EN BANC
G.R. No. 175352 DANTE V. LIBAN, REYNALDO M. BERNARDO, and SALVADOR M. VIARI, Petitioners,
vs.
RICHARD J. GORDON, Respondent.
D E C I S I O N
CARPIO, J.:
The Case
This is a petition to declare Senator Richard J. Gordon (respondent) as having forfeited his seat in the Senate.
The Facts
Petitioners Dante V. Liban, Reynaldo M. Bernardo, and
Salvador M. Viari (petitioners) filed with this Court a Petition to
Declare Richard J. Gordon as Having Forfeited His Seat in the Senate.
Petitioners are officers of the Board of Directors of the Quezon City
Red Cross Chapter while respondent is Chairman of the Philippine
National Red Cross (PNRC) Board of Governors.
During respondent’s incumbency as a member of the Senate of the Philippines,1
he was elected Chairman of the PNRC during the 23 February 2006 meeting
of the PNRC Board of Governors. Petitioners allege that by accepting
the chairmanship of the PNRC Board of Governors, respondent has ceased
to be a member of the Senate as provided in Section 13, Article VI of
the Constitution, which reads:
SEC. 13. No Senator or Member of the House of
Representatives may hold any other office or employment in the
Government, or any subdivision, agency, or instrumentality thereof,
including government-owned or controlled corporations or their
subsidiaries, during his term without forfeiting his seat. Neither shall
he be appointed to any office which may have been created or the
emoluments thereof increased during the term for which he was elected.
Petitioners cite Camporedondo v. NLRC,2
which held that the PNRC is a government-owned or controlled
corporation. Petitioners claim that in accepting and holding the
position of Chairman of the PNRC Board of Governors, respondent has
automatically forfeited his seat in the Senate, pursuant to Flores v. Drilon,3 which held that incumbent national legislators lose their elective posts upon their appointment to another government office.
In his Comment, respondent asserts that petitioners
have no standing to file this petition which appears to be an action for
quo warranto, since the petition alleges that respondent committed an
act which, by provision of law, constitutes a ground for forfeiture of
his public office. Petitioners do not claim to be entitled to the Senate
office of respondent. Under Section 5, Rule 66 of the Rules of Civil
Procedure, only a person claiming to be entitled to a public office
usurped or unlawfully held by another may bring an action for quo
warranto in his own name. If the petition is one for quo warranto, it is
already barred by prescription since under Section 11, Rule 66 of the
Rules of Civil Procedure, the action should be commenced within one year
after the cause of the public officer’s forfeiture of office. In this
case, respondent has been working as a Red Cross volunteer for the past
40 years. Respondent was already Chairman of the PNRC Board of Governors
when he was elected Senator in May 2004, having been elected Chairman
in 2003 and re-elected in 2005.
Respondent contends that even if the present petition
is treated as a taxpayer’s suit, petitioners cannot be allowed to raise
a constitutional question in the absence of any claim that they
suffered some actual damage or threatened injury as a result of the
allegedly illegal act of respondent. Furthermore, taxpayers are allowed
to sue only when there is a claim of illegal disbursement of public
funds, or that public money is being diverted to any improper purpose,
or where petitioners seek to restrain respondent from enforcing an
invalid law that results in wastage of public funds.
Respondent also maintains that if the petition is
treated as one for declaratory relief, this Court would have no
jurisdiction since original jurisdiction for declaratory relief lies
with the Regional Trial Court.
Respondent further insists that the PNRC is not a
government-owned or controlled corporation and that the prohibition
under Section 13, Article VI of the Constitution does not apply in the
present case since volunteer service to the PNRC is neither an office
nor an employment.
In their Reply, petitioners claim that their petition
is neither an action for quo warranto nor an action for declaratory
relief. Petitioners maintain that the present petition is a taxpayer’s
suit questioning the unlawful disbursement of funds, considering that
respondent has been drawing his salaries and other compensation as a
Senator even if he is no longer entitled to his office. Petitioners
point out that this Court has jurisdiction over this petition since it
involves a legal or constitutional issue which is of transcendental
importance.
The Issues
Petitioners raise the following issues:
1. Whether the Philippine National Red Cross (PNRC) is a government- owned or controlled corporation;
2. Whether Section 13, Article VI of the Philippine
Constitution applies to the case of respondent who is Chairman of the
PNRC and at the same time a Member of the Senate;
3. Whether respondent should be automatically removed
as a Senator pursuant to Section 13, Article VI of the Philippine
Constitution; and
4. Whether petitioners may legally institute this petition against respondent.4
The substantial issue boils down to whether the
office of the PNRC Chairman is a government office or an office in a
government-owned or controlled corporation for purposes of the
prohibition in Section 13, Article VI of the Constitution.
The Court’s Ruling
We find the petition without merit.
Petitioners Have No Standing to File this Petition
A careful reading of the petition reveals that it is
an action for quo warranto. Section 1, Rule 66 of the Rules of Court
provides:
Section 1. Action by Government against individuals. –
An action for the usurpation of a public office, position or franchise
may be commenced by a verified petition brought in the name of the
Republic of the Philippines against:
(a) A person who usurps, intrudes into, or unlawfully holds or exercises a public office, position or franchise;
(b) A public officer who does or suffers an act which
by provision of law, constitutes a ground for the forfeiture of his
office; or
(c) An association which acts as a corporation within
the Philippines without being legally incorporated or without lawful
authority so to act. (Emphasis supplied)
Petitioners allege in their petition that:
4. Respondent became the Chairman of the PNRC when he
was elected as such during the First Regular Luncheon-Meeting of the
Board of Governors of the PNRC held on February 23, 2006, the minutes of
which is hereto attached and made integral part hereof as Annex "A."
5. Respondent was elected as Chairman of the PNRC
Board of Governors, during his incumbency as a Member of the House of
Senate of the Congress of the Philippines, having been elected as such
during the national elections last May 2004.
6. Since his election as Chairman of the PNRC Board
of Governors, which position he duly accepted, respondent has been
exercising the powers and discharging the functions and duties of said
office, despite the fact that he is still a senator.
7. It is the respectful submission of the
petitioner[s] that by accepting the chairmanship of the Board of
Governors of the PNRC, respondent has ceased to be a Member of the House
of Senate as provided in Section 13, Article VI of the Philippine
Constitution, x x x
x x x x
10. It is respectfully submitted that in accepting
the position of Chairman of the Board of Governors of the PNRC on
February 23, 2006, respondent has automatically forfeited his seat in
the House of Senate and, therefore, has long ceased to be a Senator,
pursuant to the ruling of this Honorable Court in the case of FLORES, ET
AL. VS. DRILON AND GORDON, G.R. No. 104732, x x x
11. Despite the fact that he is no longer a senator,
respondent continues to act as such and still performs the powers,
functions and duties of a senator, contrary to the constitution, law and
jurisprudence.
12. Unless restrained, therefore, respondent will
continue to falsely act and represent himself as a senator or member of
the House of Senate, collecting the salaries, emoluments and other
compensations, benefits and privileges appertaining and due only to the
legitimate senators, to the damage, great and irreparable injury of the
Government and the Filipino people.5 (Emphasis supplied)
Thus, petitioners are alleging that by accepting the
position of Chairman of the PNRC Board of Governors, respondent has
automatically forfeited his seat in the Senate. In short, petitioners
filed an action for usurpation of public office against respondent, a
public officer who allegedly committed an act which constitutes a ground
for the forfeiture of his public office. Clearly, such an action is for
quo warranto, specifically under Section 1(b), Rule 66 of the Rules of
Court.
Quo warranto is generally commenced by the Government
as the proper party plaintiff. However, under Section 5, Rule 66 of the
Rules of Court, an individual may commence such an action if he claims
to be entitled to the public office allegedly usurped by another, in
which case he can bring the action in his own name. The person
instituting quo warranto proceedings in his own behalf must claim and be
able to show that he is entitled to the office in dispute, otherwise
the action may be dismissed at any stage.6
In the present case, petitioners do not claim to be entitled to the
Senate office of respondent. Clearly, petitioners have no standing to
file the present petition.
Even if the Court disregards the infirmities of the
petition and treats it as a taxpayer’s suit, the petition would still
fail on the merits.
PNRC is a Private Organization Performing Public Functions
On 22 March 1947, President Manuel A. Roxas signed Republic Act No. 95,7
otherwise known as the PNRC Charter. The PNRC is a non-profit,
donor-funded, voluntary, humanitarian organization, whose mission is to
bring timely, effective, and compassionate humanitarian assistance for
the most vulnerable without consideration of nationality, race,
religion, gender, social status, or political affiliation.8
The PNRC provides six major services: Blood Services, Disaster
Management, Safety Services, Community Health and Nursing, Social
Services and Voluntary Service.9
The Republic of the Philippines, adhering to the
Geneva Conventions, established the PNRC as a voluntary organization for
the purpose contemplated in the Geneva Convention of 27 July 1929.10 The Whereas clauses of the PNRC Charter read:
WHEREAS, there was developed at Geneva, Switzerland,
on August 22, 1864, a convention by which the nations of the world were
invited to join together in diminishing, so far lies within their power,
the evils inherent in war;
WHEREAS, more than sixty nations of the world have
ratified or adhered to the subsequent revision of said convention,
namely the "Convention of Geneva of July 29 [sic], 1929 for the
Amelioration of the Condition of the Wounded and Sick of Armies in the
Field" (referred to in this Charter as the Geneva Red Cross Convention);
WHEREAS, the Geneva Red Cross Convention envisages
the establishment in each country of a voluntary organization to assist
in caring for the wounded and sick of the armed forces and to furnish
supplies for that purpose;
WHEREAS, the Republic of the Philippines became an
independent nation on July 4, 1946 and proclaimed its adherence to the
Geneva Red Cross Convention on February 14, 1947, and by that action
indicated its desire to participate with the nations of the world in
mitigating the suffering caused by war and to establish in the
Philippines a voluntary organization for that purpose as contemplated by
the Geneva Red Cross Convention;
WHEREAS, there existed in the Philippines since 1917 a
Charter of the American National Red Cross which must be terminated in
view of the independence of the Philippines; and
WHEREAS, the volunteer organizations established in
the other countries which have ratified or adhered to the Geneva Red
Cross Convention assist in promoting the health and welfare of their
people in peace and in war, and through their mutual assistance and
cooperation directly and through their international organizations
promote better understanding and sympathy among the peoples of the
world. (Emphasis supplied)
The PNRC is a member National Society of the
International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement (Movement), which is
composed of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), the
International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies
(International Federation), and the National Red Cross and Red Crescent
Societies (National Societies). The Movement is united and guided by its
seven Fundamental Principles:
1. HUMANITY – The International Red Cross and Red
Crescent Movement, born of a desire to bring assistance without
discrimination to the wounded on the battlefield, endeavors, in its
international and national capacity, to prevent and alleviate human
suffering wherever it may be found. Its purpose is to protect life and
health and to ensure respect for the human being. It promotes mutual
understanding, friendship, cooperation and lasting peace amongst all
peoples.
