WHEREAS, notwithstanding the laudable purpose for which these legal fees shall be used, the members of the Bar, present litigants, the business sector and the public in general, find the new rates of legal fees exorbitant and prohibitive; WHEREAS, (such) fees will have the adverse effect of discouraging aggrieved parties to seek judicial remedies for their complaints, and making them bear and suffer their grievances in silence; WHEREAS, aside from the issue of reasonableness of the filing fees, there is the question of the constitutionality and propriety of the method resorted to by Congress in sourcing the principal funding of the increase in compensation of the members of the judiciary by authorizing an increase in the filing fees and the imposition of new ones, instead of sourcing it from taxes;
The IBP Board of Governors resolved to:
Ask the Supreme Court to suspend the effectivity of the rates imposed under A.M. No. 02-8-13-SC, consistent with the constitutional mandate not to deny any person free access to the courts by reason of poverty;
Request the Supreme Court for a dialogue with the Governors and officers of the IBP;
Ask Congress to amend RA 9227 to achieve its avowed purpose of increasing the compensation of members of the Judiciary by allocating funds therefore from the general funds generated from taxes and appropriating the same in the annual national budget, instead of imposing the financial burden upon litigants;
The IBP is led by Jose Anselmo Cadiz, Chairman and National President, and Leonard S. De Vera, Vice-Chairman and Executive Vice-President.
To clarify, the increase in legal fees is not confined to the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA). It is a sweeping overhaul of the fee structure for all judiciary-related services. The fee structure of the CTA, however, happens to the most onerous. The other judicial services the fees for which have also been substantially increased include motions for postponements and extensions, sheriffs services, BAR examination, mediation, certificate of marriage, publication of legal notices.
Unlike the fee for appeals to the Supreme Court, Court of Appeals and Sandiganbayan for which a flat amount of P3,000 is charged, the CTA is the only appellate court which uses the progressive rates (based on the amount of the assessment and without any cap) which can go up to millions of pesos per appeal. In fact, there is a taxpayer which recently had to pay a whopping P9-million filing fee.
Practioners find it unfortunate that the High Court, as the ultimate arbiter of what is constitutional and legal, may have overlooked, in the first instance, to address the constitutional flaw of RA 9227, before implementing it. It is reasonable to assume that before its enactment, prior consultations were conducted between Congress and the Supreme Court.