sentences copied in
C.1.) is not present. No attribution to McCorquodale was made.
C.2 This item refers to the footnote attached to the copied sentence in C.1. It is composed of two
instances of copying stitched together: two sentences of McCorquodale, taken from the paragraph
directly preceding his analysis of individual claims in the international legal system, and the footnote
corresponding to the PCIJ Decision quoted in the second of the said two sentences. No attribution to
McCorquodale was made.
C.3 The conclusion Okowa reached was copied in footnote 63 of Vinuya, but Okowas reference to
the cases she cited in her analysis was omitted and the context of her conclusion (on the current
standing of general international law with regard an enforceable legal duty of diplomatic protection)
was removed. No attribution to Okowa was made.
C.4 McCorquodales discussion of the case Abassi v. Secretary of State was copied without any
citation of his essay or the international law book in which it was published. No attribution to
McCorquodale was made.
C.5 The order of sentences were reversed, but the conclusion in Okowas essay was copied, and as
well as her discussion of the case Kaunda v. President of the Republic of South Africa. No attribution
to Okowa was made.
D.1 Albornozs summary and analysis was copied word for word in the body of the Decision on page
24. No indication was given that this was not the ponentes original analysis, and no attribution to
Albornoz was made.
D.2 The elucidation of Albornoz regarding what she calls the traditional view on the discretion of
states in the exercise of diplomatic protection was copied into footnote 57 of the Vinuya Decision.
Albornozs citation of Borchard was used as a reference in the same footnote, but Albornoz was
bypassed completely.
D.3 Albornozs summation of the ILCs First Reading Draft Articles on diplomatic protection was
copied with some modifications: the second half of the first sentence from Albornoz was removed
and instead replaced with "fully support this traditional view" in an apparent effort to link this
summary to the previous instance of copying (table entry D.2.). Minor edits were made to Albornozs
summary to streamline the flow of the second copied sentence. No attribution to Albornoz was
made.
D.4 Albornozs summation of Dugards proposal was lifted word for word and used in footnote 62
ofVinuya. The footnote Albornoz attached to this summation, a quotation of Albornozs cited source,
was inserted directly after the copied summation. No attribution to Albornoz was made.
D.5 The conclusion reached by Albornoz regarding the rejection of Dugards proposal was copied
exactly, even with regard to the portions of the Official Records of the General Assembly that
Albornoz quoted. No attribution to Albornoz was made.
D.6 The major part of a sentence from Albornoz was copied and attached to the transition phrase "In
addition" to continue the pastiche of copied sentences in footnote 62 of Vinuya. The footnote of
Albornoz regarding Dugard was inserted immediately after and enclosed in parentheses. Note that
the inline text citation, "supra note 13, par. 80" in Albornozs footnote 130 was copied as well. No
attribution to Albornoz was made.
D.7 Continuing from the instance of copying in D.6., the second half of a sentence in Albornoz was
used as what is apparently an incomplete sentence (beginning with: ", but their enforceability...") in
footnote 62 of Vinuya. The next sentence was also copied, and its corresponding footnote enclosed
in parentheses and inserted immediately after it. While the Decision cites one of the same sources
Albornoz cited (ILC First Reading Draft Articles on Diplomatic Protection), no attribution is made to
Albornoz for the excerpt, or to Dugard, whom Albornoz cited for the quoted portion.
E.1 An excerpt from the third paragraph of Prochaska is reproduced verbatim in footnote 62 of page
26 of the Decision. There were no quotation marks or attribution to Prochaska to indicate that such
was not theponentes analysis, but Prochaskas.
F.1 A sentence from paragraph 11 of Niksch was reproduced verbatim without quotation marks in
page 17 of the body of the Decision. No attribution to Niksch was made.
F.2 An excerpt from paragraph 12 of Niksch was reproduced verbatim without quotation marks in
page 17 of the body of the Decision. No attribution to Niksch was made.
F.3 An excerpt from paragraph 19 of Niksch was reproduced verbatim without quotation marks in
page 17 of the body of the Decision. No attribution to Niksch was made.
G.1 An excerpt from page 344 of Ladino was reproduced without quotation marks in pages 9 to 10 of
the body of the Decision. The phrase "women who had filed" was changed to "comfort women."
G.2 An excerpt from page 345 of Ladino was reproduced without quotation marks in page 12 of the
body of the Decision. The two sentences in the footnote from Ladino were combined, but the words
were reproduced verbatim.
G.3 An excerpt from page 345 of Ladino is reproduced verbatim in page 12 of the body of the
Decision. Part of Ladinos discussion was reproduced verbatim in footnote 32 of the Vinuya
Decision, with no attribution to Ladino.
G.4 The first part of the paragraph in page 345 of Ladino was reproduced verbatim. However, the
latter part of Ladinos explanation, (stating that while the judgment against Japan was not legally
binding, it still "cast Japan in the shadow of moral reproach") was omitted. There was no attribution
to Ladino.
G.5 An excerpt from page 346 of Ladino, along with two footnotes, was reproduced verbatim in page
12 of the Decision. No attribution to Ladino was made.
G.6 Ladinos discussion in page 350 and the corresponding footnotes were reproduced verbatim in
page 13 of the Decision. No attribution to Ladino was made.
B. The Process of the Commission of Plagiarism in the Vinuya Decision
A careful reading of the Vinuya Decision reveals that it is unlike other decisions issued by this Court,
except perhaps for the case of Ang Ladlad LGBT Party v. Commission on Elections, which Justice
del Castillo likewise penned. The footnotes in Vinuya read like those found in theses of international
law scholars, where one discursive footnote can be so extensive as to occupy three-fourths of a
page (see footnotes 62, 63, and 65). An honest researcher for a Philippine judge, after painstakingly
developing a perspective on an international legal issue by reading the works of scholars who have
documented the debate, would deliberately refer to the works of such scholars, and not transform
their works into his own.
Justice del Castillos researcher not only contends that accidental deletion is the sole reason for the
missing footnotes, but also that their office subsequently went over the Decision "sentence by
sentence" and concluded that no plagiarism was committed at all. However, the rearrangement of
the sentences lifted from the original work, the mimicking of the original works use of footnotes, the
subsequent back and forth copying and pasting of such footnotes these acts belie mere
negligence. The following analysis shows objective plagiarism viewed through three lenses:extent,
deliberateness, and effect.
The massiveness and frequency with which instances of unattributed copying occur in Vinuya
highlight the extent of the plagiarism. Clever transpositions of excerpts to make them flow according
to the researchers transition phrases are clearly devices of a practiced plagiarist, which betray the
deliberateness of every single act. The plagiarism inVinuya will also be scrutinized on the basis of
its effect, especially in light of its commission in a judicial decision. The rationale for such a thematic
presentation will then be discussed in a succeeding section, which deals with evaluating plagiarism.
1. The extent of unattributed copying belies inadvertence.
In the tables outlined above, as well as in the analysis in my Dissent dated 12 October 2010, it can
be seen that the researcher of Justice del Castillo failed to make the necessary attribution twentythree (23) times in the body of theVinuya Decision; the works whose texts were used without
attribution include several copyrighted journal articles, essays from a book on international law, and
one congressional report of the United States. There were thirty-six (36) missing citations in the
footnotes, including twelve (12) citations missing from footnote 65 alone. This adds up to a total of
fifty-nine (59) missing citations. The sheer number of missing citations is related to the length and
volume of the footnotes and discussions, some of which Justice del Castillo himself admitted to be
unnecessary.
The quantity of text copied without attribution is most concentrated in pages 12 to 13, which deal
with actions taken in the pursuit of justice for the comfort women, and in pages 24 to 32, which
appear under the section heading The Philippines is not under any international obligation to
espouse petitioners claims. In the latter section, the discussion and analysis appearing on pages
24 (insofar as the section after the start of the international law discussion is concerned), 28 and 31
in particular would be significantly impaired were the unattributed portions of texts to be removed:
there would be no words left in the instance of page 24; the entirety of the discursive footnote on
page 28 would be reduced to one sentence and its attendant citations; three sentence fragments,
and no footnotes, would remain on page 31.
In pages 24 to 32, out of a total of thirteen (13) discursive footnotes, eleven (11) of these are
comprised wholly of material copied without attribution, and yet another one footnote 69 contains
text that was copied without attribution as well. The writer of the Vinuya Decision displayed
meticulous attention to detail in reproducing the citations to international judicial decisions,
publications, and other such references in these footnotes citations that originally appeared in the
copied works but completely bypassed the copied works themselves, thereby appropriating the
analysis, processing, and synthesizing of information, as well as the words, of the writers whose
works were copied.
On its face, the sheer volume of portions copied, added to the frequency with which citations to the
plagiarized works were omitted while care was taken to retain citations to the sources cited by the
plagiarized works, reveal that the plagiarism committed cannot logically be anything other than
deliberate.
2. Systematic commission of plagiarism demonstrates deliberateness.
In pages twelve (12) to thirteen (13) of Vinuya, sentences from the body of Ladinos article were
interspersed with Ladinos footnotes, without a single attribution to Ladino (please refer to Table G).
Sentences from Ladinos article were copied into footnote 32 of Vinuya, while the immediately
succeeding sentence was again copied to form part of the body of Vinuya. The cutting of sentences
from Ladinos work and the patching together of these pieces to form a mishmash of sentences
negate the defense of inadvertence, and give the reader the impression that the freshly crafted
argument was an original creation.
The work of Criddle and Fox-Decent was subjected to a similar process. This process is dissected in
the following list of instances ordered according to how they appear in pages 31 to 32 of the body of
the Decision:
a. Detailed analysis of patchwork plagiarism in the body of Vinuya, pp. 31-32:
1. Page 31, par. 2: Early strains of the jus cogens doctrine have existed since the 1700s,[71] but
peremptory norms began to attract greater scholarly attention with the publication of Alfred von
Verdross's influential 1937 article, Forbidden Treaties in International Law.[72]
[72] Verdross argued that certain discrete rules of international custom had come to be recognized
as having a compulsory character notwithstanding contrary state agreements. At first, Verdross's
vision of international jus cogensencountered skepticism within the legal academy. These voices of
resistance soon found themselves in the minority, however, as the jus cogens concept gained
enhanced recognition and credibility following the Second World War. (See Lauri Hannikainen,
Peremptory Norms (Jus cogens) in International Law: Historical Development, Criteria, Present
Status 150 (1988) (surveying legal scholarship during the period 1945-69 and reporting that "about
eighty per cent [of scholars] held the opinion that there are peremptory norms existing in
international law").
This sentence, together with footnote 72 in Vinuya, is part of one continuous discussion by Criddle
and Fox Decent, and copied verbatim. The two authors rightfully attributed the historical data to Lauri
Hannikainen, but the conclusion on established jus cogens principles is wholly their own.
2. Page 31, par. 2: The recognition of jus cogens gained even more force in the 1950s and 1960s
with the ILCs preparation of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (VCLT).[73] Though
there was a consensus that certain international norms had attained the status of jus cogens[74]
The first sentence and its subsequent clause are lifted verbatim from the article. Footnotes 73 and
74 are Criddle and Fox-Decents analysis of how international "minimum requirements" form
evidence of jus cogens. The paragraph was broken down, then rearranged in Vinuya.
3. Page 31, par. 2: Though there was a consensus that certain international norms had attained the
status of jus cogens,[74] the ILC was unable to reach a consensus on the proper criteria for
identifying peremptory norms.
Aside from copying the first clause in the sentence, which forms part of the premise, the conclusion
of Criddle and Fox-Decent was likewise copied.
4. Page 32, par. 1: After an extended debate over these and other theories of jus cogens, the ILC
concluded ruefully in 1963 that "there is not as yet any generally accepted criterion by which to
identify a general rule of international law as having the character of jus cogens."[75]
After copying the sentence and footnote in No. 4 above, three sentences were omitted from the
article, then this sentence in No. 5 was also copied. In the body of the work, the two sentences
immediately following this statement pertaining to the conclusion of the International Law
Commission were again omitted.
5. Page 32, par. 1: In a commentary accompanying the draft convention, the ILC indicated that "the
prudent course seems to be to x x x leave the full content of this rule to be worked out in State
practice and in the jurisprudence of international tribunals."[76]
This sentence was conjoined with the sentence above; footnotes 75 and 76 were also copied. The
net effect is that this paragraph was spliced together, sentence by sentence, from Criddle and FoxDecents work.
A similar method of splicing was used extensively in the footnotes of the Decision as well. It is most
evident in footnote 65, the longest discursive footnote in Vinuya. This portion copied heavily from the
article of Dr. Mark Ellis entitled "Breaking the Silence: Rape as an International Crime." To illustrate,
the first paragraph of footnote 65 is broken down and scrutinized by sentence, following the original
sequence in the Decision.
b. Detailed analysis of patchwork plagiarism in paragraph 1, footnote 65 of Vinuya:
1. Sentences 1 and 2: The concept of rape as an international crime is relatively new. This is not to
say that rape has never been historically prohibited, particularly in war.
These are the opening sentences from the second paragraph on page 227 of the journal article. Ellis
cites the treaty between the United States and Prussia as his own example, in a footnote. In Vinuya,
this particular citation is copied, enclosed in parentheses, and became the sixth and seventh
sentences of footnote 65.
2. Sentence 3: But modern-day sensitivity to the crime of rape did not emerge until after World War
II.
This is the sixth sentence in the same paragraph in Ellis article as discussed above. It is transposed
verbatim, and became the second sentence in Vinuya.
3. Sentences 4 and 5: In the Nuremberg Charter, the word rape was not mentioned. The article on
crimes against humanity explicitly set forth prohibited acts, but rape was not mentioned by name.
The clauses "After World War II, when the Allies established the Nuremberg Charter" was deleted.
This particular sentence is Ellis own conclusion regarding the "Agreement for the Prosecution and
Punishment of the Major War Criminals of the European Axis," but there was no attribution to Ellis,
only a citation of the agreement, along with Elliss other footnotes, at the end of the paragraph.
4. Sentences 6 and 7: (For example, the Treaty of Amity and Commerce between Prussia and the
United States provides that in time of war all women and children "shall not be molested in their
persons." The Treaty of Amity and Commerce, Between his Majesty the King of Prussia and the
United States of America, art. 23, Sept. 10, 1785, U.S.-Pruss., 8 Treaties & Other Int'l Agreements
Of The U.S. 78, 85.
This is the citation originally corresponding to the first and second sentences on page 227 of Elliss
article. This portion was copied in Vinuya, this time placed at the end of the paragraph and enclosed
in parentheses.
5. Sentence 8: The 1863 Lieber Instructions classified rape as a crime of "troop discipline."
Originally the second sentence in Elliss paragraph, this was transposed to the eighth. Its
corresponding footnote in Ellis was lifted verbatim, enclosed in parentheses, then inserted into the
paragraph in Vinuya, as the ninth sentence: "(Mitchell, The Prohibition of Rape in International
Humanitarian Law as a Norm of Jus cogens: Clarifying the Doctrine, 15 Duke J. Comp. Intl. L. 219,
224)."
6. Sentence 10: It specified rape as a capital crime punishable by the death penalty.
Originally the fourth sentence in Ellis article, this was transposed, and its corresponding footnote
was copied: "(Id. at 236)."
