Escolar Documentos
Profissional Documentos
Cultura Documentos
DECISION
MENDOZA, J.:
This is a petition for review of the decision dated March 4, 1992 of the Regional Trial
Court, Branch 14 of Oroquieta City, affirming the legal existence of the Municipality of
Sinacaban in Misamis Occidental and ordering the relocation of its boundary for the
purpose of determining whether certain areas claimed by it belong to it.
[1]
The municipality of Sinacabn contains the barrios of Sinacaban, which shall be the
seat of the municipal government, Sinonoc, Libertad, the southern portion of the
barrio of Macabayao, and the sitios of Tipan, Katipunan, Estrella, Flores, Senior,
Adorable, San Isidro, Cagayanon, Kamanse, Kulupan and Libertad Alto.
The municipality of Jimenez shall have its present territory, minus the portion thereof
included in the municipality of Sinacaban.
The municipality of Sinacaban shall begin to exist upon the appointment and
qualification of the mayor, vice-mayor, and a majority of the councilors thereof. The
new municipality shall, however, assume payment of a proportionate share of the loan
of the municipality of Jimenez with the Rehabilitation Finance Corporation as may be
outstanding on the date of its organization, the proportion of such payment to be
determined by the Department of Finance.
Done in the City of Manila, this 30th day of August, in the year of Our Lord, nineteen
hundred and forty-nine, and of the Independence of the Philippines, the fourth.
(SGD.) ELPIDIO QUIRINO
President of the Philippines
By the President:
(SGD.) TEODORO EVANGELISTA
Executive Secretary
By virtue of Municipal Council Resolution No. 171, dated November 22, 1988,
Sinacaban laid claim to a portion of Barrio Tabo-o and to Barrios Macabayao, Adorable,
Sinara Baja, and Sinara Alto, based on the technical description in E.O. No. 258. The
claim was filed with the Provincial Board of Misamis Occidental against the Municipality
of Jimenez.
[2]
[3]
In its answer, the Municipality of Jimenez, while conceding that under E.O. No. 258
the disputed area is part of Sinacaban, nonetheless asserted jurisdiction onTHE BASIS
OF an agreement it had with the Municipality of Sinacaban. This agreement was
approved by the Provincial Board of Misamis Occidental, in its Resolution No. 77, dated
February 18, 1950, which fixed the common boundary of Sinacaban and Jimenez as
follows:
[4]
In its decision dated October 11, 1989, the Provincial Board declared the disputed
area to be part of Sinacaban. It held that the previous resolution approving the
agreement between the municipalities was void because the Board had no power to
alter the boundaries of Sinacaban as fixed in E.O. No. 258, that power being vested in
Congress pursuant to the Constitution and the Local Government Code of 1983 (B.P.
Blg. 337), 134. The Provincial Board denied in its Resolution No. 13-90 dated January
30, 1990 the motion of Jimenez seeking reconsideration.
[5]
[6]
[7]
During pre-trial, the parties agreed to limit the issues to the following:
A. Whether the Municipality of Sinacaban is a legal juridical entity, duly created in
accordance with law;
B. If not, whether it is a de facto juridical entity;
C. Whether the validity of the existence of the Municipality can be properly questioned
in this action on certiorari;
D. Whether the Municipality of Jimenez which had recognized the existence of the
municipality for more than 40 years is estopped to question its existence;
E. Whether the existence of the municipality has been recognized by the laws of the
land; and
F. Whether the decision of the Provincial Board had acquired finality.
On February 10, 1992, the RTC rendered its decision, the dispositive portion of
which reads:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, it is the finding of this Court that the petition
must be denied and judgment is hereby rendered declaring a STATUS QUO, that is,
the municipality of Sinacaban shall continue to exist and operate as a regular
municipality; declaring the decision dated October 11, 1989 rendered by the
Municipalities existing as of the date of the effectivity of this Code shall continue
to exist and operate as such. Existing municipal districts organized pursuant to
presidential issuances or executive orders and which have their respective set of
elective municipal officials holding office at the time of the effectivity of this
Code shall henceforth be considered as regular municipalities.
On March 17, 1990, petitioner moved for a reconsideration of the decision but its
motion was denied by the RTC. Hence this petition raising the following issues: (1)
whether Sinacaban has legal personality to file a claim, and (2) if it has, whether it is the
boundary provided for in E.O. No. 258 or in resolution No. 77 of the Provincial Board of
Misamis Occidental which should be used as the basis for adjudicating Sinacabans
territorial claim.
First. The preliminary issue concerns the legal existence of Sinacaban. If Sinacaban
legally exist, then it has standing to bring a claim in the Provincial Board. Otherwise, it
cannot.
The principal basis for the view that Sinacaban was not validly created as a
municipal corporation is the ruling in Pelaez v. Auditor General that the creation of
municipal corporations is essentially a legislative matter and therefore the President
was without power to create by executive order the Municipality of Sinacaban. The
ruling in this case has been reiterated in a number of cases later decided. However, we
have since held that where a municipality created as such by executive order is later
impliedly recognized and its acts are accorded legal validity, its creation can no longer
be questioned. In Municipality of San Narciso, Quezon v. Mendez, Sr., this Court
considered the following factors as having validated the creation of a municipal
corporation, which, like the Municipallity of Sinacaban, was created by executive order
of the President before the ruling in Pelaez v. Auditor general: (1) the fact that for nearly
30 years the validity of the creation of the municipality had never been challenged; (2)
the fact that following the ruling in Pelaez no quo warranto suit was filed to question the
validity of the executive order creating such municipality; and (3) the fact that the
municipality was later classified as a fifth class municipality, organized as part of a
municipal circuit court and considered part of a legislative district in the Constitution
apportioning the seats in the House of Representatives. Above all, it was held that
whatever doubt there might be as to the de jure character of the municipality must be
deemed to have been put to rest by the local Government Code of 1991 (R.A. no.
7160), 442 (d) of which provides that municipal districts organized pursuant to
presidential issuances or executive orders and which have their respective sets of
elective officials holding office at the time of the effectivity of this Code shall henceforth
be considered as regular municipalities.
[9]
[10]
Here, the same factors are present so as to confer on Sinacaban the status of at
least a de facto municipal corporation in the sense that its legal existence has been
recognized and acquiesced publicly and officially. Sinacaban had been in existence for
sixteen years when Pelaez v. Auditor General was decided on December 24, 1965. Yet
the validity of E.O. No. 258 creating it had never been questioned. Created in 1949, it
was only 40 years later that its existence was questioned and only because it had laid
claim to an area that apparently is desired for its revenue. This fact must be
underscored because under Rule 66, 16 of the Rules of Court, a quo warranto suit
against a corporation for forfeiture of its charter must be commenced within five (5)
years from the time the act complained of was done or committed. On the contrary, the
State and even the municipality of Jimenez itself have recognized Sinacabans corporate
existence. Under Administrative order no. 33 dated June 13, 1978 of this Court, as
reiterated by 31 of the judiciary Reorganization Act of 1980 (B.P. Blg. 129), Sinacaban is
constituted part of municipal circuit for purposes of the establishment of Municipal
Circuit Trial Courts in the country. For its part, Jimenez had earlier recognized
Sinacaban in 1950 by entering into an agreement with it regarding their common
boundary. The agreement was embodied in Resolution no. 77 of the Provincial Board of
Misamis Occidental.
Indeed Sinacaban has attained de jure status by virtue of the Ordinance appended
to the 1987 Constitution, apportioning legislative districts throughout the country, which
considered Sinacaban part of the Second District of Misamis Occidental. Moreover
following the ruling in Municipality of san Narciso, Quezon v. Mendez, Sr., 442(d) of the
Local Government Code of 1991 must be deemed to have cured any defect in the
creation of Sinacaban. This provision states:
Municipalities existing as of the date of the effectivity of this Code shall continue
to exist and operate as such. Existing municipal district organized pursuant to
presidential issuances or executive orders and which have their respective set of
elective municipal officials holding office at the time of the effectivity of the
Code shall henceforth be considered as regular municipalities.
Second. Jimenez claims, however, that R.A. No. 7160, 442(d) is invalid, since it
does not conform to the constitutional and statutory requirements for the holding of
plebiscites in the creation of new municipalities.
[11]
This contention will not bear analysis. Since, as previously explained, Sinacaban
had attained de facto status at the time the 1987 Constitution took effect on February 2,
1987, it is not subject to the plebiscite requirement. This requirement applies only to
new municipalities created for the first time under the Constitution. Actually, the
requirement of plebiscite was originally contained in Art. XI, 3 of the previous
Constitution which took effect on January 17, 1973. It cannot, therefore, be applied to
municipal corporations created before, such as the municipality of Sinacaban in the
case at bar.
Third. Finally Jimenez argues that the RTC erred in ordering a relocation survey of
the boundary of Sinacaban because the barangays which Sinacaban are claiming are
not enumerated in E.O. No. 258 and that in any event in 1950 the parties entered into
an agreement whereby the barangays in question were considered part of the territory
of Jimenez.
E.O. no. 258 does not say that Sinacaban comprises only the barrios (now called
Barangays) therein mentioned. What it say is that Sinacaban contains those barrios,
without saying they are the only ones comprising it. The reason for this is that the
technical description, containing the metes and bounds of its territory, is controlling. The
trial court correctly ordered a relocation and consequently the question to which the
municipality the barangays in question belong.
Now, as already stated, in 1950 the two municipalities agreed that certain barrios
bellonged to Jimenez, while certain other ones belonged to Sinacaban. This agreement
was subsequently approved by the Provincial board of Misamis Occidental. Whether
this agreement conforms to E.O. no. 258 will be determined by the result of the
survey. Jimenez contends however, that regardless of its conformity to E.O. No, 258,
the agreement as embodied in resolution No, 77 of the Provincial Board, is binding on
Sinacaban. This raises the question whether the provincial board had authority to
approve the agreement or, to put it in another way, whether it had the power to declare
certain barrios part of the one or the other municipality.We hold it did not if effect would
be to amend the area as described in E.O no. 258 creating the Municipality of
Sinacaban.
At the time the Provincial Board passed Resolution No. 77 on February 18, 1950,
the applicable law was 2167 of the Revised Administrative Code of 1917 which
provided:
[13]
Jimenez properly brought to the RTC for review the decision of October 11,
1989 and Resolution No. 13-90 of the Provincial Board. Its action is in accordance with
the local Government Code of 1983, 79 of which provides that I case no settlement of
boundary disputes is made the dispute should be elevated to the RTC of the
province. In 1989, when the action was brought by Jimenez, this Code was the
governing law. The governing law is now the Local Government Code of 1991 (R.A. No.
7160), 118-119.
Jimenezs contention that the RTC failed to decide the case within one year form the
start of proceeding as required by 79 of the Local Government Code of 1983 and the
90-day period provided for in the Article VIII, 15 of the Constitution does not affect the
validity of the decision rendered. For even granting that the court failed to decide within
the period prescribed by law, its failure did not divest it of its jurisdiction to decide the
case but only makes the judge thereof liable for possible administrative sanction.
[14]
WHEREFORE,
the
petition
is
DENIED
and
the
the Regional Trial Court of Oroquieta City, Branch 14 is AFFIRMED.
decision
of
SO ORDERED
Narvasa C.J., Padilla, Regalado, Davide Jr., Romero, Bellosillo, Melo, Puno, Vitug,
Kapunan, Francisco, Hermosisima Jr., Panganiban, and Torres, Jr., JJ., concur.
OF
THE
- versus -
Promulgated:
COMMISSION ON AUDIT,
Respondent.
June 7, 2011
x--------------------------------------------------x
DECISION
LEONARDO-DE CASTRO, J.:
The jurisdiction of the Commission on Audit (COA) over the Boy Scouts of the
Philippines (BSP) is the subject matter of this controversy that reached
us via petition for prohibition[1] filed by the BSP under Rule 65 of the 1997 Rules
of Court. In this petition, the BSP seeks that the COA be prohibited from
implementing its June 18, 2002Decision,[2] its February 21, 2007 Resolution,[3] as
well as all other issuances arising therefrom, and that all of the foregoing be
rendered null and void. [4]
Antecedent Facts and Background of the Case
This case arose when the COA issued Resolution No. 99-011[5] on August
19, 1999 (the COA Resolution), with the subject Defining the Commissions policy
with respect to the audit of the Boy Scouts of the Philippines. In its whereas
clauses, the COA Resolution stated that the BSP was created as a public
corporation under Commonwealth Act No. 111, as amended by Presidential Decree
No. 460 and Republic Act No. 7278; that in Boy Scouts of the Philippines v.
National Labor Relations Commission,[6] the Supreme Court ruled that the BSP, as
constituted under its charter, was a government-controlled corporation within the
meaning of Article IX(B)(2)(1) of the Constitution; and that the BSP is
appropriately regarded as a government instrumentality under the 1987
Administrative Code.[7] The COA Resolution also cited its constitutional mandate
under Section 2(1), Article IX (D). Finally, the COA Resolution reads:
NOW THEREFORE, in consideration of the foregoing premises,
the COMMISSION PROPER HAS RESOLVED, AS IT DOES
HEREBY RESOLVE, to conduct an annual financial audit of the Boy
Scouts of the Philippines in accordance with generally accepted
auditing standards, and express an opinion on whether the financial
statements which include the Balance Sheet, the Income Statement and
the Statement of Cash Flows present fairly its financial position and
results of operations.
xxxx
The BSP maintains that the provisions of Republic Act No. 7278 suggest
that governance of BSP has come to be overwhelmingly a private affair or nature,
with government participation restricted to the seat of the Secretary of Education,
Culture and Sports.[21] It cites Philippine Airlines Inc. v. Commission on
Audit[22] wherein the Court declared that, PAL, having ceased to be a governmentowned or controlled corporation is no longer under the audit jurisdiction of the
COA.[23] Claiming that the amendments introduced by Republic Act No. 7278
constituted a supervening event that changed the BSPs corporate identity in the
same way that the governments privatization program changed PALs, the BSP
makes the case that the government no longer has control over it; thus, the COA
cannot use the Boy Scouts of the Philippines v. National Labor Relations
Commission as its basis for the exercise of its jurisdiction and the issuance of COA
Resolution No. 99-011.[24] The BSP further claims as follows:
It is not far-fetched, in fact, to concede that BSPs funds and assets
are private in character. Unlike ordinary public corporations, such as
provinces, cities, and municipalities, or government-owned and controlled
corporations, such as Land Bank of the Philippines and the Development
Bank of the Philippines, the assets and funds of BSP are not derived from
any government grant. For its operations, BSP is not dependent in any way
on any government appropriation; as a matter of fact, it has not even been
included in any appropriations for the government. To be sure, COA has not
alleged, in its Resolution No. 99-011 or in the Memorandum of its General
Counsel, that BSP received, receives or continues to receive assets and
funds from any agency of the government. The foregoing simply point to
the private nature of the funds and assets of petitioner BSP.
xxxx
As stated in petitioners third argument, BSPs assets and funds were
never acquired from the government. Its operations are not in any way
financed by the government, as BSP has never been included in any
appropriations act for the government. Neither has the government invested
funds with BSP. BSP, has not been, at any time, a user of government
property or funds; nor have properties of the government been held in trust
by BSP. This is precisely the reason why, until this time, the COA has not
attempted to subject BSP to its audit jurisdiction. x x x. [25]
2.
3.
Republic Act No. 7278 did not change the character of the BSP as a
government-owned or controlled corporation and government
instrumentality.[27]
The COA maintains that the functions of the BSP that include, among others,
the teaching to the youth of patriotism, courage, self-reliance, and kindred virtues,
are undeniably sovereign functions enshrined under the Constitution and discussed
by the Court in Boy Scouts of the Philippines v. National Labor Relations
Commission. The COA contends that any attempt to classify the BSP as a private
corporation would be incomprehensible since no less than the law which created it
had designated it as a public corporation and its statutory mandate embraces
performance of sovereign functions.[28]
The COA claims that the only reason why the BSP employees fell within the
scope of the Civil Service Commission even before the 1987 Constitution was the
the VFP. The erroneous application of the law by public officers does not
bar a subsequent correct application of the law.[31] (Citations omitted.)
The COA points out that the government is not precluded by law from
extending financial support to the BSP and adding to its funds, and that as a
government instrumentality which continues to perform a vital function imbued
with public interest and reflective of the governments policy to stimulate patriotic
sentiments and love of country, the BSPs funds from whatever source are public
funds, and can be used solely for public purpose in pursuance of the provisions of
Republic Act No. [7278].[32]
The COA claims that the fact that it has not yet audited the BSPs funds may
not bar the subsequent exercise of its audit jurisdiction.
