Section 6. The Supreme Court shall have administrative supervision over all courts and the personnel thereof.


Maceda v. Vasquez
G.R. No. 102781. April 22, 1993


Facts:

RTC Judge Maceda was charged before the Ombudsman of falsifying his Certificate of Service by certifying that all civil and criminal cases which have been submitted for decision for a period of 90 days have been decided on or before January 31, 1998, when in truth and in fact, no such decisions have been rendered in five (5) civil and ten (10) criminal cases that have been submitted for decision. He moved to have his case referred to the SC, contending, among others, that the Ombudsman has no jurisdiction over his case and that its investigation constituted an encroachment into the SC’s constitutional duty of supervision over all inferior courts. He also insisted that he had been granted by this Court an extension of ninety (90) days to decide the aforementioned cases. The Ombudsman denied the motion; hence, Judge Maceda filed a petition for certiorari before the Supreme Court with prayer for preliminary mandatory injunction and/or restraining order. 


Issue:

Does the Office of the Ombudsman have authority to investigate a criminal complaint against a judge for alleged falsification of Certification of Service in the absence of an administrative action?


Held:

No.

Article VIII, section 6 of the 1987 Constitution exclusively vests in the Supreme Court administrative supervision over all courts and court personnel, from the Presiding Justice of the Court of Appeals down to the lowest municipal trial court clerk. By virtue of this power, it is only the Supreme Court that can oversee the judges' and court personnel's compliance with all laws, and take the proper administrative action against them if they commit any violation thereof. No other branch of government may intrude into this power, without running afoul of the doctrine of separation of powers.

The Ombudsman cannot justify its investigation of petitioner on the powers granted to it by the Constitution, for such a justification not only runs counter to the specific mandate of the Constitution granting supervisory powers to the Supreme Court over all courts and their personnel, but likewise undermines the independence of the judiciary.

Thus, the Ombudsman should first refer the matter of petitioner's certificates of service to this Court for determination of whether said certificates reflected the true status of his pending case load, as the Court has the necessary records to make such a determination. The Ombudsman cannot compel this Court, as one of the three branches of government, to submit its records, or to allow its personnel to testify on this matter.

The rationale for the foregoing pronouncement is evident in this case. Administratively. the question before Us is this: should a judge, having been granted by this Court an extension of time to decide cases before him, report these cases in his certificate of service? As this question had not yet been raised with, much less resolved by, this Court. how could the Ombudsman resolve the present criminal complaint that requires the resolution of said question?

In fine, where a criminal complaint against a Judge or other court employee arises from their administrative duties, the Ombudsman must defer action on said complaint and refer the same to this Court for determination whether said Judge or court employee had acted within the scope of their administrative duties.