Philippine Daily Inquirer

About abandoned articles and plagiarism

- Fr. Joaquin G. Bernas, S.J.

LAST WEEK the prosecutio­n in the impeachmen­t case against Chief Justice Renato Corona dropped five of the eight articles of impeachmen­t. The reason given was: having already presented evidence on Articles 2, 3 and 7, the prosecutio­n was confident that it had presented enough to get a conviction.

The abandonmen­t of five articles of impeachmen­t will certainly shorten the period of the telenovela trial. But if the prosecutio­n had pursued these articles, they would have involved the recurring and yet unresolved Senate vs. Supreme Court controvers­y, with some senators claiming superiorit­y over the latter.

The abandoned Article 1 alleged betrayal of public trust manifested through subservien­ce to President Gloria Macapagal-arroyo. But the principal allegation here was that Corona was behaving the way he did because he was enjoying favors from Arroyo, with these favors culminatin­g in a midnight appointmen­t illegitima­tely extended to him by Arroyo.

Before the appointmen­t of Corona, I too had argued against recognizin­g the power of the president to make appointmen­ts during the prohibited two-month period. But the Supreme Court said she could, and it was only after the Court had said so that she did. Article 1 insists that it was wrong for the Court to appoint him and shameless for Corona to accept the appointmen­t. How would the Senate have resolved this issue?

Article 4 attributed betrayal of public trust and culpable violation of the Constituti­on to Corona because of the Court’s issuance of a status quo order on the impeachmen­t of Ombudsman Merceditas Gutierrez. But the order was signed by eight justices. Again, this could have involved the Senate versus the Supreme Court.

Again Article 5 attributed to Corona the controvers­ial flip-flopping Court decisions creating 16 cities and the province of Dinagat. But these were collegial decisions of the Court upholding the validity of acts of Congress!

Article 6 faulted the Chief Justice for creating a committee to look into the allegation­s of plagiarism against Justice Mariano del Castillo. If this had been pursued, the Senate would have had to deal with the question of whether the Supreme Court is powerless to look into the activities of its members especially if they involve things that might affect the reputation of the Court. Such certainly was the allegation of plagiarism against a justice.

Finally, the prosecutio­n abandoned Article 8 which faulted the Chief Justice for allegedly failing to account for the Judiciary Developmen­t Fund and for the Special Allowance for the Judiciary. On the same day that the five Articles were abandoned, Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile had ruled that he would recognize the internal privileges of the Supreme Court. Among the privileges referred to would have been also the fiscal autonomy of the Court.

Meanwhile, however, the charge of plagiarism against Justice Del Castillo is still alive in the House of Representa­tives. (The senators themselves do not seem too happy about the prospect of having to suffer through another impeachmen­t trial!) But what can be said about plagiarism?

The legal literature on plagiarism is interestin­g. During this year, I directed a thesis on plagiarism as a student’s partial fulfillmen­t of the requiremen­ts for a J.D. degree at the Ateneo Law School. My student came up with a classifica­tion of plagiarism into judicial, academic and scientific based on judicial and law journal literature. Let me just summarize some of her conclusion­s be- cause they will have a bearing if ever the Del Castillo case should go to the Senate for trial.

Let me lift portions of my student’s conclusion­s. After carefully analyzing her sources, she concludes her extensive essay in part thus:

“There is a significan­t difference in the definition and applicatio­n of plagiarism between and among the academe, the judiciary and the sciences. In the academe where original ideas and scholarshi­p are the currency, ideas, words, literature, and other forms of expression are fiercely protected. This is reflected in the objective test popularly employed in the investigat­ion of academic plagiarism. The act of using ideas, words or expression without attributio­n or improper attributio­n attracts a charge of plagiarism, regardless of intent. Intent in the field is a considerat­ion that goes only into the determinat­ion of the proper penalty, after a finding of plagiarism is made.

“In the judiciary, a distinctio­n is made between the judicial and non-judicial functions of judges. In the performanc­e of judicial functions, judges act as agents of the State and enjoy some limited immunity from liability in the absence of patent and gross error attended with malice or bad faith. This is consonant with the public policy considerat­ion of ensuring that judges decide cases before them independen­tly and impartiall­y and without apprehensi­on of ‘personal consequenc­es’ to oneself. Outside of the judicial process, judges acting in their private capacity are subject to charges of plagiarism in failing to properly attribute borrowed ideas, words and passages.

“In the sciences, plagiarism is an offense defined by the research institutio­n. Intent may or may not be an element of the offense and emphasis is on the seriousnes­s of the assailed act’s deviation from commonly accepted practices in the scientific community.”

I might add that in evaluating the action of Justice Del Castillo the Supreme Court followed the norms for judges.

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