14 Go v. San Juan de Letran
14 Go v. San Juan de Letran
14 Go v. San Juan de Letran
BRION , J : p
Before the Court is a petition for review on certiorari 1 assailing the decision 2 dated
May 27, 2005 and the resolution 3 dated August 18, 2005 of the Court of Appeals (CA) in
CA-G.R. CV No. 80349. The CA decision reversed and set aside the decision 4 of the
Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Caloocan City, Branch 131, awarding civil damages to the
petitioners. The CA resolution denied the petitioners' subsequent motion for
reconsideration.
The petitioners claim that respondents Colegio de San Juan de Letran (Letran), Rev.
Fr. Edwin Lao, Rev. Fr. Jose Rhommel Hernandez, Mr. Albert Rosarda and Ma. Teresa
Suratos should be held liable for moral, exemplary, and actual damages for unlawfully
dismissing petitioner Emerson Chester Kim B. Go (Kim) from the rolls of the high school
department of Letran. The respondents claim that they lawfully suspended Kim for
violating the school's rule against fraternity membership.
Factual Background
In October 2001, Mr. George Isleta, the Head of Letran's Auxiliary Services
Department, received information that certain fraternities were recruiting new members
among Letran's high school students. He also received a list of the students allegedly
involved. School authorities started an investigation, including the conduct of medical
examinations on the students whose names were on the list. On November 20, 2002, Dr.
Emmanuel Asuncion, the school physician, reported that six (6) students bore injuries,
probable signs of blunt trauma of more than two weeks, on the posterior portions of their
thighs. 5 Mr. Rosarda, the Assistant Prefect for Discipline, conferred with the students and
asked for their explanations in writing.
Four (4) students, namely: Raphael Jay Fulgencio, Nicolai Lacson, Carlos Parilla, and
Isaac Gumba, admitted that they were neophytes of the Tau Gamma Fraternity and were
present in a hazing rite held on October 3, 2001 in the house of one Dulce in Tondo, Manila.
They also identi ed the senior members of the fraternity present at their hazing. These
included Kim, then a fourth year high school student. ESHAIC
On January 28, 2002, the petitioners led a complaint 1 6 for damages before the
RTC of Caloocan City claiming that the respondents 1 7 had unlawfully dismissed Kim. 1 8
Mr. and Mrs. Go also sought compensation for the "business opportunity losses" they
suffered while personally attending to Kim's disciplinary case.
The Ruling of the RTC
Mrs. Go 1 9 and Mr. Go 2 0 testi ed for the petitioners at the trial. Mr. Rosarda, 21 Fr.
Hernandez, 2 2 and Fr. Lao 2 3 testified for the respondents.
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The RTC 2 4 held that the respondents had failed to observe "the basic requirement
of due process" and that their evidence was "utterly insu cient" to prove that Kim was a
fraternity member. 2 5 It also declared that Letran had no authority to dismiss students for
their fraternity membership. Accordingly, it awarded the petitioners moral and exemplary
damages. The trial court also held that Mr. Go was entitled to actual damages after nding
that he had neglected his manufacturing business when he personally attended to his
son's disciplinary case. The dispositive portion of the decision reads:
WHEREFORE, in view of all the foregoing, the Court renders judgment in
favor of plaintiffs-spouses Eugene C. Go and Angelita B. Go, together with their
minor son Emerson Chester Kim B. Go, as against defendants Colegio De San
Juan De Letran, Fr. Edwin Lao, Fr. Jose Rhommel Hernandez, Albert Rosarda and
Ma. Teresa Suratos, and they are hereby ordered the following:
This paragraph seems to limit the scope of the order's prohibition to public
elementary and secondary schools. However, in ascertaining the meaning of DECS Order
No. 20, s. 1991, the entire order must be taken as a whole. 3 0 It should be read, not in
isolated parts, but with reference to every other part and every word and phrase in
connection with its context. 3 1
Even a cursory perusal of the rest of DECS Order No. 20, s. 1991 reveals the
education department's clear intent to apply the prohibition against fraternity membership
for all elementary and high school students, regardless of their school of enrollment.