7. Sentence 11: The 1907 Hague Convention protected women by requiring the protection of their
"honour."
The sentence was copied, and its corresponding footnote was lifted verbatim, enclosed in
parentheses, and placed at the end of the paragraph. Elliss attribution to the Yale Law website
where the pertinent law may be found was omitted, leaving only the following: ("Family honour and
rights, the lives of persons, and private property, as well as religious convictions and practice, must
be respected." Convention (IV) Respecting the Laws & Customs of War on Land, art. 46, Oct. 18,
1907. General Assembly resolution 95 (I) of December 11, 1946 entitled, "Affirmation of the
Principles of International Law recognized by the Charter of the Nrnberg Tribunal"; General
Assembly document A/64/Add.1 of 1946".
8. Sentence 13: See Agreement for the Prosecution and Punishment of the Major War Criminals of
the European Axis, Aug. 8, 1945, 59 Stat. 1544, 82 U.N.T.S. 279.
This is originally Elliss citation, used to support his observation that there was no express mention of
"rape" in the Nuremberg Charter. It was enclosed in parentheses and relegated to the end of the
paragraph in Vinuya.
9. Sentence 14: Article 6(c) of the Charter established crimes against humanity as the following:
CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY: namely, murder, extermination, enslavement, deportation, and
other inhumane acts committed against any civilian population, before or during the war, or
persecutions on political, racial or religious grounds in execution of or in connection with any crime
within the Jurisdiction of the Tribunal, whether or not in violation of the domestic law of the country
where perpetrated.
This was lifted from page 227 of Elliss work. Pages 227 to 228 of the said work, pertaining to the
discussion on rape were substantially copied. Insertions were made for Elliss own footnotes.
The conscious thought required for the act of cutting and pasting the original authors footnotes onto
the precise spot where the copied sentences ended contradicts the account of inadvertence. There
is consistent correspondence between the sentences copied to the footnote copied. In the example
above, the act of encapsulating Ellis footnotes in parentheses show further that in Vinuya there was
a conscious appropriation of Elliss sources in a usage that is substantially similar to what appears in
his article. This allegedly inadvertent copying of Elliss footnotes occurred no less than twelve (12)
times in footnote 65 alone.
3. Research steps purportedly followed in the drafting of Vinuya cast doubt on inadvertence.
The following is a recreation of the step-by-step research procedure followed by many offices in the
research and crafting of judicial decisions. It is based on the account given by the researcher of
the Vinuya Decision of her own experiences while working on the case. This detailed breakdown is
made in order to show the exact number of actions which must be made in order to input a citation, if
indeed it was intentionally inputted. A recreation of the steps necessary to delete a citation is also
made to show that the aggregate number of actions needed to erase each and every citation
missing in Vinuya is so high that the underlying cause could not have been mere inadvertence.
Step 1:
a. First, using an internet-based search engine, which could be a free search service like
Googles, or a paid service like Westlaws, the researcher would have typed in key phrases
like "erga omnes," "sexual slavery," or other such terms relevant to the subject matter.
b. For some researchers, this is just a preliminary step, as they would then pick and choose
which articles to read and which to discard. The researcher in Vinuya, however, claimed that
she purposely read all the materials available through this search.8
Step 2:
a. The search engine would have generated a list of documents containing the search terms
and topics relevant to the subject matter. The search engine would also have linked the
items on this list to the corresponding online locations where these documents may be
accessed.
b. In Vinuya, the researcher used the Westlaw legal research service (which is made
available to offices of all the Justices), and perused the generated list.9 A possible item on
this list would be the article entitled "Breaking the Silence: Rape as an International Crime,"
by one of the complaining authors, Dr. Mark Ellis.
Step 3:
The researcher would read articles from the generated list and identify the portions she planned to
incorporate into the draft. For this example, she would have scrolled through the work of Mark Ellis
and found the selection she wanted. The level of scrutiny invested into each of the chosen articles
would vary; some researchers make cursory readings and incorporate as many portions from
different works and authors as they can.
Step 4:
a. The researcher can either save the articles in their entirety, or save the selections in one
document. The researcher in Vinuya claimed that she did the latter and used the Microsoft
Word program for this purpose.
b. If the researcher chose to save only pertinent selections, then ideally the attributions
would have to be made at his point.
Now, this step is critical. I know of no software in the world, especially not Microsoft Word, that will
generate the citation to the work of Ellis on its own, without the appropriate action of the user. An
honest researcher would immediately copy and paste the citation references of Ellis into the copied
portions, or type a reference or label in, even if it were only a short form placeholder of the proper
citation. If she did neither, she may be sloppy, incompetent or downright dishonest.
During the deliberations of the Ethics Committee, the researcher explained this crucial step: "So I
would cut and paste relevant portions, at least portions which I find relevant into what turns out to be
a large manuscript which I can then whittle and edit and edit further."10 Adhering to this account,
there would be an additional step in the process:
Step 5
If an existing draft or "manuscript" has already been created, the next step would be to incorporate
the selections from the articles into the draft. This is a second opportunity to ensure that the proper
attributions are made. If the researcher is diligent, she would already have tried to follow the correct
form as prescribed by the Manual of Judicial Writing.11
If a "manuscript" or outline has already been formulated, then incorporating the selections would
require her to be conscious that these ideas and arguments are not her own. The process ideally
alerts any researcher that extraneous sources are being added. It allows her to make the following
considerations: Does this portion sufficiently discuss the historical context of a particular conclusion?
Do I need this literature as support for my arguments? Am I including it to support my arguments, or
merely to mimic the authors? Corollarily, the researcher would initially assess if such argument
made by the author is adequately supported as well. She would check the authors footnotes.
In Vinuya, the copying of the footnotes was so extensive, such that it practically used the uncited
works as blueprint for the Decisions footnotes.
4. The frequency of instances of missing citations and actions required for deletion betray
deliberateness.
To purposefully input citations would require many key strokes and movements of the computers
"mouse." If the attributions had indeed been made already, then the deletions of such attributions
would not simply happen without a specific sequence of key strokes and mouse movements. The
researcher testified that the necessary attributions were made in the earlier drafts, but that in the
process of cutting and pasting the various paragraphs, they were accidentally dropped. She makes it
sound as if something like a long reference citation can just easily fall by the wayside. Not so.
The reference required under the Manual of Judicial Writing for the work of Ellis reads like this:
"Mark Ellis, Breaking the Silence: Rape as an International Crime, 38 Case W. Res. J. Int'l L. 225
(2006-2007)."
The researcher in Vinuya explained that footnotes were deleted along with headings of certain
portions, and with the deletion of the note reference mark in the body of the text, the citations in the
documents footers disappeared also. For this scenario to happen with the same frequency as the
number of missing citations, the following steps must have been followed:
1. First movement: Using hand and eye coordination, consciously move cursor to the
location of target footnote and/or heading, using either the mouse or arrow keys.
2. Second movement: Select the "note reference mark" by highlighting the target footnote
number. Note that unlike in normal characters or texts wherein a single press of the "delete"
or "backspace" button would suffice, a footnote number must be highlighted before it can be
deleted. This means that either the particular footnote and/or heading must have been
"double-clicked" or it must have been specifically highlighted by a precise horizontal motion
of the cursor while pressing on a mouse button both of which require two movements
(either two "clicks", or a "click" and a "swipe").
3. Third movement: Press "delete" or "backspace" key.
Note that in the case wherein the note reference mark was not highlighted by a mouse movement,
the "delete" or "backspace" key must have been pressed twice, as pressing it only once will merely
highlight the note reference mark without deleting the same.
Hence, even accommodating the explanation given by the researcher, at least four movements must
have been accomplished to delete one footnote or reference. Multiply this with the number of
references that were "dropped" or "missing," and you have a situation wherein the researcher
accomplished no less than two hundred thirty-six (236) deliberate steps to be able to drop the fiftynine (59) citations that are missing in Vinuya. If by some chance the cursor happened to be at the
precise location of the citations, and the citations were subsequently deleted by an accidental click of
the mouse, this would still have necessitated a total of one hundred seventy seven (177) clicks. It is
understandable if a researcher accidentally deleted one, two or even five footnotes. That a total of
59 footnotes were erased by mere accident is inconceivable.
To make a conservative estimate, we can deduct the number of times that a footnote number in the
body of the Decision could simply have been deleted inadvertently. Our analysis indicates that this
could have happened a third of the time, or an estimate of twenty times, when short footnotes
containing "supra" or "id." could have been easily forgotten or omitted. This would still have yielded
sixty deliberate steps or movements, and would alert the researcher either that: 1) too much of the
body comprises ideas which are not his own, or 2) too many of the sources in his "main manuscript"
were getting lost. Subsequently, if more than half of the attributions in the International Law
discussion went missing, the simple recourse would have been either to review his or her first draft,
or simply delete his lengthy discursive footnotes precisely because he cannot remember which
articles he might have lifted them from.
On Microsoft Word features that alert the user to discrepancies in footnote deletions
The researcher took pains to deliberately cut and paste the original sources of the author, thereby
making it appear that she was the one who collated and processed this material. What she should
have done was simply to cite the author from whom she took the analysis and summarization of the
said sources in the first place. The latter would have been the simple, straightforward, not to mention
honest path. Instead, the effect is that the Vinuya Decision also appropriated the authors analysis.
Actually, it would have been easier to cite the authors copied work considering the availability of
short citation forms commonly used as reference tools in legal articles such as "supra" or "id."
Microsoft Word may not have an automatic alarm each time a footnote or citation is deleted, but it
does contain built-in features to help raise "red flags" to signal that a particular passage was copied,
or is attached to a particular citation if indeed such citation exists. For example, the researcher in
Vinuya, in describing her own process of drafting the Decision, stated that portions containing
footnotes from the first Vinuya draft were lifted and transformed into the contents of a separate
footnote. In short, during revisions of the draft, substantial footnoted portions which used to be in the
body were relegated to footnotes. This does not result, however, in the automatic erasure of the
original footnotes within the new footnote. A simple recreation of this process reveals that this
"footnote within a footnote" retains a number symbol in superscript, albeit one altered due to the
redundancy in the functionality of "footnotes within footnotes." Any reasonably prudent researcher
would thus be alerted to the fact that something was amiss with the citations in that particular
selection because the footnote would have abnormal numeric superscripts. This glaring abnormality
in itself is a warning.
Another notable feature is that when a cursor, as seen on the screen in an open document, is placed
over a footnote reference mark, Microsoft Word automatically supplies that footnotes citation in a
popup text box. The popup box hovers over the numerical superscript, unmistakably indicating the
source.12 In addition, no single action can cause a footnote to be deleted; once the cursor is beside
it, either the "delete" or "backspace" key must be pressed twice, or it must be deliberately highlighted
and then erased with a stroke of either the "delete" or the "backspace" key. This functionality of
footnote deletion in Microsoft Word thus decreases the likelihood of footnotes being deleted without
the knowledge or intention of the researcher.
As to the claim of the researcher that the footnotes in the headings were accidentally deleted, there
was a failure on the part of the Ethics Committee to thoroughly investigate the matter when they
relied on a presentation of what, according to the researcher, happened during her research for and
drafting of the Vinuya Decision. Instead of asking her to re-create the various situations of
"inadvertent dropping," the Ethics Committee satisfied itself with a "before" and "after" Microsoft
PowerPoint presentation which could not, by any stretch of the imagination, have recreated the
whole process of researching and drafting that happened in Vinuya unless every step were to be
frozen through screenshots using the "Print Screen" command in tandem with a common image
management program. To simply present the "before" and "after" scenario through PowerPoint has
no bearing on the reality of what happened. Had the Ethics Committee required that the presentation
made before them be through recreation of the drafting process using Microsoft Word alone, without
"priming the audience" through a "before" and "after" PowerPoint presentation, they would have
seen the footnotes themselves behaving strangely, alerting the researcher that something was
seriously wrong. The Committee would then have found incredible the claim that the accidental
deletion of a footnote mark attached to a heading and the subsequent transposition of text under
that heading to another footnote could have occurred without the researcher being reminded that
the text itself came from another source. Proof of deliberate action is found in the Vinuya Decision
itself the care with which the researcher included citations of the sources to which the authors of
the copied works referred, while conveniently neglecting attribution to the copied works themselves.
It is therefore impossible to conclude that such gross plagiarism, consisting of failure to attribute to
nine (9) copyrighted works, could have been the result of anything other than failure to observe the
requirements of the standard of conduct demanded of a legal researcher. There is also no basis to
conclude that there was no failure on the part of Justice del Castillo to meet the standard of
supervision over his law clerk required of incumbent judges.
III. On Evaluating Plagiarism
A. Posners Standards for Evaluating the Characterization of Incidents of Plagiarism
To be generous to my colleagues in this part of my analysis, I have referred to one of the scholars
who hold the most liberal views on plagiarism, Judge Richard A. Posner. The three guideposts by
which I structured my technical analysis of the instances of plagiarism in the Vinuya Decision come
from his breakdown of certain key issues in his work, The Little Book of Plagiarism. In his "cooks
tour" of the key issues surrounding plagiarism, wherein he is more liberal than most academics in
speaking of the sanctions the act may merit he is against the criminalization of plagiarism, for
instance, and believes it an act more suited to informal sanctions13 Judge Posner characterizes
plagiarism thus:
Plagiarism is a species of intellectual fraud. It consists of unauthorized copying that the copier claims
(whether explicitly or implicitly, and whether deliberately or carelessly) is original with him and the
claim causes the copier's audience to behave otherwise than it would if it knew the truth. This
change in behavior, as when it takes the form of readers' buying the copier's book under the
misapprehension that it is original, can harm both the person who is copied and the competitors of
the copier. But there can be plagiarism without publication, as in the case of student plagiarism. The
fraud is directed in the first instance at the teacher (assuming that the student bought rather than
stole the paper that he copied). But its principal victims are the plagiarist's student competitors, who
are analogous to authors who compete with a plagiarist.14
Posner then goes on to neatly sum up, in the form of three "keys," major considerations that need to
be taken into account when evaluating an occurrence of plagiarism. His books last paragraph reads:
In the course of my cooks tour of the principal issues that have to be addressed in order to form a
thoughtful response to plagiarism in modern America, I have challenged its definition as "literary
theft" and in its place emphasized reliance, detectability, and the extent of the market for
expressive works as keys to defining plagiarism and calibrating the different types of
plagiarism by their gravity. I have emphasized the variety of plagiarisms, argued for the adequacy
of the existing, informal sanctions, pointed out that the "fair use" doctrine of copyright law should not
protect a plagiarist, noted the analogy between plagiarism and trademark infringement (a clue to the
entwinement of the modern concept of plagiarism with market values)and warned would-be
plagiarists that the continuing advance of digitization may soon trip them up. (Emphasis supplied.)
It is in this spirit that the three questions of extent, an analogue of reliance, as extensive plagiarism
correlates to the reliance of the text on the copied work; deliberateness; and effect, an analogue of
what Posner called "extent of the market for expressive works", used here in the context of the effect
of plagiarism in the Vinuya Decision were put to the text being scrutinized. The first two questions
have been discussed in preceding sections. To examine the effect, one must first make the
distinction between the effect of copying a copyrighted work without attribution, and between the
effect of copying without attribution a work in the public domain. Using these three guideposts, we
can them come to a conclusion whether the plagiarism is relatively harmless and light or something
severe and harmful. In the case of the Vinuya Decision, we have come to conclude that the
plagiarism is severe; and because judicial decisions are valuable to the Philippine legal system, that
the plagiarism harms this institution as well.