The BSP filed its Reply[33] on August 29, 2007 maintaining that its statutory
designation as a public corporation and the public character of its purpose and
functions are not determinative of the COAs audit jurisdiction; reiterating its stand
that Boy Scouts of the Philippines v. National Labor Relations Commission is not
applicable anymore because the aspect of government ownership and control has
been removed by Republic Act No. 7278; and concluding that the funds and
property that it either owned or held in trust are not public funds and are not
subject to the COAs audit jurisdiction.
Thereafter, considering the BSPs claim that it is a private corporation, this
Court, in a Resolution[34] dated July 20, 2010, required the parties to file, within a
period of twenty (20) days from receipt of said Resolution, their respective
comments on the issue of whether Commonwealth Act No. 111, as amended by
Republic Act No. 7278, is constitutional.
In compliance with the Courts resolution, the parties filed their respective
Comments.
In its Comment[35] dated October 22, 2010, the COA argues that the
constitutionality of Commonwealth Act No. 111, as amended, is not determinative
of the resolution of the present controversy on the COAs audit jurisdiction over
petitioner, and in fact, the controversy may be resolved on other grounds; thus, the
requisites before a judicial inquiry may be made, as set forth in Commissioner of
Internal Revenue v. Court of Tax Appeals,[36] have not been fully met. [37] Moreover,
the COA maintains that behind every law lies the presumption of constitutionality.
[38]
The COA likewise argues that contrary to the BSPs position, repeal of a law by
implication is not favored.[39] Lastly, the COA claims that there was no violation of
Section 16, Article XII of the 1987 Constitution with the creation or declaration of
the BSP as a government corporation. CitingPhilippine Society for the Prevention
of Cruelty to Animals v. Commission on Audit,[40] the COA further alleges:
The true criterion, therefore, to determine whether a corporation is
public or private is found in the totality of the relation of the corporation to
the State. If the corporation is created by the State as the latters own agency
or instrumentality to help it in carrying out its governmental functions, then
that corporation is considered public; otherwise, it is private. x x x. [41]
For its part, in its Comment[42] filed on December 3, 2010, the BSP submits
that its charter, Commonwealth Act No. 111, as amended by Republic Act No.
7278, is constitutional as it does not violate Section 16, Article XII of the
Constitution. The BSP alleges that while [it] is not a public corporation within the
purview of COAs audit jurisdiction, neither is it a private corporation created by
special law falling within the ambit of the constitutional prohibition x x x. [43] The
BSP further alleges:
Petitioners purpose is embodied in Section 3 of C.A. No. 111, as
amended by Section 1 of R.A. No. 7278, thus:
xxxx
A reading of the foregoing provision shows that petitioner was created
to advance the interest of the youth, specifically of young boys, and to mold
The BSP reiterates its stand that the public character of its purpose and
functions do not place it within the ambit of the audit jurisdiction of the COA as it
lacks the government ownership or control that the Constitution requires before an
entity may be subject of said jurisdiction.[45] It avers that it merely stated in its
Reply that the withdrawal of government control is akin to privatization, but it
does not necessarily mean that petitioner is a private corporation.[46] The BSP
claims that it has a unique characteristic which neither classifies it as a purely
public nor a purely private corporation; [47] that it is not a quasi-public corporation;
and that it may belong to a different class altogether.[48]
The BSP claims that assuming arguendo that it is a private corporation, its
creation is not contrary to the purpose of Section 16, Article XII of the
Constitution; and that the evil sought to be avoided by said provision is inexistent
in the enactment of the BSPs charter,[49] as, (i) it was not created for any pecuniary
purpose; (ii) those who will primarily benefit from its creation are not its officers
but its entire membership consisting of boys being trained in scoutcraft all over the
country; (iii) it caters to all boys who wish to join the organization without any
distinction; and (iv) it does not limit its membership to a particular class or group
of boys. Thus, the enactment of its charter confers no special privilege to particular
individuals, families, or groups; nor does it bring about the danger of granting
undue favors to certain groups to the prejudice of others or of the interest of the
country, which are the evils sought to be prevented by the constitutional provision
involved.[50]
Philippines or his representative; (b) the charter and life members of the
Boy Scouts of the Philippines; (c) the Chairman of the Board of Trustees
of the Philippine Scouting Foundation; (d) the Regional Chairman of the
Scout Regions of the Philippines; (e) the Secretary of Education and
Culture, the Secretary of Social Welfare, the Secretary of National
Defense, the Secretary of Labor, the Secretary of Finance, the Secretary
of Youth and Sports, and the Secretary of Local Government and
Community Development; (f) an equal number of individuals from the
private sector; (g) the National President of the Girl Scouts of the
Philippines; (h) one Scout of Senior age from each Scout Region to
represent the boy membership; and (i) three representatives of the
cultural minorities. Except for the Regional Chairman who shall be
elected by the Regional Scout Councils during their annual meetings,
and the Scouts of their respective regions, all members of the National
Executive Board shall be either by appointment or cooption, subject to
ratification and confirmation by the Chief Scout, who shall be the Head
of State. Vacancies in the Executive Board shall be filled by a majority
vote of the remaining members, subject to ratification and confirmation
by the Chief Scout. The by-laws may prescribe the number of members
of the National Executive Board necessary to constitute a quorum of the
board, which number may be less than a majority of the whole number
of the board. The National Executive Board shall have power to make
and to amend the by-laws, and, by a two-thirds vote of the whole board
at a meeting called for this purpose, may authorize and cause to be
executed mortgages and liens upon the property of the corporation.
Subsequently, on March 24, 1992, Republic Act No. 7278 further amended
Commonwealth Act No. 111 by strengthening the volunteer and democratic
character of the BSP and reducing government representation in its governing
body, as follows:
Section 1. Sections 2 and 3 of Commonwealth Act. No. 111, as
amended, is hereby amended to read as follows:
"Sec. 2. The said corporation shall have the powers of perpetual
succession, to sue and be sued; to enter into contracts; to acquire, own,
lease, convey and dispose of such real and personal estate, land grants,
rights and choses in action as shall be necessary for corporate purposes,
and to accept and receive funds, real and personal property by gift,
There are three classes of juridical persons under Article 44 of the Civil
Code and the BSP, as presently constituted under Republic Act No. 7278, falls
under the second classification. Article 44 reads:
Art. 44. The following are juridical persons:
(1) The State and its political subdivisions;
(2) Other corporations, institutions and entities for public
interest or purpose created by law; their personality begins as soon
as they have been constituted according to law;
(3) Corporations, partnerships and associations for private
interest or purpose to which the law grants a juridical personality,
separate and distinct from that of each shareholder, partner or member.
(Emphases supplied.)
The purpose of the BSP as stated in its amended charter shows that it was
created in order to implement a State policy declared in Article II, Section 13 of the
Constitution, which reads:
ARTICLE II - DECLARATION OF PRINCIPLES AND STATE
POLICIES
Section 13. The State recognizes the vital role of the youth in nationbuilding and shall promote and protect their physical, moral, spiritual, intellectual,
and social well-being. It shall inculcate in the youth patriotism and nationalism,
and encourage their involvement in public and civic affairs.
Evidently, the BSP, which was created by a special law to serve a public
purpose in pursuit of a constitutional mandate, comes within the class of public
corporations defined by paragraph 2, Article 44 of the Civil Code and governed by
the law which creates it, pursuant to Article 45 of the same Code.
The BSPs Classification Under the
Administrative Code of 1987
The public, rather than private, character of the BSP is recognized by the
fact that, along with the Girl Scouts of the Philippines, it is classified as
an attached agency of the DECS under Executive Order No. 292, or
the Administrative Code of 1987, which states:
TITLE VI EDUCATION, CULTURE AND SPORTS
Chapter 8 Attached Agencies
SEC. 20. Attached Agencies. The following agencies are hereby
attached to the Department:
xxxx
(12) Boy Scouts of the Philippines;
(13) Girl Scouts of the Philippines.
As an attached agency, the BSP enjoys operational autonomy, as long as policy and
program coordination is achieved by having at least one representative of
government in its governing board, which in the case of the BSP is the DECS
Secretary. In this sense, the BSP is not under government control or supervision
and control. Still this characteristic does not make the attached chartered agency a
private corporation covered by the constitutional proscription in question.
Art. XII, Sec. 16 of the Constitution refers to
private corporations created by government for
proprietary or economic/business purposes
The scope and coverage of Section 16, Article XII of the Constitution can be
seen from the aforementioned declaration of state policies and goals which pertains
tonational economy and patrimony and the interests of the people in economic
development.
Section 16, Article XII deals with the formation, organization, or
regulation of private corporations,[52] which should be done through a general
law enacted by Congress, provides for an exception, that is: if the corporation is
government owned or controlled; its creation is in the interest of the common
good; and it meets the test of economic viability. The rationale behind Article XII,
Section 16 of the 1987 Constitution was explained in Feliciano v. Commission on
Audit,[53] in the following manner:
It may be gleaned from the above discussion that Article XII, Section 16
bans the creation of private corporations by special law. The said constitutional
provision should not be construed so as to prohibit the creation of public
corporations or a corporate agency or instrumentality of the government intended
to serve a public interest or purpose, which should not be measured onTHE BASIS
OF economic viability, but according to the public interest or purpose it serves as
envisioned by paragraph (2), of Article 44 of the Civil Code and the pertinent
provisions of the Administrative Code of 1987.
The BSP is a Public Corporation Not Subject to
the Test of Government Ownership or Control
and Economic Viability
The BSP is a public corporation or a government agency or instrumentality
with juridical personality, which does not fall within the constitutional prohibition
in Article XII, Section 16, notwithstanding the amendments to its charter. Not all
corporations, which are not government owned or controlled, are ipso facto to be
considered private corporations as there exists another distinct class of
corporations or chartered institutions which are otherwise known as public
corporations. These corporations are treated by law as agencies or instrumentalities
of the government which are not subject to the tests of ownership or control and
economic viability but to different criteria relating to their public purposes/interests
or constitutional policies and objectives and their administrative relationship to the
government or any of its Departments or Offices.
Assuming for the sake of argument that the BSP ceases to be owned or
controlled by the government because of reduction of the number of
representatives of the government in the BSP Board, it does not follow that it also
ceases to be a government instrumentality as it still retains all the characteristics of
the latter as an attached agency of the DECS under the Administrative
Code. Vesting corporate powers to an attached agency or instrumentality of the
government is not constitutionally prohibited and is allowed by the abovementioned provisions of the Civil Code and the 1987 Administrative Code.
Economic Viability and Ownership and Control
Tests Inapplicable to Public Corporations
The dissent of Justice Carpio also submits that by recognizing a new class of
public corporation(s) created by special charter that will not be subject to the test
of economic viability, the constitutional provision will be circumvented.
However, a review of the Record of the 1986 Constitutional Convention
reveals the intent of the framers of the highest law of our land to distinguish
between government corporations performing governmental functions and
corporations involved in business or proprietary functions:
THE PRESIDENT. Commissioner Foz is recognized.
MR. FOZ. Madam President, I support the proposal to insert
ECONOMIC VIABILITY as one of the grounds for organizing
government corporations. x x x.
MR. OPLE. Madam President, the reason for this concern is really
that when the government creates a corporation, there is a sense in which
this corporation becomes exempt from the test of economic performance.
We know what happened in the past. If a government corporation loses,
then it makes its claim upon the taxpayers money through new equity
infusions from the government and what is always invoked is the
common good. x x x
Therefore, when we insert the phrase ECONOMIC VIABILITY
together with the common good, this becomes a restraint on future
enthusiasts for state capitalism to excuse themselves from the
responsibility of meeting the market test so that they become viable. x x
x.
xxxx
THE PRESIDENT. Commissioner Quesada is recognized.
MS. QUESADA. Madam President, may we be clarified by the
committee on what is meant by economic viability?
THE PRESIDENT. Please proceed.
MR. MONSOD. Economic viability normally is determined by
cost-benefit ratio that takes into consideration all benefits, including
economic external as well as internal benefits. These are what they call
externalities in economics, so that these are not strictly financial criteria.
Economic viability involves what we call economic returns or benefits of
the country that are not quantifiable in financial terms. x x x.
xxxx
MS. QUESADA. So, would this particular formulation now really
limit the entry of government corporations into activities engaged in by
corporations?
MR. MONSOD. Yes, because it is also consistent with the
economic philosophy that this Commission approved that there
should be minimum government participation and intervention in
the economy.
Thus, the test of economic viability clearly does not apply to public corporations
dealing with governmental functions, to which category the BSP belongs. The
discussion above conveys the constitutional intent not to apply this constitutional
ban on the creation of public corporations where the economic viability test would
be irrelevant. The said test would only apply if the corporation is engaged in some
economic activity or business function for the government.
It is undisputed that the BSP performs functions that are impressed with public
interest. In fact, during the consideration of the Senate Bill that eventually became
Republic Act No. 7278, which amended the BSP Charter, one of the bills sponsors,
Senator Joey Lina, described the BSP as follows:
Senator Lina. Yes, I can only think of two organizations
involving the masses of our youth, Mr. President, that should be given
this kind of a privilege the Boy Scouts of the Philippines and the Girl
Scouts of the Philippines. Outside of these two groups, I do not think
there are other groups similarly situated.
The Boy Scouts of the Philippines has a long history of
providing value formation to our young, and considering how huge
the population of the young people is, at this point in time, and also
considering the importance of having an organization such as this
that will inculcate moral uprightness among the young people, and
further considering that the development of these young people at
that tender age of seven to sixteen is vital in the development of the
country producing good citizens, I believe that we can make an
exception of the Boy Scouting movement of the Philippines from this
general prohibition against providing tax exemption and privileges. [57]
Furthermore, this Court cannot agree with the dissenting opinion which equates the
changes introduced by Republic Act No. 7278 to the BSP Charter as clear
manifestation of the intent of Congress to return the BSP to the private sector. It
was not the intent of Congress in enacting Republic Act No. 7278 to give up all
interests in this basic youth organization, which has been its partner in forming
responsible citizens for decades.
In fact, as may be seen in the deliberation of the House Bills that eventually
resulted to Republic Act No. 7278, Congress worked closely with the BSP to
rejuvenate the organization, to bring it back to its former glory reached under its
original charter, Commonwealth Act No. 111, and to correct the perceived ills
introduced by the amendments to its Charter under Presidential Decree No.
460. The BSP suffered from low morale and decrease in number because the
Secretaries of the different departments in government who were too busy to attend
the meetings of the BSPs National Executive Board (the Board) sent
representatives who, as it turned out, changed from meeting to meeting. Thus, the
Scouting Councils established in the provinces and cities were not in touch with
what was happening on the national level, but they were left to implement what
was decided by the Board.[58]
A portion of the legislators discussion is quoted below to clearly show their intent:
HON. DEL MAR. x x x I need not mention to you the value
and the tremendous good that the Boy Scout Movement has done
not only for the youth in particular but for the country in general.
And that is why, if we look around, our past and present national
leaders, prominent men in the various fields of endeavor, public
servants in government offices, and civic leaders in the communities
all over the land, and not only in our country but all over the world
many if not most of them have at one time or another been
beneficiaries of the Scouting Movement. And so, it is along this line,
Mr. Chairman, that we would like to have the early approval of this
measure if only to pay back what we owe much to the Scouting
Movement. Now, going to the meat of the matter, Mr. Chairman, if I may
just the Scouting Movement was enacted into law in October 31, 1936
under Commonwealth Act No. 111. x x x [W]e were acknowledged as
the third biggest scouting organization in the world x x x. And to our
mind, Mr. Chairman, this erratic growth and this decrease in membership
[number] is because of the bad policy measures that were enunciated
with the enactment or promulgation by the President before of
Presidential Decree No. 460 which we feel is the culprit of the ills that is
flagging the Boy Scout Movement today. And so, this is specifically
what we are attacking, Mr. Chairman, the disenfranchisement of the
National Council in the election of the national board. x x x. And so, this
is what we would like to be appraised of by the officers of the Boy
[Scouts] of the Philippines whom we are also confident, have the best
interest of the Boy Scout Movement at heart and it is in this spirit, Mr.
Chairman, that we see no impediment towards working together, the Boy
Scout of the Philippines officers working together with the House of
Representatives in coming out with a measure that will put back the
vigor and enthusiasm of the Boy Scout Movement. x x x. [59] (Emphasis
ours.)