2. IMPARTIALITY – It makes no discrimination as to
nationality, race, religious beliefs, class or political opinions. It
endeavors to relieve the suffering of individuals, being guided solely
by their needs, and to give priority to the most urgent cases of
distress.
3. NEUTRALITY – In order to continue to enjoy the
confidence of all, the Movement may not take sides in hostilities or
engage at any time in controversies of a political, racial, religious or
ideological nature.
4. INDEPENDENCE – The Movement is independent. The
National Societies, while auxiliaries in the humanitarian services of
their governments and subject to the laws of their respective countries,
must always maintain their autonomy so that they may be able at all
times to act in accordance with the principles of the Movement.
5. VOLUNTARY SERVICE – It is a voluntary relief movement not prompted in any manner by desire for gain.
6. UNITY – There can be only one Red Cross or one Red
Crescent Society in any one country. It must be open to all. It must
carry on its humanitarian work throughout its territory.
7. UNIVERSALITY – The International Red Cross and Red
Crescent Movement, in which all Societies have equal status and share
equal responsibilities and duties in helping each other, is worldwide.
(Emphasis supplied)
The Fundamental Principles provide a universal
standard of reference for all members of the Movement. The PNRC, as a
member National Society of the Movement, has the duty to uphold the
Fundamental Principles and ideals of the Movement. In order to be
recognized as a National Society, the PNRC has to be autonomous and must
operate in conformity with the Fundamental Principles of the Movement.11
The reason for this autonomy is fundamental. To be
accepted by warring belligerents as neutral workers during international
or internal armed conflicts, the PNRC volunteers must not be seen as
belonging to any side of the armed conflict. In the Philippines where
there is a communist insurgency and a Muslim separatist rebellion, the
PNRC cannot be seen as government-owned or controlled, and neither can
the PNRC volunteers be identified as government personnel or as
instruments of government policy. Otherwise, the insurgents or
separatists will treat PNRC volunteers as enemies when the volunteers
tend to the wounded in the battlefield or the displaced civilians in
conflict areas.
Thus, the PNRC must not only be, but must also be
seen to be, autonomous, neutral and independent in order to conduct its
activities in accordance with the Fundamental Principles. The PNRC must
not appear to be an instrument or agency that implements government
policy; otherwise, it cannot merit the trust of all and cannot
effectively carry out its mission as a National Red Cross Society.12 It is imperative that the PNRC must be autonomous, neutral, and independent in relation to the State.
To ensure and maintain its autonomy, neutrality, and
independence, the PNRC cannot be owned or controlled by the government.
Indeed, the Philippine government does not own the PNRC. The PNRC does
not have government assets and does not receive any appropriation from
the Philippine Congress.13
The PNRC is financed primarily by contributions from private
individuals and private entities obtained through solicitation campaigns
organized by its Board of Governors, as provided under Section 11 of
the PNRC Charter:
SECTION 11. As a national voluntary organization, the
Philippine National Red Cross shall be financed primarily by
contributions obtained through solicitation campaigns throughout the
year which shall be organized by the Board of Governors and conducted by
the Chapters in their respective jurisdictions. These fund raising
campaigns shall be conducted independently of other fund drives by other
organizations. (Emphasis supplied)
The government does not control the PNRC. Under the
PNRC Charter, as amended, only six of the thirty members of the PNRC
Board of Governors are appointed by the President of the Philippines.
Thus, twenty-four members, or four-fifths (4/5), of the PNRC Board of
Governors are not appointed by the President. Section 6 of the PNRC
Charter, as amended, provides:
SECTION 6. The governing powers and authority shall
be vested in a Board of Governors composed of thirty members, six of
whom shall be appointed by the President of the Philippines, eighteen
shall be elected by chapter delegates in biennial conventions and the
remaining six shall be selected by the twenty-four members of the Board
already chosen. x x x.
Thus, of the twenty-four members of the PNRC Board,
eighteen are elected by the chapter delegates of the PNRC, and six are
elected by the twenty-four members already chosen — a select group where
the private sector members have three-fourths majority. Clearly, an
overwhelming majority of four-fifths of the PNRC Board are elected or
chosen by the private sector members of the PNRC.
The PNRC Board of Governors, which exercises all
corporate powers of the PNRC, elects the PNRC Chairman and all other
officers of the PNRC. The incumbent Chairman of PNRC, respondent Senator
Gordon, was elected, as all PNRC Chairmen are elected, by a private
sector-controlled PNRC Board four-fifths of whom are private sector
members of the PNRC. The PNRC Chairman is not appointed by the President
or by any subordinate government official.
Under Section 16, Article VII of the Constitution,14
the President appoints all officials and employees in the Executive
branch whose appointments are vested in the President by the
Constitution or by law. The President also appoints those whose
appointments are not otherwise provided by law. Under this Section 16,
the law may also authorize the "heads of departments, agencies,
commissions, or boards" to appoint officers lower in rank than such
heads of departments, agencies, commissions or boards.15 In Rufino v. Endriga,16 the Court explained appointments under Section 16 in this wise:
Under Section 16, Article VII of the 1987
Constitution, the President appoints three groups of officers. The first
group refers to the heads of the Executive departments, ambassadors,
other public ministers and consuls, officers of the armed forces from
the rank of colonel or naval captain, and other officers whose
appointments are vested in the President by the Constitution. The second
group refers to those whom the President may be authorized by law to
appoint. The third group refers to all other officers of the Government
whose appointments are not otherwise provided by law.
Under the same Section 16, there is a fourth group of
lower-ranked officers whose appointments Congress may by law vest in
the heads of departments, agencies, commissions, or boards. x x x
x x x
In a department in the Executive branch, the head is
the Secretary. The law may not authorize the Undersecretary, acting as
such Undersecretary, to appoint lower-ranked officers in the Executive
department. In an agency, the power is vested in the head of the agency
for it would be preposterous to vest it in the agency itself. In a
commission, the head is the chairperson of the commission. In a board,
the head is also the chairperson of the board. In the last three
situations, the law may not also authorize officers other than the heads
of the agency, commission, or board to appoint lower-ranked officers.
x x x
The Constitution authorizes Congress to vest the
power to appoint lower-ranked officers specifically in the "heads" of
the specified offices, and in no other person. The word "heads" refers
to the chairpersons of the commissions or boards and not to their
members, for several reasons.
The President does not appoint the Chairman of the
PNRC. Neither does the head of any department, agency, commission or
board appoint the PNRC Chairman. Thus, the PNRC Chairman is not an
official or employee of the Executive branch since his appointment does
not fall under Section 16, Article VII of the Constitution. Certainly,
the PNRC Chairman is not an official or employee of the Judiciary or
Legislature. This leads us to the obvious conclusion that the PNRC
Chairman is not an official or employee of the Philippine Government.
Not being a government official or employee, the PNRC Chairman, as such,
does not hold a government office or employment.
Under Section 17, Article VII of the Constitution,17 the President exercises control over all government offices in the Executive branch. If an office is legally not under the control of the President, then such office is not part of the Executive branch. In Rufino v. Endriga,18 the Court explained the President’s power of control over all government offices as follows:
Every government office, entity, or agency must fall
under the Executive, Legislative, or Judicial branches, or must belong
to one of the independent constitutional bodies, or must be a
quasi-judicial body or local government unit. Otherwise, such government
office, entity, or agency has no legal and constitutional basis for its
existence.
The CCP does not fall under the Legislative or
Judicial branches of government. The CCP is also not one of the
independent constitutional bodies. Neither is the CCP a quasi-judicial
body nor a local government unit. Thus, the CCP must fall under the
Executive branch. Under the Revised Administrative Code of 1987, any
agency "not placed by law or order creating them under any specific
department" falls "under the Office of the President."
Since the President exercises control over "all the
executive departments, bureaus, and offices," the President necessarily
exercises control over the CCP which is an office in the Executive
branch. In mandating that the President "shall have control of all
executive . . . offices," Section 17, Article VII of the 1987
Constitution does not exempt any executive office — one performing
executive functions outside of the independent constitutional bodies —
from the President’s power of control. There is no dispute that the CCP
performs executive, and not legislative, judicial, or quasi-judicial
functions.
The President’s power of control applies to the acts
or decisions of all officers in the Executive branch. This is true
whether such officers are appointed by the President or by heads of
departments, agencies, commissions, or boards. The power of control
means the power to revise or reverse the acts or decisions of a
subordinate officer involving the exercise of discretion.
In short, the President sits at the apex of the
Executive branch, and exercises "control of all the executive
departments, bureaus, and offices." There can be no instance under the
Constitution where an officer of the Executive branch is outside the
control of the President. The Executive branch is unitary since there is
only one President vested with executive power exercising control over
the entire Executive branch. Any office in the Executive branch that is
not under the control of the President is a lost command whose existence
is without any legal or constitutional basis. (Emphasis supplied)
An overwhelming four-fifths majority of the PNRC
Board are private sector individuals elected to the PNRC Board by the
private sector members of the PNRC. The PNRC Board exercises all
corporate powers of the PNRC. The PNRC is controlled by private sector
individuals. Decisions or actions of the PNRC Board are not reviewable
by the President. The President cannot reverse or modify the decisions
or actions of the PNRC Board. Neither can the President reverse or
modify the decisions or actions of the PNRC Chairman. It is the PNRC
Board that can review, reverse or modify the decisions or actions of the
PNRC Chairman. This proves again that the office of the PNRC Chairman
is a private office, not a government office.1avvphi1
Although the State is often represented in the
governing bodies of a National Society, this can be justified by the
need for proper coordination with the public authorities, and the
government representatives may take part in decision-making within a
National Society. However, the freely-elected representatives of a
National Society’s active members must remain in a large majority in a
National Society’s governing bodies.19
The PNRC is not government-owned but privately owned.