1. The distinction between the effect of appropriating copyrighted works and works in the
public domain
The infringement of copyright necessitates a framework for characterizing the expression of ideas as
property. It thus turns on a question of whether there exists resultant harm in a form which is
economically quantifiable. Plagiarism, on the other hand, covers a much wider range of acts. In
defining copyright infringement, Laurie Stearns points out how it is an offense independent from
plagiarism, so that an action for violation of copyright which may take on either a criminal and a
civil aspect, or even both does not sufficiently remedy the broader injury inherent in plagiarism.
Plagiarism is not necessarily copyright infringement, nor is copyright infringement necessarily
plagiarismIn some ways the concept of plagiarism is broader than infringement, in that it can
include the copying of ideas, or of expression not protected by copyright, that would not constitute
infringement, and it can include the copying of small amounts of material that copyright law would
disregard.15
Plagiarism, with its lack of attribution, severs the connection between the original author's name and
the work. A plagiarist, by falsely claiming authorship of someone else's material, directly assaults the
author's interest in receiving credit. In contrast, attribution is largely irrelevant to a claim of copyright
infringementinfringement can occur even when a work is properly attributed if the copying is not
authorizedfor example, a pirated edition of a book produced by someone who does not own the
publication rights.16
The recognition of plagiarism as an offense that can stand independently of copyright infringement
allows a recognition that acts of plagiarism are subject to reproof irrespective of whether the work is
copyrighted or not. In any case, the scenario presented before the Court is an administrative matter
and deals with plagiarism, not infringement of copyright.
The intentional representation of another persons words, thoughts, or ideas as ones own without
giving attribution is plagiarism. "Judicial plagiarism" is the copying of words or ideas first written
down by another judge, advocate, legal writer or commentator without giving credit to the originator
of that work. It can include such things as a judges copying of anothers judges opinion, the
adoption verbatim of an advocates findings of fact and conclusions of law, the wholesale adoption of
an advocates brief, or the copying of a portion of a law review article and representing it as the
judges own thoughts. The lack of attribution makes this activity "judicial plagiarism," but without legal
sanctions.17
Indeed, my previous Dissent stated that inasmuch as sanctions for judicial plagiarism are concerned,
"there is no strictly prevailing consensus regarding the need or obligation to impose sanctions on
judges who have committed judicial plagiarism." Yet the absence of a definite answer to the question
of liability does not grant judges carte blanche to use the work of others without attribution, willy-nilly,
in their judicial opinions. As George puts it, "the judge is ethically bound to give proper credit to law
review articles, novel thoughts published in legal periodicals, newly handed down decisions, or even
a persuasive case from another jurisdiction."18 Plainly, George is of the opinion that though a judge
may not be held liable for an act of judicial plagiarism, he should still attribute.
A note about "intentional representation." A careful reading of Georges writing on judicial plagiarism
will make it clear that she does not consider "inadvertent" or "unintentional"
plagiarism not plagiarism; indeed, she makes the distinction between "intentional" and
"unintentional" plagiarism several times, treating both as types of plagiarism:
Using anothers language verbatim without using quotation marks or a block quote is intentional, as
opposed to unintentional, plagiarism.19
...
The lack of proper attribution may be unintentional and due to sloppy note taking, either by the law
clerk or the judge.20
...
Judicial plagiarism may also arise from the use of law clerks performing research and writing of draft
decisions and who may not accurately reflect the source. The plagiarized material may be included
within the draft resulting from the law clerks poor research skills.21
...
The commission of unintended judicial plagiarism is unethical, but it is not sanctionable.22
The intentional representation of which George speaks, then, may be considered as the intent to
represent a work as ones own already embodied in claiming a work by, for instance, affixing ones
name or byline to it in which case the inadvertence, or lack thereof, by which an act of plagiarism
was committed is irrelevant to a finding of plagiarism.
While George is perhaps not as exacting in her valuation of the penalties for plagiarism as others
may be, she still emphasizes that her view on the exemption of judicial plagiarism from sanctions
among which she evidently counts social stigma, censure, and ostracism does not negate the
judges ethical obligation to attribute. She writes:
In conclusion, this author believes that a judicial writer cannot commit legal plagiarism because the
purpose of his writing is not to create a literary work but to dispose of a dispute between parties.
Even so, a judge is ethically bound to give proper credit to law review articles, novel thoughts
published in legal periodicals, newly handed down decisions, or even a persuasive case from
another jurisdiction. While the judge may unwittingly use the language of a source without attribution,
it is not proper even though he may be relieved of the stigma of plagiarism.23
As I wrote in my previous Dissent:
In so fulfilling her obligations, it may become imperative for the judge to use "the legal reasoning and
language [of others e.g. a supervising court or a law review article] for resolution of the dispute."
Although these obligations of the judicial writer must be acknowledged, care should be taken to
consider that said obligations do not negate the need for attribution so as to avoid the commission of
judicial plagiarism. Nor do said obligations diminish the fact that judicial plagiarism "detracts directly
from the legitimacy of the judge's ruling and indirectly from the judiciary's legitimacy" or that it falls far
short of the high ethical standards to which judges must adhere.24
It must not be forgotten, however, that Georges view tends toward the very liberal. There are other
writings, and actual instances of the imposition of sanctions, that reveal a more exacting view of the
penalties merited by judicial plagiarism.25
B. On the Countercharges Made by Justice Abad
In his Concurring Opinion in A.M. No. 10-7-17-SC, Justice Abad alleged that I myself have "lifted
from works of others without proper attribution," having written "them as an academician bound by
the high standards" that I espouse.
Regarding this allegation, let us recall my Dissent promulgated on 12 October 2010. I stated:
Plagiarism thus does not consist solely of using the work of others in ones own work, but of the
former in conjunction with the failure to attribute said work to its rightful owner and thereby, as in the
case of written work, misrepresenting the work of another as ones own. As the work is anothers
and used without attribution, the plagiarist derives the benefit of use form the plagiarized work
without expending the requisite effort for the same at a cost (as in the concept of "opportunity
cost") to its author who could otherwise have gained credit for the work and whatever compensation
for its use is deemed appropriate and necessary.26
Allow me to analyze the allegations of Justice Robert C. Abad point by point using the same
standard I propounded in my 12 October 2010 Dissent.
1. The alleged non-attribution to the Asian Development Banks Country Governance Assessment
Report for the Philippines (2005).
TABLE H: Comparison of Justice Abads allegations, the 2001 and 2007 versions of the article coauthored with Drs. De Dios and Capuno, and the ADB Country Governance Assessment of 2005.
Excerpt from the Article
Co-Authored with Drs.
De Dios and Capuno:
Reproduction of
J. Abads Allegations
1.
the attention of my co-authors, Drs. De Dios and Capuno, to this matter. Below is a reproduction of
the contents of my letter to Drs. De Dios and Capuno:
Hon. Maria Lourdes P.A. Sereno
Associate Justice
Supreme Court of the Philippines
February 4, 2011
Dr. Emmanuel C. De Dios
Dr. Joseph D. Capuno
School of Economics
University of the Philippines
Dear Drs. De Dios and Capuno
Greetings!
I have been recently alerted to a possible plagiarism that we are suspected to have committed with
respect to the 2005 Asian Development Bank Outlook Report, specifically three sentences in page
103 that reads:
... Cost refers to both monetary and nonmonetary opportunities that a litigant has to forego in
pursuing a case. Direct cost refers not only to fees paid to the courts but also to out-of-pocket costs
arising from litigation itself (e.g. lawyers fees and compensation, transcript fees for stenographic
notes, etc.) Indirect costs refer to lost opportunities arising from delays in the resolution of cases and
the time spent by a litigant attending and following up a case.
On examination, I discovered that it is the ADB that failed to attribute those sentences to the report
we submitted in August 2001 to the World Bank entitled "Justice and the Cost of Doing Business:
The Philippines," specifically found in the third paragraph of our 2001 report. May I suggest that
perhaps you could alert our friends at the ADB regarding the oversight. It would be nice if our small
study, and the World Bank support that made it possible, were appropriately recognized in this ADB
publication.
Warmest regards always.
Sincerely,
Maria Lourdes P.A. Sereno
A proper reading of the ADB publication will immediately convey the fact that the ADB considers one
of my writings as a resource on the topic of Philippine judicial reform. My name is quoted four (4)
times in the text. A reading of the references listed one of my 2001 papers, which I wrote singly as
the source. Note the following references to my writing:
... It is incumbent upon the courts to harmonize these laws, and often they would find the absence of
constitutional standards to guide them (Sereno 2001). at page 98
...
... Critics pointed out that the Supreme Court should not have made factual declarations on whether
a property belongs to the national patrimony in the absence of an operative law by which a factual
determination can be made (Sereno 2001). at page 99
... As Sereno pointed out, if this tension between the three branches is not resolved satisfactorily, it
will create a climate of unpredictability as a result of the following: at page 99
...
(iii) a court that will continually have to defend the exercise of its own powers against the criticism of
the principal stakeholders in the process of economic policy formulation: the executive and
legislative branches and the constituencies consulted on the particular economic issues at hand
(Sereno 2001).
Had Justice Abad or his researcher taken the time to go through the ADB material, it would have
been immediately apparent to either of them that ADB was merely collating the thoughts of several
authors on the subject of Philippine judicial reform, and that I was one of those considered as a
resource person. He would not then have presumed that I copied those sentences; rather, it might
have struck him that more likely than not, it was the ADB echoing the thoughts of one or some of the
authors in the reference list when it used those quoted sentences, and that the pool of authors being
echoed by ADB includes me. The reference list of the ADB report with the relevant reference is
quoted herein:
REFERENCES
...
Sereno, Ma. Lourdes. 2001. The Power of Judicial Review and Economic Policies: Achieving
Constitutional Objectives. PHILJA-AGILE-USAID Project on Law and Economics." at page 158.
What is more unfortunate is that I was immediately accused of having copied my sentences from
ADB when a simple turn of the page after the cover page of our 2007 paper would reveal that the
2007 paper is but a re-posting of our 2001 work. The notice on page 2 of the paper that is found in
the asterisked footnote of the title reads:
This paper was originally submitted in August 2001 as project report to the World Bank. During
and since the time this report was written, the Supreme Court was engaged in various projects in
judicial reform. The authors are grateful to J. Edgardo Campos and Robert Sherwood for stimulating
ideas and encouragement but take responsibility for remaining errors and omissions. The Asian
Institute of Journalism and Communication provided excellent support to the study in the actual
administration of the survey questionnaire and conduct of focus group discussions.
This charge is made even more aggravating by the fact that the Supreme Court itself, through the
Project Management Office, has a copy of my 2001 paper. In July 2003, a "Project Appraisal
Document on a Proposed Loan in the Amount of US$21.9 Million to the Republic of the Philippines
for a Judicial Reform Support Project" was officially filed by the World Bank as Report No.
25504.28 The applicant Supreme Courts representative is named as Chief Justice Hilario Davide.
The project leader is named as Evelyn Dumdum. The Report lists the technical papers that form the
basis for the reform program. Among the papers listed is our 2001 paper.
What is worse, from the point of view of research protocols, is that a simple internet search would
have revealed that this 2001 co-authored paper of mine has been internationally referred to at least
four (4) times in three (3) English language publications and one (1) Japanese- or Chineselanguage publication; two of these are prior to the year 2005 when the relevant ADB Outlook Report
came out. The authors of the English-language works are all scholars on judicial reform, and they
cite our work as one of the pioneering ones in terms of measuring the relationship between
dysfunctions in the judicial system and the cost to doing business of such dysfunctions. It would
have then struck any researcher that in all probability, the alleged plagiarized sentences originated
from my co-authors and me.
The references to my 2001 paper appear in the following international publications:
a) Sherwood, Robert. Judicial Performance: Its Economic Impact in Seven Countries; at
page 20. (http://www.molaah.com/Economic%20Realities/Judicial%20Performance.pdf)
b) Messick, Richard. Judicial Reform and Economic Growth: What a Decade of Experience
Teaches; at pages 2 and 16. (2004).
http://www.cato.org/events/russianconf2004/papers/messick2.pdf
c) Herro, Alvaro and Henderson, Keith. Inter-American Development Bank. The Cost of
Resolving Small-Business Conflicts in Sustainable Development Department Best Practices
Series; at page 46. (2004)
http://www.ifes.org/~/media/Files/Publications/White%20PaperReport/2003/258/SME_Peru_
Report_final_EN.pdf
d) World Development Report 2005 (Japanese language); at page 235 (2005) ("url" in
Japanese characters)
2. The purported non-attribution of the "Understanding on the Rules and Procedures Governing the
Settlement of Disputes, Annex 2 to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994."29
I will spare the reader the tedium of reading twenty pages of treaty rules and working procedures,
and thus omit the three-column table I have used in other sections of this Dissent. The rules and
procedures may be accessed online at the following locations:
1. Marrakesh Declaration of 15 April 1994
<http://www.wto.org/english/docs_e/legal_e/marrakesh_decl_e.pdf> (Last accessed on 16
February 2011)
2. Understanding on Rules and Procedures Governing the Settlement of Disputes
<http://www.wto.org/english/docs_e/legal_e/28-dsu.pdf> (Last accessed on 16 February
2011)
3. Working Procedures for Appellate Review
<http://www.wto.org/english/tratop_e/dispu_e/ab_e.htm#20> (Last accessed on 16 February
2011)
Justice Abad himself provides evidence of the attribution I made when he says:
Justice Sereno said that this section is drawn from Article XX and XXII of the GATT
1994, Understanding on Dispute Settlement and Working Procedures.
I think the problem lies in the fact that neither Justice Abad nor his researcher is aware that the
phrase "Understanding on Dispute Settlement" is the short title for the "Understanding on the Rules
and Procedures Governing the Settlement of Disputes", which is formally known also as Annex 2 of
the Marakkesh Agreement Establishing the World Trade Organization (short form of treaty name:
WTO Treaty). A quick visit to the WTO website will show that the WTO itself uses any of the terms
"DSU," "Dispute Settlement Understanding" or "Understanding on Dispute Settlement" (UDS) as
short forms for the said Annex. The WTO webpage30 shows that "Understanding on Dispute
Settlement" is the first short way they call the long set of rules covered by Annex 2 of the WTO
Treaty.
More importantly, the WTO documents that were cited here are public international documents and
rules governing the relations of states. In page 6 of my article, "Toward the Formulation of a
Philippine Position in Resolving Trade and Investment Dispute in APEC," I explain the modes of
resolving trade and investment disputes by APEC countries, and one of these modes is the WTO
dispute settlement mechanism governed by the WTO rules themselves.
This is therefore a meaningless charge.