The order's title, "Prohibition of Fraternities and Sororities in Elementary and
Secondary Schools," serves to clarify whatever ambiguity may arise from its fourth
paragraph. 3 2 It is a straightforward title. It directs the prohibition to elementary and
secondary schools in general, and does not distinguish between private and public
schools. We also look at the order's second paragraph, whereby the department faults an
earlier regulation, Department Order No. 6, series of 1954, for failing to ban fraternities and
sororities in public and private secondary schools. With the second paragraph, it is clear
that the education department sought to remedy the earlier order's failing by way of DECS
Order No. 20, s. 1991.
Finally, we note that the order is addressed to the heads of private schools, colleges,
and universities, and not just to the public school authorities.
For this Court to sustain the RTC's restrictive interpretation and accordingly limit the
prohibition in DECS Order No. 20, s. 1991 to students enrolled in public schools would be
to impede the very purpose of the order. 3 3 In United Harbor Pilots' Association of the
Philippines, Inc. v. Association of International Shipping Lines, Inc. , where the Court
construed an executive order, 3 4 we also stated that statutes are to be given such
construction as would advance the object, suppress the mischief, and secure the bene ts
the statute intended. There is no reason why this principle cannot apply to the construction
of DECS Order No. 20, s. 1991.
Incidentally, the penalty for non-compliance with DECS Order No. 20, s. 1991, is
expulsion, a severe form of disciplinary penalty consisting of excluding a student from
admission to any public or private school in the country. It requires the approval of the
education secretary before it can be imposed. 3 5 In contrast, the penalty prescribed by the
rules of Letran for fraternity membership among their high school students is dismissal,
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which is limited to the exclusion of an erring student from the rolls of the school.
Even assuming arguendo that the education department had not issued such
prohibition, private schools still have the authority to promulgate and enforce a similar
prohibition pursuant to their right to establish disciplinary rules and regulations. 3 6 This
right has been recognized in the Manual of Regulations for Private Schools, which has the
character of law. 3 7 Section 78 of the 1992 Manual of Regulations for Private Schools, in
particular and with relevance to this case, provides:
Section 78. Authority to Promulgate Disciplinary Rules. — Every private
school shall have the right to promulgate reasonable norms, rules and regulations
it may deem necessary and consistent with the provisions of this Manual for the
maintenance of good school discipline and class attendance. Such rules and
regulations shall be effective as of promulgation and noti cation to students in
an appropriate school issuance or publication.AEScHa
The right to establish disciplinary rules is consistent with the mandate in the
Constitution 3 8 for schools to teach discipline; 3 9 in fact, schools have the duty to develop
discipline in students. 4 0 Corollarily, the Court has always recognized the right of schools
to impose disciplinary sanctions on students who violate disciplinary rules. 4 1 The penalty
for violations includes dismissal or exclusion from re-enrollment.
We nd Letran's rule prohibiting its high school students from joining fraternities to
be a reasonable regulation, not only because of the reasons stated in DECS Order No. 20,
s. 1991, 4 2 but also because of the adult-oriented activities often associated with
fraternities. Expectedly, most, if not all, of its high school students are minors. Besides,
Letran's penalty for violation of the rule is clearly stated in its enrollment contracts and in
the Students Handbooks 4 3 it distributes at the start of every school year. 4 4
In this case, the petitioners were noti ed of both rule and penalty through Kim's
enrollment contract for school year 2001 to 2002. 4 5 Notably, the penalty provided for
fraternity membership is "summary dismissal." We also note that Mrs. Go signi ed her
conformé to these terms with her signature in the contract. 4 6 No reason, therefore, exist
to justify the trial court's position that respondent Letran cannot lawfully dismiss violating
students, such as Kim.