The vast majority of the thousands of PNRC members are private
individuals, including students. Under the PNRC Charter, those who
contribute to the annual fund campaign of the PNRC are entitled to
membership in the PNRC for one year. Thus, any one between 6 and 65
years of age can be a PNRC member for one year upon contributing P35, P100, P300, P500 or P1,000 for the year.20
Even foreigners, whether residents or not, can be members of the PNRC.
Section 5 of the PNRC Charter, as amended by Presidential Decree No.
1264,21 reads:
SEC. 5. Membership in the Philippine National Red
Cross shall be open to the entire population in the Philippines
regardless of citizenship. Any contribution to the Philippine National
Red Cross Annual Fund Campaign shall entitle the contributor to
membership for one year and said contribution shall be deductible in
full for taxation purposes.
Thus, the PNRC is a privately owned, privately
funded, and privately run charitable organization. The PNRC is not a
government-owned or controlled corporation.
Petitioners anchor their petition on the 1999 case of Camporedondo v. NLRC,22
which ruled that the PNRC is a government-owned or controlled
corporation. In ruling that the PNRC is a government-owned or controlled
corporation, the simple test used was whether the corporation was
created by its own special charter for the exercise of a public function
or by incorporation under the general corporation law. Since the PNRC
was created under a special charter, the Court then ruled that it is a
government corporation. However, the Camporedondo ruling failed
to consider the definition of a government-owned or controlled
corporation as provided under Section 2(13) of the Introductory
Provisions of the Administrative Code of 1987:
SEC. 2. General Terms Defined. – x x x
(13) Government-owned or controlled corporation
refers to any agency organized as a stock or non-stock corporation,
vested with functions relating to public needs whether governmental or
proprietary in nature, and owned by the Government directly or
through its instrumentalities either wholly, or where applicable as in
the case of stock corporations, to the extent of at least fifty-one (51)
percent of its capital stock: Provided, That government-owned or
controlled corporations may be further categorized by the Department of
the Budget, the Civil Service Commission, and the Commission on Audit
for purposes of the exercise and discharge of their respective powers,
functions and responsibilities with respect to such
corporations.(Boldfacing and underscoring supplied)
A government-owned or controlled corporation must be
owned by the government, and in the case of a stock corporation, at
least a majority of its capital stock must be owned by the government.
In the case of a non-stock corporation, by analogy at least a majority
of the members must be government officials holding such membership by
appointment or designation by the government. Under this criterion, and
as discussed earlier, the government does not own or control PNRC.
The PNRC Charter is Violative of the Constitutional Proscription against the Creation of Private Corporations by Special Law
The 1935 Constitution, as amended, was in force when
the PNRC was created by special charter on 22 March 1947. Section 7,
Article XIV of the 1935 Constitution, as amended, reads:
SEC. 7. The Congress 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.
The subsequent 1973 and 1987 Constitutions contain
similar provisions prohibiting Congress from creating private
corporations except by general law. Section 1 of the PNRC Charter, as
amended, creates the PNRC as a "body corporate and politic," thus:
SECTION 1. There is hereby created in the Republic of
the Philippines a body corporate and politic to be the voluntary
organization officially designated to assist the Republic of the
Philippines in discharging the obligations set forth in the Geneva
Conventions and to perform such other duties as are inherent upon a
National Red Cross Society. The national headquarters of this
Corporation shall be located in Metropolitan Manila. (Emphasis supplied)
In Feliciano v. Commission on Audit,23 the Court explained the constitutional provision prohibiting Congress from creating private corporations in this wise:
We begin by explaining the general framework under
the fundamental law. The Constitution recognizes two classes of
corporations. The first refers to private corporations created under a
general law. The second refers to government-owned or controlled
corporations created by special charters. Section 16, Article XII of the
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.
The Constitution emphatically prohibits the creation
of private corporations except by 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.
In short, Congress cannot enact a law creating a
private corporation with a special charter. Such legislation would be
unconstitutional. Private corporations may exist only under a general
law. If the corporation is private, it must necessarily exist under a
general law. Stated differently, only corporations created under a
general law can qualify as private corporations. Under existing laws,
the general law is the Corporation Code, except that the Cooperative
Code governs the incorporation of cooperatives.
The Constitution authorizes Congress to create
government-owned or controlled corporations through special charters.
Since private corporations cannot have special charters, it follows that
Congress can create corporations with special charters only if such
corporations are government-owned or controlled.24 (Emphasis supplied)
In Feliciano, the Court held that the Local Water
Districts are government-owned or controlled corporations since they
exist by virtue of Presidential Decree No. 198, which constitutes their
special charter. The seed capital assets of the Local Water Districts,
such as waterworks and sewerage facilities, were public property which
were managed, operated by or under the control of the city, municipality
or province before the assets were transferred to the Local Water
Districts. The Local Water Districts also receive subsidies and loans
from the Local Water Utilities Administration (LWUA). In fact, under the
2009 General Appropriations Act,25 the LWUA has a budget amounting to P400,000,000 for its subsidy requirements.26 There is no private capital invested in the Local Water Districts.
The capital assets and operating funds of the Local Water Districts all
come from the government, either through transfer of assets, loans,
subsidies or the income from such assets or funds.
The government also controls the Local Water
Districts because the municipal or city mayor, or the provincial
governor, appoints all the board directors of the Local Water Districts.
Furthermore, the board directors and other personnel of the Local Water
Districts are government employees subject to civil service laws and
anti-graft laws. Clearly, the Local Water Districts are considered
government-owned or controlled corporations not only because of their
creation by special charter but also because the government in fact owns
and controls the Local Water Districts.
Just like the Local Water Districts, the PNRC was
created through a special charter. However, unlike the Local Water
Districts, the elements of government ownership and control are clearly
lacking in the PNRC. Thus, although the PNRC is created by a special
charter, it cannot be considered a government-owned or controlled
corporation in the absence of the essential elements of ownership and
control by the government. In creating the PNRC as a corporate entity,
Congress was in fact creating a private corporation. However, the
constitutional prohibition against the creation of private corporations
by special charters provides no exception even for non-profit or
charitable corporations. Consequently, the PNRC Charter, insofar as it
creates the PNRC as a private corporation and grants it corporate
powers,27 is void for being unconstitutional. Thus, Sections 1,28 2,29 3,30 4(a),31 5,32 6,33 7,34 8,35 9,36 10,37 11,38 12,39 and 1340 of the PNRC Charter, as amended, are void.
The other provisions41
of the PNRC Charter remain valid as they can be considered as a
recognition by the State that the unincorporated PNRC is the local
National Society of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent
Movement, and thus entitled to the benefits, exemptions and privileges
set forth in the PNRC Charter. The other provisions of the PNRC Charter
implement the Philippine Government’s treaty obligations under Article
4(5) of the Statutes of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent
Movement, which provides that to be recognized as a National Society,
the Society must be "duly recognized by the legal government of its
country on the basis of the Geneva Conventions and of the national
legislation as a voluntary aid society, auxiliary to the public
authorities in the humanitarian field."
In sum, we hold that the office of the PNRC Chairman
is not a government office or an office in a government-owned or
controlled corporation for purposes of the prohibition in Section 13,
Article VI of the 1987 Constitution. However, since the PNRC Charter is
void insofar as it creates the PNRC as a private corporation, the PNRC
should incorporate under the Corporation Code and register with the
Securities and Exchange Commission if it wants to be a private
corporation.
WHEREFORE, we declare that the office of the Chairman
of the Philippine National Red Cross is not a government office or an
office in a government-owned or controlled corporation for purposes of
the prohibition in Section 13, Article VI of the 1987 Constitution. We
also declare that Sections 1, 2, 3, 4(a), 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, and
13 of the Charter of the Philippine National Red Cross, or Republic Act
No. 95, as amended by Presidential Decree Nos. 1264 and 1643, are VOID
because they create the PNRC as a private corporation or grant it
corporate powers.
SO ORDERED.ANTONIO T. CARPIO
Associate Justice
WE CONCUR:
REYNATO S. PUNO
Chief Justice
Chief Justice
LEONARDO A. QUISUMBING Associate Justice |
CONSUELO YNARES-SANTIAGO Associate Justice |
RENATO C. CORONA Associate Justice |
CONCHITA CARPIO MORALES Associate Justice |
MINITA V. CHICO-NAZARIO Associate Justice |
PRESBITERO J. VELASCO, JR. Associate Justice |
ANTONIO EDUARDO B. NACHURA Associate Justice |
ARTURO D. BRION Associate Justice |
TERESITA J. LEONARDO-DE CASTRO Associate Justice |
DIOSDADO M. PERALTA Associate Justice |
LUCAS P. BERSAMIN
Associate Justice
Associate Justice
C E R T I F I C A T I O N
Pursuant to Section 13, Article VIII of the
Constitution, I certify that the conclusions in the above Decision had
been reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the writer
of the opinion of the Court.
REYNATO S. PUNOChief Justice
Footnotes
1Respondent was elected as a Senator during the May 2004 elections.
2370 Phil. 901 (1999).
3G.R. No. 104732, 22 June 1993, 223 SCRA 568.
4Rollo, p. 181.
5Id. at 3-5.
6The Secretary of Justice Cuevas v. Atty. Bacal, 400 Phil. 1115 (2000); Garcia v. Perez, 188 Phil. 43 (1980).
7An Act to Incorporate the Philippine National Red Cross, as amended by Presidential Decree No. 1264.
8PNRC Website,HYPERLINK
"http://www.redcross.org.ph/Site/PNRC/StrategicDirections.aspx"
HYPERLINK
"http://www.redcross.org.ph/Site/PNRC/StrategicDirections.aspx"
http://www.redcross.org.ph/Site/PNRC/StrategicDirections.aspxHYPERLINK
"http://www.redcross.org.ph/Site/PNRC/StrategicDirections.aspx" (visited
25 March 2009).
9PNRC Website,HYPERLINK
"http://www.redcross.org.ph/Site/PNRC/StrategicDirections.aspx"
HYPERLINK "http://www.redcross.org.ph/Site/PNRC/About.aspx"
http://www.redcross.org.ph/Site/PNRC/About.aspx (visited 25 March 2009).
10Convention for the Amelioration of the Condition of the Wounded and Sick in Armies in the Field.
11Article 4 of the Statutes of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement reads:
Article 4
Conditions for Recognition of National Societies
In order to be recognized in terms of Article 5,
paragraph 2 b) as a National Society, the Society shall meet the
following conditions:
1. Be constituted on the territory of an independent
State where the Geneva Convention for the Amelioration of the Condition
of the Wounded and Sick in Armed Forces in the Field is in force.