Assuming that Justice Abad knows that the above treaty titles are interchangeable, then his charge
is akin to complaining of my supposed failure for having simply written thus: "The following are the
requirements for filing a complaint under the Rules of Court" and then for having immediately
discussed the requirements under the Rules of Court without quotation marks in reference to each
specific rule and section. If this is the case, then it appears that in Justice Abads view I should have
written: "the following are the requirements provided for under the 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure
(Bar Matter No. 803) for filing a complaint" and then used quotation marks every time reference to
the law is made. Nothing can be more awkward than requiring such a tedious way of explaining the
Rules of Court requirements. I have made no such comparable charge of violation against Justice
del Castillo in the Dissent to the main Decision and I am not making any such claim of violation in my
Dissent to the Resolution denying the Motion for Reconsideration, because that would be a
meaningless point.
Regarding the phrase allegedly coming from Professor Oppenheim on good offices and mediation,
this is a trite, common, standard statement with nothing original at all about it that can be found
in any international dispute settlement reference book, including those that discuss WTO dispute
settlement systems. The phrase is a necessary, cut-and-dried statement on the use of good offices
and mediation, which take place alongside the formal dispute settlement system in major
international dispute settlement systems. The system is provided for expressly in Article 5.5 and 5.6
of the DSU. A quick view of the WTO website makes this point very apparent.31
3. The supposed non-attribution of a phrase from Baker v. Carr.
TABLE I: Comparison of Justice Abads allegations, the legal memorandum in Province of North
Cotabato v. Peace Panel, and the decision of the U.S. Supreme Court in Baker v. Carr, cited in the
legal memorandum.
Reproduction of
J. Abads Allegations
Petitioners-Intervenors
Memorandum, Province of
negotiations to succeed is
that there be a price at
Posners model is but a
which both parties would
simple mathematical
feel that agreement would
[S]ettlement negotiations
illustration or validation of
increase their welfare.
will fail and litigation
Hence settlement
ensue, only if the minimum what we as laymen have
always believed to be true, negotiations should fail,
price that the plaintiff is
although how to prove it to and litigation ensue, only
willing to accept in
if the minimum price that
compromise of his claim is be true has always
greater than the maximum remained a problem to us. the plaintiff is willing to
We have always known
accept in compromise of
price the defendant is
that the decision on
his claim is greater than
willing to pay in
whether to settle or not is
the maximum price that
satisfaction of the claim.
dictated by the size of the the defendant is willing to
stakes in the eyes of the
pay in satisfaction of that
[Posner, p. 434]
parties, the costs of
claim; .
litigation and the
probability which each side Source cited:
gives to his winning or
losing. But until now, we
Richard A. Posner,
have only been intuitively
Economic Analysis of
dealing with a formula for
Law, 435 (2nd ed. 1977).
arriving at an estimation of
the "settlement range" or
its existence in any given
controversy. Simply, the
settlement range is that
range of prices in which
19.7 WHAT DO
JUDGES MAXIMIZE?
This section attempts
to sketch a theory of
judicial incentives that will
reconcile these
assumptions.
Presumably judges, like
the rest of us, seek to
maximize a utility function
that includes both
monetary and
nonmonetary elements
(the latter including
leisure, prestige, and
power). As noted earlier,
however, the rules of the
judicial process have
been carefully designed
both to prevent the judge
from receiving a
monetary payoff from
deciding a particular case
one way or the other and
to minimize the influence
of politically effective
interest groups on his
decisions. To be sure, the
effectiveness of these
insulating rules is
sometimes questioned. It
is often argued, for
A somewhat more
plausible case can be
made that judgesmight
slant their decisions in
favour of powerful interest
groups in order to
increase the prospects of
promotion to higher office,
judicial or otherwise.
[Posner, p. 416]
A somewhat more
plausible case can be
made that judges might
slant their decisions in
favor of powerful interest
groups in order to
increase the prospects of
promotion to higher
office, judicial or
otherwise....
(Emphasis supplied.)
(pp. 489 of Lawyers
Behavior and Judicial
Decision-Making)
Richard A. Posner,
Economic Analysis of
Law, 415-16 (2nd ed.
1977).
May I invite the reader to read my entire article entitled "Lawyers Behavior and Judicial DecisionMaking," accessible online at
<http://law.upd.edu.ph/plj/images/files/PLJ%20volume%2070/PLJ%20volume%2070%20number%2
May I ask you for help in this respect I wish to submit my work to the evaluation of your esteemed
professors in the UP School of Economics. My work as an academic has been attacked and I would
wish very much for a statement from a panel of your choosing to give its word on my work.
I am attaching a table showing which part of Posners work I am alleged to have plagiarized in my
Philippine Law Journal article.
Thank you very much. I will be much obliged for this kind favor.
Very truly yours,
Maria Lourdes P.A. Sereno
The problem with the majority approach is that it refuses to face the scale of the plagiarism in the
Vinuya Decision. If only that were the starting point for the analysis of the majority, then some of my
colleagues would not have formed the impression that I was castigating or moralizing the majority.
No court can lightly regard a ponencia, as in Vinuya, where around 53% of the words used for an
important section were plagiarized from sources of original scholarship. Judges and their legal
researchers are not being asked to be academics; only to be diligent and honest.
IV. The Role of the Judiciary in Society
On more than one occasion, this Court has referred to one of its functions as the symbolic or
educative function, the competence to formulate guiding principles that may enlighten the bench and
the bar, and the public in general.32 It cannot now backpedal from the high standards inherent in the
judicial role, or from the standards it has set for itself.
The need to cement ethical standards for judges and justices is intertwined with the democratic
process. As Lebovits explained:
The judiciary's power comes from its words alonejudges command no army and control no purse.
In a democracy, judges have legitimacy only when their words deserve respect, and their words
deserve respect only when those who utter them are ethical. Opinion writing is public writing of the
highest order; people are affected not only by judicial opinions but also by how they are written.
Therefore, judges and the opinions they writeopinions scrutinized by litigants, attorneys, other
judges, and the publicare held, and must be held, to high ethical standards. Ethics must constrain
every aspect of the judicial opinion. 33
Justice George Rose Smith once pointed to the democratic process as a reason to write opinions:
"Above all else to expose the court's decision to public scrutiny, to nail it up on the wall for all to see.
In no other way can it be known whether the law needs revision, whether the court is doing its job,
whether a particular judge is competent." Justice Smith recognized that judges are not untouchable
beings. Judges serve their audience. With this service comes the need for judges to be trusted.
Writing opinions makes obtaining trust easier; it allows an often opaque judicial institution to become
transparent.34
Judges cannot evade the provisions in the Code of Judicial Conduct.35
A judge should participate in establishing, maintaining and enforcing high standards of conduct, and
shall personally observe those standards so that the integrity and independence of the judiciary will
be preserved. The drafters of theModel Code were aware that to be effective, the judiciary must
maintain legitimacy and to maintain legitimacy, judges must live up to the Model Code's moral
standards when writing opinions. If the public is able to witness or infer from judges' writing that
judges resolve disputes morally, the public will likewise be confident of judges' ability to resolve
disputes fairly and justly.36 (Citations omitted)
Canon 1 of the Code of Judicial Conduct states that a judge should uphold the integrity and
independence of the judiciary. Rule 1.01 in particular states that a judge should be the embodiment
of competence, integrity, and independence.
Canon 3 then focuses on the duty of honesty in the performance of official duties, as well as on the
supervision of court personnel:
Rule 3.09. A judge should organize and supervise the court personnel to ensure the prompt and
efficient dispatch of business, and require at all times the observance of high standards of public
service and fidelity.
Rule 3.10. A judge should take or initiate appropriate disciplinary measures against lawyers or court
personnel for unprofessional conduct of which the judge may have become aware.
Paragraph 17 of the Code of Judicial Ethics37 focuses on the writing of judicial opinions:
In disposing of controversial cases, judges should indicate the reasons for their action in opinions
showing that they have not disregarded or overlooked serious arguments of counsel. They should
show their full understanding of the case, avoid the suspicion of arbitrary conclusion, promote
confidence in their intellectual integrity and contribute useful precedents to the growth of the law.
(Emphasis supplied)
Paragraph 31, "a summary of judicial obligations," contains a more general statement regarding the
behavioral norms required of judges and justices alike, stating:
A judges conduct should be above reproach and in the discharge of his judicial duties, he should be
conscientious, studious, thorough, courteous, patient, punctual, just, impartial, fearless of public
clamor, and regardless of private influence should administer justice according to law and should
deal with the patronage of the position as a public trust; and he should not allow outside matters or
his private interests to interfere with the prompt and proper performance of his office.
That judges and justices alike are subject to higher standards by virtue of their office has been
repeatedly pronounced by the Supreme Court:
Concerned with safeguarding the integrity of the judiciary, this Court has come down hard and
wielded the rod of discipline against members of the judiciary who have fallen short of the exacting
standards of judicial conduct. This is because a judge is the visible representation of the law and of
justice. He must comport himself in a manner that his conduct must be free of a whiff of impropriety,
not only with respect to the performance of his official duties but also as to his behavior outside his
sala and as a private individual. His character must be able to withstand the most searching public
scrutiny because the ethical principles and sense of propriety of a judge are essential to the
preservation of the peoples faith in the judicial system.38
Thus, being the subject of constant public scrutiny, a judge should freely and willingly accept
restrictions on conduct that might be viewed as burdensome by the ordinary citizen.39 A judge should
personify integrity and exemplify honest public service. The personal behavior of a judge, both in the
performance of his official duties and in private life should be above suspicion.40 Concerned with
safeguarding the integrity of the judiciary, this Court has come down hard on erring judges and
imposed the concomitant punishment.41
As held by the Court in Teban Hardware and Auto Supply Co. v. Tapucar:42
The personal and official actuations of every member of the Bench must be beyond reproach and
above suspicion. The faith and confidence of the public in the administration of justice cannot be
maintained if a Judge who dispenses it is not equipped with the cardinal judicial virtue of moral
integrity, and if he obtusely continues to commit an affront to public decency. In fact, moral integrity
is more than a virtue; it is a necessity in the Judiciary.
The inherent value of judicial decisions goes beyond the resolution of dispute between two parties.
From the perspective of the judge, he has fulfilled his minimum burden when he has disposed of the
case. Yet from the perspective of the public, it is only through publicized decisions that the public
experiences the nearest approximation of a democratic experience from the third branch of
Government.
Decisions and opinions of a court are of course matters of public concern or interest for these are
the authorized expositions and interpretations of the laws, binding upon all citizens, of which every
citizen is charged with knowledge. Justice thus requires that all should have free access to the
opinions of judges and justices, and it would be against sound public policy to prevent, suppress or
keep the earliest knowledge of these from the public.43
The clearest manifestation of adherence to these standards is through a Justices written opinions.
In the democratic framework, it is the only way by which the public can check the performance of
such public officers obligations. Plagiarism in judicial opinions detracts directly from the legitimacy of
the judge's ruling and indirectly from the judiciary's legitimacy.44 It is objectionable not only because
of its inherent capacity to harm, but the overarching damage it wreaks on the dignity of the Court as
a whole.
The Courts Educative Function
The Courts first Decision in this case hinged on the difference between the academic publishing
model on the one hand, and the judicial system on the other. It proceeded to conclude that courts
are encouraged to cite "historical legal data, precedents, and related studies" in their decisions, so
that "the judge is not expected to produce original scholarship in every respect."
This argument presents a narrower view of the role of the courts than what this countrys history
consistently reveals: the judiciary plays a more creative role than just traditional scholarship. No
matter how hesitantly it assumes this duty and burden, the courts have become moral guideposts in
the eyes of the public.
Easily the most daunting task which confronts a newly appointed judge is how to write decisions. It is
truly a formidable challenge considering the impact of a courts judgment reverberates throughout
the community in which it is rendered, affecting issues of life, liberty, and property in ways that are
more pervasive and penetrating than what usually appears on the surface or under it.45
The impact of judicial decisions has even been codified in paragraph 2 of the Canon of Judicial
Ethics: "Every judge should at all times be alert in his rulings and in the conduct of the business of
his court, so far as he can, to make it useful to litigants and to the community."
The error in the contention of the majority that judicial writing does not put a premium on originality is
evident. In the words of Daniel Farber, stare decisis has become an oft-repeated catchphrase to
justify an unfounded predisposition to repeating maxims and doctrines devoid of renewed evaluation.
In reviewing the Court's work, we saw a fixation on verbal formulas; likewise, race scholarship
frequently seems to suffer from a similar fixation on stylized rhetoric. Yet Holmes' adage defines the
problem a bit too narrowlysuggesting that we mostly need less abstraction and more concreteness.
This deficiency actually is part of the problem; we could surely benefit from more empirical research
and sensitivity to concrete factual situations. Yet, the problem goes beyond that.46
The consistent resort to stare decisis fails to take into account that in the exercise of the Courts selfproclaimed symbolic function, its first accountability is to its audience: the public. Its duty of guiding
the bench and the bar comes a close second.
Consider first the judge. A key weakness of current Supreme Court opinions seems to be that judges
have sometimes lost track of whom they are addressing or what they are trying to accomplish. Of
course, they have no literal clients, but they seek to advance a set of values and perspectives that
might serve as the basis for identifying metaphorical clientsThe purpose, then, is to help the
system work as well as possible according to its own norms and goals
Often, the purpose is to guide other courts to advance the client's interests in their own decisions. In
this respect, the important part of the opinion is that portion speaking to future casesthough as we
have seen, judges sometimes fail to focus their energies there. Additionally, the opinion, if it is to
elicit more than the most grudging obedience, must appeal to the values and goals of those judges
as well as to the author's.47
The Court seemingly views the issuance of opinions to be an end in itself, as if the text of the opinion
had some autonomous value unrelated to its ability to communicate to an audience. At a deeper
level, the intellectual flaw in the statutory-interpretation opinions is similar. The Court often treats
statutes as free-standing texts, with little attention to their historical and social contexts or what their
drafters were trying to achieve.48
Thus, the value of ethical judicial writing vis--vis the role that courts are called upon to play cannot
be underestimated.
Worrying about the ethical status of judicial opinions seems pointless at first. Complaints about
decisions and the opinions that explain them have been around as long as judges have been
judging. As technology has lowered the cost of research, and of cutting and pasting earlier work,
opinions often seem to be formal exercises that do not suggest deep judicial engagement. Other
opinions do show the hand of a deeply engaged judge, though these can be worse than the cut-andpasted kind. What then is to be gained by trying to make an ethical issue of judicial writing?
Professor Llewellyn said it is in part because the judicial office acts as "a subduer of self and selfwill, as an engine to promote openness to listen and to understand, to quicken evenhandedness,
patience, sustained effort to see and judge for All-of-Us." 49
The lessons taught our country by its singular experience in history has given rise to a more defined
place for our courts. With the constitutional mandate that the Supreme Court alone can exercise
judicial review, or promulgate rules and guidelines for the bench and the bar, or act as the arbiter
between the two branches of government, it is all the more evident that standards for judicial
behavior must be formulated. After all, "the most significant aspect of the court's work may lie in just
this method and process of decision: by avoiding absolutes, by testing general maxims against
concrete particulars, by deciding only in the context of specific controversies, by finding
accommodations between polar principles, by holding itself open to the reconsideration of dogma,
the court at its best, provides a symbol of reconciliation."50
According to Paul Freund, the great fundamental guarantees of our Constitution are in fact, moral
standards wrapped in legal commands. It is only fitting that the Court, in taking on the role of a public
conscience, accept the fact that the people expect nothing less from it than the best of faith and
effort in adhering to high ethical standards.