On the issue of due process, the petitioners insist that the question be resolved
under the guidelines for administrative due process in Ang Tibay v. Court of Industrial
Relations. 4 7 They argue that the respondents violated due process (a) by not conducting a
formal inquiry into the charge against Kim; (b) by not giving them any written notice of the
charge; and (c) by not providing them with the opportunity to cross-examine the neophytes
who had positively identi ed Kim as a senior member of their fraternity. The petitioners
also fault the respondents for not showing them the neophytes' written statements, which
they claim to be unverified, unsworn, and hearsay.
These arguments deserve scant attention.
In Ateneo de Manila University v. Capulong , 4 8 the Court held that Guzman v.
National University , 4 9 not Ang Tibay, is the authority on the procedural rights of
students in disciplinary cases. In Guzman, we laid down the minimum standards in the
imposition of disciplinary sanctions in academic institutions, as follows:
[I]t bears stressing that due process in disciplinary cases involving students
does not entail proceedings and hearings similar to those prescribed for actions
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and proceedings in courts of justice. The proceedings in student discipline
cases may be summary; and cross-examination is not, contrary to petitioners'
view, an essential part thereof. There are withal minimum standards which must
be met to satisfy the demands of procedural due process; and these are, that (1)
the students must be informed in writing of the nature and cause of any
accusation against them; (2) they shall have the right to answer the charges
against them, with the assistance of counsel, if desired; (3) they shall be
informed of the evidence against them; (4) they shall have the right to adduce
evidence in their own behalf; and (5) the evidence must be duly considered by
the investigating committee or o cial designated by the school authorities to
hear and decide the case. 5 0
Through the notices, the respondents duly informed the petitioners in writing that
Kim had a disciplinary charge for fraternity membership. At the earlier November 23, 2001
Parents-Teachers Conference, Mr. Rosarda also informed Mrs. Go that the charge
stemmed from the fraternity neophytes' positive identi cation of Kim as a member; thus
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the petitioners fully knew of the nature of the evidence that stood against Kim.
The petitioners nevertheless argue that the respondents defectively observed the
written notice rule because they had requested, and received, Kim's written explanation at
a time when the respondents had not yet issued the written notice of the accusation
against him. The records indicate that while Kim's denial and the rst notice were both
dated December 19, 2001, Kim had not yet received the notice at the time he made the
requested written explanation.
We see no merit in this argument as the petitioners apparently hew to an erroneous
view of administrative due process. Jurisprudence has clari ed that administrative due
process cannot be fully equated with due process in the strict judicial sense. 6 0 The very
nature of due process negates any concept of in exible procedures universally applicable
to every imaginable situation. 6 1 Thus, we are hard pressed to believe that Kim's denial of
his fraternity membership before formal notice was given worked against his interest in
the disciplinary case. What matters for due process purpose is notice of what is to be
explained, not the form in which the notice is given.
The raison d'etre of the written notice rule is to inform the student of the disciplinary
charge against him and to enable him to suitably prepare a defense. The records show that
as early as November 23, 2001, it was already made plain to the petitioners that the
subject matter of the case against Kim was his alleged fraternity membership. Thus, by the
time Mr. Rosarda spoke to Kim and asked for his written explanation in December 2001,
Kim has had enough time to prepare his response to this plain charge. We also note that
the information in the notice the respondents subsequently sent is no different from the
information that they had earlier conveyed, albeit orally, to the petitioners: the simple
unadorned statement that Kim stood accused of fraternity membership. Given these
circumstances, we are not convinced that Kim's right to explain his side as exercised in his
written denial had been violated or diminished. The essence of due process, it bears
repeating, is simply the opportunity to be heard. 6 2
And Kim had been heard. His written explanation was received, indeed even
solicited, by the respondents. Thus, he cannot claim that he was denied the right to adduce
evidence in his behalf. In fact, the petitioners were given further opportunity to produce
additional evidence with the January 8, 2002 conference that they did not attend. We are
also satis ed that the respondents had considered all the pieces of evidence and found
these to be substantial. We note especially that the petitioners never imputed any motive
on Kim's co-students that would justify the claim that they uttered falsehood against him.