2. Be the only National Red Cross or Red Crescent
Society of the said State and be directed by a central body which shall
alone be competent to represent it in its dealings with other components
of the Movement.
3. Be duly recognized by the legal government of its
country on the basis of the Geneva Conventions and of the national
legislation as a voluntary aid society, auxiliary to the public
authorities in the humanitarian field.
4. Have an autonomous status which allows it to operation in conformity with the Fundamental Principles of the Movement.
5. Use a name and distinctive emblem in conformity with the Geneva Conventions and their Additional Protocols.
6. Be so organized as to be able to fulfill the tasks
defined in its own statutes, including the preparation in peace time
for its statutory tasks in case of armed conflicts.
7. Extend its activities to the entire territory of the State.
8. Recruit its voluntary members and its staff without consideration of race, sex, class, religion or political opinions.
9. Adhere to the present Statutes, share in the fellowship which unites the components of the Movement and cooperate with them.
10. Respect the Fundamental Principles of the
Movement and be guided in its work by the principles of international
humanitarian law. (Emphasis supplied)
12 The Fundamental Principles of the Red Cross and Red Crescent, ICRC Publication, p. 17.
13Although
under Section 4(c) of the PNRC Charter, as amended, the PNRC is
allotted one lottery draw yearly by the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes
for the support of its disaster relief operations, in addition to its
existing lottery draws for the Blood Program, such allotments are
donations given to most charitable organizations.
14Section 16, Article VII of the Constitution provides:
The President shall nominate and, with the consent of
the Commission on Appointments, appoint the heads of the executive
departments, ambassadors, other public ministers and consuls, or
officers of the armed forces from the rank of colonel or naval captain,
and other officers whose appointments are vested in him in this
Constitution. He shall also appoint all other officers of the Government
whose appointments are not otherwise provided for by law, and those
whom he may be authorized by law to appoint. The Congress may, by law,
vest the appointment of other officers lower in rank in the President
alone, in the courts, or in the heads of departments, agencies,
commissions, or boards.
The President shall have the power to make
appointments during the recess of the Congress, whether voluntary or
compulsory, but such appointments shall be effective only until after
disapproval by the Commission on Appointments or until the next
adjournment of the Congress.
15 Endriga v. Rufino, G.R. Nos. 139554 & 139565, 21 July 2006, 496 SCRA 13.
16 Id. at 50-57.
17 Section 17, Article VII of the Constitution provides:
The President shall have control of all the executive
departments, bureaus, and offices. He shall ensure that the laws be
faithfully executed.
18 Supra note 15 at 63-65.
19 See note 12 at 20.
20 PNRC Website, http://202.57.124.158/Site/PNRC/membershipInfo.aspx#5 (visited 15 June 2009).
21Issued on 15 December 1977.
22Supra note 2.
23464 Phil. 439 (2004).
24Id. at 454-455.
25Republic Act No. 9524.
26DBM Website,HYPERLINK
"http://www.dbm.gov.ph/GAA09/bsgc/C1.pdf" HYPERLINK
"http://www.dbm.gov.ph/GAA09/bsgc/C1.pdf"
http://www.dbm.gov.ph/GAA09/bsgc/C1.pdf (visited 25 June 2009).
27Section 36 of the Corporation Code enumerates the general powers of a corporation:
SEC. 36. Corporate powers and capacity. – Every corporation incorporated under this Code has the power and capacity:
1. To sue and be sued in its corporate name;
2. Of succession by its corporate name for the period
of time stated in the articles of incorporation and the certificate of
incorporation;
3. To adopt and use a corporate seal;
4. To amend its articles of incorporation in accordance with the provisions of this Code;
5. To adopt by-laws, not contrary to law, morals or public policy, and to amend or repeal the same in accordance with this Code;
6. In case of stock corporations, to issue or sell
stocks to subscribers and to sell treasury stocks in accordance with the
provisions of this Code; and to admit members to the corporation if it
be a non-stock corporation;
7. To purchase, receive, take or grant, hold, convey,
sell, lease, pledge, mortgage and otherwise deal with such real and
personal property, including securities and bonds of other corporations,
as the transaction of the lawful business of the corporation may
reasonably and necessarily require, subject to the limitations
prescribed by law and the Constitution;
8. To adopt any plan of merger or consolidation as provided in this Code;
9. To make reasonable donations, including those for
the public welfare or for hospital, charitable, cultural, scientific,
civic, or similar purposes: Provided, That no corporation, domestic or
foreign, shall give donations in aid of any political party or candidate
or for purposes of partisan political activity;
10. To establish pension, retirement and other plans for the benefit of its directors, trustees, officers and employees; and
11. To exercise such other powers as may be essential
or necessary to carry out its purpose or purposes as stated in its
articles of incorporation.
28SECTION
1. There is hereby created in the Republic of the Philippines a body
corporate and politic to be the voluntary organization officially
designated to assist the Republic of the Philippines in discharging the
obligations set forth in the Geneva Conventions and to perform such
other duties as are inherent upon a national Red Cross Society. The
national headquarters of this Corporation shall be located in Metro
Manila.
29SEC.
2. The name of this corporation shall be "The Philippine National Red
Cross" and by that name shall have perpetual succession with the power
to sue and be sued; to own and hold such real and personal estate as
shall be deemed advisable and to accept bequests, donations and
contributions of property of all classes for the purpose of this
Corporation hereinafter set forth; to adopt a seal and to alter and
destroy the same at pleasure; and to have the right to adopt and to use,
in carrying out its purposes hereinafter designated, as an emblem and
badge, a red Greek cross on a white ground, the same as has been
described in the Geneva Conventions, and adopted by the several nations
ratifying or adhering thereto; to ordain and establish by-laws and
regulations not inconsistent with the laws of the Republic of the
Philippines, and generally to do all such acts and things as may be
necessary to carry into effect the provisions of this Act and promote
the purposes of said organization; and the corporation hereby created is
designated as the organization which is authorized to act in matters of
relief under said Convention. In accordance with the Geneva
Conventions, the issuance of the distinctive Red Cross emblem to medical
units and establishments, personnel and materials neutralized in time
of war shall be left to the military authorities. The red Greek cross on
a white ground, as has been described by the Geneva Conventions is not,
and shall not be construed as a religious symbol, and shall have equal
efficacy and applicability to persons of all faiths, creeds and beliefs.
The operational jurisdiction of the Philippine National Red Cross shall
be over the entire territory of the Philippines.
30SEC. 3. That the purposes of this Corporation shall be as follows:
a. To provide volunteer aid to the sick and wounded
of the armed forces in time of war, in accordance with the spirit of and
under the conditions prescribed by the Geneva Conventions to which the
Republic of the Philippines proclaimed its adherence;
b. For the purposes mentioned in the preceding
sub-section, to perform all duties devolving upon the Corporation as a
result of the adherence of the Republic of the Philippines to the said
Convention;
c. To act in matters of voluntary relief and in
accordance with the authorities of the armed forces as a medium of
communication between the people of the Republic of the Philippines and
their Armed Forces, in time of peace and in time of war, and to act in
such matters between similar national societies of other governments and
the Government and people and the Armed Forces of the Republic of the
Philippines;
d. To establish and maintain a system of national and
international relief in time of peace and in time of war and apply the
same in meeting the emergency needs caused by typhoons, flood, fires,
earthquakes, and other natural disasters and to devise and carry on
measures for minimizing the suffering caused by such disasters;
e. To devise and promote such other services in time
of peace and in time of war as may be found desirable in improving the
health, safety and welfare of the Filipino people;
f. To devise such means as to make every citizen and/or resident of the Philippines a member of the Red Cross.
31SEC. 4. In furtherance of the purposes mentioned in the preceding sub-paragraphs, the Philippine National Red Cross shall:
a. Be authorized to secure loans from any financial institution which shall not exceed its budget of the previous year.
32SEC.
5. Membership in the Philippine National Red Cross shall be open to the
entire population in the Philippines regardless of citizenship. Any
contribution to the Philippine National Red Cross Annual Fund Campaign
shall entitle the contributor to membership for one year and said
contribution shall be deductible in full for taxation purposes.
33SEC.
6. The governing powers and authority shall be vested in the Board of
Governors composed of thirty members, six of whom shall be appointed by
the President of the Philippines, eighteen shall be elected by chapter
delegates in biennial conventions and the remaining six shall be
selected by the twenty-four members of the Board already chosen. At
least one but not more than three of the Presidential appointees shall
be chosen from the Armed Forces of the Philippines.
a. The term of office of all members of the Board
shall be four years, including those appointed by the President of the
Philippines, renewable at the pleasure of the appointing power or
elective bodies.
b. Vacancies in the Board of Governors caused by
death or resignation shall be filled by election by the Board of
Governors at its next meeting, except that vacancies among the
Presidential appointees shall be filled by the President.
34SEC.
7. The President of the Philippines shall be the Honorary President of
the Philippine National Red Cross. The officers shall consist of a
Chairman, a Vice-Chairman, a Secretary, a Treasurer, a Counselor, an
Assistant Secretary and an Assistant Treasurer, all of whom shall be
elected by the Board of Governors from among its membership for a term
of two years and may be re-elected. The election of officers shall take
place within sixty days after all the members of the Board of Governors
have been chosen and have qualified.
35SEC.
8. The Biennial meeting of chapter delegates shall be held on such date
and such place as may be specified by the Board of Governors to elect
members of the Board of Governors and advice the Board of Governors on
the activities of the Philippine National Red Cross; Provided, however,
that during periods of great emergency, the Board of Governors in its
discretion may determine that the best interest of the corporation shall
be served by postponing such biennial meeting.
36SEC. 9. The power to ordain, adopt and amend by-laws and regulations shall be vested in the Board of Governors.
37SEC.
10. The members of the Board of Governors, as well as the officers of
the corporation, shall serve without compensation. The compensation of
the paid staff of the corporation shall be determined by the Board of
Governors upon the recommendation of the Secretary General.
38SEC.
11. As a national voluntary organization, the Philippine National Red
Cross shall be financed primarily by contributions obtained through
solicitation campaigns throughout the year which shall be organized by
the Board of Governors and conducted by the Chapters in their respective
jurisdictions. These fund raising campaigns shall be conducted
independently of other fund drives by other organizations.
39SEC.