I affirm my response to the dispositive portion of the majority Decision in this case as stated in my
Dissent of 12 October 2010, with the modification that more work of more authors must be
appropriately acknowledged, apologies must be extended, and a more extensively corrected
Corrigendum must be issued. Again, I make no pronouncement on liability, not only because the
process was erroneously cut short by the majority when it refused to proceed to the next step of
determining the duty of diligence that a judge has in supervising the work of his legal research, and
whether, in this instance, Justice del Castillo discharged such duty, but also because of the view
expressed by Justice Carpio that this Court had best leave the matter of clearing Justice del Castillo
to Congress, the body designated by the Constitution for such matters. It seems now that the
process of determining the degree of care required in this case may never be undertaken by this
Court. One thing is certain, however: we cannot allow a heavily plagiarized Decision to remain in our
casebooks it must be corrected. The issues are very clear to the general public. A wrong must be
righted, and this Court must move forward in the right direction.
MARIA LOURDES P. A. SERENO
Associate Justice
Footnotes
Mark Ellis, Breaking the Silence: Rape as an International Crime, 38 Case W. Res. J. Intl
L. 225 (2006-2007); Christian J. Tams, Enforcing Erga Omnes Obligations in International
Law (2005); Evan J. Criddle and Evan Fox-Decent, A Fiduciary Theory of Jus Cogens, 34
Yale J. Intl L. 331 (2009)
1
Justice Antonio T. Carpio, Dissenting Opinion, In the Matter of the Charges of Plagiarism,
etc. against Associate Justice Mariano C. del Castillo, A.M. No. 10-7-17-SC.
2
Justice Maria Lourdes P. A. Sereno, Dissenting Opinion, In the Matter of the Charges of
Plagiarism, etc. against Associate Justice Mariano C. del Castillo, AM 10-7-17-SC,
promulgated 12 October 2010, at 31.
3
Robert McCorquodale, The Individual and the International Legal System, in International
Law, 307-332 (Malcolm Evans ed., 2006).
4
"So in the process, my practice, which may not be shared by other researchers, my own
practice as to doing research for decisions is to basically review all the material that is
available insofar as I can. So I review everything, I take notes, I do my own research and
then after one has reviewed as much as I am able to, then one starts writing." TSN at 28,
Hearing of 26 August 2010, Deliberations of the Committee on Ethics and Ethical Standards.
8
"So what happens, Your Honors, is basically, one does an initial review, sorry, I do an initial
review on thisall of these goes for the most articles, Law Journal articles. So one does
initial review on these articles and if there is an article that immediately strikes one as
relevant or as important or as useful in the course of writing a decision, you can click on it,
the blue portion, you can click on this and the article will actually appear. And then you can
read the whole article, you can skim through the article, if again it seems relevant, its
possible to e-mail the article to yourself, which makes it easier becauseso at least I have,
for instance, all of the articles available like in my home." TSN at 28, Hearing of 26 August
2010, Deliberations of the Committee on Ethics and Ethical Standards.
9
TSN at 29, Hearing of 26 August 2010, Deliberations of the Committee on Ethics and
Ethical Standards.
10
11
A case in which the popup text box would not appear is that in which a block of text
containing the note reference mark is selected; the popup text box will only appear if the
cursor is hovered near the note reference mark.
12
13
14
Id. at 106.
Laurie Stearns, Copy Wrong: Plagiarism, Property, and the Law, 80 Cal. L. Rev. 513, 518
(1992).
15
16
Id. at 522.
18
Id. at 726.
19
Id. at 715.
20
Id. at 718.
21
Id.
22
Id. at 726.
23
Id.
24
See: In re Widdison, 539 N.W.2d 671 (S.D. 1995) at 865 (as cited in Jaime S. Dursht,
Judicial Plagiarism: It May Be Fair Use but Is It Ethical?, 18 Cardozo L. Rev. 1253); Rebecca
Moore Howard, Plagiarisms, Authorships, and the Academic Death Penalty, 57 College
English 7 (Nov., 1995), at 788-806, as cited in the JSTOR,
http://www.jstor.org./stable/378403; Klinge v. Ithaca College, 634 N.Y.S.2d 1000 (Sup. Ct.
1995), Napolitano v. Trustees of Princeton Univ., 453 A.2d 279, 284 (N.J. Super. Ct. Ch. Div.
1987), and In re Brennan, 447 N.W.2d 712, 713-14 (Mich. 1949), as cited in Gerald Lebovits,
Alifya V. Curtin & Lisa Solomon, Ethical Judicial Opinion Writing, 21 The Georgetown Journal
of Legal Ethics 264, note 190; Apotex Inc. v. Janssen-Ortho Inc. 2009, as cited in Emir Aly
Crowne-Mohammed, 22 No. 4 Intell. Prop. & Tech. L. J. 15, 1 as cited in page 28 and
footnotes 24, 25, 27 to 29 of my 12 October 2010 Dissent.
25
26
Id. at 26.
27
World Bank, Project Appraisal Document on a Proposed Loan in the Amount of US$21.9
Million to the Republic of the Philippines for a Judicial Reform Support Project (Report No:
25504) (2003), available at http://wwwwds.worldbank.org/external/default/WDSContentServer/WDSP/IB/2003/07/31/
000012009_20030731101244/Rendered/PDF/255040PH0PAD.pdf (accessed on February
5, 2011).
28
32
Salonga v. Cruz Pao, G.R. No. 59525, 18 February 1985, 134 SCRA 438.
Gerald Lebovits, Alifya V. Curtin, & Lisa Solomon, Ethical Judicial Opinion Writing, 21 Geo.
J. Legal Ethics 264 (2008).
33
34
Id. at 269.
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
Castillo v. Calanog, Jr., A.M. No. RTJ-90-447, 16 December 1994, 239 SCRA 268
Teban Hardware and Auto Supply Co. v. Tapucar, A.M. No. 1720, 31 January 1981, 102
SCRA 492, 504.
42
43
44
46
Daniel Farber, Missing the Play of Intelligence, 6 Wm. & Mary L. Rev. 147, (1994).
47
Id. at 170.
48
David McGowan, Judicial Writing and the Ethics of the Judicial Office, 14 Geo. J. Legal
Ethics 509, 509. (2001).
49
50
Paul A. Freund, "The Supreme Court" in Talks on American Law 81-94 (rev. ed., 1972).
I submit that the Court may wield its administrative power against its incumbent members on
grounds other thanculpable violation of the Constitution, treason, bribery, graft and corruption, other
high crimes, or betrayal of public trust, AND provided the offense or misbehavior does not carry
with it a penalty, the service of which would amount to removal from office either on a permanent or
temporary basis such as suspension.
The President, the Vice President, the members of the Supreme Court, the Members of the
Constitutional Commissions, and the Ombudsman may be removed from office, on impeachment
for, and conviction of, culpable violation of the Constitution, treason, bribery, graft and corruption,
other high crimes, or betrayal of public trust. All other public officers and employees may be
removed from office as provided by law, but not by impeachment.1(underscoring supplied)
In 1988, the Court dismissed the complaint for disbarment against Justice Marcelo Fernan for lack of
merit. Aside from finding the accusations totally baseless, the Court, by per curiam Resolution,2 also
stated that to grant a complaint for disbarment of a member of the Court during the members
incumbency would in effect be to circumvent and hence to run afoul of the constitutional mandate
that members of the Court may be removed from office only by impeachment.
In the subsequent case of In Re Raul M. Gonzales,3 this principle of constitutional law was succinctly
formulated in the following terms which lay down a bar to the institution of certain actions against an
impeachable officer during his or her incumbency.
x x x A public officer who under the Constitution is required to be a Member of the Philippine Bar as
a qualification for the office held by him and who may be removed from office only by
impeachment, cannot be charged with disbarmentduring the incumbency of such public officer.
Further, such public officer, during his incumbency, cannot be charged criminally before
the Sandiganbayan or any other court with any offense which carries with it the penalty of removal
from office, or any penalty service of which would amount to removal from office.4 (emphasis
and underscoring supplied; italics in the original)
The Court clarified, however, that it is not saying that its members are entitled to immunity from
liability for possible criminal acts or for alleged violations of the canons of judicial ethics or codes of
judicial conduct. It stressed that there is a fundamental procedural requirement that must be
observed before such liability may be determined and enforced.
x x x A Member of the Supreme Court must first be removed from office via the constitutional route
of impeachment under Sections 2 and 3 of Article XI of the 1987 Constitution. Should the tenure of
the Supreme Court Justice be thus terminated by impeachment, he may then be held to answer
either criminally or administratively (by disbarment proceedings) for any wrong or misbehaviour that
may be proven against him in appropriate proceedings.5(underscoring supplied)
The Court declared the same principle in Jarque v. Desierto6 by Resolution of December 5, 1995.
The rule that an impeachable officer cannot be criminally prosecuted for the same offenses which
constitute grounds for impeachment presupposes his continuance in office. Hence, the moment he is
no longer in office because of his removal, resignation, or permanent disability, there can be no bar
to his criminal prosecution in the courts.
Nor does retirement bar an administrative investigation from proceeding against the private
respondent, given that, as pointed out by the petitioner, the formers retirement benefits have been
placed on hold in view of the provisions of Sections 12 and 13 of the Anti-Graft and Corrupt
Practices Act.7 (underscoring supplied)
The implication that the Court could have imposed further administrative sanctions on Justice
Purisima had he not retired is a recognition that the Court may discipline one of its sitting members.
Further, the Court did not explain why the "further" imposition of administrative sanctions was
untenable except for the fact that Justice Purisima was no longer a member of the Court. Could it be
that the earlier imposed penalties (i.e., censure and partial forfeiture of fees) were already
considered sufficient? Could it be that the proper administrative case (arising from the earlier bar
matter) was not instituted before Justice Purisima retired? Or could it be that Justice Purisimas
retirement benefits were already released to him, leaving the Court with nothing more to go after to
or impose (except, perhaps, disqualification to hold any government office)?
I thus submit that the failure to initiate an administrative proceeding prior to Justice Purisimas
retirement made it untenable for the Court to further impose administrative sanctions on him.
What was confirmed by thePurisima case, nonetheless, for purposes of pertinent discussion, is that
the Court has jurisdiction to take cognizance of a complaint against an incumbent Justice.
Then there was the case In re: Undated Letter of Mr. Louis Biraogo12 where Justice Ruben Reyes
was, inter alia, "held liable for GRAVE MISCONDUCT for leaking a confidential internal document of
the Court" for which he was "FINED P500,000.00, to be charged against his retirement benefits, and
disqualified to hold any office or employment in any branch or instrumentality of the government
including government-owned or controlled corporations."13 The question in Biraogo was not so much
on the Courts jurisdiction over the case but on the effect of Justice Reyes subsequent retirement
during the pendency of the case.
Unlike the present case, however, impeachment proceedings against Justices Purisima and Reyes
did not see the light of day as they eventually retired, which mandatory retirement either foreclosed
the initiation of further administrative proceedings or directed the imposable sanctions to the
retirement benefits.
In view of the impeachment complaint filed with the House of Representatives involving the same
subject matter of the case, which denotes that a co-equal branch of government found the same act
or omission grievous as to present a ground for impeachment and opted to exercise its constitutional
function, I submit that the Court cannot proceed with the administrative complaint against Justice Del
Castillo for it will either (i) take cognizance of an impeachable offense which it has no jurisdiction to
determine, or (ii) downplay the questioned conduct and preempt the impeachment proceedings.
I thus join the call of Justice Carpio to recall the Courts October 15, 2010 Resolution, but only
insofar as Justice Del Castillo is concerned. All related administrative concerns and issues involving
non-impeachable officers therein should still be considered effectual.
In Biraogo, the unauthorized release of the unpromulgated ponencia of Justice Reyes in the
consolidated Limkaichongcases spawned an investigation to determine who were responsible for the
leakage of the confidential internal document of the Court. The investigation led to the disciplining of
not just Justice Reyes but also two members of his staff, who were named without hesitation by the
Court, viz., Atty. Rosendo B. Evangelista and Armando Del Rosario, and who were held liable
for SIMPLE NEGLECT OF DUTY and ordered to pay FINE in the amount
of P10,000.00 andP5,000.00, respectively.14
Why, in the present case, the legal researcher who is hiding behind her credentials appears to be
held a sacred cow, I cannot fathom. Hers is a new (or better) specie of initialed personification (e.g.,
"xxx") under the likes of Cabalquinto15which should apply only to cases involving violence against
women and children.16
The unjustified non-disclosure of her identity is unfair to Atty. Evangelista who, aside from having his
own credentials to protect, had to be mentioned as a matter of course in the committee report
adopted by the Court in In re: Undated Letter of Mr. Louis Biraogo, after similarly cooperating with
and explaining his side before the investigating committee.
Atty. Evangelista was eventually found by the Court to be wanting in care and diligence in securing
the integrity and confidentiality of a document. In the present case, the Courts October 15, 2010 per
curiam Decision cleared the name of the unnamed legal researcher.
While what was at stake in Biraogo was the "physical integrity" of a ponencia, what is at stake in the
present case is the "intellectual integrity" of a ponencia. The Court is committing a disservice to its
judicial function if it values the physical form of a decision more than what a decision substantially
contains.
Moreover, the liability of Justice Reyes did not save the day for Atty. Evangelista who, as the judicial
staff head, was tasked to secure and protect the copies of the Limkaichong Decision. Similarly in the
present case, independently of Justice Del Castillos "shortcomings," the legal researcher, who was
the lone drafter, proofreader and citechecker, was tasked like any other Court Attorney to secure
and ensure the substance and legal reasoning of the Vinuya Decision. Like Justice Reyes, Justice
Del Castillo can only do so much in claiming responsibility and full control of his office processes and
shielding the staff under the mantle of his impeachable wings.
Notably, Rule 10.2 of Canon 10 of the Code of Professional Responsibility states that lawyers shall
"not knowinglymisquote or misrepresent the contents of a paper, the language or the argument of
opposing counsel, or the text of a decision or authority, or knowingly cite as law a provision already
rendered inoperative by repeal or amendment, or assert as a fact that which has not been proved."
While the provision presupposes knowledge or willful intent, it does not mean that negligent acts or
omissions of the same nature by lawyers serving the government go scot-free.
Simple neglect of duty is defined as the failure to give proper attention to a task expected of an
employee resulting from either carelessness or indifference.17
I submit that the legal researcher was remiss in her duties of re-studying the sources or authorities
invoked in theVinuya Decision and checking the therein citations or, at the very least, those whose
authors rights to attribution and integrity are protected under Intellectual Property Law. While it is
incumbent upon her to devise ways and means of legal research, her admitted method or process
as shown in the Vinuya case reflects a disregard of a duty resulting from carelessness or
indifference. She failed to exercise the required degree of care to a task expected of a lawyeremployee of the Supreme Court.
While the Court recognizes that there were indeed lapses in the editorial work in the drafting of
the Vinuya Decision, it easily attributed them to "accidental deletions." It conveniently assigned such
human errors to the realm of accidents,without explaining whether it could not have been foreseen
or avoided.
I, therefore, posit that the legal researcher, who must hitherto be named, is liable for Simple Neglect
of Duty and must be ordered to pay a Fine in the amount of, following Biraogo, P10,000.00, with
warning of more severe sanctions for future similar conduct.
