Republic of the EN BANC
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CHINA NATIONAL MACHINERY & EQUIPMENT CORP. (GROUP),
Petitioner, versus HON. CESAR D. SANTAMARIA, in his official capacity
as Presiding Judge of Branch 145, Regional Trial Court of Makati City,
HERMINIO HARRY L. ROQUE, JR., JOEL R. BUTUYAN, ROGER R. RAYEL, ROMEL R.
BAGARES, CHRISTOPHER FRANCISCO C. BOLASTIG, LEAGUE OF URBAN POOR FOR ACTION
(LUPA), KILUSAN NG MARALITA SA MEYCAUAYAN (KMM-LUPA CHAPTER), DANILO M.
CALDERON, VICENTE C. ALBAN, MERLYN M. VAAL, LOLITA S. QUINONES, RICARDO D.
LANOZO, JR., CONCHITA G. GOZO, MA. TERESA D. ZEPEDA, JOSEFINA A. LANOZO, and
SERGIO C. LEGASPI, JR., KALIPUNAN NG DAMAYANG MAHIHIRAP (KADAMAY), EDY
CLERIGO, RAMMIL DINGAL, NELSON B. TERRADO, CARMEN DEUNIDA, and EDUARDO LEGSON, Respondents. |
G.R. No. 185572 Present: CARPIO, VELASCO, JR., LEONARDO-DE CASTRO, BRION, PERALTA, BERSAMIN, ABAD, VILLARAMA, JR., PEREZ, SERENO, REYES, and PERLAS-BERNABE, JJ. Promulgated: February 7, 2012 |
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D E C I S I O N
SERENO, J.:
This is a Petition for Review on
Certiorari with Prayer for the Issuance of a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO)
and/or Preliminary Injunction assailing the 30 September 2008 Decision and 5
December 2008 Resolution of the Court of Appeals (CA) in CAG.R. SP No. 103351.[1]
On 14 September 2002, petitioner China National Machinery
& Equipment Corp. (Group) (CNMEG), represented by its chairperson, Ren
Hongbin, entered into a Memorandum of Understanding with the North Luzon
Railways Corporation (Northrail), represented by its president, Jose L. Cortes,
Jr. for the conduct of a feasibility study on a possible railway line from
Manila to San Fernando, La Union (the Northrail Project).[2]
On 30
August 2003, the Export Import Bank of China (EXIM Bank) and the Department of
Finance of the Philippines (DOF) entered into a Memorandum of Understanding
(Aug 30 MOU), wherein China agreed to extend Preferential Buyers Credit to the
Philippine government to finance the Northrail Project.[3] The Chinese government designated
EXIM Bank as the lender, while the Philippine government named the DOF as the
borrower.[4] Under the Aug 30 MOU, EXIM Bank
agreed to extend an amount not exceeding USD 400,000,000 in favor of the DOF,
payable in 20 years, with a 5-year grace period, and at the rate of 3% per
annum.[5]
On 1 October 2003, the Chinese Ambassador to the Philippines,
Wang Chungui (Amb. Wang), wrote a letter to DOF Secretary Jose Isidro Camacho
(Sec. Camacho) informing him of CNMEGs designation as the Prime Contractor for
the Northrail Project.[6]
On 30 December 2003, Northrail and
CNMEG executed a Contract Agreement for the construction of Section I, Phase I
of the North Luzon Railway System from Caloocan to Malolos on a turnkey basis
(the Contract Agreement).[7] The contract price for the Northrail
Project was pegged at USD 421,050,000.[8]
On 26
February 2004, the Philippine government and EXIM Bank entered into a
counterpart financial agreement Buyer Credit Loan Agreement No. BLA 04055
(the Loan Agreement).[9] In the Loan Agreement, EXIM Bank
agreed to extend Preferential Buyers Credit in the amount of USD 400,000,000
in favor of the Philippine government in order to finance the construction of
Phase I of the Northrail Project.[10]
On 13
February 2006, respondents filed a Complaint for Annulment of Contract and
Injunction with Urgent Motion for Summary Hearing to Determine the Existence of
Facts and Circumstances Justifying the Issuance of Writs of Preliminary
Prohibitory and Mandatory Injunction and/or TRO against CNMEG, the Office of
the Executive Secretary, the DOF, the Department of Budget and Management, the
National Economic Development Authority and Northrail.[11] The case was docketed as Civil Case
No. 06-203 before the Regional Trial Court, National Capital Judicial Region,
Makati City, Branch 145 (RTC Br. 145). In the Complaint, respondents alleged
that the Contract Agreement and the Loan Agreement were void for being contrary
to (a) the Constitution; (b) Republic Act No. 9184 (R.A. No. 9184), otherwise
known as the Government Procurement Reform Act; (c) Presidential Decree No.