12. The Board of Governors shall promulgate rules and regulations for
the organization of local units of the Philippine National Red Cross to
be known as Chapters. Said rules and regulations shall fix the
relationship of the Chapters to the Corporation, define their
territorial jurisdictions, and determine the number of delegates for
each chapter based on population, fund campaign potentials and service
needs.
40SEC.
13. The Corporation shall, at the end of every calendar year submit to
the President of the Philippines an annual report containing the
activities of the Corporation showing its financial condition, the
receipts and disbursements.
41 The valid provisions are Sections 4(b) and (c), 14, 15, 16, and 17:
SEC. 4. In furtherance of the purposes mentioned in the preceding sub-paragraphs, the Philippine National Red Cross shall:
x x x
b. Be exempt from payment of all duties, taxes, fees,
and other charges of all kinds on all importations and purchases for
its exclusive use, on donations for its disaster relief work and other
Red Cross services, and in its benefits and fund raising drives all
provisions of law to the contrary notwithstanding.
c. Be allotted by the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes
Office one lottery draw yearly for the support of its disaster relief
operations in addition to its existing lottery draws for the Blood
Program.
SEC. 14. It shall be unlawful for any person to
solicit, collect or receive money, materials, or property of any kind by
falsely representing or pretending himself to be a member, agent or
representative of the Philippine National Red Cross.
SEC. 15. The use of the name Red Cross is reserved
exclusively to the Philippine National Red Cross and the use of the
emblem of the red Greek cross on a white ground is reserved exclusively
to the Philippine National Red Cross, medical services of the Armed
Forces of the Philippines and such other medical facilities or other
institutions as may be authorized by the Philippine National Red Cross
as provided under Article 44 of the Geneva Conventions. It shall be
unlawful for any other person or entity to use the words Red Cross or
Geneva Cross or to use the emblem of the red Greek cross on a white
ground or any designation, sign, or insignia constituting an imitation
thereof for any purpose whatsoever.
SEC. 16. As used in this Decree, the term person
shall include any legal person, group, or legal entity whatsoever
nature, and any person violating any section of this Article shall, upon
conviction therefore be liable to a fin[e] of not less than one
thousand pesos or imprisonment for a term not exceeding one year, or
both, at the discretion of the court, for each and every offense. In
case the violation is committed by a corporation or association, the
penalty shall devolve upon the president, director or any other officer
responsible for such violation.
SEC. 17. All acts or parts of acts which are inconsistent with the provisions of this Decree are hereby repealed.
The Lawphil Project - Arellano Law Foundation
DISSENTING OPINION
NACHURA, J.:
I am constrained to register my dissent because the
ponencia does not only endorse an unmistakably flagrant transgression of
the Constitution but also unwittingly espouses the destruction of the
Philippine National Red Cross (PNRC) as an institution. With all due
respect, I disagree with the principal arguments advanced in the
ponencia to justify Senator Richard J. Gordon’s unconstitutional holding
of the chairmanship of the PNRC Board of Governors while concurrently
sitting as a member of the Senate of the Philippines.
Procedurally, I maintain that the petition is one for
prohibition and that petitioners have standing to file the same. On the
merits, I remain earnestly convinced that PNRC is a government owned or
controlled corporation (GOCC), if not a government instrumentality;
that its charter does not violate the constitutional proscription
against the creation of private corporations by special law; and that
Senator Gordon’s continuous occupancy of two incompatible positions is a
clear violation of the Constitution.
Allow me to elucidate.
I.
The petition should be treated
as one for prohibition; and
petitioners have locus standi
as one for prohibition; and
petitioners have locus standi
I submit that the present petition should be treated
as one for prohibition rather than for quo warranto. In the main, the
petitioners seek from this Court the declaration that Senator Gordon has
forfeited his seat in the Senate, and the consequent proscription from
further acting or representing himself as a Senator and from receiving
the salaries, emoluments, compensations, privileges and benefits
thereof.1
Hence, the remedy sought is preventive and restrictive—an injunction
against an alleged continuing violation of the fundamental law.
Furthermore, the petitioners raise a constitutional issue, without
claiming any entitlement to either the Senate seat or the chairmanship
of PNRC.
Considering that the issue involved is of fundamental
constitutional significance and of paramount importance, i.e., whether
the Senator continues to commit an infringement of the Constitution by
holding two positions claimed to be incompatible, the Court has full
authority, nay the bounden duty, to treat the vaguely worded petition as
one for prohibition and assume jurisdiction.2
Petitioners, as citizens of the Republic and by being
taxpayers, have locus standi to institute the instant case. Garcillano
v. the House of Representatives Committees on Public Information, Public
Order and Safety, National Defense and Security, Information and
Communications Technology, and Suffrage and Electoral Reforms3 echoes the current policy of the Court, as laid down in Chavez v. Gonzales,4
to disallow procedural barriers to serve as impediments to addressing
and resolving serious legal questions that greatly impact on public
interest. This is in keeping with the Court’s responsibility under the
Constitution to determine whether or not other branches of government
have kept themselves within the limits of the Constitution and the laws,
and that they have not abused the discretion given them.5
Finally, as aforementioned, petitioners advance a
constitutional issue which deserves the attention of this Court in view
of its seriousness, novelty and weight as precedent.6
Considering that Senator Gordon is charged with continuously violating
the Constitution by holding incompatible offices, the institution of the
instant action by the petitioners is proper.
II.
A brief history of the PNRC
A historical account of the PNRC’s creation is
imperative in order to comprehend the nature of the institution and to
put things in their proper perspective.
Even before its incorporation in 1947, the Red Cross,
as an organization, was already in existence in the Philippines.
Apolinario Mabini played an important role in the approval by the
Malolos Republic, on February 17, 1899, of the Constitution of
the National Association of the Red Cross. Appointed to serve as its
president was Hilario del Rosario de Aguinaldo. On August 29, 1900,
International Delegate of Diplomacy Felipe Agoncillo met with
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) President Gustave
Moynier to lobby for the recognition of the Filipino Red Cross Society
and the application of the 1864 Geneva Convention to the country during
the Filipino-American war.7
The Geneva Convention of August 22, 1864 dealt mainly on the relief to
wounded soldiers without any distinction as to nationality, on the
neutrality and inviolability of medical personnel and medical
establishments and units; and on the adoption of the distinctive sign of
the red cross on a white ground by hospitals, ambulances and evacuation
parties and personnel.8
On August 30, 1905, a Philippine branch of the
American National Red Cross (ANRC) was organized. This was later
officially recognized as an ANRC chapter on December 4, 1917. In 1934,
President Manuel L. Quezon initiated the establishment of an independent
Philippine Red Cross, but this did not materialize because the
Commonwealth Government at that time could not ratify the Geneva
Convention. During the Japanese occupation, a Japanese-controlled
Philippine Red Cross was created to take care of internment camps in the
country. After the liberation of Manila in 1945, local Red Cross
officials and the ANRC undertook to reconstitute the organization.9
The Republic of the Philippines became an independent nation on July 4,
1946, and proclaimed its adherence to the Geneva Convention on February
14, 1947. On March 22 of that year, the PNRC was officially created
when President Manuel A. Roxas signed Republic Act (R.A.) No. 95.10
PNRC is a GOCC
Section 16, Article XII, of the Philippine
Constitution, provides the inflexible imperative for the formation or
organization of private corporations, as follows:
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.
Delineating the nature of a GOCC, compared to a
private corporation, Justice Carpio explains this inviolable rule in
Feliciano v. Commission on Audit11 in this wise:
We begin by explaining the general framework under
the fundamental law. The Constitution recognizes two classes of
corporations. The first refers to private corporations created under a
general law. The second refers to government-owned or controlled
corporations created by special charters. Section 16, Article XII of the
Constitution provides:
Section 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 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.
In short, Congress cannot enact a law creating a
private corporation with a special charter. Such legislation would be
unconstitutional. Private corporations may exist only under a general
law. If the corporation is private, it must necessarily exist under a
general law. Stated differently, only corporations created under a
general law can qualify as private corporations. Under existing laws,
that general law is the Corporation Code, except that the Cooperative
Code governs the incorporation of cooperatives.
The Constitution authorizes Congress to create
government-owned or controlled corporations through special charters.
Since private corporations cannot have special charters, it follows that
Congress can create corporations with special charters only if such
corporations are government-owned or controlled.12
Reason dictates that since no private corporation can
have a special charter, it follows that Congress can create
corporations with special charters only if such corporations are
government-owned or controlled.13
To hold otherwise would run directly against our fundamental law or,
worse, authorize implied amendment to it, which this Court cannot allow.
The PNRC was incorporated under R.A. No 95, a special law. Following the logic in Feliciano, it cannot be anything but a GOCC.
R.A. No. 95 has undergone amendment through the years.14 Did the amendment of the PNRC Charter have the effect of transforming it into a private corporation?
In Camporedondo v. National Labor Relations Commission,15 we answered this in the negative. The Court’s ruling in that case, reiterated in Baluyot v. Holganza,16 is direct, definite and clear, viz:
Resolving the issue set out in the opening paragraph
of this opinion, we rule that the Philippine National Red Cross (PNRC)
is a government owned and controlled corporation, with an original
charter under Republic Act No. 95, as amended. The test to determine
whether a corporation is government owned or controlled, or private in
nature is simple. Is it created by its own charter for the exercise of a
public function, or by incorporation under the general corporation law?
Those with special charters are government corporations subject to its
provisions, and its employees are under the jurisdiction of the Civil
Service Commission, and are compulsory members of the Government Service
Insurance System. The PNRC was not "impliedly converted into a private
corporation" simply because its charter was amended to vest in it the
authority to secure loans, be exempted from payment of all duties,
taxes, fees and other charges of all kinds on all importations and
purchases for its exclusive use, on donations for its disaster relief
work and other services and in its benefits and fund raising drives and
be allotted one lottery draw a year by the Philippine Charity
Sweepstakes Office for the support of its disaster relief operation in
addition to its existing lottery draws for blood programs.17
In an effort to avoid the inescapable command of
Camporendondo, the ponencia asserts that the decision has failed to
consider the definition of a GOCC under Section 2 (13) of the
Introductory Provisions of Executive Order No. 292 (Administrative Code
of 1987), which provides:
SEC. 2. General Terms Defined. – x x x
(13) Government-owned or controlled corporation
refers to any agency organized as a stock or non-stock corporation,
vested with functions relating to public needs whether governmental or
proprietary in nature, and owned by the Government directly or through
its instrumentalities either wholly, or, where applicable as in the case
of stock corporations, to the extent of at least fifty-one (51) per
cent of its capital stock: Provided, That government-owned or controlled
corporations may be further categorized by the Department of the
Budget, the Civil Service Commission, and the Commission on Audit for
purposes of the exercise and discharge of their respective powers,
functions and responsibilities with respect to such corporations.18
The ponencia then argues that, based on the criterion
in the cited provision, PNRC is not owned or controlled by the
government and, thus, is not a GOCC.