Whether liability attaches to what the October 15, 2010 per curiam Decision finds to be deletion or
omission of citation "unquestionably due to inadvertence or pure oversight," the fact remains,
nonetheless, that there is a need for a textual correction of the Vinuya Decision. This Court should
cause the issuance of a corrected version in the form of, what Justice Ma. Lourdes P. A. Sereno
suggests as, a "corrigendum."
The matter of making corrections in judicial issuances is neither novel nor something beneath the
Court. As early as February 22, 2000, the Court already accepted the reality of human error. In A.M.
No. 00-2-05-SC, "In the Matter of Correction of Typographical Errors in Decisions and Signed
Resolutions," the Court provided a simple procedure in making proper corrections:
Inadvertent typographical errors in decisions and signed resolutions of the Court may occur every
now and then. As these decisions and signed resolutions are published and preserved for posterity
in the Philippine Reports, the Supreme Court Reports Annotated, and other publications as well as in
the Supreme Court website, the need for making them free of typographical errors cannot be
overemphasized. Care should, therefore, be taken in proofreading them before they are submitted
for promulgation and/or publication.
Nevertheless, should typographical errors be discovered after the promulgation and/or publication of
decisions and resolutions, the following procedure should be observed to the end that unauthorized
corrections, alterations, or intercalations in what are public and official documents are not made.
1. In case of decisions and signed resolutions with the author[s] names indicated, the
Reporter and the Chief of the Management Information Systems Office of the Supreme Court
should secure the authority of the author concerned to make the necessary correction of
typographical errors. In case of per curiam decisions and unsigned resolutions, authority to
make corrections should be secured from the Chief Justice.
2. The correction of typographical errors shall be made by crossing out the incorrect word
and inserting by hand the appropriate correction immediately above the cancelled word.
Such correction shall be authenticated by the author by signing his initials immediately below
the correction. In per curiam decisions and unsigned resolutions, and in cases where the
author is no longer a member of the Court, the authentication shall be made by the Chief
Justice.
3. The Reporter and the Chief of the Management Information Systems Office shall submit to
the Court, through the Clerk of Court, a quarterly report of decisions and resolutions in which
corrections have been made. The Clerk of Court must thereafter include the report in the
agenda of the Court en banc.
This resolution takes effect immediately.
Despite the avowals of "slip in attribution," "bad footnoting," and "editorial error" in the Courts
October 15, 2010 per curiam Decision, to date no effort has been made to correct
the Vinuya Decision in conformity with A.M. No. 00-2-05-SC, which only implies that the lapses are
not typographical in nature. The corrections of the Vinuya Decision cannot simply be made by
crossing out the incorrect word and inserting by hand the appropriate correction immediately above
the cancelled word, with authentication by the ponente or writer.
CONCHITA CARPIO MORALES
Associate Justice
Footnotes
1
Cuenco v. Fernan, Adm. Case No. 3135, February 17, 1988, 158 SCRA 29; vide also the
Resolution of April 15, 1988 (160 SCRA 778) where the complainant was severely
reprimanded and warned.
2
Id. at 774.
Id. at 776-777.
Office of the Ombudsman v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 146486, March 4, 2005, 452 SCRA
714, 734-735.
7
In discussing the word "incapacitated," Bernas said that the power to determine incapacity
is part of the overall administrative power which the Supreme Court has over its
members and over all members of the judiciary [Bernas, The 1987 Constitution of the
Republic of the Philippines: A Commentary (2003), p. 988].
8
10
This framework of constitutional law likewise explains why incumbent Justices of the
Supreme Court, by virtue of their being impeachable officers, are not included from the
operation of A.M. No. 02-9-02-SC on the "Automatic Conversion of Some Administrative
Cases Against Justices of the Court of Appeals and the Sandiganbayan, Judges of Regular
and Special Courts, and Court Officials Who Are Lawyers as Disciplinary Proceedings
Against Them Both as Officials and as Members of the Philippine Bar" (September 17,
2002). The rule provides that when the said administrative case is based on grounds which
are likewise grounds for a disciplinary action of members of the Bar, the administrative case
shall also be considered a disciplinary action against the respondent justice, judge or court
official concerned as a member of the Bar [as applied inAvancena v. Liwanag, A.M. No.
MTJ-01-1383, March 5, 2003, 398 SCRA 541 and July 17, 2003, 406 SCRA 300 where the
judge was dismissed from service and disbarred from the practice of law. See also Juan de
la Cruz (Concerned Citizen of Legazpi City) v. Carretas, A.M. No. RTJ-07-2043, September
5, 2007, 532 SCRA 218; Caada v. Suerte, A.M. No. RTJ-04-1884, February 22, 2008, 546
SCRA 414]. Its application to a particular administrative action is not dependent on the date
of commission of the offense but on the date of filing of the case. There is no automatic
conversion when the administrative case was filed before October 1, 2002 or prior to the
date of effectivity of A.M. No. 02-9-02-SC (vide Office of the Court Administrator v. Morante,
A.M. No. P-02-1555, April 16, 2004, 428 SCRA 1, 35-36; J. King and Sons Company, Inc., v.
Hontanosas, Jr., A.M. No. RTJ-03-1802, February 28, 2006 Resolution) and the respondent
has already been required to comment on the complaint (Heck v. Santos, A.M. No. RTJ-011657, 23 February 2004, 423 SCRA 329, 341).
11
12
13
Id. at 164.
14
of fine on Atty. Evangelista and Del Rosario in the amount of P10,000 and P5,000,
respectively, just and reasonable. (Id. at 161-163; emphasis, italics and underscoring
in the original).
15
People v. Cabalquinto, G.R. No. 167693, September 19, 2006, 502 SCRA 419.
Vide Republic Act No. 7610 (Special Protection of Children against Child Abuse,
Exploitation and Discrimination Act); Republic Act No. 9262 (Anti-Violence Against Women
and Their Children Act of 2004); A.M. No. 04-10-11-SC of November 14, 2004 (Rule on
Violence against Women and their Children); and A.M. No. 99-7-06-SC, In Re Internet Web
page of the Supreme Court, Resolution of February 14, 2006.
16
In Re: Undated Letter of Mr. Louis Biraogo, supra at 162, citing Rivera v. Buena, A.M. No.
P-07-2394, February 19, 2008, 546 SCRA 222.
17
In a Decision dated October 12, 2010, the Court resolved to dismiss the plagiarism charges against
Justice del Castillo. It recognized that indeed certain passages of the foreign legal article were lifted
and used in the Vinuya Decision and that "no attributions were made to the x x x authors in [its]
footnotes."5 However, the Court concluded that the failure to attribute did not amount to plagiarism
because no malicious intent attended the failure; the attributions (present in Justice del Castillos
original drafts) were simply accidentally deleted in the course of the drafting process. Malicious
intent was deemed an essential element, as "plagiarism is essentially a form of fraud where intent to
deceive is inherent." Citing Blacks Law Dictionarys definition of plagiarism the deliberate and
knowing presentation of another persons original ideas or creative expressions as ones own the
Court declared that "plagiarism presupposes intent and a deliberate, conscious effort to steal
anothers work and pass it off as ones own." In fact, the Court found that by citing the foreign
authors original sources, Justice del Castillo never created the impression that he was the original
author of the passages claimed to have been lifted from the foreign law articles:
The Court also adopts the Committees finding that the omission of attributions to Criddle-Descent
and Ellis did not bring about an impression that Justice Del Castillo himself created the passages
that he lifted from their published articles. That he merely got those passages from others remains
self-evident, despite the accidental deletion. The fact is that he still imputed the passages to the
sources from which Criddle-Descent and Ellis borrowed them in the first place.
As to the charge that Justice del Castillo twisted the meaning of the works of the foreign authors, the
Court ruled that it was impossible for him to have done so because:
first, since the attributions to Criddle-Descent and Ellis were accidentally deleted, it is impossible for
any person reading the decision to connect the same to the works of those authors as to conclude
that in writing the decision Justice Del Castillo "twisted" their intended messages. And, second, the
lifted passages provided mere background facts that established the state of international law at
various stages of its development. These are neutral data that could support conflicting theories
regarding whether or not the judiciary has the power today to order the Executive Department to sue
another country or whether the duty to prosecute violators of international crimes has attained the
status of jus cogens.
The Court, thus, declared that "only errors [of judges] tainted with fraud, corruption, or malice are
subject of disciplinary action" and these were not present in Justice del Castillos case; the failure
was not attended by any malicious intent not to attribute the lifted passages to the foreign authors.
Justice Maria Lourdes P. A. Sereno dissented from the Courts October 12, 2010 Decision based
mainly on her disagreement with the majoritys declaration that malicious intent is required for a
charge of plagiarism to prosper.
On November 15, 2010, Attys. Roque and Bagares filed a motion for reconsideration of the Courts
October 12, 2010 Decision. This motion was the subject of the Report/Resolution submitted to the
Court for consideration. Incidentally, the same counsels filed an impeachment complaint for betrayal
of public trust against Justice del Castillo with the House of Representatives on December 14, 2010.
The Courts Action on the
Motion for Reconsideration
The Court referred the motion for reconsideration to the Ethics Committee and its Report
recommended the dismissal of the motion for reconsideration. The Report differentiated academic
writing from judicial writing, declaring that originality of ideas is not required of a judge writing
decisions and resolving conflicts because he is bound by the doctrine of stare decisis the legal
principle of determining points in litigation according to precedents.
The Report likewise declared that the foreign authors, whose works were claimed to have been
plagiarized, were not themselves the originators of the ideas cited in the Vinuya Decision. While the
Vinuya Decision did not mention their names, it did attribute the passages to the original authors
from whom these foreign authors borrowed the ideas. There was, thus, no intent on the part of
Justice del Castillo to appropriate the ideas or to claim that these ideas originated from him; in short,
he did not pass them off as his own.
Justice Antonio T. Carpio dissented from the Report, based on two grounds:
a. the Court has no jurisdiction over the administrative case as it involves a sitting Supreme Court
Justice, for alleged misconduct committed in office; and
b. the judge, when writing judicial decisions, must comply with the law on copyright and respect the
moral right of the author to have the work copied attributed to him.
My Position
I fully support the conclusions of the Ethics Committee. I likewise take exception to Justice Carpios
Dissenting Opinion, specifically on his position that the Court has no jurisdiction to discipline its
Members as the only means to discipline them is through impeachment proceedings that the
Congress has the sole prerogative to undertake. Impeachment, he declares, functions as the
equivalent of administrative disciplinary proceedings. Since the Congress is given the exclusive
power to initiate,6 try, and decide7 all cases of impeachment, Justice Carpio posits that the Congress
serves as the exclusive disciplining authority over all impeachable officers. He warns that for the
Supreme Court to hear the present administrative disciplinary case would be to usurp this exclusive
power of Congress.
Jurisdiction of the Supreme Court to Discipline its Members
A given in the discipline of Members of the Supreme Court is that they can only be "removed from
office" through impeachment, as provided under Article XI of the Constitution, on the specified
grounds of culpable violation of the Constitution, treason, bribery, graft and corruption, other high
crimes, or betrayal of the public trust. The purpose of impeachment and the constitutional interest
sought is to protect the people and the State from official delinquencies and other
malfeasances.8 The Constitution, however, is not a single-purpose document that focuses on one
interest alone to the exclusion of related interests; impeachment was never intended by the
Constitution to be the totality of the administrative actions or remedies that the public or the Court
may take against an erring Justice of the Court. Other related constitutional interests exist touching
on other facets of the Judiciary and public accountability. They are, by themselves, equally
compelling and demanding of recognition.
Among the compelling interests that the Constitution zealously guards is judicial independence
because it is basic to the meaning and purposes of the Judiciary. This interest permeates the
provisions of Article VIII of the Constitution.9
Another interest to consider is the need for judicial integrity a term not expressly mentioned in the
Article on the Judiciary (Article VIII), but is a basic concept found in Article XI (on Accountability of
Public Officers) of the Constitution. It is important as this constitutional interest underlies the
independent and responsible Judiciary that Article VIII establishes and protects. To be exact, it
complements judicial independence as integrity and independence affect and support one another;
only a Judiciary with integrity can be a truly independent Judiciary. Judicial integrity, too, directly
relates to public trust and accountability that the Constitution seeks in the strongest terms. The same
Article XI contains the impeachment provisions that provide for the removal of Justices of the
Supreme Court. Notably, a common thread that runs through all the grounds for impeachment is the
lack of integrity of the official impeached on these grounds.
Still another unavoidable consideration on impeachment and its limited grounds is that it cannot, by
itself, suffice to protect the people and foster the public accountability that the Constitution speaks of.
While it is a powerful weapon in the arsenal of public accountability and integrity, it is not a complete
weapon that can address and fully achieve its protective purposes. As discussed more fully below,
not all complaints and grievances can be subsumed under the defined constitutional grounds for
impeachment. Members of the Court can commit other offenses not covered by the impeachable
offenses, for which other offenses they should equally be held accountable. These other offenses
must of course be administratively addressed elsewhere if they cannot be similarly addressed
through impeachment; the people will not accept an interpretation that these are offenses that fell
through the constitutional cracks and can no longer be administratively addressed.
These considerations, taken together, dictate against the position of Justice Carpio that the
Congress alone, through impeachment and to the exclusion of this Court, can proceed against the
Members of the Court.
Protection of Judicial Integrity
For the purpose of preserving judicial integrity, the Supreme Court has as much (and in fact, should
have more) interest as the public or as any other branch of the government in overseeing the
conduct of members of the Judiciary, including its own Members. This is precisely the reason for the
Judiciarys Code of Judicial Conduct and the lawyers Code of Professional Responsibility. Judicial
integrity is not only a necessary element in the orderly and efficient administration of justice; it is
almost literally the lifeblood of the Judiciary. A Judiciary, dissociated from integrity and the public
trust that integrity brings, loses its rightful place in the constitutional democratic scheme that puts a
premium on a reliable and respected third branch of government that would balance the powers of
the other two branches.
To ensure the maintenance and enhancement of judicial integrity, the Constitution has given the
Judiciary, mainly through the Supreme Court, a variety of powers. These powers necessarily begin
with the power to admit and to discipline members of the bar10 who are officers of the courts and who
have the broadest frontline interaction with the courts and with the public. Courts in general have the
power to cite for contempt11 that proceeds, not only from the need to maintain orderly procedures,
but also from the need to protect judicial integrity in the course of the courts exercise of judicial
power. The Supreme Court has the power to discipline and remove judges of lower courts.12 In this
role, the Court hears administrative disciplinary cases against lower court judges for purposes of
redress against erring judges and, more importantly, to "[preserve] the integrity of the judicial system
and public confidence in the system and x x x [to safeguard] the bench and the public from those
who are unfit."13
As concrete legal basis, the Supreme Court is expressly granted the general power of administrative
supervision overall courts and the personnel thereof.14 By its plain terms, the power extends not only
to the authority to supervise and discipline lower court judges but to exercise the same powers over
the Members of the Court itself. This is the unavoidable meaning of this grant of authority if its main
rationale i.e., to preserve judicial integrity is to be given full effect. The Supreme Court must
ensure that the integrity of the whole Judiciary, its own Members included, is maintained as any taint
on any part of the Judiciary necessarily taints the whole. To state the obvious, a taint in or
misconduct by any Member of the Supreme Court even if only whispered about for lack of
concrete evidence and patriotic whistleblowers carries greater adverse impact than a similar event
elsewhere in the Judiciary.
