G.R. No. 164805 April 30, 2008
Facts:
1.
Gateway
obtained 4 foreign currency denominated loans from petitioner Solid Bank as
capital for its manufacturing operations. The loans were secured by Promissory
notes and by assignment to Solid Bank of all the proceeds of Gateway's Back-end
Services Agreement with Alliance Semiconductors.
2.
However,
Gateway failed to pay its obligations despite repeated demands from the petitioner.
This prompted petitioner to file a complaint for collection of sum of
money.
3.
During
the trial, Petitioner filed a motion for the production and inspection of
documents after learning that Gateway already received proceeds of its Back-end
agreement with Alliance. The motion called for the inspection of all books of
accounts, financial statements, receipts, checks, vouchers, and other
accounting records. The court granted the motion.
4.
Subsequently,
after a couple of postponements, Gateway was only able to produce the billings
and not all the other documents. The Court chastised it for not exerting due
diligence in procuring the required documents and it ordered that those not
produced shall be deemed established in accordance with Solid Bank's claim.
5.
Gateway
filed a petition for certiorari before the CA to nullify the 2 orders of the
lower court. CA granted the petition and ruled that the motion to produce and
inspect failed to comply with Sec. 1, Rule 27 of the Ruled of Court. Hence this
petition.
Issue: W/N the motion for production and inspection
complied with Sec. 1, Rule 27 of the Rules of Court
HELD: NO (Petition denied).
1.
Rule 27
of the Revised Rules of Court permits "fishing" for evidence, the
only limitation being that the documents, papers, etc., sought to be produced
are not privileged, that they are in the possession of the party ordered to
produce them and that they are material to any matter involved in the action. A
fishing expedition no longer precludes a party from prying into the facts
underlying his opponent's case. However, fishing for evidence has its
limitations.
2.
Solidbank's
motion was fatally defective and violates Sec. 1 Rule 27 due to its failure to
specify with particularity the documents it required Gateway to produce.
Simply, the motion called for a blanket inspection, too broad and too
generalized in scope. Its request that "all documents pertaining to,
arising from, in connection with or involving the Back-end Services
Agreement" ask for a promiscuous mass of documents.
3.
A
motion for production and inspection of documents should not demand a roving
inspection of a promiscuous mass of documents. The inspection should be limited
to those documents designated with sufficient particularity in the motion, such
that the adverse party can easily identify the documents he is required to
produce.
4.
Since
it is Solid Bank who asserted that Gateway already received payment from its
Back-end Agreement with Alliance, then the burden of proof is on its side.
Burden of proof is the duty of a party to present evidence on the facts in
issue necessary to establish his claim or defense by the amount of evidence
required by law. Throughout the trial, the burden of proof remains with the
party upon whom it is imposed, until he shall have discharged the same.
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