The following is another excerpt from the discussion on the House version
of the bill, in the Committee on Government Enterprises:
HON. AQUINO: x x x Well, obviously, the two bills as well as the
previous laws that have created the Boy Scouts of the Philippines did not
provide for any direct government support by way of appropriation from
the national budget to support the activities of this organization. The
point here is, and at the same time they have been subjected to a
governmental intervention, which to their mind has been inimical to the
objectives and to the institution per se, that is why they are seeking
legislative fiat to restore back the original mandate that they had under
Commonwealth Act 111. Such having been the experience in the
hands of government, meaning, there has been negative interference
on their part and inasmuch as their mandate is coming from a
legislative fiat, then shouldnt it be, this rhetorical question, shouldnt
it be better for this organization to seek a mandate from, lets say, the
government the Corporation Code of the Philippines and register
with the SEC as non-profit non-stock corporation so that
government intervention could be very very minimal. Maybe thats a
rhetorical question, they may or they may not answer, ano. I dont know
what would be the benefit of a charter or a mandate being provided for
by way of legislation versus a registration with the SEC under the
Corporation Code of the Philippines inasmuch as they dont get anything
from the government anyway insofar as direct funding. In fact, the only
thing that they got from government was intervention in their
affairs. Maybe we can solicit some commentary comments from the
resource persons. Incidentally, dont take that as an objection, Im not
objecting. Im all for the objectives of these two bills. It just occurred to
me that since you have had very bad experience in the hands of
Therefore, even though the amended BSP charter did away with most of the
governmental presence in the BSP Board, this was done to more strongly promote
the BSPs objectives, which were not supported under Presidential Decree No.
460. The BSP objectives, as pointed out earlier, are consistent with the public
purpose of the promotion of the well-being of the youth, the future leaders of the
country. The amendments were not done with the view of changing the character
of the BSP into a privatized corporation.The BSP remains an agency attached to a
department of the government, the DECS, and it was not at all stripped of its public
character.
The ownership and control test is likewise irrelevant for a public corporation like
the BSP. To reiterate, the relationship of the BSP, an attached agency, to the
government, through the DECS, is defined in the Revised Administrative Code of
1987. The BSP meets the minimum statutory requirement of an attached
government agency as the DECS Secretary sits at the BSP Board ex officio, thus
facilitating the policy and program coordination between the BSP and the DECS.
Requisites
for
Declaration
of
Unconstitutionality Not Met in this Case
The dissenting opinion of Justice Carpio improperly raised the issue of
unconstitutionality of certain provisions of the BSP Charter. Even if the parties
were asked to Comment on the validity of the BSP charter by the Court, this alone
does not comply with the requisites for judicial review, which were clearly set
forth in a recent case:
When questions of constitutional significance are raised, the Court
can exercise its power of judicial review only if the following requisites
are present: (1) the existence of an actual and appropriate case; (2)
the existence of personal and substantial interest on the part of the
party raising the constitutional question; (3) recourse to judicial
review is made at the earliest opportunity; and (4) the constitutional
question is the lis mota of the case.[61] (Emphasis added.)
Thus, when it comes to the exercise of the power of judicial review, the
constitutional issue should be the very lis mota, or threshold issue, of the case, and
that it should be raised by either of the parties. These requirements would be
ignored under the dissents rather overreaching view of how this case should have
been decided. True, it was the Court that asked the parties to comment, but the
Court cannot be the one to raise a constitutional issue. Thus, the Court chooses to
once more exhibit restraint in the exercise of its power to pass upon the validity of
a law.
Re: the COAs Jurisdiction
Regarding the COAs jurisdiction over the BSP, Section 8 of its amended
charter allows the BSP to receive contributions or donations from the
government. Section 8 reads:
Section 8. Any donation or contribution which from time to
time may be made to the Boy Scouts of the Philippines by the
Government or any of its subdivisions, branches, offices, agencies or
instrumentalities shall be expended by the Executive Board in
pursuance of this Act.
The sources of funds to maintain the BSP were identified before the House
Committee on Government Enterprises while the bill was being deliberated, and
the pertinent portion of the discussion is quoted below:
MR. ESCUDERO. Yes, Mr. Chairman. The question is the
sources of funds of the organization. First, Mr. Chairman, the Boy
Scouts of the Philippines do not receive annual allotment from the
government. The organization has to raise its own funds through fund
drives and fund campaigns or fund raising activities. Aside from this, we
have some revenue producing projects in the organization that gives us
funds to support the operation. x x x From time to time, Mr. Chairman,
when we have special activities we request for assistance or financial
assistance from government agencies, from private business and
corporations, but this is only during special activities that the Boy Scouts
of the Philippines would conduct during the year. Otherwise, we have to
raise our own funds to support the organization. [62]
The nature of the funds of the BSP and the COAs audit jurisdiction were
likewise brought up in said congressional deliberations, to wit:
EN BANC
The Case
This is a petition for certiorari to annul the Commission on Audits (COA)
Resolution dated 3 January 2000 and the Decision dated 30 January 2001
denying the Motion for Reconsideration. The COA denied petitioner Ranulfo
C. Felicianos request for COA to cease all audit services, and to stop charging
auditing fees, to Leyte Metropolitan Water District (LMWD). The COA also
denied petitioners request for COA to refund all auditing fees previously paid
by LMWD.
[1]
Antecedent Facts
A Special Audit Team from COA Regional Office No. VIII audited the
accounts of LMWD. Subsequently, LMWD received a letter from COA dated
19 July 1999 requesting payment of auditing fees. As General Manager of
LMWD, petitioner sent a reply dated 12 October 1999 informing COAs
Regional Director that the water district could not pay the auditing
fees.Petitioner cited as basis for his action Sections 6 and 20 of Presidential
Decree 198 (PD 198) , as well as Section 18 of Republic Act No. 6758 (RA
6758). The Regional Director referred petitioners reply to the COA Chairman
on 18 October 1999.
[2]
The COA also denied petitioners request for COA to stop charging auditing
fees as well as petitioners request for COA to refund all auditing fees already
paid.
The Issues
Petitioner contends that COA committed grave abuse of discretion
amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction by auditing LMWD and requiring it
to pay auditing fees. Petitioner raises the following issues for resolution:
1. Whether a Local Water District (LWD) created under PD 198, as amended,
is a government-owned or controlled corporation subject to the audit
jurisdiction of COA;
2. Whether Section 20 of PD 198, as amended, prohibits COAs certified
public accountants from auditing local water districts; and
3. Whether Section 18 of RA 6758 prohibits the COA from charging
government-owned and controlled corporations auditing fees.
The Ruling of the Court
The petition lacks merit.
The Constitution and existing laws mandate COA to audit all government
agencies, including government-owned and controlled corporations (GOCCs)
with original charters. An LWD is a GOCC with an original charter. Section
2(1), Article IX-D of the Constitution provides for COAs audit jurisdiction, as
follows:
[4]
SECTION 2. (1) The Commission on Audit shall have the power, authority and duty
to examine, audit, and settle all accounts pertaining to the revenue and receipts of, and
expenditures or uses of funds and property, owned or held in trust by, or pertaining to,
the Government, or any of its subdivisions, agencies, or instrumentalities, including
government-owned and controlled corporations with original charters, and on a
post-audit basis: (a) constitutional bodies, commissions and offices that have been
granted fiscal autonomy under this Constitution; (b) autonomous state colleges and
universities; (c) other government-owned or controlled corporations and their
subsidiaries; and (d) such non-governmental entities receiving subsidy or equity,
directly or indirectly, from or through the government, which are required by law or
[6]
[7]
Petitioner theorizes that what PD 198 created was the Local Waters
Utilities Administration (LWUA) and not the LWDs. Petitioner claims that LWDs
are created pursuant to and not created directly by PD 198. Thus, petitioner
concludes that PD 198 is not an original charter that would place LWDs within
the audit jurisdiction of COA as defined in Section 2(1), Article IX-D of the
Constitution. Petitioner elaborates that PD 198 does not create LWDs since it
does not expressly direct the creation of such entities, but only provides for
their formation on an optional or voluntary basis. Petitioner adds that the
operative act that creates an LWD is the approval of the Sanggunian
Resolution as specified in PD 198.
[8]
by
special
Sec. 16. The Congress shall not, except by general law, provide for the formation,
organization, or regulation of private corporations. Government-owned or controlled
corporations may be created or established by special charters in the interest of the
common good and subject to the test of economic viability.
The Constitution emphatically prohibits the creation of private corporations
except by a general law applicable to all citizens. The purpose of this
constitutional provision is to ban private corporations created by special
charters, which historically gave certain individuals, families or groups special
privileges denied to other citizens.
[9]
[10]
[12]
contrary, they were created pursuant to a special law and are governed primarily
by its provision. (Emphasis supplied)
[13]
Section 6. Formation of District. This Act is the source of authorization and power
to form and maintain a district. For purposes of this Act, a district shall be
considered as a quasi-public corporation performing public service and
supplying public wants. As such, a district shall exercise the powers, rights and
privileges given to private corporations under existing laws, in addition to the
powers granted in, and subject to such restrictions imposed, under this Act.
(a) The name of the local water district, which shall include the name of the city,
municipality, or province, or region thereof, served by said system, followed by the
words Water District.
(b) A description of the boundary of the district. In the case of a city or municipality,
such boundary may include all lands within the city or municipality. A district may
include one or more municipalities, cities or provinces, or portions thereof.
(c) A statement completely transferring any and all waterworks and/or sewerage
facilities managed, operated by or under the control of such city, municipality or
province to such district upon the filing of resolution forming the district.
(d) A statement identifying the purpose for which the district is formed, which shall
include those purposes outlined in Section 5 above.
(e) The names of the initial directors of the district with the date of expiration of term
of office for each.
(f) A statement that the district may only be dissolved on the grounds and under the
conditions set forth in Section 44 of this Title.
(g) A statement acknowledging the powers, rights and obligations as set forth in
Section 36 of this Title.
Nothing in the resolution of formation shall state or infer that the local legislative body
has the power to dissolve, alter or affect the district beyond that specifically provided
for in this Act.
If two or more cities, municipalities or provinces, or any combination thereof, desire
to form a single district, a similar resolution shall be adopted in each city, municipality
and province.
xxx
Sec. 25. Authorization. The district may exercise all the powers which are
expressly granted by this Title or which are necessarily implied from or
incidental to the powers and purposes herein stated. For the purpose of carrying
out the objectives of this Act, a district is hereby granted the power of eminent
domain, the exercise thereof shall, however, be subject to review by the
Administration.(Emphasis supplied)
Clearly, LWDs exist as corporations only by virtue of PD 198,
which expressly confers on LWDs corporate powers. Section 6 of PD 198
provides that LWDs shall exercise the powers, rights and privileges given to
private corporations under existing laws. Without PD 198, LWDs would have
no corporate powers. Thus, PD 198 constitutes the special enabling charter of
LWDs. The ineluctable conclusion is that LWDs are government-owned and
controlled corporations with a special charter.
The phrase government-owned and controlled corporations with original
charters means GOCCs created under special laws and not under the general
incorporation law. There is no difference between the term original charters
and special charters. The Court clarified this in National Service
Corporation v. NLRC by citing the deliberations in the Constitutional
Commission, as follows:
[15]
[18]
SECTION 447. Powers, Duties, Functions and Compensation. (a) The sangguniang
bayan, as the legislative body of the municipality, shall enact ordinances, approve
resolutions and appropriate funds for the general welfare of the municipality and its
inhabitants pursuant to Section 16 of this Code and in the proper exercise of the
corporate powers of the municipality as provided for under Section 22 of this Code,
and shall:
xxx
(vii) Subject to existing laws, provide for the establishment, operation, maintenance,
and repair of an efficient waterworks system to supply water for the inhabitants;
regulate the construction, maintenance, repair and use of hydrants, pumps, cisterns
and reservoirs; protect the purity and quantity of the water supply of the municipality
and, for this purpose, extend the coverage of appropriate ordinances over all territory
within the drainage area of said water supply and within one hundred (100) meters of
the reservoir, conduit, canal, aqueduct, pumping station, or watershed used in
connection with the water service; and regulate the consumption, use or wastage of
water;
x x x. (Emphasis supplied)
The Sangguniang Bayan may establish a waterworks system only in
accordance with the provisions of PD 198. The Sangguniang Bayan has no
power to create a corporate entity that will operate its waterworks
system. However, the Sangguniang Bayan may avail of existing enabling
laws, like PD 198, to form and incorporate a water district. Besides, even
assuming for the sake of argument that the Sangguniang Bayan has the
power to create corporations, the LWDs would remain government-owned or
controlled corporations subject to COAs audit jurisdiction. The resolution of
the Sangguniang Bayan would constitute an LWDs special charter, making the
LWD a government-owned and controlled corporation with an original
charter.In any event, the Court has already ruled in Baguio Water District v.
Trajano that the Sangguniang Bayan resolution is not the special charter of
LWDs, thus:
[19]
While it is true that a resolution of a local sanggunian is still necessary for the final
creation of a district, this Court is of the opinion that said resolution cannot be
considered as its charter, the same being intended only to implement the provisions of
said decree.
Petitioner further contends that a law must create directly and explicitly a
GOCC in order that it may have an original charter. In short, petitioner argues
that one special law cannot serve as enabling law for several GOCCs but only
for one GOCC. Section 16, Article XII of the Constitution mandates that
Congress shall not, except by general law, provide for the creation of private
corporations. Thus, the Constitution prohibits one special law to create one
private corporation, requiring instead a general law to create private
corporations. In contrast, the same Section 16 states that Government-owned
or controlled corporations may be created or established by special
charters. Thus, the Constitution permits Congress to create a GOCC with a
special charter. There is, however, no prohibition on Congress to create
several GOCCs of the same class under one special enabling charter.
[20]
This point is important because the Constitution provides in its Article IX-B, Section
2(1) that the Civil Service embraces all branches, subdivisions, instrumentalities, and
agencies of the Government, including government-owned or controlled corporations
with original charters. As the Bank is not owned or controlled by the Government
although it does have an original charter in the form of R.A. No. 3518, it clearly
does not fall under the Civil Service and should be regarded as an ordinary
commercial corporation. Section 28 of the said law so provides. The consequence is
that the relations of the Bank with its employees should be governed by the labor
laws, under which in fact they have already been paid some of their claims. (Emphasis
supplied)
[23]
[26]
While Section 8 of PD 198 states that [N]o public official shall serve as
director of an LWD, it only means that the appointees to the board of directors
of LWDs shall come from the private sector. Once such private sector
representatives assume office as directors, they become public officials
governed by the civil service law and anti-graft laws. Otherwise, Section 8 of
PD 198 would contravene Section 2(1), Article IX-B of the Constitution
declaring that the civil service includes government-owned or controlled
corporations with original charters.
If LWDs are neither GOCCs with original charters nor GOCCs without
original charters, then they would fall under the term agencies or
instrumentalities of the government and thus still subject to COAs audit
jurisdiction. However, the stark and undeniable fact is that the government
owns LWDs. Section 45 of PD 198 recognizes government ownership of
LWDs when Section 45 states that the board of directors may dissolve an
LWD only on the condition that another public entity has acquired the assets
of the district and has assumed all obligations and liabilities attached
thereto. The implication is clear that an LWD is a public and not a private
entity.
[27]
Petitioner does not allege that some entity other than the government
owns or controls LWDs. Instead, petitioner advances the theory that the Water
Districts owner is the District itself. Assuming for the sake of argument that
an LWD is self-owned, as petitioner describes an LWD, the government in
any event controls all LWDs. First, government officials appoint all LWD
directors to a fixed term of office. Second, any per diem of LWD directors in
excess of P50 is subject to the approval of the Local Water Utilities
Administration, and directors can receive no other compensation for their
services to the LWD. Third, the Local Water Utilities Administration can
require LWDs to merge or consolidate their facilities or operations. This
element of government control subjects LWDs to COAs audit jurisdiction.