I respectfully differ. The quoted Administrative Code
provision does not pronounce a definition of a GOCC that strays from
Section 16, Article XII of the Constitution. As explained in Philippine
National Construction Corporation v. Pabion, et al.,19 it merely declares that a GOCC may either be a stock or non-stock corporation, or that it "may be further categorized,"20
suggesting that the definition provided in the Administrative Code is
broad enough to admit of other distinctions as to the kinds of GOCCs.21
Rather, crucial in this definition is the reference
to the corporation being "vested with functions relating to public needs
whether governmental or proprietary." When we relate this to the PNRC
Charter, as amended, we note that Section 1 of the charter starts with
the phrase, "(T)here is hereby created in the Republic of the
Philippines a body corporate and politic to be the voluntary
organization officially designated to assist the Republic of the
Philippines in discharging the obligations set forth in the Geneva
Conventions x x x".22
It is beyond cavil that the obligations of the Republic of the
Philippines set forth in the Geneva Conventions are public or
governmental in character. If the PNRC is "officially designated to
assist the Republic," then the PNRC is, perforce, engaged in the
performance of the government’s public functions.
PNRC is, at the very least, a government instrumentality
Further, applying the definition of terms used in the
Administrative Code of 1987, as Justice Carpio urges this Court to do,
will lead to the inescapable conclusion that PNRC is an instrumentality
of the government. Section 2(10) of the said code defines a government
instrumentality as:
(10) Instrumentality refers to any agency of the
National Government not integrated within the department framework,
vested with special functions or jurisdiction by law, endowed with some
if not all corporate powers, administering special funds, and enjoying
operational autonomy, usually through a charter. This term includes
regulatory agencies, chartered institutions and government-owned or
controlled corporations.23
The PNRC is vested with the special function of
assisting the Republic of the Philippines in discharging its obligations
under the Geneva Conventions. It is endowed with corporate powers. It
administers special funds—the contributions of its members, the aid
given by the government, the support extended to it by the Philippine
Charity Sweepstakes Office (PCSO) in terms of allotment of lottery
draws.24
It enjoys operational autonomy, as emphasized by Justice Carpio
himself. And all these attributes exist by virtue of its charter.
Significantly, in the United States, the ANRC, the
precursor of the PNRC and likewise a member of the International
Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies,25
is considered as a federal instrumentality. Addressing the issue of
whether the ANRC was an entity exempt from paying unemployment
compensation tax, the US Supreme Court, in Department of Employment v.
United States,26
characterized the Red Cross as an instrumentality of the federal
government not covered by the enforcement of the tax statute and
entitled to a refund of taxes paid—
On the merits, we hold that the Red Cross is an
instrumentality of the United States for purposes of immunity from state
taxation levied on its operations, and that this immunity has not been
waived by congressional enactment. Although there is no simple test for
ascertaining whether an institution is so closely related to
governmental activity as to become a tax-immune instrumentality, the Red
Cross is clearly such an instrumentality. See generally, Sturges, The
Legal Status of the Red Cross, 56 Mich.L.Rev. 1 (1957). Congress
chartered the present Red Cross in 1905, subjecting it to governmental
supervision and to a regular financial audit by the Defense, then War,
Department. 33 Stat. 599, as amended, 36 U.S.C. s 1 et seq.
Its principal officer is appointed by the President, who also appoints
seven (all government officers) of the remaining 49 Governors. 33 Stat.
601, as amended, 36 U.S.C. s 5.
By statute and Executive Order there devolved upon the Red Cross the
right and the obligation to meet this Nation's commitments under various
Geneva Conventions, to perform a wide variety of functions
indispensable to the workings of our Armed Forces around the globe, and
to assist the Federal Government in providing disaster assistance to the
States in time of need. Although its operations are financed primarily
from voluntary private contributions, the Red Cross does receive
substantial material assistance from the Federal Government. And time
and time again, both the President and the Congress have recognized and
acted in reliance upon the Red Cross' status virtually as an arm of the
Government. In those respects in which the Red Cross differs from the
usual government agency-e.g., in that its employees are not employees of
the United States, and that government officials do not direct its
everyday affairs-the Red Cross is like other institutions-e.g., national
banks-whose status as tax-immune instrumentalities of the United States
is beyond dispute.27
The same conclusion was reached in R.A. Barton v. American Red Cross.28
In that case, a transfusion recipient and her family brought action
against American Red Cross and its state medical director under Alabama
Medical Liability Act as well as Alabama tort law for failing to
properly test blood sample and failing to timely notify recipient that
donor had tested positive for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). The US
District Court concluded that the Red Cross was a federal
instrumentality and was so intertwined with and was essential to the
operation of the federal government, both internationally and
domestically;29
thus, its personnel were exempt from tort liability if the conduct
complained of were within the scope of official duties and were
discretionary in nature.30 The US Court of Appeals later affirmed the decision, and the US Supreme Court denied certiorari and rehearing on the case.31
Interestingly, while the United States considers the
ANRC as its arm and the US courts uphold its status as a federal
instrumentality, ANRC remains an independent, volunteer-led organization
that works closely with the ICRC on matters of international conflict
and social, political, and military unrest. There is, therefore, no
sufficient basis for Justice Carpio to assume that if this Court will
consider PNRC as a GOCC, then "it cannot merit the trust of all and
cannot effectively carry out its mission as a National Red Cross
Society."
Let it be stressed that, in much the same way as the
ANRC, the PNRC has been chartered and incorporated by the Philippine
Government to aid it in the fulfillment of its obligations under the
Geneva Convention. The President of the Republic appoints six of the 36
PNRC governors. Though it depends primarily on voluntary contributions
for its funding, PNRC receives financial assistance not only from the
National Government and the PCSO but also through the local government
units. PNRC further submits to the President an annual report containing
its activities and showing its financial condition, as well as the
receipts and disbursements. PNRC has further been recognized by the
Philippine Government to be an essential component in its international
and domestic operation. There is no doubt therefore that PNRC is a GOCC
or, if not, at least a government instrumentality.
The fact that the Philippine or the American National
Red Cross is a governmental instrumentality does not affect its
autonomy and operation in conformity with the Fundamental Principles of
the International Red Cross. The PNRC, like the ANRC, remains
autonomous, neutral and independent from the Government, and vice versa,
consonant with the principles laid down in the Geneva Convention.
A similar standing obtains in the case of the
Commission on Human Rights (CHR). While it is a governmental office, it
is independent. Separatists and insurgents do not consider the CHR, or
the PNRC in this case, as the enemy, but rather as the entity to turn to
in the event of injury to their constitutional rights, for the CHR, or
to their physical being, for the PNRC.
The PNRC Charter does not violate
the constitutional proscription
against the creation of private
corporations by special law
the constitutional proscription
against the creation of private
corporations by special law
Considering that the PNRC is not a private
corporation, but a GOCC or a government instrumentality, then its
charter does not violate the constitutional provision that Congress
cannot, except by a general law, provide for the formation, organization
or regulation of private corporations, unless such corporations are
owned or controlled by the Government.32
We have already settled this issue in Camporedondo and in Baluyot. Let
it be emphasized that, in those cases, this Court has found nothing
wrong with the PNRC Charter. We have simply applied the Constitution,
and in Feliciano, this Court has explained the meaning of the
constitutional provision.
I respectfully submit that we are not prepared to
reverse the ruling of this Court in the said cases. To rule otherwise
will create an unsettling ripple effect in numerous decisions of this
Court, including those dealing with the jurisdiction of the Civil
Service Commission (CSC) and the authority of the Commission on Audit
(COA), among others.
Furthermore, to subscribe to the proposition that
Section 1 of the PNRC Charter, which deals with the creation and
incorporation of the organization, is invalid for being violative of the
aforesaid constitutional proscription, but the rest of the provisions
in the PNRC Charter remains valid, is to reach an absurd situation in
which obligations are imposed on and a framework for its operation is
laid down for a legally non-existing entity. If Section 1 of the PNRC
Charter were impulsively invalidated, what will remain are the following
provisions, which will have no specific frame of reference─
SECTION 2. The name of this corporation shall be "The
Philippine National Red Cross" and by that name shall have perpetual
succession with the power to sue and be sued; to own and hold such real
and personal estate as shall be deemed advisable and to accept bequests,
donations and contributions of property of all classes for the purpose
of this Corporation hereinafter set forth; to adopt a seal and to alter
and destroy the same at pleasure; and to have the right to adopt and to
use, in carrying out its purposes hereinafter designated, as an emblem
and badge, a red Greek cross on a white ground, the same as has been
described in the Geneva Conventions, and adopted by the several nations
ratifying or adhering thereto; to ordain and establish by-laws and
regulations not inconsistent with the laws of the Republic of the
Philippines, and generally to do all such acts and things as may be
necessary to carry into effect the provisions of this Act and promote
the purposes of said organization; and the corporation hereby created is
designated as the organization which is authorized to act in matters of
relief under said Convention. In accordance with the Geneva
Conventions, the issuance of the distinctive Red Cross emblem to medical
units and establishments, personnel and materials neutralized in time
of war shall be left to the military authorities. The red Greek cross on
a white ground, as has been described by the Geneva Conventions is not,
and shall not be construed as a religious symbol, and shall have equal
efficacy and applicability to persons of all faiths, creeds and beliefs.
The operational jurisdiction of the Philippine National Red Cross shall
be over the entire territory of the Philippines.
SECTION 3. That the purposes of this Corporation shall be as follows:
a. To provide volunteer aid to the sick and wounded
of armed forces in time of war, in accordance with the spirit of and
under the conditions prescribed by the Geneva Conventions to which the
Republic of the Philippines proclaimed its adherence;
b. For the purposes mentioned in the preceding
sub-section, to perform all duties devolving upon the Corporation as a
result of the adherence of the Republic of the Philippines to the said
Convention;
c. To act in matters of voluntary relief and in
accordance with the authorities of the armed forces as a medium of
communication between people of the Republic of the Philippines and
their Armed Forces, in time of peace and in time of war, and to act in
such matters between similar national societies of other governments and
the Governments and people and the Armed Forces of the Republic of the
Philippines;
d. To establish and maintain a system of national and
international relief in time of peace and in time of war and apply the
same in meeting and emergency needs caused by typhoons, flood, fires,
earthquakes, and other natural disasters and to devise and carry on
measures for minimizing the suffering caused by such disasters;
e. To devise and promote such other services in time
of peace and in time of war as may be found desirable in improving the
health, safety and welfare of the Filipino people;
f. To devise such means as to make every citizen and/or resident of the Philippines a member of the Red Cross.
