Four Cebu judges sacked over marriage racket
THE Supreme Court (SC) dismissed four Cebu City judges and several court administrative personnel charged of involvement in civil marriage solemnization rackets and irregularities.
Ordered dismissed from the service for “gross efficiency or neglect of duty and of gross ignorance of law” were presiding judges Anatalio Necessario and Gil Acosta, Rosabella Tormis and Edgemelo Rosales of the Municipal Trial Court in Cities (MTCC) Branches 2, 3, 4 and 8 in Cebu City.
The judges bewailed the Supreme Court decision, with Judge Rosales saying he will file a motion for reconsideration. Judge Tormis described the ruling as “a work of the devil.”
The SC ruling meant that the judges’ retirement benefits were forfeited and they were barred from reinstatement or appointment to any public office, including corporations owned or controlled by the government.
The administrative cases against the judges and several court personnel stemmed from the Office of the Court Administrator’s uncovering of irregularities in the solemnization of marriages in local courts in Cebu.
The scam consists of certain “package fees” were offered to interested parties by “fixers” or “facilitators” for instant marriages.
Article continues after this advertisementIn its ruling, the Supreme Court said the judges violated judicial ethics which exact competence, integrity and probity in the performance of their duties.
Article continues after this advertisementThe justices said “ignorance of the law is a mark of incompetence, and where the law involved is elementary, ignorance thereof is considered as an indication of lack of integrity.”
Aside from the judges, the Supreme Court also dismissed court interpreter Helen Mongaya and administrative officer Rhona Rodriguez for their involvement in the racket.
Process server Desiderio Aranas and court interpreter Rebecca Alesna were suspended for six months while clerk Celeste Retuya and stenographer Emma Valencia were admonished.
Disbarment
The Court also ordered the initiation of disbarment proceedings against Tormis after one of her staff members claimed she ordered marriage records brought to her home after learning about the audit.
Tormis was dismissed by the Court last month following a separate administrative case regarding undue delays in resolving cases, court mismanagement, and two other offenses.
The marriage racket was uncovered when by an audit team sent by the OCA to the Cebu City Palace of Justice.
A female and male lawyer of the team went undercover as a couple looking to get married.
In one branch, the couple were told that for P3,000, they could get married the next day but their marriage certificate would only be dated the day the marriage license becomes available.
Under the Family Code, marriages conducted without licenses are void from the start.
The team’s investigation of about 2,000 marriages conducted by the judges from 2005 to 2007 showed various anomalies.
Judge Rosales said the SC decision against him and three other judges is “harsh.” While waiting for a copy of the decision, he said he will continue handling cases.
Judge Tormis was dismayed with yet another dismissal from service from the High Court. “It is the work of the devil,” she said over the phone.Inquirer with a story from Reporter Ador Vincent Mayol