The Court Pillar
The Court Pillar
The Court Pillar
1 COURT PILLAR
Court is a body or tribunal to which the public administration and justice is delegated
CJS: processes the offender to attain equality in the application of law (justice) [via court]
Evolution of Court
Pre-colonial Era (PH)
Times whereby instead the datu, the elders (assembly of elders) are settling the dispute
All trials of criminal and civil cases in pre-Spanish Philippines were in public.
Before testifying, these witnesses took and oath to tell the truth.
The barangay court decided the case in favor of the litigants who presented more
proofs than the other.
Trial by Ordeal
Ordeal: Ancient form of challenge to determine the guilt or innocence of the accused.
With injuries = guilty; then the hand will be mutilated (cut off)
Ordeal of the lake (withcraft or warlocks): thrown in the lake (if floated: guilty;
punishment: burn alive) // (if drowned: not guilty)
Order of the rice chewing sati (MARITES): grains of the sati will be chewed and spit
If you spit it with blood = guilty; no blood = innocent
Order of drinking water (stay in the mouth): having water in mouth (specific amount),
have to run and have to spit the same amount of water. If not = guilty.
In criminal cases, when there was doubt as to who of the accused persons was really guilty of
the crime, trial by ordeal was resorted to.
It was believed that the gods protect the innocent and punished the guilty.
Through the ordeal the gods revealed divine truth to the people.
Thus, an accused person who was innocent was believed to be always successful in the
ordeal because the gods would make him win.
Meaning of Court
A court is a body to which the public administration of justice is delegated, being a
tribunal officially assembled under authority of law at the appropriate time and place for the
administration of justice through which the State enforces its sovereign rights and powers.0
2. To determine whether there has been grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack of
excess of jurisdiction on the part of any branch or instrumentality of the government.
6. The only institution capable of identifying and maintaining the proper balance between
the conflicting rights of the individual and those of the state and society.
9. It is in the court that our citizens primarily feel the keen cutting edge of the law.
10. The only constitution capable of identifying and maintaining the proper balance between the
conflicting rights of the state and society.
Judge: a public officer so-named in his commission to preside over and to administer the law
in a court.
: presiding officer in court
Jury is the body of people sworn to give a verdict. (12 people on the court — randomly
chosen citizens from the entire population)
Judicial Power
the reason why the court can perform all the roles mentioned beforehand.
A constitutional power.
2 KINDS:
2. The power of the courts to determine whether or not there has been a grave abuse of
discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction.
3. The only institution capable of identifying and maintining the proper balance between the
conflicting rights of the individual and those of the state and society; and
Meaning of Judge
A judge is public officer so named in his commission (written evidence of appointment and
appointed to preside over and to administer the law in a court of justice.)
It is a personality separate and distinct from the men who compose it.
A judge alone does not necessarily constitute a court, for while he is an indispensable part he
is only a part of the court.
Judicial power shall be vested in the Supreme Court and in such inferior courts
as may be established by law.
Judicial power includes the duty of the courts to settle actual controversies
involving rights which are legally demandable and enforceable, and to determine
whether or not there has been grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess
of jurisdiction on the part of any branch or instrumentality of the Government.
Lower courts as here used are not to be understood in the sense of insignificant
but as referring to all other courts below the Supreme Court.
7. Sandiganbayan
Jurisdiction Defined
The authority by which courts take cognizance of and decide cases, the legal right by which
judges exercise their authority.
Inherent power of a court ot hear, try and decide a case.
Jurisdiction of Courts
1. General
When it is empowered to decide all disputes which may come before it,
except those designated to other courts. (Ex. Jurisdiction of RTC);
2. Limited
When it has authority to hear and determine only a few specified cases. (Ex. Jurisdiction of
the Court of Tax Appeals);
3. Original
When it can try and decide a case presented for the first time;
4. Appellate
When it can take a case already heard and decided by a lower court removed from it by
appeal;
5. Exclusive
When it can try and decide a case which cannot be presented before any court;
6. Concurrent
When any one of two or more courts may take cognizance of a case;
7. Criminal
That which exists for the punishment of crime; and
8. Civil
That which exists when the subject matter is not of a criminal case.
In each metropolitan area, established by law are a Municipal Trial Court in every city not
forming part of the Metropolitan area and each of the municipalities not comprised within a
metropolitan area; as well as a Municipal Trial Court in each area defined as a municipal circuit
comprising of one or more cities and/or one or more municipalities grouped together according to
law.
B. Special Courts
Aside from the above-mentioned courts, there are also under present laws some special courts.
These are the following:
2. Sandiganbayan
The Sandiganbayan is retained by the new Constitution under the following provision in
Article XI, Sec. 4:
Sec. 4 The present anti-graft court known as the Sandiganbayan shall continue to function and
exercise its jurisdiction as now or hereafter may be provided by law.
The basic rule was embodied in Art. XIII, Sec. 5 of the 1973 Constitution, which called for the
creation by the Batasang Pambansa of a special court to be known as the Sandiganbayan. The
The 1973 Constitution provided that the Sandiganbayan “shall have jurisdiction over civil and
criminal cases involving graft and corrupt practices and such other offenses committed by public
officers and employees, including those government-owned or controlled corporations, in relation
to their office as may be determined by law.”