[28]
[29]
[30]
[31]
Finally, petitioner claims that even on the assumption that the government
owns and controls LWDs, Section 20 of PD 198 prevents COA from auditing
LWDs. Section 20 of PD 198 provides:
[34]
Sec. 20. System of Business Administration. The Board shall, as soon as practicable,
prescribe and define by resolution a system of business administration and accounting
for the district, which shall be patterned upon and conform to the standards
established by the Administration. Auditing shall be performed by a certified
public accountant not in the government service. The Administration may,
however, conduct annual audits of the fiscal operations of the district to be performed
by an auditor retained by the Administration. Expenses incurred in connection
therewith shall be borne equally by the water district concerned and the
Administration. (Emphasis supplied)
[35]
There can be no question that Section 18 of Republic Act No. 6758 is designed to
strengthen further the policy x x x to preserve the independence and integrity of the
COA, by explicitly PROHIBITING: (1) COA officials and employees from receiving
salaries, honoraria, bonuses, allowances or other emoluments from any government
entity, local government unit, GOCCs and government financial institutions,except
such compensation paid directly by the COA out of its appropriations and
contributions, and (2) government entities, including GOCCs, government financial
institutions and local government units from assessing or billing other government
entities, GOCCs, government financial institutions or local government units for
services rendered by the latters officials and employees as part of their regular
functions for purposes of paying additional compensation to said officials and
employees.
xxx
The first aspect of the strategy is directed to the COA itself, while the second aspect is
addressed directly against the GOCCs and government financial institutions. Under
the first, COA personnel assigned to auditing units of GOCCs or government
financial institutions can receive only such salaries, allowances or fringe benefits
paid directly by the COA out of its appropriations and contributions.The
contributions referred to are the cost of audit services earlier mentioned which
cannot include the extra emoluments or benefits now claimed by petitioners. The
COA is further barred from assessing or billing GOCCs and government financial
institutions for services rendered by its personnel as part of their regular audit
functions for purposes of paying additional compensation to such personnel. x x
x. (Emphasis supplied)
In Tejada, the Court explained the meaning of the word contributions in
Section 18 of RA 6758, which allows COA to charge GOCCs the cost of its
audit services:
x x x the contributions from the GOCCs are limited to the cost of audit services which
are based on the actual cost of the audit function in the corporation concerned plus a
reasonable rate to cover overhead expenses. The actual audit cost shall include
personnel services, maintenance and other operating expenses, depreciation on capital
and equipment and out-of-pocket expenses. In respect to the allowances and fringe
benefits granted by the GOCCs to the COA personnel assigned to the formers auditing
units, the same shall be directly defrayed by COA from its own appropriations x x x.
[41]
COA may charge GOCCs actual audit cost but GOCCs must pay the same
directly to COA and not to COA auditors. Petitioner has not alleged that COA
charges LWDs auditing fees in excess of COAs actual audit cost. Neither has
petitioner alleged that the auditing fees are paid by LWDs directly to individual
COA auditors. Thus, petitioners contention must fail.
WHEREFORE, the Resolution of the Commission on Audit dated 3
January 2000 and the Decision dated 30 January 2001 denying petitioners
Motion for Reconsideration are AFFIRMED. The second sentence of Section
20 of Presidential Decree No. 198 is declared VOID for being inconsistent with
Sections 2 (1) and 3, Article IX-D of the Constitution. No costs.
SO ORDERED.
THE PREVENTION OF
CRUELTY TO ANIMALS,
Petitioners,
Members:
PUNO, C.J.
QUISUMBING,
YNARES-SANTIAGO,
SANDOVAL-GUTIERREZ,
CARPIO,
AUSTRIA-MARTINEZ,
CORONA,
- versus -
CARPIO-MORALES,
AZCUNA,
TINGA,
CHICO-NAZARIO,
GARCIA,
VELASCO, JR.,
NACHURA, and
REYES, JJ.
COMMISSION ON AUDIT,
DIR. RODULFO J. ARIESGA
(in his
Director
official
capacity
as
MS.
MERLE M. VALENTIN and MS.
SUSAN
official
GUARDIAN
(in
their
Promulgated:
x----------------------------------------------------------x
DECISION
AUSTRIA-MARTINEZ, J.:
Before
the
Court
is
a
special
civil
action
for Certiorari and Prohibition under Rule 65 of the Rules of Court,
in relation to Section 2 of Rule 64, filed by the petitioner assailing
Office Order No. 2005-021[1] dated September 14, 2005 issued by
the respondents which constituted the audit team, as well as its
September 23, 2005 Letter[2] informing the petitioner that
respondents audit team shall conduct an audit survey on the
petitioner for a detailed audit of its accounts, operations, and
financial transactions. No temporary restraining order was issued.
(emphasis supplied)
xxxx
In
a
Memorandum
dated September
16,
2004,
Director Delfin Aguilar
reported
to
COA
Assistant
Commissioner Juanito Espino, Corporate Government Sector, that
the audit survey was not conducted due to the refusal of the
petitioner because the latter maintained that it was a private
corporation.
B.
sovereign powers, that is, it is tasked to enforce the laws for the
protection and welfare of animals which ultimately redound to the
public good and welfare, and, therefore, it is deemed to be a
government instrumentality as defined under the Administrative
Code of 1987, the purpose of which is connected with the
administration of government, as purportedly affirmed by
American jurisprudence; third, by virtue of Section 23,[11] Title II,
Book III of the same Code, the Office of the President exercises
supervision or control over the petitioner; fourth, under the same
Code, the requirement under its special charter for the petitioner
to render a report to the Civil Governor, whose functions have
been inherited by the Office of the President, clearly reflects the
nature of the petitioner as a government instrumentality; fifth,
despite the passage of the Corporation Code, the law creating the
petitioner had not been abolished, nor had it been re-incorporated
under any general corporation law; and finally, sixth, Republic Act
No. 8485, otherwise known as the Animal Welfare Act of 1998,
designates the petitioner as a member of its Committee on
Animal Welfare which is attached to the Department of
Agriculture.
Petitioner
and
the
OSG
filed
their
respective
Comments. Respondents filed a Manifestation stating that since
they were being represented by the OSG which filed its Comment,
they opted to dispense with the filing of a separate one and adopt
for the purpose that of the OSG.
The petitioner avers that it does not have the authority to impose
fines for violation of animal welfare laws; it only enjoyed the
privilege of sharing in the fines imposed and collected from its
efforts in the enforcement of animal welfare laws; such privilege,
however, was subsequently abolished by C.A. No. 148; that it
continues to exist as a private corporation since it was created by
the
Philippine
Commission
before
the effectivity of
the
Corporation law, Act No. 1459; and the 1935 and 1987
Constitutions.
The OSG submits that Act No. 1285 and its amendatory laws did
not give petitioner the authority to impose fines for violation of
laws[12] relating to the prevention of cruelty to animals and the
protection of animals; that even prior to the amendment of Act
No. 1285, petitioner was only entitled to share in the fines
imposed; C.A. No. 148 abolished that privilege to share in the
fines collected; that petitioner is a public corporation and has
continued to exist since Act No. 1285; petitioner was not repealed
by the 1935 and 1987 Constitutions which contain transitory
First, the Court agrees with the petitioner that the charter test
cannot be applied.
The petitioner is correct in stating that the charter test is predicated, at best, on the
legal regime established by the 1935 Constitution, Section 7, Article XIII, which
states:
Sec. 7. The National Assembly shall not, except by general law, provide
for the formation, organization, or regulation of private corporations,
unless such corporations are owned or controlled by the Government or
any subdivision or instrumentality thereof.[14]
The foregoing proscription has been carried over to the 1973 and
the 1987 Constitutions. Section 16 of Article XII of the present
Constitution provides:
Sec. 16. The Congress shall not, except by general law, provide
for the formation, organization, or regulation of private
corporations. Government-owned or controlled corporations may be
created or established by special charters in the interest of the common
good and subject to the test of economic viability.
As pointed out by the OSG, both the 1935 and 1987 Constitutions
contain transitory provisions maintaining all laws issued not
inconsistent therewith until amended, modified or repealed. [19]
In a legal regime where the charter test doctrine cannot be
applied, the mere fact that a corporation has been created by
virtue of a special law does not necessarily qualify it as a public
corporation.
What then is the nature of the petitioner as a corporate entity? What legal regime
governs its rights, powers, and duties?
As stated, at the time the petitioner was formed, the applicable law was the
Philippine Bill of 1902, and, emphatically, as also stated above, no proscription
similar to the charter test can be found therein.
The textual foundation of the charter test, which placed a
limitation on the power of the legislature, first appeared in the
1935 Constitution. However, the petitioner was incorporated in
Time and again the Court must caution even the most brilliant
scholars of the law and all constitutional historians on the danger
of imposing legal concepts of a later date on facts of an earlier
date.[20]
xxxx
xxxx
Authorities are of the view that the purpose alone of the corporation cannot be
taken as a safe guide, for the fact is that almost all corporations are nowadays
created to promote the interest, good, or convenience of the public. A bank, for
example, is a private corporation; yet, it is created for a public benefit. Private
schools and universities are likewise private corporations; and yet, they are
rendering public service. Private hospitals and wards are charged with heavy social
responsibilities. More so with all common carriers. On the other hand, there may
exist a public corporation even if it is endowed with gifts or donations from private
individuals.
SO ORDERED
Municipal Corporations
Elements of a Municipal Corporation- Nature and Function
G.R. No. L-23825
All barrios existing at the time of the passage of this Act shall come under the
provisions hereof.
Upon petition of a majority of the voters in the areas affected, a new barrio may be
created or the name of an existing one may be changed by the provincial board of
the province, upon recommendation of the council of the municipality or
municipalities in which the proposed barrio is stipulated. The recommendation of the
municipal council shall be embodied in a resolution approved by at least two-thirds of
the entire membership of the said council: Provided, however, That no new barrio
may be created if its population is less than five hundred persons.
Hence, since January 1, 1960, when Republic Act No. 2370 became effective, barrios may
"not be created or their boundaries altered nor their names changed" except by Act of
Congress or of the corresponding provincial board "upon petition of a majority of the voters
in the areas affected" and the "recommendation of the council of the municipality or
municipalities in which the proposed barrio is situated." Petitioner argues, accordingly: "If
the President, under this new law, cannot even create a barrio, can he create a municipality
which is composed of several barrios, since barrios are units of municipalities?"
Respondent answers in the affirmative, upon the theory that a new municipality can be
created without creating new barrios, such as, by placing old barrios under the jurisdiction of
the new municipality. This theory overlooks, however, the main import of the petitioner's
argument, which is that the statutory denial of the presidential authority to create a new
barrio implies a negation of the bigger power to create municipalities, each of which
consists of several barrios. The cogency and force of this argument is too obvious to be
denied or even questioned. Founded upon logic and experience, it cannot be offset except
by a clear manifestation of the intent of Congress to the contrary, and no such
manifestation, subsequent to the passage of Republic Act No. 2379, has been brought to
our attention.
Moreover, section 68 of the Revised Administrative Code, upon which the disputed
executive orders are based, provides:
The (Governor-General) President of the Philippines may by executive order define
the boundary, or boundaries, of any province, subprovince, municipality, [township]
municipal district, or other political subdivision, and increase or diminish the territory
comprised therein, may divide any province into one or more subprovinces, separate
any political division other than a province, into such portions as may be required,
merge any of such subdivisions or portions with another, name any new subdivision
so created, and may change the seat of government within any subdivision to such
place therein as the public welfare may require: Provided, That the authorization of
the (Philippine Legislature) Congress of the Philippines shall first be obtained
whenever the boundary of any province or subprovince is to be defined or any
province is to be divided into one or more subprovinces. When action by the
(Governor-General) President of the Philippines in accordance herewith makes
necessary a change of the territory under the jurisdiction of any administrative officer
or any judicial officer, the (Governor-General) President of the Philippines, with the
recommendation and advice of the head of the Department having executive control
of such officer, shall redistrict the territory of the several officers affected and assign
such officers to the new districts so formed.
Upon the changing of the limits of political divisions in pursuance of the foregoing
authority, an equitable distribution of the funds and obligations of the divisions
thereby affected shall be made in such manner as may be recommended by the
(Insular Auditor) Auditor General and approved by the (Governor-General) President
of the Philippines.
Respondent alleges that the power of the President to create municipalities under this
section does not amount to an undue delegation of legislative power, relying
upon Municipality of Cardona vs. Municipality of Binagonan (36 Phil. 547), which, he
claims, has settled it. Such claim is untenable, for said case involved, not the creation of a
new municipality, but a mere transfer of territory from an already existing municipality
(Cardona) to another municipality (Binagonan), likewise, existing at the time of and prior to
said transfer (See Gov't of the P.I. ex rel. Municipality of Cardona vs. Municipality, of
Binagonan [34 Phil. 518, 519-5201) in consequence of the fixing and definition,
pursuant to Act No. 1748, of the common boundaries of two municipalities.
It is obvious, however, that, whereas the power to fix such common boundary, in order to
avoid or settle conflicts of jurisdiction between adjoining municipalities, may partake of
an administrative nature involving, as it does, the adoption of means and ways to carry
into effect the law creating said municipalities the authority to create municipal
corporations is essentially legislative in nature. In the language of other courts, it is "strictly
a legislative function" (State ex rel. Higgins vs. Aicklen, 119 S. 425, January 2, 1959) or
"solely and exclusively the exercise oflegislative power" (Udall vs. Severn, May 29, 1938, 79
P. 2d 347-349). As the Supreme Court of Washington has put it (Territory ex rel. Kelly vs.
Stewart, February 13, 1890, 23 Pac. 405, 409), "municipal corporations are purely the
creatures of statutes."
Although1a Congress may delegate to another branch of the Government the power to fill in
the details in the execution, enforcement or administration of a law, it is essential, to
forestall a violation of the principle of separation of powers, that said law: (a) be complete in
itself it must set forth therein the policy to be executed, carried out or implemented by the
delegate2 and (b) fix a standard the limits of which are sufficiently determinate or
determinable to which the delegate must conform in the performance of his
functions.2aIndeed, without a statutory declaration of policy, the delegate would in effect,
make or formulate such policy, which is the essence of every law; and, without the
aforementioned standard, there would be no means to determine, with reasonable certainty,
whether the delegate has acted within or beyond the scope of his authority. 2b Hence, he
could thereby arrogate upon himself the power, not only to make the law, but, also and
this is worse to unmake it, by adopting measures inconsistent with the end sought to be
attained by the Act of Congress, thus nullifying the principle of separation of powers and the
system of checks and balances, and, consequently, undermining the very foundation of our
Republican system.
Section 68 of the Revised Administrative Code does not meet these well settled
requirements for a valid delegation of the power to fix the details in the enforcement of a
law. It does not enunciate any policy to be carried out or implemented by the President.
Neither does it give a standard sufficiently precise to avoid the evil effects above referred to.
In this connection, we do not overlook the fact that, under the last clause of the first
sentence of Section 68, the President:
... may change the seat of the government within any subdivision to such place
therein as the public welfare may require.
It is apparent, however, from the language of this clause, that the phrase "as the public
welfare may require" qualified, not the clauses preceding the one just quoted,
but only the place to which the seat of the government may be transferred. This fact
becomes more apparent when we consider that said Section 68 was originally Section 1 of
Act No. 1748,3 which provided that, "whenever in the judgment of the Governor-General
the public welfare requires, he may, by executive order," effect the changes enumerated
therein (as in said section 68), including the change of the seat of the government "to
such place ... as the public interest requires." The opening statement of said Section 1 of
Act No. 1748 which was not included in Section 68 of the Revised Administrative Code
governed the time at which, or the conditions under which, the powers therein conferred
could be exercised; whereas the last part of the first sentence of said section
referred exclusively to the place to which the seat of the government was to be transferred.
At any rate, the conclusion would be the same, insofar as the case at bar is concerned,
even if we assumed that the phrase "as the public welfare may require," in said Section 68,
qualifies all other clauses thereof. It is true that in Calalang vs. Williams (70 Phil. 726)
and People vs. Rosenthal (68 Phil. 328), this Court had upheld "public welfare" and "public
interest," respectively, as sufficient standards for a valid delegation of the authority to
execute the law. But, the doctrine laid down in these cases as all judicial
pronouncements must be construed in relation to the specific facts and issues involved
therein, outside of which they do not constitute precedents and have no binding effect. 4 The
law construed in the Calalang case conferred upon the Director of Public Works, with the
approval of the Secretary of Public Works and Communications, the power to issue rules
and regulations topromote safe transit upon national roads and streets. Upon the other
hand, the Rosenthal case referred to the authority of the Insular Treasurer, under Act No.
2581, to issue and cancel certificates or permits for the sale ofspeculative securities. Both
cases involved grants to administrative officers of powers related to the exercise of their
administrative functions, calling for the determination of questions of fact.
