Title
Ruby vs. Espejo
Case
A.C. No. 10558
Decision Date
Feb 23, 2015
Client engaged lawyers for a property case; disputes arose over unaccounted fees, unreturned payments, and lack of updates. Court found lawyer-client relationship, ordered fee refund, and admonished for professional lapses.
A

Case Summary (A.C. No. 10558)

Petitioner

Michael Ruby filed an administrative complaint with the IBP Commission on Bar Discipline alleging violations of the Code of Professional Responsibility by attorneys Espejo and Bayot arising from their engagement to represent him and his mother in an action for cancellation and nullification of deeds of donation.

Respondents

Atty. Erlinda B. Espejo — retained counsel of record and recipient of various payments from the complainant; later died during the administrative proceedings. Atty. Rudolph Dilla Bayot — collaborated in drafting pleadings, attended hearings, and received certain payments; contested that he was not counsel of record.

Key Dates

Relevant transactional and procedural dates appearing in the record include: retainer agreement dated August 29, 2009; P50,000 cash payment on September 15, 2009; complaint filed in the RTC on September 16, 2009; hearing on TRO denial on September 22–24, 2009; additional interactions and deposits through October–November 2009; IBP-CBD proceedings and resolutions in 2010–2014. (The decision under review postdates 1990; the 1987 Philippine Constitution governs the legal framework.)

Applicable Law

Primary disciplinary standards applied: Code of Professional Responsibility (Canons 16 and 18 and their rules), and controlling jurisprudence on lawyer-client relationships, fiduciary duties regarding client funds, and standards for imposition of disciplinary sanctions. The analysis is conducted under the 1987 Philippine Constitution as the operative constitutional framework for decisions rendered after 1990.

Retainer Agreement and Payments

The complainant and his mother entered a retainer agreement with Atty. Espejo providing for a P100,000 acceptance fee (P70,000 paid at signing; P30,000 due after TRO hearing), an appearance fee per hearing initially P5,000 later reduced to P4,000, and an alleged P50,000 deposit by the complainant on September 15, 2009 as a filing fee. Atty. Espejo filed the RTC complaint on September 16, 2009.

Discrepancy in Filing Fees and Accounting Demand

Although the complainant gave Atty. Espejo P50,000 said to be for filing fees, the actual filing fee paid by counsel amounted to only P7,561. The complainant sent demand letters seeking accounting for the excess but Atty. Espejo failed to account for or return the difference; the complainant alleged non-accountability and sought remedial action.

Payments to Atty. Bayot and Nature of His Role

At Atty. Espejo’s request, the complainant gave Atty. Bayot P8,000 on September 23, 2009 (part of the acceptance fee) and P4,000 as an appearance fee for the September 22, 2009 hearing. On October 23, 2009 the complainant deposited P4,000 into Atty. Bayot’s bank account for an appearance scheduled at 2:00 p.m. that day, but Atty. Bayot did not appear in court; instead he allegedly spoke with the clerk of court and met the complainant in the lobby. The complainant later alleged lack of updates and evasiveness by counsel, and that Atty. Bayot denied being their counsel.

Respondents’ Answers and Positions

Atty. Bayot’s Answer: he maintained he was not counsel of record and only assisted Atty. Espejo as collaborating counsel; he drafted pleadings and assisted in hearings but claimed no part in the retainer agreement and denied knowledge of the P50,000 filing-fee payment to Atty. Espejo. He admitted receiving P12,000 from the complainant, asserting entitlement to P4,000 as his appearance fee and P8,000 as his portion of the acceptance fee. He denied requesting the October 23 deposit and explained the motion to serve summons by publication was not calendared and that the clerk told him the motion would be considered submitted.

Atty. Espejo’s Answer: she denied asking for P50,000 as filing fees and asserted the complainant voluntarily gave the amount; she claimed inability to account for the excess because files were destroyed by flooding, and characterized a requested P50,000 as intended to cover an injunction bond rather than a representation fee.

Investigating Commissioner’s Findings

The Investigating Commissioner found a lawyer-client relationship existed between the complainant and both respondents, observing that Atty. Bayot’s admissions and actions (drafting pleadings, attending hearings, receiving money) substantiated representation. The Commissioner characterized respondents’ actions as demanding fees for dubious purposes, performing their duties leisurely, and being evasive — concluding their performance fell below ethical standards. The Commissioner recommended censure, reasoning insufficient proof of actual injury to justify stiffer sanction.

IBP Board of Governors’ Determination

The IBP Board adopted the Investigating Commissioner’s recommendation but increased the penalty to suspension from the practice of law for one year for both respondents. Subsequent motions for reconsideration were filed. Following Atty. Espejo’s death, the Board dismissed the case against her and affirmed the one-year suspension as to Atty. Bayot.

Supreme Court’s Scope of Review and Limitation

The Supreme Court limited its disquisition to Atty. Bayot because Atty. Espejo had died, which rendered further disciplinary action against her moot. The central issue for the Court was whether Atty. Bayot violated the Code of Professional Responsibility warranting discipline.

Lawyer-Client Relationship Analysis

The Court concluded that notwithstanding the absence of formal appearance as counsel of record, the totality of evidence established a lawyer-client relationship between Atty. Bayot and the complainant: drafting the complaint and motion, appearing in hearings, advising on the case, and admitting receipt of P8,000 from the complainant. The Court reiterated the principle that formal documentary proof is not essential to establish employment of an attorney; an express or implied contract suffices and acceptance of client funds supports the existence of an attorney-client relationship.

Fiduciary Duties and Applicable Ethical Rules

The Court set out the relevant ethical dictates: Canon 16 (duty to hold client monies in trust and to account) and Canon 18 (duty to serve with competence and diligence; keeping client informed). Under Rules 16.01, 16.02, 18.03, and 18.04, a lawyer must account for client funds, keep them separate, not neglect entrusted matters, and keep clients reasonably informed.

Distinction of Personal Liability and Allocation of Responsibility

The Court emphasized that administrative liability must be tied to acts for which the lawyer is personally accountable; it would be unjust to impute to one attorney the acts or omissions of another without proof. Applying that principle, the Court found that Atty. Bayot could not be held responsible for the P50,000 that the complainant gave to Atty. Espejo for filing fees because (1) Atty. Espejo alone received that amount and paid the filing fees, (2) the complainant admitted Bayot was not present when the P50,000 was given, and (3) Atty. Bayot denied knowledge and the demand letters were directed solely to Atty. Espejo.

Entitlement to Certain Fees and Required Accounting/Restitution

The Court found that Atty. Bayot was legally entitled to the P8,000 he received (as his share of the acceptance fee) and the P4,000 received as appearance fee for the September 22, 2009 TRO hearing. Conversely, the Court held that the P4,000 deposited to his bank account on October 23, 2009 must be returned because no hearing occurred on that date and the motion was not on the calendar; Bayot admitted there was no scheduled hearing and so was not entitled to keep that amount for services not rendered at that time.

Gross Neglect and Sufficiency of Proof

The Court reviewed the gross neglect charge and reiterated that disciplinary penalties such as suspension or disbarment require clear, convincing, and satisfactory proof because of their serious consequences. The complainant bore the burden of proof. The Court found the evidence insufficient to support a finding of gross neglect by Atty. Bayot: the case was in its early stages (pre-trial and trial had not commenced), the denial of a TRO alone did not establish neglec

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