1445, otherwise known as the Government Auditing Code; and (d) Executive Order
No. 292, otherwise known as the Administrative Code.[12]
RTC
Br. 145 issued an Order dated 17 March 2006 setting the case for hearing on the
issuance of injunctive reliefs.[13] On 29 March 2006, CNMEG filed an Urgent
Motion for Reconsideration of this Order.[14] Before RTC Br. 145 could rule
thereon, CNMEG filed a Motion to Dismiss dated 12 April 2006, arguing that the
trial court did not have jurisdiction over (a) its person, as it was an agent
of the Chinese government, making it immune from suit, and (b) the subject
matter, as the Northrail Project was a product of an executive agreement.[15]
On 15
May 2007, RTC Br. 145 issued an Omnibus Order denying CNMEGs Motion to Dismiss
and setting the case for summary hearing to determine whether the injunctive
reliefs prayed for should be issued.[16] CNMEG then filed a Motion for
Reconsideration,[17] which was denied by the trial court
in an Order dated 10 March 2008.[18] Thus, CNMEG filed before the CA a
Petition for Certiorari with Prayer for the Issuance of TRO and/or Writ of
Preliminary Injunction dated 4 April 2008.[19]
In the assailed Decision dated 30 September 2008, the
appellate court dismissed the Petition for Certiorari.[20]
Subsequently, CNMEG filed a Motion for Reconsideration,[21] which was
denied by the CA in a Resolution dated 5 December 2008.[22] Thus, CNMEG
filed the instant Petition for Review on Certiorari dated 21 January 2009,
raising the following issues: [23]
Whether or not petitioner CNMEG is an agent of the
sovereign Peoples Republic of
Whether or not the Northrail contracts are products of
an executive agreement between two sovereign states.
Whether or not the certification from the Department
of Foreign Affairs is necessary under the foregoing circumstances.
Whether or not the act being undertaken by petitioner
CNMEG is an act jure imperii.
Whether or not the Court of Appeals failed to avoid a
procedural limbo in the lower court.
Whether or not the Northrail Project is subject to
competitive public bidding.
Whether or not the Court of Appeals ignored the ruling
of this Honorable Court in the Neri case.
CNMEG prays for the dismissal of
Civil Case No. 06-203 before RTC Br. 145 for lack of jurisdiction. It likewise requests
this Court for the issuance of a TRO and, later on, a writ of preliminary
injunction to restrain public respondent from proceeding with the disposition
of Civil Case No. 06-203.
The
crux of this case boils down to two main issues, namely:
1.
Whether
CNMEG is entitled to immunity, precluding it from being sued before a local
court.
2.
Whether
the Contract Agreement is an executive agreement, such that it cannot be
questioned by or before a local court.