Such is not the nature of the powers dealt with in section 68. As above indicated, the
creation of municipalities, is not an administrative function, but one which is essentially
and eminently legislative in character. The question of whether or not "public interest"
demands the exercise of such power is not one of fact. it is "purely a legislativequestion
"(Carolina-Virginia Coastal Highway vs. Coastal Turnpike Authority, 74 S.E. 2d. 310-313,
315-318), or apolitical question (Udall vs. Severn, 79 P. 2d. 347-349). As the Supreme Court
of Wisconsin has aptly characterized it, "the question as to whether incorporation is for
the best interest of the community in any case is emphatically a question of public policy
and statecraft" (In re Village of North Milwaukee, 67 N.W. 1033, 1035-1037).
For this reason, courts of justice have annulled, as constituting undue delegation of
legislative powers, state laws granting the judicial department, the power to determine
whether certain territories should be annexed to a particular municipality (Udall vs.
Severn, supra, 258-359); or vesting in a Commission the right to determine the plan and
frame of government of proposed villages and what functions shall be exercised by the
same, although the powers and functions of the village are specifically limited by statute (In
re Municipal Charters, 86 Atl. 307-308); or conferring upon courts the authority to declare a
given town or village incorporated, and designate its metes and bounds, upon petition of a
majority of the taxable inhabitants thereof, setting forth the area desired to be included in
such village (Territory ex rel Kelly vs. Stewart, 23 Pac. 405-409); or authorizing the territory
of a town, containing a given area and population, to be incorporated as a town, on certain
steps being taken by the inhabitants thereof and on certain determination by a court and
subsequent vote of the inhabitants in favor thereof, insofar as the court is allowed to
determine whether the lands embraced in the petition "ought justly" to be included in the
village, and whether the interest of the inhabitants will be promoted by such incorporation,
and to enlarge and diminish the boundaries of the proposed village "as justice may require"
(In re Villages of North Milwaukee, 67 N.W. 1035-1037); or creating a Municipal Board of
Control which shall determine whether or not the laying out, construction or operation of a
toll road is in the "public interest" and whether the requirements of the law had been
complied with, in which case the board shall enter an order creating a municipal corporation
and fixing the name of the same (Carolina-Virginia Coastal Highway vs. Coastal Turnpike
Authority, 74 S.E. 2d. 310).
Insofar as the validity of a delegation of power by Congress to the President is concerned,
the case of Schechter Poultry Corporation vs. U.S. (79 L. Ed. 1570) is quite relevant to the
one at bar. The Schechter case involved the constitutionality of Section 3 of the National
Industrial Recovery Act authorizing the President of the United States to approve "codes of
fair competition" submitted to him by one or more trade or industrial associations or
corporations which "impose no inequitable restrictions on admission to membership therein
and are truly representative," provided that such codes are not designed "to promote
monopolies or to eliminate or oppress small enterprises and will not operate to discriminate
against them, and will tend to effectuate the policy" of said Act. The Federal Supreme Court
held:
To summarize and conclude upon this point: Sec. 3 of the Recovery Act is without
precedent. It supplies no standards for any trade, industry or activity. It does not
undertake to prescribe rules of conduct to be applied to particular states of fact
determined by appropriate administrative procedure. Instead of prescribing rules of
conduct, it authorizes the making of codes to prescribe them. For that legislative
undertaking, Sec. 3 sets up no standards, aside from the statement of the general
aims of rehabilitation, correction and expansion described in Sec. 1. In view of the
scope of that broad declaration, and of the nature of the few restrictions that are
imposed, the discretion of the President in approving or prescribing codes, and thus
enacting laws for the government of trade and industry throughout the country, is
virtually unfettered. We think that the code making authority thus conferred is an
unconstitutional delegation of legislative power.
If the term "unfair competition" is so broad as to vest in the President a discretion that is
"virtually unfettered." and, consequently, tantamount to a delegation of legislative power, it is
obvious that "public welfare," which has even a broader connotation, leads to the same
result. In fact, if the validity of the delegation of powers made in Section 68 were upheld,
there would no longer be any legal impediment to a statutory grant of authority to the
President to do anything which, in his opinion, may be required by public welfare or public
interest. Such grant of authority would be a virtual abdication of the powers of Congress in
favor of the Executive, and would bring about a total collapse of the democratic system
established by our Constitution, which it is the special duty and privilege of this Court to
uphold.
It may not be amiss to note that the executive orders in question were issued after the
legislative bills for the creation of the municipalities involved in this case had failed to pass
Congress. A better proof of the fact that the issuance of said executive orders entails the
exercise of purely legislative functions can hardly be given.
Again, Section 10 (1) of Article VII of our fundamental law ordains:
The President shall have control of all the executive departments, bureaus, or
offices, exercise general supervision over all local governments as may be provided
by law, and take care that the laws be faithfully executed.
The power of control under this provision implies the right of the President to interfere in the
exercise of such discretion as may be vested by law in the officers of the executive
departments, bureaus, or offices of the national government, as well as to act in lieu of such
officers. This power is denied by the Constitution to the Executive, insofar as local
governments are concerned. With respect to the latter, the fundamental law permits him to
wield no more authority than that of checking whether said local governments or the officers
thereof perform their duties as provided by statutory enactments. Hence, the President
cannot interfere with local governments, so long as the same or its officers act Within the
scope of their authority. He may not enact an ordinance which the municipal council has
failed or refused to pass, even if it had thereby violated a duty imposed thereto by law,
although he may see to it that the corresponding provincial officials take appropriate
disciplinary action therefor. Neither may he vote, set aside or annul an ordinance passed by
said council within the scope of its jurisdiction, no matter how patently unwise it may be. He
may not even suspend an elective official of a regular municipality or take any disciplinary
action against him, except on appeal from a decision of the corresponding provincial board. 5
Upon the other hand if the President could create a municipality, he could, in effect, remove
any of its officials, by creating a new municipality and including therein the barrio in which
the official concerned resides, for his office would thereby become vacant. 6 Thus, by merely
brandishing the power to create a new municipality (if he had it), without actually creating it,
he could compel local officials to submit to his dictation, thereby, in effect, exercising over
them the power of control denied to him by the Constitution.
Then, also, the power of control of the President over executive departments, bureaus or
offices implies no morethan the authority to assume directly the functions thereof or to
interfere in the exercise of discretion by its officials. Manifestly, such control does not
Separate Opinions
BENGZON, J.P., J., concurring and dissenting:
A sign of progress in a developing nation is the rise of new municipalities. Fostering their
rapid growth has long been the aim pursued by all three branches of our Government.
So it was that the Governor-General during the time of the Jones Law was given authority
by the Legislature (Act No. 1748) to act upon certain details with respect to said local
governments, such as fixing of boundaries, subdivisions and mergers. And the Supreme
Court, within the framework of the Jones Law, ruled in 1917 that the execution or
implementation of such details, did not entail abdication of legislative power (Government
vs. Municipality of Binagonan, 34 Phil. 518; Municipality of Cardona vs. Municipality of
Binagonan, 36 Phil. 547). Subsequently, Act No. 1748's aforesaid statutory authorization
was embodied in Section 68 of the Revised Administrative Code. And Chief Executives
since then up to the present continued to avail of said provision, time and again invoking it
to issue executive orders providing for the creation of municipalities.
From September 4, 1964 to October 29, 1964 the President of the Philippines issued
executive orders to create thirty-three municipalities pursuant to Section 68 of the Revised
Administrative Code. Public funds thereby stood to be disbursed in implementation of said
executive orders.
Suing as private citizen and taxpayer, Vice President Emmanuel Pelaez filed in this Court a
petition for prohibition with preliminary injunction against the Auditor General. It seeks to
restrain the respondent or any person acting in his behalf, from passing in audit any
expenditure of public funds in implementation of the executive orders aforementioned.
Petitioner contends that the President has no power to create a municipality by executive
order. It is argued that Section 68 of the Revised Administrative Code of 1917, so far as it
purports to grant any such power, is invalid or, at the least, already repealed, in light of the
Philippine Constitution and Republic Act 2370 (The Barrio Charter).
Section 68 is again reproduced hereunder for convenience:
SEC. 68. General authority of [Governor-General) President of the Philippines to fix
boundaries and make new subdivisions. The [Governor-General] President of the
Philippines may by executive order define the boundary, or boundaries, of any
province, subprovince, municipality, [township] municipal district, or other political
subdivision, and increase or diminish the territory comprised therein, may divide any
province into one or more subprovinces, separate any political division other than a
province, into such portions as may be required, merge any of such subdivisions or
portions with another, name any new subdivision so created, and may change the
seat of government within any subdivision to such place therein as the public welfare
may require: Provided, That the authorization of the [Philippine Legislature]
Congress of the Philippines shall first be obtained whenever the boundary of any
province or subprovince is to be defined or any province is to be divided into one or
more subprovinces. When action by the [Governor-General] President of the
Philippines in accordance herewith makes necessary a change of the territory under
the jurisdiction of any administrative officer or any judicial officer, the [GovernorGeneral] President of the Philippines, with the recommendation and advice of the
head of the Department having executive control of such officer, shall redistrict the
territory of the several officers to the new districts so formed.
Upon the changing of the limits of political divisions in pursuance of the foregoing
authority, an equitable distribution of the funds and obligations of the divisions
thereby affected shall be made in such manner as may be recommended by the
[Insular Auditor] Auditor General and approved by the [Governor-General] President
of the Philippines.
From such working I believe that power to create a municipality is included: to "separate any
political division other than a province, into such portions as may be required, merge any
such subdivisions or portions with another, name any new subdivision so created." The
issue, however, is whether the legislature can validly delegate to the Executive such power.
The power to create a municipality is legislative in character. American authorities have
therefore favored the view that it cannot be delegated; that what is delegable is not the
power to create municipalities but only the power to determine the existence of facts under
which creation of a municipality will result (37 Am. Jur. 628).
The test is said to lie in whether the statute allows any discretion on the delegate as to
whether the municipal corporation should be created. If so, there is an attempted delegation
of legislative power and the statute is invalid (Ibid.). Now Section 68 no doubt gives the
President such discretion, since it says that the President "may by executive order" exercise
the powers therein granted. Furthermore, Section 5 of the same Code states:
SEC. 5. Exercise of administrative discretion The exercise of the permissive
powers of all executive or administrative officers and bodies is based upon
discretion, and when such officer or body is given authority to do any act but not
required to do such act, the doing of the same shall be dependent on a sound
discretion to be exercised for the good of the service and benefit of the public,
whether so expressed in the statute giving the authority or not.
Under the prevailing rule in the United States and Section 68 is of American origin the
provision in question would be an invalid attempt to delegate purely legislative powers,
contrary to the principle of separation of powers.
It is very pertinent that Section 68 should be considered with the stream of history in mind. A
proper knowledge of the past is the only adequate background for the present. Section 68
was adopted half a century ago. Political change, two world wars, the recognition of our
independence and rightful place in the family of nations, have since taken place. In 1917 the
Philippines had for its Organic Act the Jones Law. And under the setup ordained therein no
strict separation of powers was adhered to. Consequently, Section 68 was not
constitutionally objectionable at the time of its enactment.
The advent of the Philippine Constitution in 1935 however altered the situation. For not only
was separation of powers strictly ordained, except only in specific instances therein
provided, but the power of the Chief Executive over local governments suffered an explicit
reduction.
Formerly, Section 21 of the Jones Law provided that the Governor-General "shall have
general supervision and control of all the departments and bureaus of the government in the
Philippine Islands." Now Section 10 (1), Article VII of the Philippine Constitution provides:
"The President shall have control of all the executive departments, bureaus, or offices,
exercise general supervision over all local governments as may be provided by law, and
take care that the laws be faithfully executed.
In short, the power of control over local governments had now been taken away from the
Chief Executive. Again, to fully understand the significance of this provision, one must trace
its development and growth.
As early as April 7, 1900 President McKinley of the United States, in his Instructions to the
Second Philippine Commission, laid down the policy that our municipal governments should
be "subject to the least degree of supervision and control" on the part of the national
government. Said supervision and control was to be confined within the "narrowest limits" or
so much only as "may be necessary to secure and enforce faithful and efficient
administration by local officers." And the national government "shall have no direct
administration except of matters of purely general concern." (See Hebron v. Reyes, L-9158,
July 28, 1958.)
All this had one aim, to enable the Filipinos to acquire experience in the art of selfgovernment, with the end in view of later allowing them to assume complete management
and control of the administration of their local affairs. Such aim is the policy now embodied
in Section 10 (1), Article VII of the Constitution (Rodriguez v. Montinola, 50 O.G. 4820).
It is the evident decree of the Constitution, therefore, that the President shall have no power
of control over local governments. Accordingly, Congress cannot by law grant him such
power (Hebron v. Reyes, supra). And any such power formerly granted under the Jones
Law thereby became unavoidably inconsistent with the Philippine Constitution.
It remains to examine the relation of the power to create and the power to control local
governments. Said relationship has already been passed upon by this Court in Hebron v.
Reyes, supra. In said case, it was ruled that the power to control is an incident of the power
to create or abolish municipalities. Respondent's view, therefore, that creating municipalities
and controlling their local governments are "two worlds apart," is untenable. And since as
stated, the power to control local governments can no longer be conferred on or exercised
by the President, it follows a fortiori that the power to create them, all the more cannot be so
conferred or exercised.
I am compelled to conclude, therefore, that Section 10 (1), Article VII of the Constitution has
repealed Section 68 of the Revised Administrative Code as far as the latter empowers the
President to create local governments. Repeal by the Constitution of prior statutes
inconsistent with it has already been sustained in De los Santos v. MaIlare, 87 Phil. 289.
And it was there held that such repeal differs from a declaration of unconstitutionality of a
posterior legislation, so much so that only a majority vote of the Court is needed to sustain a
finding of repeal.
Since the Constitution repealed Section 68 as far back as 1935, it is academic to ask
whether Republic Act 2370 likewise has provisions in conflict with Section 68 so as to repeal
it. Suffice it to state, at any rate, that statutory prohibition on the President from creating a
barrio does not, in my opinion, warrant the inference of statutory prohibition for creating a
municipality. For although municipalities consist of barrios, there is nothing in the statute
that would preclude creation of new municipalities out of pre-existing barrios.
It is not contrary to the logic of local autonomy to be able to create larger political units and
unable to create smaller ones. For as long ago observed in President McKinley's
Instructions to the Second Philippine Commission, greater autonomy is to be imparted to
the smaller of the two political units. The smaller the unit of local government, the lesser is
the need for the national government's intervention in its political affairs. Furthermore, for
practical reasons, local autonomy cannot be given from the top downwards. The national
government, in such a case, could still exercise power over the supposedly autonomous
unit, e.g., municipalities, by exercising it over the smaller units that comprise them, e.g., the
barrios. A realistic program of decentralization therefore calls for autonomy from the bottom
upwards, so that it is not surprising for Congress to deny the national government some
power over barrios without denying it over municipalities. For this reason, I disagree with the
majority view that because the President could not create a barrio under Republic Act 2370,
a fortiori he cannot create a municipality.
It is my view, therefore, that the Constitution, and not Republic Act 2370, repealed Section
68 of the Revised Administrative Code's provision giving the President authority to create
local governments. And for this reason I agree with the ruling in the majority opinion that the
executive orders in question are null and void.
In thus ruling, the Court is but sustaining the fulfillment of our historic desire to be free and
independent under a republican form of government, and exercising a function derived from
the very sovereignty that it upholds. Executive orders declared null and void.
Makalintal and Regala, JJ., concur
EN BANC
VITUG, J.:
On 20 August 1959, President Carlos P. Garcia, issued, pursuant to the then Sections 68
and 2630 of the Revised Administrative Code, as amended, Executive Order No. 353
creating the municipal district of San Andres, Quezon, by segregating from the municipality
of San Narciso of the same province, the barrios of San Andres, Mangero, Alibijaban,
Pansoy, Camflora and Tala along with their respective sitios.
Executive Order No. 353 was issued upon the request, addressed to the President and
coursed through the Provincial Board of Quezon, of the municipal council of San Narciso,
Quezon, in its Resolution No. 8 of 24 May 1959. 1
By virtue of Executive Order No. 174, dated 05 October 1965, issued by President
Diosdado Macapagal, the municipal district of San Andres was later officially recognized to
have gained the status of a fifth class municipality beginning 01 July 1963 by operation of
Section 2 of Republic Act No. 1515. 2 The executive order added that "(t)he conversion of this
municipal district into (a) municipality as proposed in House Bill No. 4864 was approved by the House of
Representatives."