Independent of the grant of supervisory authority and at a more basic level, the Supreme Court
cannot be expected to play its role in the constitutional democratic scheme solely on the basis of the
Constitutions express grant of powers. Implied in these grants are the inherent powers that every
entity endowed with life (even artificial life) and burdened with responsibilities can and must exercise
if it is to survive. The Court cannot but have the right to defend itself to ensure that its integrity and
that of the Judiciary it oversees are kept intact. This is particularly true when its integrity is attacked
or placed at risk by its very own Members a situation that is not unknown in the history of the
Court. To be sure, judicial integrity cannot be achieved if the Court can police the ranks of the lower
court judges but not its own ranks. From this perspective view, it is unthinkable that the Supreme
Court can only watch helplessly for the reason that the power to act is granted only to Congress
under the terms of the Constitution as its own Members prostitute its integrity as an institution.
Impeachment Grounds are Limited
That an impeachment partakes of the nature of an administrative disciplinary proceeding confined to
the defined and limited grounds of "culpable violation of the Constitution, treason, bribery, graft and
corruption, other high crimes, and betrayal of public trust"15 cannot be disputed. However, it cannot
likewise be disputed that these grounds, as defined, refer only to those serious "offenses that strike
at the very heart of the life of the nation."16 Thus, for "betrayal of public trust" to be a ground for
impeachment, the "manner of commission must be of the same severity as treason and
bribery."17 With respect to members of the High Court, impeachment is considered "as a response
to serious misuse of judicial power"18 no less equivalent to treason or bribery.
Directly implied from these established impeachment principles is that "removal from office (the
imposable penalty upon impeachment and conviction) is not the price exacted for every incident of
judicial misconduct."19 Otherwise stated, that impeachment administratively addresses only serious
offenses committed by impeachable officers cannot imply that the Constitution condones
misdemeanors and misconduct that are not of equal gravity.
For, side by side with the constitutional provision on impeachment is the constitutional policy that
"public office is a public trust" and that "public officers and employees must, at all times, be
accountable to the people."20 Even impeachable officials, despite the nature and level of their
positions, must be administratively accountable for misconduct and misdemeanors that are of lesser
gravity than the defined impeachable offenses. Only this approach and reconciled reading with the
provision on impeachment can give full effect to the constitutional policy of accountability. If this were
not the case, then the public would be left with no effective administrative recourse against Supreme
Court Justices committing less than grave misconduct. One American writer, Brent D. Ward, writes
on this point that:
It would be a serious weakness in our system to place systematic judicial misconduct beyond the
reach of any remedy save impeachment. There are limits beyond which no person even a federal
judge should be allowed to go with impunity. The courts themselves have the power and the duty
to curtail the effect of repeated contrary and erratic actions of a judge that occur too frequently to
permit effective appellate supervision in the run of cases.
xxxx
[The] Constitution does x x x shield [judges] from corrective action by other judges designed to
ensure that the law is effectively administered. The appellate courts have the power to prevent
action so obviously improper as to place it beyond established rules of law.21
Adverse Effects of Expansive View of Impeachment Grounds
If impeachment were to be the only administrative proceeding to hold Justices of this Court
accountable, then the grounds for impeachment may arguably carry a definition beyond the
traditionally grave or serious character these offenses have always carried. An expanded definition,
however, is no different from the remedy of burning a house to kill a rat. While such definition in the
long run may kill more rats or assuredly do away with a particularly obnoxious rat, it will at the same
time threaten and adversely affect a more valuable constitutional interest the independence of the
Judiciary that allows magistrates to conscientiously undertake their duties, guided only by the
dictates of the Constitution and the rule of law.
It needs no elaborate demonstration to show that the threat of impeachment for every perceived
misconduct or misdemeanor would open Justices of the Court to harrassment. A naughty effect if
administrative redress can only be secured from Congress to the exclusion of this Court under an
expanded definition of impeachment grounds is to encourage every litigant with a perceived
grievance against a Justice of this Court to run to his congressman for the filing of an impeachment
complaint.
Undoubtedly, this kind of scenario will be a continuing threat to judges and justices, with
consequential adverse effects on the Judiciary, on inter-branch relationship, and on the respect the
public may give the Judiciary, the Legislature, and even of the government itself. Worse, this kind of
scenario may ultimately trivialize the impeachment process and is thus best avoided.
An expansive interpretation of the grounds for impeachment must also affect Congress which acts
on impeachment complaints but whose main task under our structure of government is to legislate,
not to police the Supreme Court and other impeachable officers. To say the least, a deluge of
impeachment complaints may prove to be impractical for Congress because impeachment is both an
arduous and a time consumming process that will surely divert congressional time and other
resources from the principal function of lawmaking.
The US Practice
In the United States (US) federal courts, "the impeachment process has not been the only check on
federal judges [who are removable through impeachment] who may have abused their
independence, or the only assurance of their accountability."22 The US National Commission on
Judicial Discipline and Removal has posited that there must be "a power in the judiciary to deal with
certain kinds of misconduct [as this will further] both the smooth functioning of the judicial branch
and the broad goal judicial independence."
Along this line, the US Congress created a system enforcing an internal judicial self-discipline
through the judicial councils under their Judicial Councils Reform and Judicial Conduct and Disability
Act of 1980 (the US 1980 Act). The judicial council (composed of the federal judges within a specific
judicial circuit) is considered as a "formal and credible supplement to the impeachment process for
resolving complaint of misconduct or disability against federal judges."23The judicial council of a
federal circuit, through the chief judge, is authorized to receive and to act on complaints about the
conduct of judges who are removable only through impeachment. If there is merit to a complaint, the
judicial council can "take appropriate action, which may include censure, reprimand, temporary
suspension, and transfer of cases, but not removal from office. If the judicial council believes that it
has uncovered grounds for impeachment, the council is empowered to report its findings to the
Judicial Conference of the United States, which after an investigation, may report its findings to the
House of Representatives."24
Arguably, the existence of a judicial council as an additional or supplemental check on US federal
judges is statutory and no equivalent statute has been enacted in our jurisdiction specifically
establishing in our Supreme Court a system of internal judicial self-discipline. This argument,
however, loses sight of the constitutional authority of our Supreme Court to govern the conduct of its
members under its power of general administrative supervision over all courts a power that the
Philippine Constitution expressly grants to our Supreme Court to the exclusion of remedies outside
of the Judiciary except only for impeachment. Interestingly, even in the US, the view has been taken
that the enactment of a statute conferring disciplinary power to the Court over its own members may
be unnecessary as the Supreme Court itself may assume this power. This is implied from the
following recommendation of the US National Commission on Judicial Discipline and Removal which
states:
[I]t may be in the [US Supreme] Courts best interest, as contributing to the publics perception of
accountability, to devise and adopt some type of formal procedure for the receipt and disposition of
conduct and disability complaints.
The Commission recommends that the Supreme Court may wish to consider the adoption of policies
and procedures for the filing and disposition fo complaints alleging misconduct against Justices of
the Supreme Court.25
Note should be taken in these regards that the Philippine Supreme Court has already put in place
various Codes governing ethical rules for the bar and for the Judiciary. The Code of Judicial Conduct
applies to all members of the Judiciary, including the Members of the Supreme Court. The Code of
Professional Responsibility applies to all lawyers, thus, necessarily to Members of the Court for
whom membership in the bar is an essential qualification. The Court as well has codified the Internal
Rules of the Supreme Court. A Rule on Whistleblowing is presently under consideration by the Court
en banc.
What is crucial in the establishment of the judicial council system in the US is the implication that no
inherent incompatibility exists between the existence of Congress power to impeach and the
Supreme Courts power to discipline its own members; the two powers can co-exist and, in fact,
even supplement each other. The constitutionality of recognizing disciplinary power in the courts
over their own impeachable members (as provided in the US 1980 Act), vis--vis the Congress
power to remove the same officials by impeachment, has been addressed before the US Court of
Appeals in the case of McBryde v. Commission to Review Circuit Council Conduct and Disability
Orders of the Judicial Conference of the US26:
Judge McBryde frames his separation of powers claim as whether the Constitution "allocates the
power to discipline federal judges and, if so, to which branches of government." Finding that it
allocates the power to Congress in the form of impeachment, he concludes that it excludes all other
forms of discipline. But Judge McBryde's attempt to fudge the distinction between impeachment and
discipline doesn't work. The Constitution limits judgments for impeachment to removal from office
and disqualification to hold office. It makes no mention of discipline generally. The Supreme Court
recently observed that it accepted the proposition that "[w]hen a statute limits a thing to be done in a
particular mode, it includes a negative of any other mode." But application of the maxim depends on
the "thing to be done." Here the thing to be done by impeachment is removal and disqualification, not
"discipline" of any sort.
Thus, when the conduct of a member of the Supreme Court is improper but is not of such gravity to
be considered as an impeachable offense, the Court to protect its integrity may address the
misconduct through an administrative disciplinary case against the erring member.
Conclusion: Court can hear the case against Justice del Castillo as an Administrative Matter
What the impeachment provisions of the Constitution guarantee is simply the right to be removed
from office only through the process of impeachment and not by any other means; it does not
preclude the imposition of disciplinary sanctions short of removal on the impeachable official.
Impeachment is the sole means of removal, but it is certainly not the sole means of disciplining
Members of the Supreme Court or, for that matter, public officials removable by impeachment.
Accordingly, I believe that the Court has the authority to hear the present administrative disciplinary
case against Associate Justice Mariano del Castillo; in case of a finding of misconduct, it can impose
penalties that are not the functional equivalent of removal or dismissal from service. If, in the
exercise of its prerogative as interpreter of the Constitution, it determines that an act complained of
falls within the defined grounds for impeachment, then the Court should say so and forthwith forward
its recommendations to Congress as the body constitutionally mandated to act in impeachment
cases.
Courts Interpretation of Plagiarism - limited to its Concept as an Ethical violation of Members of the
Judiciary.
The dissatisfaction with the Courts October 12, 2010 Decision (resolving the plagiarism charge
against Justice del Castillo or the "plagiarism Decision") primarily lies with the Courts declaration
that malicious intent is a necessary element in committing plagiarism. In the plagiarism Decision, the
Court said:
[P]lagiarism presupposes intent and a deliberate, conscious effort to steal anothers work and pass it
off as ones own.
Why we deemed malicious intent as a necessary element for judicial plagiarism can be explained by
our repeated pronouncement that:
not every error or mistake committed by judges in the performance of their official duties renders
them administratively liable. In the absence of fraud, dishonesty or deliberate intent to do an
injustice, acts done in their official capacity, even though erroneous, do not always constitute
misconduct.
Only errors that are tainted with fraud, corruption or malice may be the subject of disciplinary action.
For administrative liability to attach, respondent must be shown to have been moved by bad faith,
dishonesty, hatred or some other motive. Indeed, judges may not be held administratively liable for
any of their official acts, no matter how erroneous, as long as they acted in good faith.27
The term plagiarism does not have a precise statutory definition as it is not a matter covered by
present Philippine statutes.28 What the Intellectual Property Code (Republic Act 8283)29 defines and
punishes is "copyright infringement." However, these terms are not legally interchangeable. Laurie
Stearns, copyright lawyer and author of the article "Copy Wrong: Plagiarism, Process, Property, and
the Law" aptly observes the distinctions between the two in this wise:
or was not committed cannot preclude Congress from determining whether the failure or omission to
make an attribution, intentionally or unintentionally, amounts to a "betrayal of public trust."
For these reasons, I support the conclusion of the Ethics and Ethical Standards Committee that
Justice Mariano C. del Castillos attribution lapses did not involve any ethical violation. I vote for the
approval of the Committees Report and for the denial of the petitioners Motion for Reconsideration.
ARTURO D. BRION
Associate Justice
Footnotes
1
Petitioners Vinuya, et al.s Supplemental Motion for Reconsideration dated July 18, 2010, p.
2.
4
Specifically, the Court referred to the article A Fiduciary Theory of Jus Cogens written by
Criddle-Decent and Fox.
5
CONSTITUTION, Article XI, Section 3(1). The House of Representatives shall have the
exclusive power to initiate all cases of impeachment.
6
Id., Section 3(6). The Senate shall have the sole power to try and decide all cases of
impeachment.
7
See De Leon, Philippine Constitutional Law, Vol. II, 2004 Ed., p. 831.
See, among others, security of tenure at Section 1; fiscal autonomy under Section 2;
defined jurisdiction that Congress cannot touch without concurrence from the Supreme
Court; administrative supervision over all courts under Section 6; a Judicial and Bar Council
that renders recourse to the Commission on Appointments unnecessary; and the guarantee
of strict focus on judicial duties under Section 12.
9
10
CONSTITUTION, Article VIII, Section 5(5); RULES OF COURT, Rules 138 and 139-B.
11
12
Cynthia Gray, A Study of State Judicial Discipline Sanctions, American Judicature Society
(2002), at <www.ajs.org/ethics/pdfs/Sanctions.pdf>, last visited February 9, 2011. The article
also cites other reasons: impressing upon the judge the severity and significance of the
13
misconduct; deterring similar conduct by the judge and others; reassuring the public that
judicial misconduct is not tolerated or condoned; and fostering public confidence in the selfpolicing system.
See Joaquin G. Bernas, S.J., The 1987 Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines: A
Commentary (2009 ed.), p. 1012, and Hector S. De Leon, Philippine Constitutional Law:
Principles and Cases, Volume 2 (2004 ed.), p. 595.
14
15
16
17
Ibid.
Cynthia Gray, supra note 13, citing In re Lowery, 999 S.W.2d 639, 661 (Special Court of
Review Appointed by Texas Supreme Court, 1998).
19
20
Brent D. Ward, Can the Federal Courts Keep Order in Their Own House? Appellate
Supervision through Mandamus and Orders of Judicial Councils, 233 Bringham Young
University Law Review 233, 237 and 253 (1980), at
<heinonline.org/HOL/LandingPage?collection=journals&handle=
21
23
Ibid.
25
26
27
Cruz v. Iturralde, A.M. RTJ No. 03-1775, April 30, 2003, 402 SCRA 65.
George, Joyce J. "Judicial Opinion Writing Handbook." 5th edition. William S. Hein & Co.,
Inc., 2007, page 715, defines plagiarism as "the intentional representation of another
persons words, thoughts or ideas as ones own without giving attribution."
28
Stearns, Laurie. "Copy Wrong: Plagiarism, Process, Property and the Law." Perspectives
on Plagiarism and Intellectual Property in a Postmodern World. Ed. Lise Buranen and Alice
M. Roy. Albany, New York State University of New York Press. 1999. 5-6.
30
31
32
Icasiano v. Sandiganbayan, G.R. No. 95642, May 28, 1992, 209 SCRA 377.
See: Rule 4, Internal Rules of the Supreme Court, in relation with Section 4, Rule 6 on
Docket Number and Entry in Logbook. Administrative cases are not listed as G.R. (General
Register) cases as they are not acted upon in the exercise of the Courts judicial function.