First
issue: Whether CNMEG is entitled to immunity
This Court explained the doctrine
of sovereign immunity in Holy See v. Rosario,[24] to wit:
There are two conflicting concepts of sovereign immunity, each widely held and firmly established. According to the classical or absolute theory, a sovereign cannot, without its consent, be made a respondent in the courts of another sovereign. According to the newer or restrictive theory, the immunity of the sovereign is recognized only with regard to public acts or acts jure imperii of a state, but not with regard to private acts or acts jure gestionis. (Emphasis supplied; citations omitted.)
xxx xxx xxx
The restrictive theory came about because of the entry of sovereign states into purely commercial activities remotely connected with the discharge of governmental functions. This is particularly true with respect to the Communist states which took control of nationalized business activities and international trading.
In JUSMAG v. National Labor Relations
Commission,[25] this Court affirmed the Philippines adherence to the restrictive
theory as follows:
The doctrine of state immunity
from suit has undergone further metamorphosis. The view evolved that the
existence of a contract does not, per
se, mean that sovereign states may, at all times, be sued in local courts.
The complexity of relationships between sovereign states, brought about by
their increasing commercial activities, mothered a more restrictive application of the doctrine.
xxx xxx xxx
As it stands now,
the application of the doctrine of immunity from suit has been restricted to sovereign or governmental
activities (jure imperii). The mantle of state immunity cannot be extended to commercial,
private and proprietary acts (jure gestionis).[26] (Emphasis supplied.)
Since the Philippines adheres to
the restrictive theory,
it is crucial to ascertain the legal nature of
the act involved whether the entity claiming immunity performs governmental, as
opposed to proprietary, functions. As held in United States of America v. Ruiz [27]
The restrictive application of State immunity is
proper only when the proceedings arise out of commercial transactions of the foreign
sovereign, its commercial activities or economic affairs. Stated differently, a
State may be said to have descended to the level of an individual and can thus
be deemed to have tacitly given its consent to be sued only when it enters into
business contracts. It does not apply where the contract relates to the
exercise of its sovereign functions.[28]
A.
CNMEG is
engaged in a proprietary activity.
A threshold question that must be answered is whether
CNMEG performs governmental or proprietary functions. A thorough examination of
the basic facts of the case would show that CNMEG is engaged in a proprietary
activity.
The parties executed the Contract Agreement for the purpose of
constructing the Luzon Railways, viz:[29]
WHEREAS the Employer
(Northrail) desired to construct the railways form Caloocan to Malolos, section
I, Phase I of Philippine North Luzon Railways Project (hereinafter referred to
as THE PROJECT);
AND
WHEREAS the Contractor has offered to provide the Project on Turnkey basis,
including design, manufacturing, supply, construction, commissioning, and
training of the Employers personnel;
AND
WHEREAS the Loan Agreement of the Preferential Buyers Credit between
Export-Import Bank of
NOW,
THEREFORE, the parties agree to sign this Contract for the Implementation of
the Project.
The above-cited portion of the Contract Agreement,
however, does not on its own reveal whether the construction of the Luzon
railways was meant to be a proprietary endeavor. In order to fully understand
the intention behind and the purpose of the entire undertaking, the Contract
Agreement must not be read in isolation. Instead, it must be construed in
conjunction with three other documents executed in relation to the Northrail
Project, namely: (a) the Memorandum of Understanding dated 14 September 2002
between Northrail and CNMEG;[30] (b) the
letter of Amb. Wang dated 1 October 2003 addressed to Sec. Camacho;[31] and (c) the
Loan Agreement.[32]
1.