On 05 June 1989, the Municipality of San Narciso filed a petition for quo warranto with the
Regional Trial Court, Branch 62, in Gumaca, Quezon, against the officials of the
Municipality of San Andres. Docketed Special Civil Action No. 2014-G, the petition sought
the declaration of nullity of Executive Order No. 353 and prayed that the respondent local
officials of the Municipality of San Andres be permanently ordered to refrain from performing
the duties and functions of their respective offices. 3 Invoking the ruling of this Court in Pelaez v.
Auditor General, 4 the petitioning municipality contended that Executive Order No. 353, a presidential act,
was a clear usurpation of the inherent powers of the legislature and in violation of the constitutional
principle of separation of powers. Hence, petitioner municipality argued, the officials of the Municipality or
Municipal District of San Andres had no right to exercise the duties and functions of their respective
offices that righfully belonged to the corresponding officials of the Municipality of San Narciso.
In their answer, respondents asked for the dismissal of the petition, averring, by way of
affirmative and special defenses, that since it was at the instance of petitioner municipality
that the Municipality of San Andres was given life with the issuance of Executive Order No.
353, it (petitioner municipality) should be deemed estopped from questioning the creation of
the new municipality; 5 that because the Municipality of San Andred had been in existence since 1959,
its corporate personality could no longer be assailed; and that, considering the petition to be one for quo
warranto, petitioner municipality was not the proper party to bring the action, that prerogative being
reserved to the State acting through the Solicitor General. 6
On 18 July 1991, after the parties had submitted their respective pre-trial briefs, the trial
court resolved to defer action on the motion to dismiss and to deny a judgment on the
pleadings.
On 27 November 1991, the Municipality of San Andres filed anew a motion to dismiss
alleging that the case had become moot and academic with the enactment of Republic Act
No. 7160, otherwise known as the Local Government Code of 1991, which took effect on 01
January 1991. The movant municipality cited Section 442(d) of the law, reading thusly:
Sec. 442. Requisites for Creation. . . .
(d) Municipalities existing as of the date of the effectivity of this Code shall
continue to exist and operate as such. Existing municipal districts organized
pursuant to presidential issuances or executive orders and which have their
respective set of elective municipal officials holding office at the time of the
effectivity of this Code shall henceforth be considered as regular
municipalities.
The motion was opposed by petitioner municipality, contending that the above
provision of law was inapplicable to the Municipality of San Andres since the
enactment referred to legally existing municipalities and not to those whose mode of
creation had been void ab initio. 7
In its Order of 02 December 1991, the lower court 8 finally dismissed the petition 9 for lack of cause
of action on what it felt was a matter that belonged to the State, adding that "whatever defects (were)
present in the creation of municipal districts by the President pursuant to presidential issuances and
executive orders, (were) cured by the enactment of R.A. 7160, otherwise known as Local Government
Code of 1991." In an order, dated 17 January 1992, the same court denied petitioner municipality's motion
for reconsideration.
Hence, this petition "for review on certiorari." Petitioners 10 argue that in issuing the orders of 02
December 1991 and 17 January 1992, the lower court has "acted with grave abuse of discretion
amounting to lack of or in excess of jurisdiction." Petitioners assert that the existence of a municipality
created by a null and void presidential order may be attacked either directly or even collaterally by anyone
whose interests or rights are affected, and that an unconstitutional act is not a law, creates no office and is
inoperative such as though its has never been passed. 11
Petitioners consider the instant petition to be one for "review on certiorari" under Rules 42
and 45 of the Rules of Court; at the same time, however, they question the orders of the
lower court for having been issued with "grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack of or in
excess of jurisdiction, and that there is no other plain, speedy and adequate remedy in the
ordinary course of law available to petitioners to correct said Orders, to protect their rights
and to secure a final and definitive interpretation of the legal issues involved." 12 Evidently,
then, the petitioners intend to submit their case in this instance under Rule 65. We shall disregard the
procedural incongruence.
The special civil action of quo warranto is a "prerogative writ by which the Government can
call upon any person to show by what warrant he holds a public office or exercises a public
franchise." 13 When the inquiry is focused on the legal existence of a body politic, the action is reserved
to the State in a proceeding for quo warranto or any other credit proceeding. 14 It must be brought "in the
name of the Republic of the Philippines" 15 and commenced by the Solicitor General or the fiscal "when
directed by the President of the Philippines . . . ." 16 Such officers may, under certain circumstances, bring
such an action "at the request and upon the relation of another person" with the permission of the
court. 17 The Rules of Court also allows an individual to commence an action for quo warranto in his own
name but this initiative can be done when he claims to be "entitled to a public office or position usurped or
unlawfully held or exercised by another." 18 While the quo warranto proceedings filed below by petitioner
municipality has so named only the officials of the Municipality of San Andres as respondents, it is
virtually, however, a denunciation of the authority of the Municipality or Municipal District of San Andres to
exist and to act in that capacity.
At any rate, in the interest of resolving any further doubt on the legal status of the
Municipality of San Andres, the Court shall delve into the merits of the petition.
While petitioners would grant that the enactment of Republic Act
No. 7160 may have converted the Municipality of San Andres into a de facto municipality,
they, however, contend that since the petition for quo warranto had been filed prior to the
passage of said law, petitioner municipality had acquired a vested right to seek the
nullification of Executive Order No. 353, and any attempt to apply Section 442 of Republic
Act 7160 to the petition would perforce be violative of due process and the equal protection
clause of the Constitution.
Petitioners' theory might perhaps be a point to consider had the case been seasonably
brought. Executive Order No. 353 creating the municipal district of San Andres was issued
on 20 August 1959 but it was only after almost thirty (30) years, or on 05 June 1989, that
the municipality of San Narciso finally decided to challenge the legality of the executive
order. In the meantime, the Municipal District, and later the Municipality, of San Andres,
began and continued to exercise the powers and authority of a duly created local
government unit. In the same manner that the failure of a public officer to question his
ouster or the right of another to hold a position within a one-year period can abrogate an
action belatedly filed, 19 so also, if not indeed with greatest imperativeness, must a quo
warranto proceeding assailing the lawful authority of a political subdivision be timely raised.
interest
demands it.
20
Public
Granting the Executive Order No. 353 was a complete nullity for being the result of an
unconstitutional delegation of legislative power, the peculiar circumstances obtaining in this
case hardly could offer a choice other than to consider the Municipality of San Andres to
have at least attained a status uniquely of its own closely approximating, if not in fact
attaining, that of a de facto municipal corporation. Conventional wisdom cannot allow it to
be otherwise. Created in 1959 by virtue of Executive Order No. 353, the Municipality of San
Andres had been in existence for more than six years when, on 24 December 1965, Pelaez
v. Auditor General was promulgated. The ruling could have sounded the call for a similar
declaration of the unconstitutionality of Executive Order No. 353 but it was not to be the
case. On the contrary, certain governmental acts all pointed to the State's recognition of the
continued existence of the Municipality of San Andres. Thus, after more than five years as a
municipal district, Executive Order No. 174 classified the Municipality of San Andres as a
fifth class municipality after having surpassed the income requirement laid out in Republic
Act No. 1515. Section 31 of Batas Pambansa Blg. 129, otherwise known as the Judiciary
Reorganization Act of 1980, constituted as municipal circuits, in the establishment of
Municipal Circuit Trial Courts in the country, certain municipalities that comprised the
municipal circuits organized under Administrative Order No. 33, dated 13 June 1978, issued
by this Court pursuant to Presidential Decree No. 537. Under this administrative order, the
Municipality of San Andres had been covered by the 10th Municipal Circuit Court of San
Francisco-San Andres for the province of Quezon.
At the present time, all doubts on the de jure standing of the municipality must be dispelled.
Under the Ordinance (adopted on 15 October 1986) apportioning the seats of the House of
Representatives, appended to the 1987 Constitution, the Municipality of San Andres has
been considered to be one of the twelve (12) municipalities composing the Third District of
the province of Quezon. Equally significant is Section 442(d) of the Local Government Code
to the effect that municipal districts "organized pursuant to presidential issuances or
executive orders and which have their respective sets of elective municipal officials holding
office at the time of the effectivity of (the) Code shall henceforth be considered as regular
municipalities." No pretension of unconstitutionality per seof Section 442(d) of the Local
Government Code is proferred. It is doubtful whether such a pretext, even if made, would
succeed. The power to create political subdivisions is a function of the legislature. Congress
did just that when it has incorporated Section 442(d) in the Code. Curative laws, which in
essence are retrospective, 21 and aimed at giving "validity to acts done that would have been invalid
under existing laws, as if existing laws have been complied with," are validly accepted in this jurisdiction,
subject to the usual qualification against impairment of vested rights. 22
All considered, the de jure status of the Municipality of San Andres in the province of
Quezon must now be conceded.
WHEREFORE, the instant petition for certiorari is hereby DISMISSED. Costs against
petitioners.
SO ORDERED.
EN BANC
This Petition for Certiorari presents this Court with the prospect of our
own Brigadoon the municipality of Andong, Lanao del Surwhich like its
counterpart in filmdom, is a town that is not supposed to exist yet is anyway
insisted by some as actually alive and thriving. Yet unlike in the movies, there
is nothing mystical, ghostly or anything even remotely charming about the
purported existence of Andong. The creation of the putative municipality was
declared void ab initio by this Court four decades ago, but the present petition
insists that in spite of this insurmountable obstacle Andong thrives on, and
hence, its legal personality should be given judicial affirmation. We disagree.
[1]
[3]
[4]
These executive orders were issued after legislative bills for the creation of
municipalities involved in that case had failed to pass Congress. President
Diosdado Macapagal justified the creation of these municipalities citing his
powers under Section 68 of the Revised Administrative Code. Then VicePresident Emmanuel Pelaez filed a special civil action for a writ of prohibition,
alleging in main that the Executive Orders were null and void, Section 68
having been repealed by Republic Act No. 2370, and said orders constituting
an undue delegation of legislative power.
[5]
[6]
[7]
After due deliberation, the Court unanimously held that the challenged
Executive Orders were null and void. A majority of five justices, led by
the ponente, Justice (later Chief Justice) Roberto Concepcion, ruled that
Section 68 of the Revised Administrative Code did not meet the well-settled
requirements for a valid delegation of legislative power to the executive
branch, while three justices opined that the nullity of the issuances was the
consequence of the enactment of the 1935 Constitution, which reduced the
power of the Chief Executive over local governments. Pelaez was disposed
in this wise:
[8]
[9]
WHEREFORE, the Executive Orders in question are declared null and void ab
initio and the respondent permanently restrained from passing in audit any
expenditure of public funds in implementation of said Executive Orders or any
disbursement by the municipalities above referred to. It is so ordered.
[10]
Among the Executive Orders annulled was Executive Order No. 107 which
created the Municipality of Andong. Nevertheless, the core issue presented in
the present petition is the continued efficacy of the judicial annulment of the
Municipality of Andong.
Petitioner Sultan Osop B. Camid (Camid) represents himself as a current
resident of Andong, suing as a private citizen and taxpayer whose locus
standi is of public and paramount interest especially to the people of the
Municipality of Andong, Province of Lanao del Sur. He alleges that Andong
has metamorphosed into a full-blown municipality with a complete set of
officials appointed to handle essential services for the municipality and its
constituents, even though he concedes that since 1968, no person has been
appointed, elected or qualified to serve any of the elective local government
positions of Andong. Nonetheless, the municipality of Andong has its own
high school, Bureau of Posts, a Department of Education, Culture and Sports
office, and at least seventeen (17) barangay units with their own respective
chairmen. From 1964 until 1972, according to Camid, the public officials of
Andong have been serving their constituents through the minimal means and
resources with least (sic) honorarium and recognition from the Office of the
then former President Diosdado Macapagal. Since the time of Martial Law in
1972, Andong has allegedly been getting by despite the absence of public
funds, with the Interim Officials serving their constituents in their own little
ways and means.
[11]
[12]
[13]
[14]
[15]
[16]
[18]
[20]
Camid imputes grave abuse of discretion on the part of the DILG in not
classifying [Andong] as a regular existing municipality and in not including said
municipality in its records and official database as [an] existing regular
municipality. He characterizes such non-classification as unequal treatment
to the detriment of Andong, especially in light of the current recognition given
to the eighteen (18) municipalities similarly annulled by reason of Pelaez. As
appropriate
relief,
Camid
prays
that
the
Court
annul
the
DILG Certification dated 21 November 2003; direct the DILG to classify
Andong as a regular existing municipality; all public respondents, to extend full
recognition and support to Andong; the Department of Finance and the
Department of Budget and Management, to immediately release the internal
revenue allotments of Andong; and the public respondents, particularly the
DILG, to recognize the Interim Local Officials of Andong.
[21]
[22]
[24]
presidential issuances or executive orders and which have their respective sets of
elective municipal officials holding office at the time of the effectivity of (the) Code
shall henceforth be considered as regular municipalities.
[25]
There are several reasons why the petition must be dismissed. These can
be better discerned upon examination of the proper scope and application of
Section 442(d), which does not sanction the recognition of just any
municipality. This point shall be further explained further on.
Notably, as pointed out by the public respondents, through the Office of
the Solicitor General (OSG), the case is not a fit subject for the special civil
actions of certiorari and mandamus, as it pertains to the de novo appreciation
of factual questions. There is indeed no way to confirm several of Camids
astonishing factual allegations pertaining to the purported continuing operation
of Andong in the decades since it was annulled by this Court. No trial court
has had the opportunity to ascertain the validity of these factual claims, the
appreciation of which is beyond the function of this Court since it is not a trier
of facts.
The importance of proper factual ascertainment cannot be gainsaid,
especially in light of the legal principles governing the recognition
of de facto municipal corporations. It has been opined that municipal
corporations may exist by prescription where it is shown that the community
has claimed and exercised corporate functions, with the knowledge and
acquiescence of the legislature, and without interruption or objection for period
long enough to afford title by prescription. These municipal corporations
have exercised their powers for a long period without objection on the part of
the government that although no charter is in existence, it is presumed that
they were duly incorporated in the first place and that their charters had been
lost. They are especially common in England, which, as well-worth noting,
has existed as a state for over a thousand years. The reason for the
development of that rule in England is understandable, since that country was
settled long before the Roman conquest by nomadic Celtic tribes, which could
have hardly been expected to obtain a municipal charter in the absence of a
national legal authority.
[26]
[27]
[30]
[31]
[32]
Court but rather it was expressly affirmed in the cases of Municipality of San
Joaquin v. Siva, Municipality of Malabang v. Benito, and Municipality of
Kapalong v. Moya. No subsequent ruling by this Court declared Pelaez as
overturned or inoperative. No subsequent legislation has been passed since
1965 creating a Municipality of Andong. Given these facts, there is hardly any
reason to elaborate why Andong does not exist as a duly constituted
municipality.
[33]
[34]
[35]
This ratiocination does not admit to patent legal errors and has the
additional virtue of blessed austerity. Still, its sweeping adoption may not be
advisedly appropriate in light of Section 442(d) of the Local Government Code
and our ruling in Municipality of San Narciso, both of which admit to the
possibility of de facto municipal corporations.
To understand the applicability of Municipality of San Narciso and Section
442(b) of the Local Government Code to the situation of Andong, it is
necessary again to consider the ramifications of our decision in Pelaez.
The eminent legal doctrine enunciated in Pelaez was that the President
was then, and still is, not empowered to create municipalities through
executive issuances. The Court therein recognized that the President has, for
many years, issued executive orders creating municipal corporations, and that
the same have been organized and in actual operation . . . . However, the
Court ultimately nullified only those thirty-three (33) municipalities, including
Andong, created during the period from 4 September to 29 October 1964
whose existence petitioner Vice-President Pelaez had specifically assailed
before this Court. No pronouncement was made as to the other municipalities
which had been previously created by the President in the exercise of power
the Court deemed unlawful.
[36]
Two years after Pelaez was decided, the issue again came to fore
in Municipality of San Joaquin v. Siva. The Municipality of Lawigan was
created by virtue of Executive Order No. 436 in 1961. Lawigan was not one of
the municipalities ordered annulled in Pelaez. A petition for prohibition was
filed contesting the legality of the executive order, again on the ground that
Section 68 of the Revised Administrative Code was unconstitutional. The trial
court dismissed the petition, but the Supreme Court reversed the ruling and
entered a new decision declaring Executive Order No. 436 void ab initio. The
Court reasoned without elaboration that the issue had already been squarely
taken up and settled in Pelaez which agreed with the argument posed by the
challengers to Lawigans validity.