33
As for the alleged violation of the copyright law in this case, it should be sufficient to point out that no
such charge has been lodged against Justice Del Castillo. What is more, the Court has no original
jurisdiction over copyright law violations. I reserve in the appropriate case my view on whether or not
lifting from copyrighted articles, without attribution, solely for the purpose of rendering a decision,
constitutes violation of the copyright law.
Justice Sereno castigates the majority in the Court for lowering the standards for judicial scholarship,
negating the educative and moral directional value in the writing and publishing of decisions,
bending over backwards to deny the objective existence of gross plagiarism, and condoning
dishonesty in the exercise of a function central to the role of the courts.
But our courts are in the business, not of "judicial scholarship," but of deciding fairly and honestly the
disputes before them, using precedents and legal literature that, according to American scholars,
belong to the public domain. If this is not honest work for a judge, I do not know what is.
And Justice Sereno has no right to preach at the expense of the majority about "educative and moral
directional value" in writing published articles. For one thing, her standards are obviously for work
done in the academe, not for the judge plodding at his desk to perform government work. For
another, I note that on occasions she has breached those very standards, lifting from works of others
without proper attribution.
Take Justice Serenos article, Toward the Formulation of a Philippine Position in Resolving Trade
and Investment Disputes in APEC."4 Under the section subtitled "The WTO Dispute Settlement
Mechanism," she said in the footnote that "[t]his section is drawn from Article XX and XXIII of the
GATT 1994, Understanding on Dispute Settlement, and Working Procedures." To me, this means
that in writing the section, she drew ideas from these four GATT issuances.
I am reproducing below the beginning portions of Justice Serenos work that are relevant to this
discussion. I underline what she copied verbatim from Annex 2 of the General Agreement on Tariffs
and Trade (GATT) 1994, entitled "Understanding on Rules and Procedures Governing the
Settlement of Disputes," or "Understanding on Dispute Settlement" for short.
The WTO Dispute Settlement Mechanism
Dispute settlement under the WTO mechanism is the prompt settlement of situations in which a
member considers that any benefit accruing to it directly or indirectly under the WTO Agreement is
being impaired by measures taken by another member. A dispute settlement mechanism aims to
secure a positive solution to a dispute. Thus, a solution mutually acceptable to the parties to a
dispute is preferred. However, in the absence of a mutually agreed solution, the first objective is
usually to secure the withdrawal of measures concerned. A measure is any internal act, whether a
law, an administrative action, or a judicial decision of a member.
The DSB is the WTO organ that is mandated to administer the rules and procedures that govern the
settlement of disputes. It is made up of the representatives of all the members of the WTO. Each
member is entitled to one vote.
The DSB has the following powers and functions: (a) to establish panels, (b) to adopt or reject panel
and Appellate Body reports, (c) to maintain surveillance of the implementation of rulings and
recommendations, and (d) to authorize the suspension of concessions and other obligations. It is
understood that requests for conciliation and the use of the dispute settlement procedures should
not be viewed as contentious acts. Members engage in this procedure to resolve disputes. [copied]
If a measure adopted by a country (A) within its territory impinges on, for example, the exports of
another country (B), the first step in dispute settlement is the filing of a request for consultation by
the complainant. In this case, B is the complainant.
If B requests consultation with A, then A must consider the complaint of B. A must reply to the
request within 10 days after its receipt and enter into consultations with B in good faith within a
period of 30 days from the date of the request, with a view to reaching a mutually satisfactory
solution. If A does not respond within 10 days, does not enter into consultations within a period of 30
days from the filing of the request, and if the consultation fails to settle a dispute within 60 days after
the request for consultation, then B may proceed to request the establishment of a panel.
Good offices, conciliation, and mediation may be requested at any time by any party to a dispute.
They may begin and be terminated at any time. Once they are terminated, the complaining party can
then request the establishment of a panel.
If the complaining party so requests, a panel may be established by the DSB. The function of the
panel is to assist the DSB in discharging its responsibilities. Accordingly, a panel should make an
objective assessment of the matter before it, including the facts of the case and the applicability and
conformity of the measure with the relevant agreements. It should also make other findings that will
assist the DSB in making the recommendations or in giving the rulings provided for in the covered
agreements, besides consulting regularly with the parties to the dispute and giving them adequate
opportunity to develop a mutually satisfactory solution. [Copied]
The request for the establishment of a panel should be made in writing, indicate whether
consultations were held, identify the specific measures at issue, and provide a brief summary of the
legal basis of the complaint. [Copied]
xxxx
Notably, Justice Sereno began her above discussion with ideas presumably from her four sources,
which she put together and fashioned into her own sentences and paragraphs. The ideas were from
GATT but the presentation was original Sereno. Down the line, however, without introduction or
preamble, she copied verbatim into her work portions from Understanding on Dispute Settlement,
without citing this specific source. More, she did not use quotation marks to identify the copied
portions. She thus made ordinary readers like me believe that she also crafted those portions. To
borrow a word from the civil code, she "co-mingled" the work of others with hers, erasing the identity
of the lifted work.
Justice Serenos explanation is that, since she was drawing from the rules embodied in GATTs
Understanding on Dispute Settlement, she did not have to make attributions to those rules at each
turn of her writing. She may be correct if she in fact properly cited those rules the first time she
copied from it and, further, indicated a clear intent to do further copying down the line. But she did
not. Properly, she could have written:
xxxx
The DSB has the following powers and functions: (a) to establish panels, (b) to adopt or reject panel
and Appellate Body reports, (c) to maintain surveillance of the implementation of rulings and
recommendations, and (d) to authorize the suspension of concessions and other obligations.
GATTs Understanding on Dispute Settlement has a lot to say about the subject and some are
mentioned here. For one it says, "It is understood that requests for conciliation and the use of the
Sereno, J.
After receipt of comments from the
parties, the panel shall issue an interim
report to them, including both the
descriptive sections and the panels
findings and conclusions. The parties may
submit written requests for the panel to
review precise aspects of the interim
report for which the panel shall meet with
the parties. If no comments are received
from any party within the comment period,
the interim report shall be considered the
final panel report and circulated promptly
to the members. (page 7)
Note that the AB reviews only issues of law An appeal shall be limited to issues of law
covered in the panel report and legal
covered in the panel report and legal
interpretation developed by the panel.
interpretations developed by the panel.
(page 8)
[Article 17.6, GATT Annex 2]
The DSB shall keep under surveillance the
implementation of adopted
recommendation or rulings. Any member
may raise the issue of implementation of
the recommendations or rulings at the DSB
anytime following their adoption. (page 8)
Going to another item in the same article, Justice Sereno copies significant lines from Oppenheims
Treatise without making an attribution to that work.
Sereno, J.
In mediation, the third party facilitates the
negotiations between the parties
concerned. It involves direct conduct of
negotiations between the parties at issue
on the basis of proposals made by the
mediator.
On the other hand, good offices are a
friendly offer by a third party, which tries to
induce disputants to negotiate among
themselves. Such efforts mayconsist of
various kinds of actions tending to call
negotiations between conflicting states into
existence. (page 11)
Justice Sereno explains that "trite, common, standard statement[s]" like the ones she copied from
Oppenheim has "nothing original at all about [them]" and need no citation or quotation marks. This is
true. Indeed, the Court acknowledged in its October 12, 2010 decision that no plagiarism could be
committed respecting "common definitions and terms, abridged history of certain principles of law,
and similar frequently repeated phrases that, in the world of legal literature, already belong to the
public realm." But I cite the above because Justice Sereno would not grant to Justice Del Castillo the
liberty to use common definitions and terms in his ponencia without the correct attribution.
In the original draft of this concurring opinion that I circulated among the members of the Court, I
mentioned an article published in 2007 that Justice Sereno wrote with two others entitled Justice and
the Cost of Doing Business.6 I found that a portion of this article appeared to have been reproduced
without attribution from a 2005 publication, the Asian Development Bank Country Governance
Assessment (Philippines) 2005.7 Justice Sereno has since explained to my satisfaction that such
portion came from the three co-authors earlier 2001 report submitted to the World Bank (WB). I am
dropping it as a case of omission of attribution.
Parenthetically, however, in the academic model, "dual and overlapping submissions" is a thesis
writers sin. It simply means that the same academic work is submitted to gain credit for more than
one academic course.8 In the publishing world, while not prohibited across the board, law journals
and reviews frown upon authors who submit manuscripts which have been previously published
elsewhere, since the purpose of publication is the circulation and distribution of original scholarship
and the practice would permit the author to be credited twice for the same work.
Notably, from the papers she furnished the members of the Court, it would seem that the WB Danish
Trust Fund commissioned and paid for the 2001 study that Justice Sereno and her co-authors
undertook. Indeed, the cover page of the WB paper she also provided shows that it was part of the
"Document of the World Bank." I would assume, however, that Justice Sereno obtained WB
authorization for the subsequent publication of the report in 2007.
Next, in her memorandum for petitioners-intervenors Franklin M. Drilon and Adel A. Tamano in
Province of North Cotabato, et al. v. Government of the Republic of the Philippines Peace and Panel
on Ancestral Domain, et al.,9Justice Sereno lifted a famous phrase from the United States case of
Baker v. Carr, 169 U.S. 180, without making attribution to her source.
J. Sereno
Second, there is no lack of a
judicially discoverable and
manageable standard for resolving
the question, nor impossibility of
deciding the question without an
initial policy determination of a kind
clearly for non-judicial discretion.
Justice Sereno explains that, since she earlier cited Baker v. Carr in her memorandum, it would be
utterly pointless to require her to repeat her citation as often as excerpts from the case appear down
the line. It is not quite pointless because one who copies from the work of another has an obligation,
she insists in her dissent, to make an attribution to his source. Otherwise, a writer can simply say at
the start of his article that he is copying from a list of named cases and it would be up to the reader
to guess where the copied portions are located in that article. An explanation like this from an
academician is disheartening.
In another article, Uncertainties Beyond The Horizon: The Metamorphosis of the WTO Investment
Framework In The Philippine Setting,10 Justice Sereno also copied from the World Trade
Organization fact sheet on line (prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture) without
using quotation marks, and made the material appear to be her own original analysis. Thus:
J. Sereno
The World Trade Organization
(WTO) was established on January
1, 1995. It is a multilateral institution
charged with administering rules for
trade among member countries. The
WTO functions as the principal
international body concerned with
multilateral negotiations on the
reduction of trade barriers and other
measures that distort competition.
The WTO also serves as a platform
for countries to raise their concerns
regarding the trade policies of their
trading partners. The basic aim of
the WTO is to liberalize world trade
and place it on a secure basis,
thereby contributing to economic
growth and development.
Here again, Justice Sereno ignores her unbendable rule that one commits plagiarism by his "[f]ailure
to use quotation marks to indicate that the entire paragraph in the body of the decisionwas not the
ponentes original paragraph, but was lifted verbatim from [anothers] work."
In his book entitled Economic Analysis of Law (2nd edition, 1977), Judge Richard A. Posner wrote:
xxx Hence, settlement negotiations will fail, and litigation ensue, only if the minimum price that the
plaintiff is willing to accept in compromise of his claim is greater than the maximum price the
defendant is willing to pay in satisfaction of that claim. (At p. 435)
Justice Sereno copied the above verbatim in her article entitled Lawyers Behavior and Judicial
Decision-Making11published in the Philippine Law Journal, without quotation marks or attribution to
Judge Posner. Thus, she wrote:
xxx [S]ettlement negotiations will fail and litigation will ensue if the minimum price that plaintiff is
willing to accept in compromise of his claim is greater than the maximum price that the defendant is
willing to pay in satisfaction of that claim. (At page 483)
In other sections of the same article that Justice Sereno wrote, she either copied verbatim from
Judge Posner or mimicked his ideas without attributing these to him. Thus:
Judge Posner wrote -A somewhat more plausible case can be made that judges might slant their decisions in favour of
powerful interest groups in order to increase the prospects of promotion to higher office, judicial or
otherwise. xxx (At p. 416)
Justice Sereno mimicked -The third is that the judge maximizes the prospects of his promotion to a higher office by slanting his
decisions in favor of powerful interest groups. (page 489)
Judge Posner wrote -Presumably judges, like the rest of us, seek to maximize a utility function that includes both
monetary and non-monetary elements xxx. (At p. 415)
Justice Sereno mimicked -In understanding judicial behaviour we have to assume that judges like all economic actors
maximize a utility function. This function in all probability includes material as well as non-material
factors. xxx (At page 489)
Judge Posner wrote -[T]he rules of the judicial process have been carefully designed both to prevent the judge from
receiving a monetary payoff from deciding a particular case one way or the other and to minimize the
influence of politically effective interest groups in his decisions. [At p. 415]
Justice Sereno mimicked --
The first is that the American judicial system have rules designed to minimize the possibilities of a
judge maximizing his financial interest by receiving a bribe from a litigant or from acceding to a
politically powerful interest group by making the rules work in such a manner as to create
disincentives for the judge ruling in such a manner (page 489)
Judge Posner wrote -It is often argued, for example, that the judge who owns land will decide in favor of landowners, the
judge who walks to work will be in favour of pedestrians. Posner, 415]
Justice Sereno mimicked -The second proceeding from the first is that the judge maximizes the interest of the group to which
he belongs. If he belongs to the landowning class he will generally favor landowners and if he walks
to work, he will generally favor pedestrians. (page 489)
Judge Posner wrote -[J]udges seek to impose their preferences, tastes, values, etc. on society. [Posner, 416]
Justice Sereno mimicked-The last is that judges maximize their influence on society by imposing their values, tastes and
preferences thereon. (page 489)
Using the severe standards she sets for Justice Del Castillo in Vinuya, i.e., "objective existence of
plagiarism," I am afraid that any explanation of good faith or lack of malicious intent on Justice
Serenos part in copying without proper attribution from the work of Judge Posner would not be
acceptable.
Still I can concede that Justice Sereno may not have intended to plagiarize the work of others even if
she copied verbatim from them without proper attribution or quotation marks. Her above articles
were, taken as whole, essentially hers. I regret, however, that since she wrote them as an
academician bound by the high standards that she and the University of the Philippines where she
taught espouse, she may have failed, borrowing her own phrase, to set the correct "educative and
moral directional value" for the young.
Justice Del Castillo, who did not write as an academician but as a judge, is at least entitled to the
liberties granted judges in writing decisions.
I vote to DENY the motion for reconsideration filed in this case.
ROBERTO A. ABAD
Associate Justice
Footnotes
Sereno, Toward the Formulation of a Philippine Position in Resolving Trade and Investment
Disputes in APEC, Philippine APEC Study Center Network (PASCN) Discussion Paper No.
2001-15 (2001). [available online athttp://pascn.pids.gov.ph/DiscList/d01/s01-15.pdf]
4
Harvey writes that "[w]ords you use verbatim from a source must be put in quotation marks,
even if you use only two or three words; its not enough simply to cite." Harvey, Writing with
Sources: A Guide for Harvard Students 10 (2008).
5
Ma Lourdes A. Sereno, Emmanuel S. De Dios, and Joseph J. Capuno, Justice and the
Cost of Doing Business: The Philippines (2007) published by the Philippine Institute for
Development Studies.
6
online at http://www.econ.upd.ude.ph/respub/dp/pdf/DP2007-11.pdf or
http://publications.pids.gov.ph/details.phtml?pid=4180
7
At p. 103.