BERSAMIN Book - Appeal N Review Phils
BERSAMIN Book - Appeal N Review Phils
BERSAMIN Book - Appeal N Review Phils
Justice Bersamin
GENERAL RULE: can consider only matters which are contained in the records of
the trial court or that which is FORMALLY OFFERED.
EXCEPTION:
1. Matters of jurisdiction
2. Judicial notice
3. Published data of general factual nature (the brandeis brief)
- materials of socio-economic nature which are relevant and very
persuasive, even if non-legal in character, in the exercise of discretionary
judicial notice by the appellate court, although not brought to the
attention of the trial court.
4. Offer of proof or tender of excluded evidence
- points of law, theories, issues of fact, and arguments not adequately brought
to the attention of the TC need not be considered by a reviewing court, as they
cannot be raised for the first time on appeal.
General Rule:
NEW QUESTIONS OR ISSUES ARE NOT ALLOWED ON APPEAL
-Must be within the issues framed by the parties in the trial.
- the determination of issues at the pre-trial conference bars the
consideration of other questions on appeal.
Exceptions:
1) in order to prevent injustice
2) public importance
3) error is plain and refusal will result in the denial of fundamental
justice
4) new evidence which developed after trial renders the appeal moot.
5) Raised to sustain the decision on another ground.
Exceptions:
1) Plainly overlooked certain facts of value
2) Evidence on record fails to support or substantiate the findings and
conclusions of TC
3) Judge who rendered the decision was not the one who heard the
witnesses
4) Conclusions of the trial courts reached arbitrarily.
5) Proceedings resulted in a denial of substantial justice or involved a
serious departure from established procedure.
PARAMETERS FOR SCRUTINIZING CREDIBILITY OF WITNESSES
o Will not disturb factual findings of the lower court.
o Findings pertaining of witnesses are entitled to great respect.
o A witness who testified in a categorical, straight forward, spontaneous,
and frank manner and remain consistent on cross-examination.
Or
RES JUDICATA
- (aka estoppel per rem judicatam)
- cause of action estoppel, issue estoppel, preclusion of claims
- Matter adjudged; a thing judicially acted upon or decided
- Thing or matter settled by judgment.
- There should be an end to litigation by same parties over subject
once fully and fairly adjudicated; public policy and necessity.
- Purpose:
o To prevent unnecessary proceedings involving expenses
and prevent wastage of courts time
o To avoid stale litigations and enable defendant to know the
extent of the claims being made arising out of the same
single incident.
CONCLUSIVENESS OF JUDGMENT
- collateral estoppel or preclusion of issues
- Issue actually and directly passed upon and determined in
a former suit cannot again be drawn in question in any
future action between the same parties involving different
cause of action.
- Special circumstances in an individual case may justify a departure
from the rigid application of the estoppel.
- Estoppel may be lifted where there was an agreement clearly
made between the parties that second claim will be held in
abeyance to await the outcome of the first.
- EXCEPTION
o LEGAL QUESTION
o Two actions involved SUBSTANTIALLY DIFFERENT CLAIMS
STARE DECISIS
- to adhere to precedent and not to unsettle things which are
settled.
- Principle underlying the decision in one case will be deemed
of imperative authority, controlling the decisions of like
cases in the same court and in lower courts within the
same jurisdiction, unless reversed or overruled.
o A single decision does not necessarily create a precedent to
be followed.
- judicial decisions assume the same authority as a statute itself and
until authoritatively abandoned.
FINAL JUDGMENTS NOT TO BE DISTURBED
BUT RESPECTED, EVEN IF WRONG