[37]
[38]
Lanao del Sur, also created by an executive order, and which, similar to
Lawigan, was not one of the municipalities annulled in Pelaez. This time, the
officials of Balabagan invoked de facto status as a municipal corporation in
order to dissuade the Court from nullifying action. They alleged that its status
as a de facto corporation cannot be collaterally attacked but should be
inquired into directly in an action for quo warranto at the instance of the State,
and not by a private individual as it was in that case. In response, the Court
conceded that an inquiry into the legal existence of a municipality is reserved
to the State in a proceeding for quo warranto, but only if the municipal
corporation is a de facto corporation.
[40]
[41]
[43]
In the cases where a de facto municipal corporation was recognized as such despite
the fact that the statute creating it was later invalidated, the decisions could fairly be
made to rest on the consideration that there was some other valid law giving corporate
vitality to the organization. Hence, in the case at bar, the mere fact that Balabagan was
organized at a time when the statute had not been invalidated cannot conceivably
make it a de facto corporation, as, independently of the Administrative Code provision
in question, there is no other valid statute to give color of authority to its creation.
[44]
The Court did clarify in Malabang that the previous acts done by the
municipality in the exercise of its corporate powers were not necessarily a
nullity. Camid devotes several pages of his petition in citing this point, yet
the relevance of the citation is unclear considering that Camid does not assert
the validity of any corporate act of Andong prior to its judicial dissolution.
Notwithstanding, the Court in Malabang retained an emphatic attitude as to
the unconstitutionality of the power of the President to create municipal
corporations by way of presidential promulgations, as authorized under
Section 68 of the Revised Administrative Code.
[45]
[46]
Tomas had not been expressly nullified by prior judicial action, yet the Court
refused to recognize its legal existence. The blunt but simple ruling: Now then,
as ruled in the Pelaez case supra, the President has no power to create a
municipality. Since [Santo Tomas] has no legal personality, it can not be a
party to any civil action.
[48]
[50]
In dismissing the petition, the Court delved in the merits of the petition, if
only to resolve further doubt on the legal status of San Andres. It noted a
circumstance which is not present in the case at barthat San Andres was in
existence for nearly thirty (30) years before its legality was challenged. The
Court did not declare the executive order creating San Andres null and void.
Still, acting on the premise that the said executive order was a complete
nullity, the Court noted peculiar circumstances that led to the conclusion that
San Andres had attained the unique status of a de facto municipal
corporation. It noted that Pelaez limited its nullificatory effect only to those
executive orders specifically challenged therein, despite the fact that the Court
then could have very well extended the decision to invalidate San Andres as
well. This statement squarely contradicts Camids reading of San Narciso that
the creation of San Andres, just like Andong, had been declared a complete
nullity on the same ground of unconstitutional delegation of legislative power
found in Pelaez.
[51]
[52]
[53]
The Court also considered the applicability of Section 442(d) of the Local
Government Code of 1991. It clarified the implication of the provision as
follows:
[54]
Equally significant is Section 442(d) of the Local Government Code to the effect that
municipal districts "organized pursuant to presidential issuances or executive orders
and which have their respective sets of elective municipal officials holding office at
the time of the effectivity of (the) Code shall henceforth be considered as regular
municipalities." No pretension of unconstitutionality per se of Section 442(d) of the
[57]
[58]
Code of 1991 (R. A. No. 7160), 442(d) of which provides that "municipal districts
organized pursuant to presidential issuances or executive orders and which have their
respective sets of elective officials holding office at the time of the effectivity of this
Code shall henceforth be considered as regular municipalities."
Here, the same factors are present so as to confer on Sinacaban the status of at least a
de facto municipal corporation in the sense that its legal existence has been
recognized and acquiesced publicly and officially. Sinacaban had been in existence for
sixteen years when Pelaez v. Auditor General was decided on December 24, 1965. Yet
the validity of E.O. No. 258 creating it had never been questioned. Created in 1949, it
was only 40 years later that its existence was questioned and only because it had laid
claim to an area that apparently is desired for its revenue. This fact must be
underscored because under Rule 66, 16 of the Rules of Court, a quo warranto suit
against a corporation for forfeiture of its charter must be commenced within five (5)
years from the time the act complained of was done or committed. On the contrary,
the State and even the Municipality of Jimenez itself have recognized Sinacaban's
corporate existence. Under Administrative Order No. 33 dated June 13, 1978 of this
Court, as reiterated by 31 of the Judiciary Reorganization Act of 1980 (B. P. Blg. 129),
Sinacaban is constituted part of a municipal circuit for purposes of the establishment
of Municipal Circuit Trial Courts in the country. For its part, Jimenez had earlier
recognized Sinacaban in 1950 by entering into an agreement with it regarding their
common boundary. The agreement was embodied in Resolution No. 77 of the
Provincial Board of Misamis Occidental.
Indeed Sinacaban has attained de jure status by virtue of the Ordinance appended to
the 1987 Constitution, apportioning legislative districts throughout the country, which
considered Sinacaban part of the Second District of Misamis Occidental. Moreover,
following the ruling in Municipality of San Narciso, Quezon v. Mendez, Sr., 442(d) of
the Local Government Code of 1991 must be deemed to have cured any defect in the
creation of Sinacaban.
[59]
The failure to appropriate funds for Andong and the absence of elections
in the municipality in the last four decades are eloquent indicia of the nonrecognition by the State of the existence of the town. The certifications relied
upon by Camid, issued by the DENR-CENRO and the National Statistics
Office, can hardly serve the purpose of attesting to Andongs legal efficacy. In
fact, both these certifications qualify that they were issued upon the request of
Camid, to support the restoration or re-operation of the Municipality of
Andong, Lanao del Sur, thus obviously conceding that the municipality is at
present inoperative.
[61]
[63]
[64]
[65]
How about the eighteen (18) municipalities similarly nullified in Pelaez but
certified as existing in the DILG Certification presented by Camid? The
petition fails to mention that subsequent to the ruling in Pelaez, legislation was
enacted to reconstitute these municipalities. It is thus not surprising that the
DILG certified the existence of these eighteen (18) municipalities, or that
these towns are among the municipalities enumerated in the Ordinance
appended to the Constitution. Andong has not been similarly reestablished
through statute. Clearly then, the fact that there are valid organic statutes
passed by legislation recreating these eighteen (18) municipalities is sufficient
legal basis to accord a different legal treatment to Andong as against these
eighteen (18) other municipalities.
[66]
[68]
therein that a determination of the issue of constitutionality of the 16 Cityhood Laws upon a
motion for reconsideration by an equally divided vote was not binding on the Court as a
valid precedent, citing the separate opinion of then Chief Justice Reynato S. Puno in
Lambino v. Commission on Elections.2
Thus, in its June 2, 2009 Resolution, the Court issued the following clarification of the April
28, 2009 Resolution, viz:
As a rule, a second motion for reconsideration is a prohibited pleading pursuant to Section
2, Rule 52 of the Rules of Civil Procedure which provides that: "No second motion for
reconsideration of a judgment or final resolution by the same party shall be entertained."
Thus, a decision becomes final and executory after 15 days from receipt of the denial of the
first motion for reconsideration.
However, when a motion for leave to file and admit a second motion for reconsideration is
granted by the Court, the Court therefore allows the filing of the second motion for
reconsideration. In such a case, the second motion for reconsideration is no longer a
prohibited pleading.
In the present case, the Court voted on the second motion for reconsideration filed by
respondent cities. In effect, the Court allowed the filing of the second motion for
reconsideration. Thus, the second motion for reconsideration was no longer a prohibited
pleading. However, for lack of the required number of votes to overturn the 18 November
2008 Decision and 31 March 2009 Resolution, the Court denied the second motion for
reconsideration in its 28 April 2009 Resolution. 3
As the result of the aforecited clarification, the Court resolved to expunge from the records
several pleadings and documents, including respondents Motion To Amend Resolution Of
April 28, 2009 etc.
The respondents thus filed their Motion for Reconsideration of the Resolution of June 2,
2009, asseverating that their Motion To Amend Resolution Of April 28, 2009 etc. was not
another motion for reconsideration of the November 18, 2008 Decision, because it assailed
the April 28, 2009 Resolution with respect to the tie-vote on the respondents Second Motion
For Reconsideration. They pointed out that the Motion To Amend Resolution Of April 28,
2009 etc. was filed on May 14, 2009, which was within the 15-day period from their receipt
of the April 28, 2009 Resolution; thus, the entry of judgment had been prematurely made.
They reiterated their arguments with respect to a tie-vote upon an issue of constitutionality.
In the September 29, 2009 Resolution,4 the Court required the petitioners to comment on
the Motion for Reconsideration of the Resolution of June 2, 2009 within 10 days from
receipt.
As directed, the petitioners filed their Comment Ad Cautelam With Motion to Expunge.
The respondents filed their Motion for Leave to File and to Admit Attached "Reply to
Petitioners Comment Ad Cautelam With Motion to Expunge", together with the Reply.
On November 17, 2009, the Court resolved to note the petitioners Comment Ad Cautelam
With Motion to Expunge, to grant the respondents Motion for Leave to File and Admit Reply
to Petitioners Comment Ad Cautelam with Motion to Expunge, and to note the respondents
Reply to Petitioners Comment Ad Cautelam with Motion to Expunge.
On December 21, 2009, the Court, resolving the Motion To Amend Resolution Of April 28,
2009 etc. and voting anew on the Second Motion For Reconsideration in order to reach a
concurrence of a majority, promulgated its Decision granting the motion and declaring the
Cityhood Laws as constitutional,5 disposing thus:
WHEREFORE, respondent LGUs Motion for Reconsideration dated June 2, 2009, their
"Motion to Amend the Resolution of April 28, 2009 by Declaring Instead that Respondents
Motion for Reconsideration of the Resolution of March 31, 2009 and Motion for Leave to
File and to Admit Attached Second Motion for Reconsideration of the Decision Dated
November 18, 2008 Remain Unresolved and to Conduct Further Proceedings," dated May
14, 2009, and their second Motion for Reconsideration of the Decision dated November 18,
2008 are GRANTED. The June 2, 2009, the March 31, 2009, and April 31, 2009
Resolutions are REVERSED and SET ASIDE. The entry of judgment made on May 21,
2009 must accordingly be RECALLED.
The instant consolidated petitions and petitions-in-intervention are DISMISSED. The
cityhood laws, namely Republic Act Nos. 9389, 9390, 9391, 9392, 9393, 9394, 9398, 9404,
9405, 9407, 9408, 9409, 9434, 9435, 9436, and 9491 are declared VALID and
CONSTITUTIONAL.
SO ORDERED.
On January 5, 2010, the petitioners filed an Ad Cautelam Motion for Reconsideration
against the December 21, 2009 Decision.6 On the same date, the petitioners also filed a
Motion to Annul Decision of 21 December 2009.7
On January 12, 2010, the Court directed the respondents to comment on the motions of the
petitioners.8
On February 4, 2010, petitioner-intervenors City of Santiago, City of Legazpi, and City of
Iriga filed their separate Manifestations with Supplemental Ad Cautelam Motions for
Reconsideration.9 Similar manifestations with supplemental motions for reconsideration
were filed by other petitioner-intervenors, specifically: City of Cadiz on February 15,
2010;10 City of Batangas on February 17, 2010;11 and City of Oroquieta on February 24,
2010.12The Court required the adverse parties to comment on the motions. 13 As directed,
the respondents complied.
On August 24, 2010, the Court issued its Resolution reinstating the November 18, 2008
Decision.14
On September 14, 2010, the respondents timely filed a Motion for Reconsideration of the
"Resolution" Dated August 24, 2010.15 They followed this by filing on September 20, 2010 a
Motion to Set "Motion for Reconsideration of the Resolution dated August 24, 2010" for
Hearing.16 On November 19, 2010, the petitioners sent in their Opposition [To the "Motion
for Reconsideration of Resolution dated August 24, 2010"]. 17 On November 30, 2010,18 the
Court noted, among others, the petitioners Opposition.
On January 18, 2011,19 the Court denied the respondents Motion to Set "Motion for
Reconsideration of the Resolution dated August 24, 2010" for Hearing.
Thereafter, on February 15, 2011, the Court issued the Resolution being now challenged.
It can be gleaned from the foregoing that, as the June 2, 2009 Resolution clarified, the
respondents Second Motion For Reconsideration was not a prohibited pleading in view of
the Courts voting and acting on it having the effect of allowing the Second Motion For
Reconsideration; and that when the respondents filed their Motion for Reconsideration of
the Resolution of June 2, 2009 questioning the expunging of their Motion To Amend
Resolution Of April 28, 2009 etc. (which had been filed within the 15-day period from receipt
of the April 28, 2009 Resolution), the Court opted to act on the Motion for Reconsideration
of the Resolution of June 2, 2009 by directing the adverse parties through its September 29,
2009 Resolution to comment. The same permitting effect occurred when the Court, by its
November 17, 2009 Resolution, granted the respondents Motion for Leave to File and
Admit Reply to Petitioners Comment Ad Cautelam with Motion to Expunge, and noted the
attached Reply.
Moreover, by issuing the Resolutions dated September 29, 2009 and November 17, 2009,
the Court: (a) rendered ineffective the tie-vote under the Resolution of April 28, 2009 and
the ensuing denial of the Motion for Reconsideration of the Resolution of March 31, 2009 for
lack of a majority to overturn; (b), re-opened the Decision of November 18, 2008 for a
second look under reconsideration; and (c) lifted the directive that no further pleadings
would be entertained. The Court in fact entertained and acted on the respondents Motion
for Reconsideration of the Resolution of June 2, 2009. Thereafter, the Court proceeded to
deliberate anew on the respondents Second Motion for Reconsideration and ended up with
the promulgation of the December 21, 2009 Decision (declaring the Cityhood Laws valid
and constitutional).
It is also inaccurate for the petitioners to insist that the December 21, 2009 Decision
overturned the November 18, 2008 Decision on the basis of the mere Reflections of the
Members of the Court. To be sure, the Reflections were the legal opinions of the Members
and formed part of the deliberations of the Court. The reference in the December 21, 2009
Decision to the Reflections pointed out that there was still a pending incident after the April
28, 2009 Resolution that had been timely filed within 15 days from its receipt, 20 pursuant to
Section 10, Rule 51,21 in relation to Section 1, Rule 52,22 of the Rules of Court. Again, the
Court did act and deliberate upon this pending incident, leading to the issuance of the
December 21, 2009 Decision (declaring the Cityhood Laws free from constitutional
infirmity). It was thereafter that the Court rendered its August 24, 2010 Resolution
(reinstating the November 18, 2008 Decision), to correct which the respondents Motion for
Reconsideration of the "Resolution" Dated August 24, 2010 was filed. And, finally, the Court
issued its February 15, 2011 Resolution, reversing and setting aside the August 24, 2010
Resolution.
It is worth repeating that the actions taken herein were made by the Court en banc strictly in
accordance with the Rules of Court and its internal procedures. There has been no
irregularity attending or tainting the proceedings.
It also relevant to state that the Court has frequently disencumbered itself under
extraordinary circumstances from the shackles of technicality in order to render just and
equitable relief.23
On whether the principle of immutability of judgments and bar by res judicata apply herein,
suffice it to state that the succession of the events recounted herein indicates that the
controversy about the 16 Cityhood Laws has not yet been resolved with finality. As such, the
operation of the principle of immutability of judgments did not yet come into play. For the
same reason is an adherence to the doctrine of res judicata not yet warranted, especially
considering that the precedential ruling for this case needed to be revisited and set with
certainty and finality.
II.
Substantive Issues
The petitioners reiterate their position that the Cityhood Laws violate Section 6 and Section
10 of Article X of the Constitution, the Equal Protection Clause, and the right of local
governments to a just share in the national taxes.
The Court differs.
Congress clearly intended that the local government units covered by the Cityhood Laws be
exempted from the coverage of R.A. No. 9009. The apprehensions of the then Senate
President with respect to the considerable disparity between the income requirement of P20
million under the Local Government Code (LGC) prior to its amendment, and the P100
million under the amendment introduced by R.A. No. 9009 were definitively articulated in his
interpellation of Senator Pimentel during the deliberations on Senate Bill No. 2157. The then
Senate President was cognizant of the fact that there were municipalities that then had
pending conversion bills
during the 11th Congress prior to the adoption of Senate Bill No. 2157 as R.A. No.