Memorandum of Understanding
dated 14 September 2002
The
Memorandum of Understanding dated 14 September 2002 shows that CNMEG sought the
construction of the Luzon Railways as a proprietary venture. The relevant parts
thereof read:
WHEREAS, CNMEG has the financial capability, professional competence
and technical expertise to assess the state of the [Main Line North (MLN)] and
recommend implementation plans as well as undertake its rehabilitation and/or
modernization;
WHEREAS, CNMEG has expressed
interest in the rehabilitation and/or modernization of the MLN from Metro
Manila to San Fernando, La Union passing through the provinces of Bulacan,
Pampanga, Tarlac, Pangasinan and La Union (the Project);
WHEREAS, the NORTHRAIL CORP. welcomes CNMEGs
proposal to undertake a Feasibility Study (the Study) at no cost to NORTHRAIL
CORP.;
WHEREAS, the
NORTHRAIL CORP. also welcomes CNMEGs interest in undertaking the Project with
Suppliers Credit and intends to employ CNMEG as the Contractor for the Project
subject to compliance with Philippine and Chinese laws, rules and regulations
for the selection of a contractor;
WHEREAS, the NORTHRAIL CORP. considers CNMEGs
proposal advantageous to the Government of the Republic of the
xxx xxx xxx
II. APPROVAL PROCESS
2.1
As soon as
possible after completion and presentation of the Study in accordance with
Paragraphs 1.3 and 1.4 above and in compliance with necessary governmental
laws, rules, regulations and procedures required from both parties, the parties
shall commence the preparation and negotiation of the terms and conditions of
the Contract (the Contract) to be entered into between them on the
implementation of the Project. The
parties shall use their best endeavors to formulate and finalize a Contract
with a view to signing the Contract within one hundred twenty (120) days from
CNMEGs presentation of the Study.[33] (Emphasis supplied)
Clearly, it was CNMEG that initiated the undertaking,
and not the Chinese government. The Feasibility Study was conducted not because
of any diplomatic gratuity from or exercise of sovereign functions by the
Chinese government, but was plainly a business strategy employed by CNMEG with
a view to securing this commercial enterprise.
2.
Letter dated 1 October 2003
That CNMEG, and not the Chinese government, initiated the Northrail Project was confirmed by Amb. Wang in his letter dated 1 October 2003,
thus:
1.
CNMEG has
the proven competence and capability to undertake the Project as evidenced by
the ranking of 42 given by the ENR among 225 global construction companies.
2.
CNMEG
already signed an MOU with the North Luzon Railways Corporation last September 14,
2000 during the visit of Chairman Li Peng. Such being the case, they have
already established an initial working relationship with your North Luzon
Railways Corporation. This would
categorize CNMEG as the state corporation within the Peoples Republic of China
which initiated our Governments involvement in the Project.
3.
Among the
various state corporations of the Peoples Republic of
Thus, the desire of CNMEG to secure the Northrail
Project was in the ordinary or regular course of its business as a global
construction company. The implementation of
the Northrail Project was intended to generate profit for CNMEG, with the
Contract Agreement placing a contract price of USD 421,050,000 for the venture.[35] The use of the term state corporation to refer to CNMEG was only
descriptive of its nature as a government-owned and/or -controlled corporation,
and its assignment as the Primary Contractor did not imply that it was acting
on behalf of China in the performance of the latters sovereign functions. To
imply otherwise would result in an absurd situation, in which all Chinese
corporations owned by the state would be automatically considered as performing
governmental activities, even if they are clearly engaged in commercial or
proprietary pursuits.
3.
The Loan
Agreement
CNMEG claims immunity on the
ground that the Aug 30 MOU on the financing of the Northrail Project was signed
by the Philippine and Chinese governments, and its assignment as the Primary
Contractor meant that it was bound to perform a governmental function on behalf
of
Article 11. xxx (j) Commercial
Activity The execution and delivery of this Agreement by the Borrower
constitute, and the Borrowers performance of and compliance with its
obligations under this Agreement will constitute, private and commercial acts done and performed for commercial purposes
under the laws of the Republic of the Philippines and neither the Borrower nor
any of its assets is entitled to any immunity or privilege (sovereign or
otherwise) from suit, execution or any other legal process with respect to its
obligations under this Agreement, as the case may be, in any jurisdiction.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Borrower does not waive any immunity with
respect of its assets which are (i) used by a diplomatic or consular mission of
the Borrower and (ii) assets of a military character and under control of a
military authority or defense agency and (iii) located in the Philippines and
dedicated to public or governmental use (as distinguished from patrimonial
assets or assets dedicated to commercial use). (Emphasis supplied.)