SECTION 4. In furtherance of the purposes mentioned in the preceding sub-paragraphs, the Philippine National Red Cross shall:
a. Be authorized to secure loans from any financial institution which shall not exceed its budget of the previous year.
b. Be exempt from payment of all duties, taxes, fees,
and other charges of all kinds on all importations and purchases for
its exclusive use, on donations for its disaster relief work and other
Red Cross services, and in its benefits and fund raising drives all
provisions of law to the contrary notwithstanding.
c. Be allotted by the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes
Office one lottery draw yearly for the support of its disaster relief
operations in addition to its existing lottery draws for the Blood
Program.
SECTION 5. Membership in the Philippine National Red
Cross shall be open to entire population in the Philippines regardless
of citizenship. Any contribution to the Philippine National Red Cross
Annual Fund Campaign shall entitle the contributor to membership for one
year and said contribution shall be deductible in full for taxation
purposes.
SECTION 6. The governing powers and authority shall
be vested in a Board of Governors composed of thirty members, six of
whom shall be appointed by the President of the Philippines, eighteen
shall be elected by chapter delegates in biennial conventions and the
remaining six shall be elected by the twenty-four members of the Board
already chosen. At least one but not more than three of the Presidential
appointees shall be chosen from the Armed Forces of the Philippines.
a. The term of office of all members of the board of
Governors shall be four years. Any member of the Board of Governor who
has served two consecutive full terms of four years each shall be
ineligible for membership on the Board for at least two years; any term
served to cover unexpired terms of office of any governor will not be
considered in this prohibition in serving two consecutive full terms,
and provided, however, that terms served for more than two years shall
be considered a full term.
b. Vacancies in the Board of Governors caused by
death or resignation shall be filled by election by the Board of
Governors at its next meeting, except that vacancies among the
Presidential appointees shall be filled by the President.
SECTION 7. The President of the Philippines shall be
the Honorary President of the Philippine National Red Cross. The
officers shall consist of a Chairman, a Vice-Chairman, a Secretary, a
Treasurer, a Counselor, an Assistant Secretary and an Assistant
Treasurer, all of whom shall be elected by the Board of Governors from
among its membership for a term of two years and may be re-elected. The
election of officers shall take place within sixty days after all the
members of the Board of Governors have been chosen and have qualified.
SECTION 8. The Biennial meeting of chapter delegates
shall be held on such date and such place as may be specified by the
Board of Governors to elect members of the Board of Governors and advice
the Board of Governors on the activities of the Philippine National Red
Cross; Provided, however that during periods of great emergency, the
Board of Governors in its discretion may determine that the best
interest of the corporation shall be served by postponing such biennial
meeting.
SECTION 9. The power to ordain, adopt and amend by-laws and regulations shall be vested in the Board of Governors.
SECTION 10. The members of the Board of Governors, as
well as the officers of the corporation, shall serve without
compensation. The compensation of the paid staff of the corporation
shall be determined by the Board of Governors upon the recommendation of
the Secretary General.
SECTION 11. As a national voluntary organization, the
Philippine National Red Cross shall be financed primarily by
contributions obtained through solicitation campaigns throughout the
year which shall be organized by the Board of Governors and conducted by
the Chapters in their respective jurisdictions. These fund raising
campaigns shall be conducted independently of other fund drives and
service needs.
SECTION 12. The Board of Governors shall promulgate
rules and regulations for the organization of local units of the
Philippine National Red Cross to be known as Chapters. Said rules and
regulations shall fix the relationship of the Chapters to the
Corporation, define their territorial jurisdictions, and determine the
number of delegates for each chapter based on population, fund campaign
potentials and service needs.
SECTION 13. The Corporation shall, at the end of
every calendar year submit to the President of the Philippines an annual
report containing the activities of the Corporation showing its
financial condition, the receipts and disbursements.
SECTION 14. It shall be unlawful for any person to
solicit, collect or receive money, materials, or property of any kind by
falsely representing or pretending himself to be a member, agent or
representative of the Philippine National Red Cross.
SECTION 15. The use of the name Red Cross is reserved
exclusively to the Philippine National Red Cross and the use of the
emblem of the red Greek cross on a white ground is reserved exclusively
to the Philippine National Red Cross, medical services of the Armed
Forces of the Philippines and such other medical facilities or other
institutions as may be authorized by the Philippine National Red Cross
as provided under Article 44 of the Geneva Conventions. It shall be
unlawful for any other person or entity to use the words Red Cross or
Geneva Cross or to use the emblem of the red Greek cross on a white
ground or any designation, sign, or insignia constituting an imitation
thereof for any purpose whatsoever.
SECTION 16. As used in this Decree, the term person
shall include any legal person, group, or legal entity whatsoever
nature, and any person violating any section of this Article shall, upon
conviction therefore be liable to a find of not less than one thousand
pesos or imprisonment for a term not exceeding one year, or both, at the
discretion of the court, for each and every offense. In case the
violation is committed by a corporation or association, the penalty
shall devolve upon the president, director or any other officer
responsible for such violation.
SECTION 17. All acts or parts of acts which are inconsistent with the provisions of this Decree are hereby repealed.
Sections 2 to 17 of R.A. No. 95, as amended, are not
separable from Section 1, the provision creating and incorporating the
PNRC, and cannot, by themselves, stand independently as law. The PNRC
Charter obviously does not contain a separability clause.
The constitutionality of a law is presumed
Two other important points militate against the
declaration of Section 1 of the PNRC Charter as invalid and
unconstitutional, namely: (1) respondent does not question the
constitutionality of the said provision; and (2) every law enjoys the
presumption of constitutionality.
Settled is the doctrine that all reasonable doubts should be resolved in favor of the constitutionality of a statute. 33
The presumption is that the legislature intended to enact a valid,
sensible and just law and one which operates no further than may be
necessary to effectuate the specific purpose thereof.34 Justice Carpio, in Kapisanan ng mga Kawani ng Energy Regulatory Board v. Barin,35
even echoes the principle that "to justify the nullification of a law,
there must be a clear and unequivocal breach of the Constitution."
Here, as in Camporedondo and Baluyot, there is no
clear showing that the PNRC Charter runs counter to the Constitution.
And, again in the same tone as in Montesclaros v. Commission on
Elections, "[the parties] are not even assailing the constitutionality
of [the PNRC Charter]." A becoming courtesy to a co-equal branch should
thus impel this Court to refrain from unceremoniously invalidating a
legislative act.
Deleterious effects will result
if PNRC is declared a private
corporation, among which are
its consequent destruction as
an institution and the Republic’s
shirking its obligation under
the Geneva Convention
if PNRC is declared a private
corporation, among which are
its consequent destruction as
an institution and the Republic’s
shirking its obligation under
the Geneva Convention
The hypothesis that PNRC is a private corporation has
far-reaching implications. As mentioned earlier, it will be a reversal
of the doctrines laid down in Camporedondo and Baluyot, and it will have
an unsettling ripple effect on other numerous decisions of the Court,
including those dealing with the jurisdiction of the CSC and the
authority of the COA.
Not only that. If PNRC is considered as a private
corporation, then, this will lead to its ultimate demise as an
institution. Its employees will no longer be covered by the Government
Service Insurance System. It can no longer be extended tax exemptions
and official immunity and it cannot anymore be given support, financial
or otherwise, by the National Government, the local government units and
the PCSO; because these will violate not only the equal protection
clause in the Constitution, but also penal statutes.
And if PNRC is consequently obliterated, the Republic
will be shirking its responsibilities and obligations under the Geneva
Convention.
This Court then has to be very careful in the
resolution of this case and in making a declaration that will have
unintended yet deleterious consequences. The Court must not arbitrarily
declare a law unconstitutional just to save a single individual from the
unavoidable consequences of his transgression of the Constitution, even
if it be unintentional and done in good faith.
The respondent holds two
incompatible offices
in violation of the Constitution
incompatible offices
in violation of the Constitution
Section 13, Article VI of the Constitution explicitly
provides that "no Senator or Member of the House of Representatives may
hold any other office or employment in the government, or any
subdivision, agency or instrumentality thereof, including [GOCCs] or
their subsidiaries, during his term without forfeiting his seat."36 In Adaza v. Pacana, Jr.,37 the Court, construing a parallel provision in the 1973 Constitution, has ruled that—
The language used in the above-cited section is
plain, certain and free from ambiguity. The only exceptions mentioned
therein are the offices of prime minister and cabinet member. The wisdom
or expediency of the said provision is a matter which is not within the
province of the Court to determine.
A public office is a public trust. It is created for
the interest and the benefit of the people. As such, a holder thereof
"is subject to such regulations and conditions as the law may impose"
and "he cannot complain of any restrictions which public policy may
dictate on his holding of more than one office." It is therefore of no
avail to petitioner that the system of government in other states allows
a local elective official to act as an elected member of the parliament
at the same time. The dictate of the people in whom legal sovereignty
lies is explicit. It provides no exceptions save the two offices
specifically cited in the above-quoted constitutional provision. Thus,
while it may be said that within the purely parliamentary system of
government no incompatibility exists in the nature of the two offices
under consideration, as incompatibility is understood in common law, the
incompatibility herein present is one created by no less than the
constitution itself. In the case at bar, there is no question that
petitioner has taken his oath of office as an elected Mambabatas
Pambansa and has been discharging his duties as such. In the light of
the oft-mentioned constitutional provision, this fact operated to vacate
his former post and he cannot now continue to occupy the same, nor
attempt to discharge its functions.38
There is no doubt that the language in Section 13,
Article VI is unambiguous; it requires no in-depth construction.
However, as the constitutional provision is worded at present, the then
recognized exception adverted to in Adaza, i.e., offices of prime
minister and cabinet member, no longer holds true given the reversion to
the presidential system and a bicameral Congress in the 1987
Constitution. There remains, however, a single exception to the rule.
