SPECIAL
FIRST DIVISION
[G.R. No. 145368. July 1, 2002]
SALVADOR H. LAUREL, petitioner,
vs. HON. ANIANO A. DESIERTO, in his capacity as Ombudsman, respondent.
R E S O L U T I O N
KAPUNAN, J.:
Petitioner
Salvador H. Laurel moves for a reconsideration of this Court’s decision
declaring him, as Chair of the National Centennial Commission (NCC), a public
officer. Petitioner also prays that the case be referred to the Court En
Banc.
First,
petitioner points out that the decision has “serious constitutional
repercussions”[1] because
the composition of the NCC included members of the Cabinet, the Senate, the
House of Representatives and the Supreme Court,[2] who are
prohibited by the Constitution from holding any other office during their term
or tenure.[3]
In connection,
the Court, in its decision, allegedly disregarded the pronouncement in Manila
Electric Co. vs. Panay Transportation Co.[4] that the
“Supreme Court and its members should not and cannot be required to exercise
any power or to perform any trust or to assume any duty not pertaining to or
connected with the administering of judicial functions.”[5]
These arguments
are irrelevant. The issue in this case is whether petitioner, as Chair of the
NCC, is a public officer under the jurisdiction of the Ombudsman. Assuming, as
petitioner proposes, that the designation of other members to the NCC runs
counter to the Constitution, it does not make petitioner, as NCC Chair, less a
public officer. Such “serious constitutional repercussions” do not reduce the
force of the rationale behind this Court’s decision.
Second,
petitioner invokes estoppel. He claims that the official acts of the President,
the Senate President, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and the
Supreme Court, in designating Cabinet members, Senators, Congressmen and
Justices to the NCC, led him to believe that the NCC is not a public office.[6]
The contention
has no merit. In estoppel, the party representing material facts must have the
intention that the other party would act upon the representation.[7] It is
preposterous to suppose that the President, the Senate President, the Speaker
and the Supreme Court, by the designation of such officials to the NCC,
intended to mislead petitioner just so he would accept the position of NCC
Chair. Estoppel must be unequivocal and intentional.[8] Moreover,
petitioner himself admits that the principle of estoppel does not operate
against the Government in the exercise of its sovereign powers.[9]
Third, as ground
for the referral of the case to the Court En Banc, petitioner
submits that our decision in this case modified or reversed doctrines rendered
by this Court, which can only be done by the Court En Banc.
It is argued
that by designating three of its then incumbent members to the NCC, the Court
took the position that the NCC was not a public office.[10] The
argument is a bit of a stretch. Section 4 (3), Article VIII of the Constitution
provides that “no doctrine or principle of law laid down by the court in a
decision rendered en banc or in division may be modified or reversed
except by the court sitting en banc.” In designating three of its
incumbent members to the NCC, the Court did not render a “decision,” in the
context of said constitutional provision, which contemplates an actual case.
Much less did the Court, by such designation, articulate any “doctrine or
principle of law.”
Invoking the
same provision, petitioner asserts[11] that the
decision in this case reversed or modified Macalino vs. Sandiganbayan,[12] holding
that the Assistant Manager of the Treasury Division and the Head of the Loans
Administration & Insurance Section of the Philippine National Construction
Corporation (PNCC) is not a public officer under Republic Act No. 3019. This
contention also has no merit. The rationale for the ruling in Macalino is
that “the PNCC has no original charter as it was incorporated under the general
law on corporations.” However, as we pointed out in our decision, a conclusion
that EXPOCORP is a government-owned or controlled corporation would not alter
the outcome of this case because petitioner’s position and functions as Chief
Executive Officer of EXPOCORP are by virtue of his being Chairman of the NCC.
The other issues raised by petitioner are mere reiterations of his earlier
arguments. The Court, however, remains unswayed thereby.
ACCORDINGLY, the motion for reconsideration and
referral to the Court En Banc is DENIED. This denial is final.
Puno, and Ynares-Santiago, JJ., concur.
Davide, Jr.,
C.J., (Chairman), no part, due to close relationship to a party.
Austria-Martinez,
J., no
part.
[1] Rollo, pp.
562-564.
[2] Section 1 of Executive Order No. 128 (Reconstituting
the Committee for the Preparation of the National Centennial Celebrations in
1998) provides:
The
Committee for the Preparation of the National Centennial Celebrations in 1998
shall hereinafter be called the National Centennial Commission. It is hereby
reconstituted to be composed of the following:
(a) Former Vice-President Salvador H.
Laurel;
(b) Secretary of Education, Culture and Sports;
(c) Secretary of National Defense;
(d) Secretary of the Interior and Local Government;
(e) Secretary of Tourism;
(f) Secretary of Trade and Industry;
(g) Secretary of Public Works and Highways;
(h) Secretary of Transportation and Communications;
(i) Secretary of Budget and Management;
(j) Press Secretary;
(k) Two representatives each from the Senate and the House of
Representatives to be designated by the Senate President
and Speaker of the House;
(1) Two (2) representatives from the Judiciary to he designated
by the Chief Justice;
(m) The Executive Director of the National Historical Institute;
(n) Three (3) representatives from the National Commission for
Culture and Arts;
(o) Three (3) representatives from the Philippine Centennial
Foundation, Inc.; and
(p) Other members from the government and the private sectors, as
may be designated later.
The Chairman of the
Commission shall be former Vice-President Salvador H. Laurel. The President
shall designate the Vice-Chairman and the private sector members of the
Commission.
The Honorary Chairpersons of
the Commission shall be former Presidents Diosdado M. Macapagal and Corazon C.
Aquino.
[3] Section 13, Article VI:
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. x x x.
Section 13, Article VII:
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. x x x.
Section 12, Article VIII:
The Members of the Supreme
Court and of other courts established by law shall not be designated to any
agency performing quasi-judicial or administrative functions.
[4] 57 Phil. 500 (1932).
[5] Rollo, pp.
569-570.
[6] Id., at
564-566.
[7] See Metropolitan Bank &Trust Company vs. Court of
Appeals, 333 SCRA 212 (2000).
[8] Manila Memorial Park Cemetery, Inc. vs. Court
of Appeals, 344 SCRA 769 (2000).
[9] Rollo, pp.
565-566.
[10] Id., pp.
566-569.
[11] Id., at 561-562,
571-572, 595-599.
[12] G.R. Nos. 140 199-200, February 6, 2002.