In Licup v. San Carlos University , 6 3 the Court held that when a student commits a
serious breach of discipline or fails to maintain the required academic standard, he forfeits
his contractual right, and the court should not review the discretion of university
authorities. 6 4 In San Sebastian College v. Court of Appeals, et al., 6 5 we held that only when
there is marked arbitrariness should the court interfere with the academic judgment of the
school faculty and the proper authorities. 6 6 In this case, we nd that the respondents
observed due process in Kim's disciplinary case, consistent with our pronouncements in
Guzman. No reason exists why the above principles in these cited cases cannot apply to
this case. The respondents' decision that Kim had violated a disciplinary rule and should be
sanctioned must be respected. ISHCcT
As a nal point, the CA correctly held that there were no further bases to hold the
respondents liable for moral or exemplary damages. Our study of the records con rms
that the respondents did not act with bad faith, malice, fraud, or improper or willful motive
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or conduct in disciplining Kim. Moreover, we nd no basis for the award of actual
damages. The petitioners claim, and the RTC agreed, 6 7 that the respondents are liable for
the business opportunity losses the petitioners incurred after their clients had cancelled
their purchases in their plastic-manufacturing business. To prove the claim, Mr. Go
testi ed that he neglected his business affairs because he had his attention on Kim's
unlawful dismissal, and that his clients had subsequently cancelled their purchase orders
when he could not con rm them. 6 8 His testimony on the reason for the clients'
cancellation, however, is obviously hearsay and remains speculative. The respondents'
liability for actual damages cannot be based on speculation.
For these reasons, we nd no reversible error in the assailed CA decision, and
accordingly, DENY the present petition.
WHEREFORE , premises considered, we hereby AFFIRM the decision dated May 27,
2005 of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 80349.
Costs against the petitioners.
SO ORDERED .
Carpio, Del Castillo, Perez and Perlas-Bernabe, JJ., concur.
Footnotes
3.Id. at 53-55.
4.In Civil Case No. C-19938, dated August 18, 2003; id. at 81-93.
5.RTC Records, p. 540.
6.Id. at 545.
7.Id. at 548.
8.Id. at 502.
9.TSN dated June 30, 2003, p. 657.
10.Id. at 658.
11.TSN dated May 19, 2003, p. 399.
26.Id. at 93.
27.Id. at 55.
28.Rollo, p. 19. The present petition assigned the following errors:
ASSIGNMENT OF ERRORS
WITH DUE RESPECT, THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS GRAVELY ABUSED ITS
DISCRETION AND COMMITTED SERIOUS ERROR OF LAW WHEN IT HELD THAT —
I DUE PROCESS ATTENDED THE SANCTION IMPOSED BY RESPONDENTS ON PETITIONER
KIM JUST BECAUSE THEY REQUIRED HIM TO EXPLAIN IN WRITING (WITHOUT ANY
WRITTEN CHARGE INFORMING HIM OF THE NATURE AND CAUSE OF ACCUSATION
AGAINST HIM) HIS MEMBERSIP [sic] IN FRATERNITY, WHICH HE DID BY DENYING IT,
ALTHOUGH THE SANCTION IS BASED MERELY ON CONFIDENTIAL, UNDISCLOSED,
UNVERIFIED OR UNSWORN STATEMENTS OF HIS CO-STUDENTS AND, WORSE, ON
CONFIDENTIAL, UNDISCLOSED, UNVERIFIED AND DOUBLE HERESAY [sic] REPORT OF
RESPONDENT SCHOOL'S DETACHMENT COMMANDER.
II WHEN IT CLEARED RESPONDENTS OF ANY LIABILITY FOR DAMAGES.
29.DECS Order No. 20, s. 1991 reads:
PROHIBITION OF FRATERNITIES AND SORORITIES
IN ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY SCHOOLS
To:Bureau Directors
Regional Directors
School Superintendents
Presidents, State Colleges and Universities
Heads of Private Schools, Colleges and Universities
Vocational School Superintendents/Administrators
1. Recent events call attention to unfortunate incidents resulting from initiation rites (hazing)
conducted in fraternities and sororities. In some cases, problems like drug addiction,
vandalism, absenteeism, rumble and other behavior problems in elementary and
secondary schools were found to be linked to the presence of and/or the active
membership of some pupils/students in such organizations.