9009,24 including the municipalities covered by the Cityhood Laws. It is worthy of mention
that the pertinent deliberations on Senate Bill No. 2157 occurred on October 5, 2000 while
the 11th Congress was in session, and the conversion bills were then pending in the
Senate. Thus, the responses of Senator Pimentel made it obvious that R.A. No. 9009 would
not apply to the conversion bills then pending deliberation in the Senate during the 11th
Congress.
R.A. No. 9009 took effect on June 30, 2001, when the 12th Congress was incipient. By
reason of the clear legislative intent to exempt the municipalities covered by the conversion
bills pending during the 11th
Congress, the House of Representatives adopted Joint Resolution No. 29, entitled Joint
Resolution to Exempt Certain Municipalities Embodied in Bills Filed in Congress before
June 30, 2001 from the coverage of Republic Act No. 9009. However, the Senate failed to
act on Joint Resolution No. 29. Even so, the House of Representatives readopted Joint
Resolution No. 29 as
Joint Resolution No. 1 during the 12th Congress, 25 and forwarded Joint Resolution No. 1 to
the Senate for approval. Again, the Senate failed to approve Joint Resolution No. 1.
At this juncture, it is worthwhile to consider the manifestation of Senator Pimentel with
respect to Joint Resolution No. 1, to wit:
MANIFESTATION OF SENATOR PIMENTEL
House Joint Resolution No. 1 seeks to exempt certain municipalities seeking conversion
into cities from the requirement that they must have at least P100 million in income of locally
generated revenue, exclusive of the internal revenue share that they received from the
central government as required under Republic Act No. 9009.
The procedure followed by the House is questionable, to say the least. The House wants
the Senate to do away with the income requirement of P100 million so that, en masse, the
municipalities they want exempted could now file bills specifically converting them into
cities. The reason they want the Senate to do it first is that Cong. Dodo Macias, chair of the
House Committee on Local Governments, I am told, will not entertain any bill for the
conversion of municipalities into cities unless the issue of income requirement is first
hurdled. The House leadership therefore wants to shift the burden of exempting certain
municipalities from the income requirement to the Senate rather than do it itself.
That is most unusual because, in effect, the House wants the Senate to pass a blanket
resolution that would qualify the municipalities concerned for conversion into cities on the
matter of income alone. Then, at a later date, the House would pass specific bills converting
the municipalities into cities. However, income is not only the requirement for municipalities
to become cities. There are also the requirements on population and land area.
In effect, the House wants the Senate to tackle the qualification of the municipalities they
want converted into cities piecemeal and separately, first is the income under the joint
resolution, then the other requirements when the bills are file to convert specific
municipalities into cities. To repeat, this is a most unusual manner of creating cities.
My respectful suggestion is for the Senate to request the House to do what they want to do
regarding the applications of certain municipalities to become cities pursuant to the
requirements of the Local Government Code. If the House wants to exempt certain
municipalities from the requirements of the Local Government Code to become cities, by all
means, let them do their thing. Specifically, they should act on specific bills to create cities
and cite the reasons why the municipalities concerned are qualified to become cities. Only
after the House shall have completed what they are expected to do under the law would it
be proper for the Senate to act on specific bills creating cities.
In other words, the House should be requested to finish everything that needs to be done in
the matter of converting municipalities into cities and not do it piecemeal as they are now
trying to do under the joint resolution.
In my long years in the Senate, this is the first time that a resort to this subterfuge is being
undertaken to favor the creation of certain cities. I am not saying that they are not qualified.
All I am saying is, if the House wants to pass and create cities out of certain municipalities,
by all means let them do that. But they should do it following the requirements of the Local
Government Code and, if they want to make certain exceptions, they can also do that too.
But they should not use the Senate as a ploy to get things done which they themselves
should do.
Incidentally, I have recommended this mode of action verbally to some leaders of the
House. Had they followed the recommendation, for all I know, the municipalities they had
envisioned to be covered by House Joint Resolution No. 1 would, by now if not all, at least
some have been converted into cities. House Joint Resolution No. 1, the House, in effect,
caused the delay in the approval in the applications for cityhood of the municipalities
concerned.
Lastly, I do not have an amendment to House Joint Resolution No. 1. What I am suggesting
is for the Senate to request the House to follow the procedure outlined in the Local
Government Code which has been respected all through the years. By doing so, we uphold
the rule of law
and minimize the possibilities of power play in the approval of bills converting municipalities
into cities.26
Thereafter, the conversion bills of the respondents were individually filed in the House of
Representatives, and were all unanimously and
favorably voted upon by the Members of the House of Representatives. 27 The bills, when
forwarded to the Senate, were likewise unanimously approved by the Senate. 28 The acts of
both Chambers of Congress show that the exemption clauses ultimately incorporated in the
Cityhood Laws are but the express articulations of the clear legislative intent to exempt the
respondents, without exception, from the coverage of R.A. No. 9009. Thereby, R.A. No.
9009, and, by necessity, the LGC, were amended, not by repeal but by way of the express
exemptions being embodied in the exemption clauses.
The petitioners further contend that the new income requirement of P100 million from locally
generated sources is not arbitrary because it is not difficult to comply with; that there are
several municipalities that have already complied with the requirement and have, in fact,
been converted into cities, such as Sta. Rosa in Laguna (R.A. No 9264), Navotas (R.A. No.
9387) and San Juan (R.A. No. 9388) in Metro Manila, Dasmarias in Cavite (R.A. No.
9723), and Bian in Laguna (R.A. No. 9740); and that several other municipalities have
supposedly reached the income of P100 million from locally generated sources, such as
Bauan in Batangas, Mabalacat in Pampanga, and Bacoor in Cavite.
The contention of the petitioners does not persuade.
As indicated in the Resolution of February 15, 2011, fifty-nine (59) existing cities had failed
as of 2006 to post an average annual income of P100 million based on the figures
contained in the certification dated December 5, 2008 by the Bureau of Local Government.
The large number of existing cities, virtually 50% of them, still unable to comply with
the P100 million threshold income five years after R.A. No. 9009 took effect renders it
fallacious and probably unwarranted for the petitioners to claim that the P100 million income
requirement is not difficult to comply with.
In this regard, the deliberations on Senate Bill No. 2157 may prove enlightening, thus:
Senator Osmea III. And could the gentleman help clarify why a municipality would want to
be converted into a city?
Senator Pimentel. There is only one reason, Mr. President, and it is not hidden. It is the fact
that once converted into a city, the municipality will have roughly more than three times the
share that it would be receiving over the internal revenue allotment than it would have if it
were to remain a municipality. So more or less three times or more.
Senator Osmea III. Is it the additional funding that they will be able to enjoy from a larger
share from the internal revenue allocations?
Senator Pimentel. Yes, Mr. President.
Senator Osmea III. Now, could the gentleman clarify, Mr. President, why in the original
Republic Act No. 7160, known as the Local Government Code of 1991, such a wide gap
was made between a municipalitywhat a municipality would earnand a city? Because
essentially, to a persons mind, even with this new requirement, if approved by Congress, if
a municipality is earning P100 million and has a population of more than 150,000
inhabitants but has less than 100 square kilometers, it would not qualify as a city.
Senator Pimentel. Yes.
Senator Osmea III. Now would that not be quite arbitrary on the part of the municipality?
Senator Pimentel. In fact, Mr. President, the House version restores the "or". So, this is a
matter that we can very well take up as a policy issue. The chair of the committee does not
say that we should, as we know, not listen to arguments for the restoration of the word "or"
in the population or territorial requirement.
Senator Osmea III. Mr. President, my point is that, I agree with the gentlemans "and", but
perhaps we should bring down the area. There are certainly very crowded places in this
country that are less than 10,000 hectares100 square kilometers is 10,000 hectares.
There might only be 9,000 hectares or 8,000 hectares. And it would be unfair if these
municipalities already earning P100,000,000 in locally generated funds and have a
population of over 150,000 would not be qualified because of the simple fact that the
physical area does not cover 10,000 hectares.
Senator Pimentel. Mr. President, in fact, in Metro Manila there are any number of
municipalities. San Juan is a specific example which, if we apply the present requirements,
would not qualify: 100 square kilometers and a population of not less than 150,000.
But my reply to that, Mr. President, is that they do not have to become a city?
Senator Osmea III. Because of the income.
Senator Pimentel. But they are already earning a lot, as the gentleman said. Otherwise, the
danger here, if we become lax in the requirements, is the metropolis-located local
governments would have more priority in terms of funding because they would have more
qualifications to become a city compared to far-flung areas in Mindanao or in the
Cordilleras, or whatever.
Therefore, I think we should not probably ease up on the requirements. Maybe we can
restore the word "or" so that if they do not have the 100 square kilometers of territory, then if
they qualify in terms of population and income, that would be all right, Mr. President.
Senator Osmea III. Mr. President, I will not belabor the point at this time. I know that the
distinguished gentleman is considering several amendments to the Local Government
Code. Perhaps this is something that could be further refined at a later time, with his
permission.
So I would like to thank the gentleman for his graciousness in answering our questions.
Senator Pimentel. I also thank the gentleman, Mr. President. 29
The Court takes note of the fact that the municipalities cited by the petitioners as having
generated the threshold income of P100 million from local sources, including those already
converted into cities, are either in Metro Manila or in provinces close to Metro Manila. In
comparison, the municipalities covered by the Cityhood Laws are spread out in the different
provinces of the Philippines, including the Cordillera and Mindanao regions, and are
considerably very distant from Metro Manila. This reality underscores the danger the
enactment of R.A. No. 9009 sought to prevent, i.e., that "the metropolis-located local
governments would have more priority in terms of funding because they would have more
qualifications to become a city compared to the far-flung areas in Mindanao or in the
Cordilleras, or whatever," actually resulting from the abrupt increase in the income
requirement. Verily, this result is antithetical to what the Constitution and LGC have nobly
envisioned in favor of countryside development and national growth. Besides, this result
should be arrested early, to avoid the unwanted divisive effect on the entire country due to
the local government units closer to the National Capital Region being afforded easier
access to the bigger share in the national coffers than other local government units.
There should also be no question that the local government units covered by the Cityhood
Laws belong to a class of their own. They have proven themselves viable and capable to
become component cities of their respective provinces. They are and have been centers of
trade and commerce, points of convergence of transportation, rich havens of agricultural,
mineral, and other natural resources, and flourishing tourism spots. In his speech delivered
on the floor of the Senate to sponsor House Joint Resolution No. 1, Senator Lim recognized
such unique traits,30viz:
It must be noted that except for Tandag and Lamitan, which are both second-class
municipalities in terms of income, all the rest are categorized by the Department of Finance
as first-class municipalities with gross income of at least P70 million as per Commission of
Audit Report for 2005. Moreover, Tandag and Lamitan, together with Borongan, Catbalogan,
and Tabuk, are all provincial capitals.
The more recent income figures of the 12 municipalities, which would have increased
further by this time, indicate their readiness to take on the responsibilities of cityhood.
Moreover, the municipalities under consideration are leading localities in their respective
provinces. Borongan, Catbalogan, Tandag, Batac and Tabuk are ranked number one in
terms of income among all the municipalities in their respective provinces; Baybay and
Bayugan are number two; Bogo and Lamitan are number three; Carcar, number four; and
Tayabas, number seven. Not only are they pacesetters in their respective provinces, they
are also among the frontrunners in their regions Baybay, Bayugan and Tabuk are number
two income-earners in Regions VIII, XIII, and CAR, respectively; Catbalogan and Batac are
number three in Regions VIII and I, respectively; Bogo, number five in Region VII; Borongan
and Carcar are both number six in Regions VIII and VII, respectively. This simply shows that
these municipalities are viable.
Petitioner League of Cities argues that there exists no issue with respect to the cityhood of
its member cities, considering that they became cities in full compliance with the criteria for
conversion at the time of their creation.
The Court considers the argument too sweeping. What we pointed out was that the
previous income requirement of P20 million was definitely not insufficient to provide the
essential government facilities, services, and special functions vis--vis the population of a
component city. We also stressed that the increased income requirement ofP100 million
was not the only conclusive indicator for any municipality to survive and remain viable as a
component city. These observations were unerringly reflected in the respective incomes of
the fifty-nine (59) members of the League of Cities that have still failed, remarkably enough,
to be compliant with the new requirement of the P100 million threshold income five years
after R.A. No. 9009 became law.
Undoubtedly, the imposition of the income requirement of P100 million from local sources
under R.A. No. 9009 was arbitrary. When the sponsor of the law chose the specific figure
of P100 million, no research or empirical data buttressed the figure. Nor was there proof
that the proposal took into account the after-effects that were likely to arise. As already
mentioned, even the danger the passage of R.A. No. 9009 sought to prevent might soon
become a reality. While the Constitution mandates that the creation of local government
units must comply with the criteria laid down in the LGC, it cannot be justified to insist that
the Constitution must have to yield to every amendment to the LGC despite such
amendment imminently producing effects contrary to the original thrusts of the LGC to
promote autonomy, decentralization, countryside development, and the concomitant
national growth.
Moreover, if we were now to adopt the stringent interpretation of the Constitution the
petitioners are espousing, we may have to apply the same restrictive yardstick against the
recently converted cities cited by the petitioners, and find two of them whose conversion
laws have also to be struck down for being unconstitutional. The two laws are R.A. No.
938731 and R.A. No. 9388,32 respectively converting the municipalities of San Juan and
Navotas into highly urbanized cities. A cursory reading of the laws indicates that there is no
indication of compliance with the requirements imposed by the LGC, for, although the two
local government units concerned presumably complied with the income requirement of P50
million under Section 452 of the LGC and the income requirement of P100 million under the
amended Section 450 of the LGC, they obviously did not meet the requirements set forth
under Section 453 of the LGC, to wit:
Section 453. Duty to Declare Highly Urbanized Status.It shall be the duty of the President
to declare a city as highly urbanized within thirty (30) days after it shall have met the
minimum requirements prescribed in the immediately preceding Section, upon proper
application therefor and ratification in a plebiscite by the qualified voters therein.
Indeed, R.A. No. 9387 and R.A. No. 9388 evidently show that the President had not
classified San Juan and Navotas as highly urbanized cities upon proper application and
ratification in a plebiscite by the qualified voters therein. A further perusal of R.A. No. 9387
reveals that San Juan did not qualify as a highly urbanized city because it had a population
of only 125,558, contravening the required minimum population of 200,000 under Section
452 of the LGC. Such non-qualification as a component city was conceded even by Senator
Pimentel during the deliberations on Senate Bill No. 2157.
The petitioners contention that the Cityhood Laws violated their right to a just share in the
national taxes is not acceptable.
In this regard, it suffices to state that the share of local government units is a matter of
percentage under Section 285 of the LGC, not a specific amount. Specifically, the share of
the cities is 23%, determined on the basis of population (50%), land area (25%), and equal
sharing (25%). This share is also dependent on the number of existing cities, such that
when the number of cities increases, then more will divide and share the allocation for
cities. However, we have to note that the allocation by the National Government is not a
constant, and can either increase or decrease. With every newly converted city becoming
entitled to share the allocation for cities, the percentage of internal revenue allotment (IRA)
entitlement of each city will decrease, although the actual amount received may be more
than that received in the preceding year. That is a necessary consequence of Section 285
and Section 286 of the LGC.
As elaborated here and in the assailed February 15, 2011 Resolution, the Cityhood Laws
were not violative of the Constitution and the LGC. The respondents are thus also entitled to
their just share in the IRA allocation for cities. They have demonstrated their viability as
component cities of their respective provinces and are developing continuously, albeit
slowly, because they had previously to share the IRA with about 1,500 municipalities. With
their conversion into component cities, they will have to share with only around 120 cities.
Local government units do not subsist only on locally generated income, but also depend on
the IRA to support their development. They can spur their own developments and thereby
realize their great potential of encouraging trade and commerce in the far-flung regions of
the country. Yet their potential will effectively be stunted if those already earning more will
still receive a bigger share from the national coffers, and if commercial activity will be more
or less concentrated only in and near Metro Manila.
III.
Conclusion
We should not ever lose sight of the fact that the 16 cities covered by the Cityhood Laws not
only had conversion bills pending during the 11th Congress, but have also complied with the
requirements of the LGC prescribed prior to its amendment by R.A. No. 9009. Congress
undeniably gave these cities all the considerations that justice and fair play demanded.
Hence, this Court should do no less by stamping its imprimatur to the clear and
unmistakable legislative intent and by duly recognizing the certain collective wisdom of
Congress.
WHEREFORE, the Ad Cautelam Motion for Reconsideration (of the Decision dated 15
February 2011) is denied with finality.
SO ORDERED.
LUCAS P. BERSAMIN
Associate Justice