Under P.D. 1606, as amended, the Sandiganbayan consists of a presiding justice (1) and (8)
eight associate justices and has the same rank as the Court of Appeals. It sits in division of
three justices each, who shall be necessary to constitute a quorum and whose unanimous vote
shall be required for the pronouncement of the judgment. Its decision may be brought on certiorari
to
the Supreme Court.
C. Administrative Agencies
An Administrative Agency may be described as a body endowed with quasilegislative and quasi-
judicial powers for the purpose of enabling it to carry out laws entrusted to it for enforcement or
execution.
2. Commission on elections
4. Bureau of Customs
5. Board of Transportation
6. Commission on Audit
Quasi-Judicial Power
The power of the administrative agency to determine questions of fact to which the legislative
policy is to apply, in accordance with the standards laid down by the law itself.
https://www.ojp.gov/pdffiles/161568.pdf
Jurisdiction is the power or the authority of a court to try and decide a case.
Requisites:
Needs to be complete; if not, the court would not have a jurisdiction.
PENALTY
MTCs — 6 years and below [1st level courts — Municipal]
Prision correccional
RTC — Above 6 years and 1 day [Regional Trial Court]
Prision Mayor = 6Y and 1D above — RTC
Aresto Menor = MTC
Combination of imprisonment and fine = Consider only the imprisonment, not the fine.
Imprisonment or fine = Forget the fine, look at the penalty.
Law in force at the time when the action is filed. (based on time of filing)
XPN: rule is dependent on the nature of the position of the accused at the time of
the commission of the offense.
eg. malversation, corruption, bribery (politician)
If the jurisdiction is is determined by the position of the accused at the time of the commission
of the crime.
What if the court finds that it has no jurisdiction, how should it proceed?
GR: Left with no other power but to dismiss the case.
If Supreme Court or Court of Appeals: can dismiss or can transmit it to the proper
court
Kinds of Jurisdiction
When it is empowered to decide all disputes which may come before it,
except those designated to other courts. (Ex. Jurisdiction of RTC);
— Power of the court to hear and decide any case that comes before it which are not designated
to another court.
eg. Regional Trial Court
3. Original
When it can try and decide a case presented for the first time;
4. Appellate
When it can take a case already heard and decided by a lower court removed from it by
appeal;
— elevated from the lower court.
6. Concurrent
When any one of two or more courts may take cognizance of a case;
— power of several courts to handle a case.
can be filed with different courts
RULE: filing in one court bars the filing with other courts
Forum shopping — multiple filing of a case to several courts.
!! lead to dismissal of all cases. !!
7. Criminal
That which exists for the punishment of crime; and
8. Civil
That which exists when the subject matter is not of a criminal case.
9. Residual Jurisdiction
Court of Appeals
Originally known as, Intermediate Appellate Court
Collegiate court
Jurisdiction: Limited-Exclusive
tax cases
Sandiganbayan
Created by virtue of PD 1606
15 Justices
Limited-Exclusive cases: only handle specific cases & they are the only ones allowed to
handle these cases.
a. Malversation
b. Bribery
Supreme Court
Collegiate court
15 Justices
Decisions of the Supreme Court form part of the laws of the land.
Legal Systems
1. Inquisitorial System
Spanish era
American era
3. Mixed system
jeopardize—
It is the reading of the case in open court to inform the accused of the nature and cause
of accusation.
2. Pre-Trial
Non-waivable. A requisite.
c. Marking for identification of evidence — [Prosec: your honor, I pray that this evidence
be marked as exhibit a, etc.] Prosec: LETTERS.
Defense: Numbers [exhibits]
e. Modification of the order of trial — The first to present is the prosecution, then the
defense.
— Possible to have a reverse trial: If, there is a justifying or exempting circumstances
(eg. self defense)
f. Other matters that will promote a fair and speedy trial — You can perform other
things to settle the case.
3. Trial
1. Factual Truth — the truth known only to the victim, the offender, and God.
The weight and strength of the evidence would determine the judgment to be rendered by
the court.
If the evidence of the prosecution and the defense are of the same weight, the
balance of justice shall be tilted in favor of the defense.
4. Judgment
written adjudication by the court that the accused is guilty or not guilty of the crime.
2 kinds:
— Sin Perjuicio Judgment [a void judgment, no legal effect; if only there is one
presented (factual or legal, but not both] — judgment with no factual (facts which
are led to this judgment) or legal basis (law itself) = valid judgment
eg. paricide
Interlocutory Order
COURT PERSONNEL
Clerk of Court — the alter ego of the judge. [in charge of records keeping]; [preparing the
court calendar]
Bailiff — present in courts abroad; law enforcement officer responsible for maintining order in
the courtroom during trial.
Corners — abroad; guard the premises of the court. found outside the courtroom.
The moment a witness is called in the witness stand to testify, everyone listens to said witness. All
eyes, ears are given to the witness.