2. Although Department Order No. 6, s. 1954 prohibits hazing in schools and imposes
sanctions for violations, it does not ban fraternities/sororities in public and private
secondary schools .
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3. Considering that enrolments in elementary and secondary schools are relatively small and
students come from the immediate communities served, the presence of
fraternities/sororities which serve as socializing agents among pupil/student-peers is
not deemed necessary. On the other hand, interest clubs and co-curricular organizations
like the Drama Club, Math Club, Junior Police organization and others perform that same
function and in addition develop pupil/student potentials.
4. Effective upon receipt of this order, fraternities and sororities are prohibited in public
elementary and secondary schools. Penalty for non-compliance is expulsion of
pupils/students.
5. Wide dissemination of and strict compliance with this Order is enjoined.
(Sgd.) ISIDRO D. CARIÑO
[emphasis ours]
30.See Judge Leynes v. Commission on Audit, 463 Phil. 557, 573 (2003).
31.See Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. TMX Sales, Inc., 205 SCRA 184, 188.
32.See Government of the P.I. v. Municipality of Binalonan, 32 Phil. 634, 636 (1915).
33.Paragraphs 1 and 2, DECS Order No. 20, s. 1991. We also note that the intent of the DECS
Order No. 20, s. 1991 has been further clarified by the Department of Education itself in a
2006 issuance titled "REITERATING THE PROHIBITION OF THE PRACTICE OF HAZING
AND THE OPERATION OF FRATERNITIES IN SORORITIES IN ELEMENTARY AND
SECONDARY SCHOOLS." Department of Education Order No. 7, s. 2006 explicitly states,
and we quote: "DECS Order No. 20, s. 1991, meanwhile, prohibits the operation of
fraternities in public and private elementary and secondary schools."
34.G.R. No. 133763, November 13, 2002, 391 SCRA 522, 533. See also Association of
International Shipping Lines, Inc. v. United Harbor Pilots' Association of the Philippines,
Inc., G.R. No. 172029, August 6, 2008, 561 SCRA 284, 294.
35.Section 77, 1992 Manual of Regulations for Private Schools.
36.Tan v. Court of Appeals, 276 Phil. 227 (1991).
41.Alcuaz v. Philippine School of Business Administration, 244 Phil. 8, 23 (1988), citing Ateneo
de Manila University v. Court of Appeals, No. L-56180, October 16, 1986, 145 SCRA 100;
and Licup v. University of San Carlos (USC) , 258-A Phil. 417, 424.
42.Supra note 29.
43.RTC Records, pp. 536-537.
52.The students were enrolled at the De La Salle University and the College of Saint Benilde.
53.These documents were later formally offered in Civil Case No. C-19938 as Exhibits "7," "8,"
"9," "10," and "11" RTC Records, pp. 541-546.
54.Supra note 48.
55.Id. at 657-658.
56.RTC Records, p. 15.
57.TSN dated January 31, 2003, Record, pp. 116, 118, 123.
60.Gatus v. Quality House, Inc., G.R. No. 156766, April 16, 2009, 585 SCRA 177, 190.
61.Perez v. Philippine Telegraph and Telephone Company, G.R. No. 152048, April 7, 2009, 584
SCRA 110, 123.
62.Gatus v. Quality House, Inc., supra note 59, at 190, citing Phil. Airlines, Inc. v. National Labor
Relations Commission, G.R. No. 87353, July 3, 1991, 198 SCRA 748; see also Audion
Electric Co. v. National Labor Relations Commission, G.R. No. 106648, June 19, 1999,
308 SCRA 341.
66.Id. at 424, citing Garcia v. The Faculty Admission Committee, Loyola School of Theology,
No. L-40779, November 28, 1975, 68 SCRA 277, 289.