(k) Proceedings to
Enforce Agreement In any proceeding
in the Republic of the
Further, the Loan Agreement likewise contains
this express waiver of immunity:
15.5 Waiver of Immunity The Borrower irrevocably and unconditionally
waives, any immunity to which it or its property may at any time be or become
entitled, whether characterized as sovereign immunity or otherwise, from any
suit, judgment, service of process upon it or any agent, execution on judgment,
set-off, attachment prior to judgment, attachment in aid of execution to which
it or its assets may be entitled in any legal action or proceedings with
respect to this Agreement or any of the transactions contemplated hereby or
hereunder. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Borrower does not waive any
immunity in respect of its assets which are (i) used by a diplomatic or
consular mission of the Borrower, (ii) assets of a military character and under
control of a military authority or defense agency and (iii) located in the
Philippines and dedicated to a public or governmental use (as distinguished
from patrimonial assets or assets dedicated to commercial use).[37]
Thus, despite petitioners claim that the EXIM Bank extended financial
assistance to Northrail because the bank was mandated by the Chinese
government, and not because of any motivation to do business in the
Philippines,[38] it is clear from the foregoing provisions that the Northrail Project
was a purely commercial transaction.
Admittedly, the Loan Agreement
was entered into between EXIM Bank and the Philippine government, while the
Contract Agreement was between Northrail and CNMEG. Although the Contract
Agreement is silent on the classification of the legal nature of the
transaction, the foregoing provisions of the Loan Agreement, which is an
inextricable part of the entire undertaking, nonetheless reveal the intention
of the parties to the Northrail Project to classify the whole venture as
commercial or proprietary in character.
Thus, piecing together the content and tenor of the
Contract Agreement, the Memorandum of Understanding dated 14 September 2002,
Amb. Wangs letter dated 1 October 2003, and the Loan Agreement would reveal
the desire of CNMEG to construct the Luzon Railways in pursuit of a purely commercial
activity performed in the ordinary course of its business.
B.
CNMEG
failed to adduce evidence that it is immune from suit under Chinese law.
Even assuming arguendo that CNMEG performs governmental functions,
such claim does not automatically vest it with immunity. This view finds
support in Malong v. Philippine National
Railways, in which this Court held
that (i)mmunity from suit is determined by the character of the objects for
which the entity was organized.[39]
In this regard, this
Courts ruling in Deutsche Gesellschaft Fr Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ) v. CA[40] must be examined. In
The
arguments raised by GTZ and the [Office of the Solicitor General (OSG)] are
rooted in several indisputable facts. The SHINE project was implemented pursuant
to the bilateral agreements between the Philippine and German governments. GTZ
was tasked, under the 1991 agreement, with the implementation of the
contributions of the German government. The activities performed by GTZ
pertaining to the SHINE project are governmental in nature, related as
they are to the promotion of health insurance in the
Certainly, the mere entering into a contract by a foreign state with a private party cannot be the ultimate test. Such an act can only be the start of the inquiry. The logical question is whether the foreign state is engaged in the activity in the regular course of business. If the foreign state is not engaged regularly in a business or trade, the particular act or transaction must then be tested by its nature. If the act is in pursuit of a sovereign activity, or an incident thereof, then it is an act jure imperii, especially when it is not undertaken for gain or profit.
Beyond dispute is the tenability of the comment
points (sic) raised by GTZ and the OSG that GTZ was not performing
proprietary functions notwithstanding its entry into the particular
employment contracts. Yet there is an equally fundamental premise which GTZ and
the OSG fail to address, namely: Is GTZ, by conception, able to enjoy the
The principle of state immunity from suit, whether a local state or a foreign state, is reflected in Section 9, Article XVI of the Constitution, which states that the State may not be sued without its consent. Who or what consists of the State? For one, the doctrine is available to foreign States insofar as they are sought to be sued in the courts of the local State, necessary as it is to avoid unduly vexing the peace of nations.
