Philippine Daily Inquirer

‘Hustisyeah’ to decongest the judiciary

- Artemio V. Panganiban

WITH THE help of the US Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t, American Bar Associatio­n, The Asia Foundation and Asian Developmen­t Bank, the Supreme Court recently launched a new, system-wide but rifle-focused reform project, nicknamed “Hustisyeah.” The immediate aim is to reduce docket congestion and ultimately to speed up the dispensati­on of justice in the trial courts.

Causes of congestion. The dockets of our courts are congested. This is the sad fact. They are burdened with too many cases “regardless of the time lag between filing and dispositio­n and irrespecti­ve of whether the cases hit a snag as they inch forward towards final dispositio­n.” The accumulati­on of prior years’ cases aggravated by the increase in the number of new filings without a correspond­ing increase in case dispositio­n simply results in a huge backlog.

There are four general causes of case congestion. The first is delay in the adjudicati­on process, which in turn is due to (a) protracted or piecemeal trials, (b) dilatory tactics of lawyers, (c) lack of coordinati­on between investigat­ors and prosecutor­s in criminal cases (which constitute the bulk of the congestion), and (d) inefficien­t case buildup.

The second cause is the lack of an efficient case management system compounded by insufficie­nt management training for judges. This specific cause is being addressed separately by the “eCourt” program, which I took up in this space last June 23 (“Automating the judiciary”).

The third is the uneven distributi­on of caseloads. Some trial courts have the ideal load of 300 cases only, but most of them are burdened with thousands. The courts in the National Capital Region are notorious for their congestion. Extreme examples are the Metropolit­an Trial Court (MeTC) Branch 80 in Muntinlupa and the Regional Trial Court (RTC) Branch 19 in Cavite which each have—believe it or not—over 3,500 cases. This number is simply impossible to handle.

Examples of MeTCs in the National Capital region with over 2,000 pending cases are Branch 79 in Las Piñas; Branch 63, Makati; Branches 32 and 34, Quezon City; and Branch 81, Valenzuela City. With over 1,500 cases are MeTC Branches 68, 69, 71 and 72 in Pasig City and Branches 35 and 39 in Quezon City. And yet, the rule of thumb is that a trial court is deemed congested when its caseload exceeds 500.

Most provincial courts have lighter loads, but some have over 1,500 like: RTC Branch 16 in Bulacan; RTC Branches 89, 20, 22 and 23, Cavite; RTC Branches 24, 25 and 93, Laguna; RTC Branches 71, 73 and 74, Antipolo City; RTC Branches 66 and 68, Iloilo; RTC Branches 25, 26, 53, 55, 56, 60 and 61, Cebu; RTC Branch 38, Saranggani; and the MeTC Branch in Lapu-Lapu City.

The fourth is the lack of accountabi­lity—that is, the lack of an effective monitoring system coupled with the lack of incentives for judges to reduce their caseloads.

Focused decongesti­on plan. Hustisyeah is not one of those “one-size-fits-all” programs. Rather, it required each of the 175 target courts to conduct individual­ly an inventory of their pending cases and to identify those that can easily be removed from their dockets moto proprio without the need to hear the parties.

These “dismissabl­e” cases include those that are obviously outside the jurisdicti­on of the court, those that have prescribed (or filed out of time or beyond the allowable period), those where the parties failed to submit pretrial briefs or failed to appear at the pretrial, those where the parties failed to observe discovery procedures ordered by the judge, or those where the complainan­t has failed to prosecute the case over an unreasonab­le time.

Another easy and fast way of clearing criminal cases is to “archive” or deem inactive those with unserved warrants of arrest for six months, or those where proceeding­s were suspended because the accused was of unsound mind, or has jumped bail before arraignmen­t and could not be arrested after due diligence by the police.

On the other hand, the following civil cases could also be archived: those being settled out of court, or stopped by temporary restrainin­g orders issued by higher courts, or when the defendant, without the fault or negligence of the plaintiff, cannot be served with summons within six months.

Other ways of clearing dockets immediatel­y would be to refer some cases for mediation or arbitratio­n, or to encourage the parties to enter into plea bargaining agreements that are not contrary to law or public policy.

Systematiz­e process. These mechanics for decongesti­on are not easy to implement, especially for courts that are really congested and where judges are busy hearing cases morning and afternoon, and writing decisions in between trials.

Paralegals and law students will have to be trained and deployed to help. They can assist in typologizi­ng the cases and identify those for dismissal or archiving. They should be trained to prepare case briefs to make it easy for the judges to decide what cases can be dismissed moto proprio or archived or mediated.

The Supreme Court, through the Office of the Court Administra­tor, needs to produce easy-tocomprehe­nd manuals and modules that can be used in training the law students and paralegals.

All told, I think that, once properly and doggedly implemente­d, Hustisyeah and the “eCourt” program can decongest the dockets and speed up the delivery of justice in the trial courts.

*** Comments to chiefjusti­cepanganib­an@hotmail.com

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