Liong Vs Lee
Liong Vs Lee
Liong Vs Lee
GR No. 181658
August 7, 2013
VILLARAMA, JR., J.
Facts:
Petitioner Lee Pue Liong, a.k.a. Paul Lee, is the President of Centillion Holdings, Inc. (CHI), a company
affiliated with the CKC Group of Companies (CKC Group) which includes the pioneer company Clothman
Knitting Corporation (CKC). The CKC Group is the subject of intra-corporate disputes between petitioner
and his siblings, including herein respondent Chua Pue Chin Lee, a majority stockholder and Treasurer of
CHI.
On July 19, 1999, petitioner's siblings including respondent and some unidentified persons took over and
barricaded themselves inside the premises of a factory owned by CKC. Petitioner and other factory
employees were unable to enter the factory premises. This incident led to the filing of criminal cases against
Nixon Lee and against Nixon Lee, Andy Lee, Chua Kipsi a.k.a. Jensen Chua and respondent, which are now
On June 14, 1999, petitioner on behalf of CHI issued by Virginia Lee caused the filing of a verified Petition
for the Issuance of an Owner's Duplicate Copy of Transfer Certificate of Title (TCT) No. 232238 which covers
a property owned by CHI. The case was docketed as LRC Record No. 4004 of the Regional Trial Court (RTC)
of Manila, Branch 4. Petitioner submitted before the said court an Affidavit of Loss stating that: (1) by virtue
of his position as President of CHI, he had in his custody and possession the owner's duplicate copy of TCT
No. 232238 issued by the Register of Deeds for Manila; (2) that said owner's copy of TCT No. 232238 was
inadvertently lost or misplaced from his files and he discovered such loss in May 1999; (3) he exerted
diligent efforts in locating the said title but it had not been found and is already beyond recovery; and (4)
said title had not been the subject of mortgage or used as collateral for the payment of any obligation with
any person, credit or banking institution. Petitioner likewise testified in support of the foregoing averments
during an ex-parte proceeding. In its Order dated September 17, 1999, the RTC granted the petition and
directed the Register of Deeds of Manila to issue a new Owner's Duplicate Copy in lieu of the lost one.
Respondent, joined by her brother Nixon Lee, filed an Omnibus Motion praying, among others, that the
September 17, 1999 Order be set aside claiming that petitioner knew fully well that respondent was in
possession of the said Owner's Duplicate Copy, the latter being the Corporate Treasurer and custodian of
vital documents of CHI. Respondent added that petitioner merely needs to have another copy of the title
because he planned to mortgage the same with the Planters Development Bank. Respondent even
produced the Owner's Duplicate Copy of TCT No. 232238 in open court. Thus, on November 12, 1999, the
RTC recalled and set aside its September 17, 1999 Order.
On June 7, 2000, respondent executed a Supplemental Affidavit to clarify that she was accusing petitioner
of perjury allegedly committed on the following occasions: (1) by declaring in the VERIFICATION the veracity
of the contents in his petition filed with the RTC of Manila concerning his claim that TCT No. 232238 was in
his possession but was lost; (2) by declaring under oath in his affidavit of loss that said TCT was lost; and (3)
by testifying under oath that the said TCT was inadvertently lost from his files.
Respondent posed that the presence and intervention of the private prosecutor in the perjury cases are
not prohibited by the rules, stressing that she is, in fact, an aggrieved party, being a stockholder, an officer
Issue: WHETHER OR NOT THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS COMMITTED A GRAVE ERROR WHEN IT
UPHELD THE RESOLUTION OF THE METROPOLITAN TRIAL COURT THAT THERE IS A PRIVATE OFFENDED
Ruling:
The petition has no merit. Accordingly, if there is no waiver or reservation of civil liability, evidence should
There was neither a waiver nor a reservation made; nor did the offended party institute a separate civil
action. It follows that evidence should be allowed in the criminal proceedings to establish the civil liability
arising from the offense committed and the private offended party has the right to intervene through the
private prosecutors.
Such right to intervene exists even when no civil liability is involved as pronounced in the ruling in Lim Tek
Goan.
Even assuming that no civil liability was alleged or proved in the perjury case being tried in the MeTC, this
Court declared in the early case of Lim Tek Goan v. Yatco cited by both MeTC and CA, that whether public
or private crimes are involved, it is erroneous for the trial court to consider the intervention of the offended
party by counsel as merely a matter of tolerance. Thus, where the private prosecution has asserted its right
to intervene in the proceedings, that right must be respected. The right reserved by the Rules to the
offended party is that of intervening for the sole purpose of enforcing the civil liability born of the criminal
act and not of demanding punishment of the accused. Such intervention, moreover, is always subject to
Private respondent did not waive the civil action, nor did she reserve the right to institute it separately, nor
institute the civil action for damages arising from the offense charged. Thus, we find that the private