Civil Liberties Union v. Executive Secretary,39 reiterated in the fairly recent Public Interest Center, Inc. v. Elma,40
recognizes that a position held in an ex officio capacity does not
violate the constitutional proscription on the holding of multiple
offices. Interpreting the equivalent section in Article VII on the
Executive Department,41 the Court has decreed in Civil Liberties that—
The prohibition against holding dual or multiple
offices or employment under Section 13, Article VII of the Constitution
must not, however, be construed as applying to posts occupied by the
Executive officials specified therein without additional compensation in
an ex officio capacity as provided by law and as required by the
primary functions of said officials’ office. The reason is that these
posts do not comprise "any other office" within the contemplation of the
constitutional prohibition but are properly an imposition of additional
duties and functions on said officials. x x x
x x x x
x x x x The term ex officio means "from office; by
virtue of office." It refers to an "authority derived from official
character merely, not expressly conferred upon the individual character,
but rather annexed to the official position." Ex officio likewise
denotes an "act done in an official character, or as a consequence of
office, and without any other appointment or authority other than that
conferred by the office." An ex officio member of a board is one who is a
member by virtue of his title to a certain office, and without further
warrant or appointment. x x x
x x x x
The ex officio position being actually and in legal
contemplation part of the principal office, it follows that the official
concerned has no right to receive additional compensation for his
services in the said position. The reason is that these services are
already paid for and covered by the compensation attached to his
principal office. x x x42
In the instant case, therefore, we must decide
whether the respondent holds the chairmanship of PNRC in an ex officio
capacity. Presidential Decree (P.D.) No. 1264, amending R.A. No. 95,
provides for the composition of the governing authority of the PNRC and
the manner of their appointment or election, thus:
Section 6. The governing powers and authority shall
be vested in a Board of Governors composed of thirty members, six of
whom shall be appointed by the President of the Philippines, eighteen
shall be elected by chapter delegates in biennial conventions and the
remaining six shall be elected by the twenty-four members of the Board
already chosen. At least one but not more than three of the Presidential
appointees shall be chosen from the Armed Forces of the Philippines.
a. The term of office of all members of the board of
Governors shall be four years. Any member of the Board of Governor who
has served two consecutive full terms of four years each shall be
ineligible for membership on the Board for at least two years; any term
served to cover unexpired terms of office of any governor will not be
considered in this prohibition in serving two consecutive full terms,
and provided, however, that terms served for more than two years shall
be considered a full term.
b. Vacancies in the Board of Governors caused by
death or resignation shall be filled by election by the Board of
Governors at its next meeting, except that vacancies among the
Presidential appointees shall be filled by the President.
Section 7. The President of the Philippines shall be
the Honorary President of the Philippine National Red Cross. The
officers shall consist of a Chairman, a Vice-Chairman, a Secretary, a
Treasurer, a Counselor, an Assistant Secretary and an Assistant
Treasurer, all of whom shall be elected by the Board of Governors from
among its membership for a term of two years and may be re-elected. The
election of officers shall take place within sixty days after all the
members of the Board of Governors have been chosen and have qualified.
Nowhere does it say in the law that a member of the
Senate can sit in an ex officio capacity as chairman of the PNRC Board
of Governors. Chairmanship of the PNRC Board is neither an extension of
the legislative position nor is it in aid of legislative duties.43
Likewise, the position is neither derived from one being a member of
the Senate nor is it annexed to the Senatorial position. Stated
differently, the PNRC chairmanship does not flow from one’s election as
Senator of the Republic. Applying Civil Liberties, we can then conclude
that the chairmanship of the PNRC Board is not held in an ex officio
capacity by a member of Congress.
The fact that the PNRC Chairman of the Board is not appointed by the President44 and the fact that the former does not receive any compensation45
do not at all give the said position an ex officio character such that
the occupant thereof becomes exempt from the constitutional proscription
on the holding of multiple offices. As held in Public Interest Center,
the absence of additional compensation being received by virtue of the
second post is not enough, what matters is that the second post is held
by virtue of the functions of the first office and is exercised in an ex
officio capacity.46
Hence, Senator Gordon, in assuming the chairmanship of the PNRC Board
of Governors while being a member of the Senate, is clearly violating
Section 13, Article VI of the Constitution. While we can only
hypothesize on the extent of the incompatibility between the two
offices—as stated in petitioners’ memorandum, Senator Gordon’s holding
of both offices may result in a divided focus of his legislative
functions, and in a conflict of interest as when a possible amendment of
the PNRC Charter is lobbied in Congress or when the PNRC and its
officials become subjects of legislative inquiries.47
Let it be stressed that, as in Adaza, the incompatibility herein
present is one created by no less than the Constitution itself.48
I hasten to add that Senator Gordon’s chairmanship of
the PNRC Board cannot be likened to the membership of several
legislators in the Legislative-Executive Development Advisory Council,
in the Council of State, in the Board of Regents of state universities,
and in the Judiciary, Executive and Legislative Advisory and
Consultative Council, because, in these bodies, the membership of the
legislators is held in an ex officio capacity or as an extension of
their legislative functions.49
IN VIEW OF THE FOREGOING, I vote to GRANT the petition.ANTONIO EDUARDO B. NACHURA
Footnotes
2
See Del Rosario v. Montaña, G.R. No. 134433, May 28, 2004, 430 SCRA
109, 116; Del Mar v. Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp., 400 Phil.
307, 326-327; Sen. Defensor-Santiago v. Guingona, Jr., 359 Phil. 276,
295-296 (1998).
3 G.R. No. 170338, December 23, 2008.4 G.R. No. 168338, February 15, 2008, 545 SCRA 441.
5 Id.
6
Garcillano v. the House of Representatives Committees on Public
Information, Public Order and Safety, National Defense and Security,
Information and Communications Technology, and Suffrage and Electoral
Reforms, supra note 3.
7 <http://www.redcross.org.ph/Site/PNRC/History.aspx> (visited July 9, 2009).
8 <http://www.icrc.org/ihl.nsf/INTRO/120?OpenDocument> (visited July 9, 2009).
9 Supra note 7.
10 Entitled "An Act To Incorporate the Philippine National Red Cross."
11 464 Phil. 439 (2004).12 Id. at 454-455; citations omitted and emphasis supplied.
13 Id. at 455.
14
The amendatory laws are Republic Act No. 855 (January 11, 1953),
Republic Act No. 6373 (August 16, 1971) and Presidential Decree No. 1264
(December 15, 1977).
15 370 Phil. 901, 906 (1999).16 382 Phil. 131 (2000)
17 Id. at 136-137.
18 Emphasis supplied.
19 377 Phil. 1019 (1999).
20
See for instance Proclamation No. 50, which categorized GOCCs into
parent and subsidiary corporations, cited in Philippine National
Construction Corporation v. Pabion, et al., supra.
21 See also the definition of a GOCC in Section 2(a) of Administrative Order No. 59 (December 5, 1988), which provides:
(a) Government-owned and/or controlled corporation,
hereinafter referred to as GOCC or government corporation, is a
corporation which is created by special law or organized under the
Corporation Code in which the Government, directly or indirectly, has
ownership of the majority of the capital or has voting control; Provided
that an acquired asset corporation as defined in the next paragraph
shall not be considered as GOCC or government corporation."
23 Emphasis supplied.
24 See Section 4(c) of R.A. No. 95, as amended.
25 <http://www.redcross.org/portal/site/en/menuitem.86f46a12f382290517a8f210b80f78a0/?vgnextoi
d=271a2aebdaadb110VgnVCM10000089f0870aRCRD> (visited July 9, 2009).
26 385 U.S. 355, 358-360; 87 S.Ct. 464, 467 (1966).27 Id.
28 829 F.Supp. 1290, 1311 (1993)
29 826 F.Supp. 412, 413-414 (1993).
30 Supre note 27.
31 43 F.3d 678 91994); 516 U.S. 822 (1995); 516 U.S. 1002, 116 S.Ct. 550 (1995).
32 Section 16, Article XII, Philippine Constitution.
33 Beltran v. Secretary of Health, G.R. Nos. 133640, 133661 and 139147, November 25, 2005, 476 SCRA 168, 199.
34 Perez v. People, G.R. No. 164763, February 12, 2008, 544 SCRA 532, 565.
35 G.R. No. 150974, June 29, 2007, 526 SCRA 1, 8.36 The full text of the provision reads:
"Section 13. No Senator or Member of the House of
Representatives may hold any other office or employment in the
government, or any subdivision, agency or instrumentality thereof,
including government-owned or controlled corporations or their
subsidiaries, during his term without forfeiting his seat. Neither shall
he be appointed to any office which may have been created or the
emoluments thereof increased during the term for which he was elected."
38 Id. at 434-435; emphasis supplied.
39 G.R. No. 83896, February 22, 1991, 194 SCRA 317.
40 G.R. No. 138965, June 30, 2006, 494 SCRA 53, 63-64.
41 Section 13, Article VII of the Constitution provides in full:
"Section 13. The President, Vice-President, the
Members of the Cabinet, and their deputies or assistants shall not,
unless otherwise provided in this Constitution, hold any other office or
employment during their tenure. They shall not, during said tenure,
directly or indirectly, practice any other profession, participate in
any business, or be financially interested in any contract with, or in
any franchise, or special privilege granted by the Government or any
subdivision, agency or instrumentality thereof, including
government-owned or controlled corporations or their subsidiaries. They
shall strictly avoid conflict of interest in the conduct of their
office.
"The spouse and relatives by consanguinity or
affinity within the fourth civil degree of the President shall not
during his tenure be appointed as Members of the Constitutional
Commissions, or the Office of the Ombudsman, or as Secretaries,
Undersecretaries, chairmen or head of bureaus or offices, including
government-owned or controlled corporations and their subsidiaries."
42 Civil Liberties Union v. Executive Secretary, supra note 5, at 331-335; emphasis supplied.
43 See Cruz, Philippine Political Law, 1998 ed., p. 129.44 See Section 7 of P.D. No. 1264.
45 Section 10 of P.D. No. 1264 provides:
"Section 10. The members of the Board of Governors,
as well as the officers of the corporation, shall serve without
compensation. The compensation of the paid staff of the corporation
shall be determined by the Board of Governors upon the recommendation of
the Secretary General."
47 Rollo, p. 28.
48 Adaza v. Pacana, Jr., supra note 3.
49
See R.A. No. 7640, Executive Order (E.O.) No. 305, Series of 1987; R.A.
No. 8292, R.A. No. 9500, and the JELAC Memorandum of Agreement
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