If the instant suit had been brought directly against the Federal Republic of Germany, there would be no doubt that it is a suit brought against a State, and the only necessary inquiry is whether said State had consented to be sued. However, the present suit was brought against GTZ. It is necessary for us to understand what precisely are the parameters of the legal personality of GTZ.
Counsel for GTZ characterizes GTZ as the
implementing agency of the Government of the Federal Republic of Germany, a
depiction similarly adopted by the OSG. Assuming that the characterization is
correct, it does not automatically invest GTZ with the ability to invoke State
immunity from suit. The distinction lies in whether the
agency is incorporated or unincorporated.
xxx xxx xxx
State immunity from suit may be waived by general or special law. The special law can take the form of the original charter of the incorporated government agency. Jurisprudence is replete with examples of incorporated government agencies which were ruled not entitled to invoke immunity from suit, owing to provisions in their charters manifesting their consent to be sued.
xxx xxx xxx
It is useful to note that on the part of the Philippine government, it
had designated two entities, the Department of Health and the Philippine Health
Insurance Corporation (PHIC), as the implementing agencies in behalf of the
Philippines. The PHIC was established under Republic Act No. 7875, Section 16
(g) of which grants the corporation the power to sue and be sued in court.
Applying the previously cited jurisprudence, PHIC would not enjoy immunity from
suit even in the performance of its functions connected with SHINE, however,
(sic) governmental in nature as (sic) they may be.
Is GTZ an incorporated agency of the German government? There is some mystery surrounding that question. Neither GTZ nor the OSG go beyond the claim that petitioner is the implementing agency of the Government of the Federal Republic of Germany. On the other hand, private respondents asserted before the Labor Arbiter that GTZ was a private corporation engaged in the implementation of development projects. The Labor Arbiter accepted that claim in his Order denying the Motion to Dismiss, though he was silent on that point in his Decision. Nevertheless, private respondents argue in their Comment that the finding that GTZ was a private corporation was never controverted, and is therefore deemed admitted. In its Reply, GTZ controverts that finding, saying that it is a matter of public knowledge that the status of petitioner GTZ is that of the implementing agency, and not that of a private corporation.
In truth, private respondents were unable to
adduce any evidence to substantiate their claim that GTZ was a private
corporation, and the Labor Arbiter acted rashly in accepting such claim
without explanation. But neither
has GTZ supplied any evidence defining its legal nature beyond that of the bare
descriptive implementing agency. There is no doubt that the 1991 Agreement
designated GTZ as the implementing agency in behalf of the German government.
Yet the catch is that such term has no precise definition that is responsive to
our concerns. Inherently, an agent acts in behalf of a principal, and the GTZ can
be said to act in behalf of the German state. But that is as far as
implementing agency could take us. The term by itself does not supply whether
GTZ is incorporated or unincorporated, whether it is owned by the German state
or by private interests, whether it has juridical personality independent of
the German government or none at all.
xxx xxx xxx
Again, we are uncertain
of the corresponding legal implications under German law surrounding a private
company owned by the Federal Republic of Germany. Yet taking the description
on face value, the apparent equivalent under Philippine law is that of a
corporation organized under the Corporation Code but owned by the Philippine
government, or a government-owned or controlled corporation without original
charter. And it bears notice that Section 36 of the Corporate Code states that
[e]very corporation incorporated under this Code has the power and capacity x
x x to sue and be sued in its corporate name.
It is entirely possible that under German law, an
entity such as GTZ or particularly GTZ itself has not been vested or has been
specifically deprived the power and capacity to sue and/or be sued. Yet in the
proceedings below and before this Court, GTZ has failed to establish that under German law, it has not consented
to be sued despite it being owned by the Federal Republic of Germany. We adhere
to the rule that in the absence of evidence to the contrary, foreign laws on a
particular subject are presumed to be the same as those of the Philippines, and following the most
intelligent assumption we can gather, GTZ is akin to a governmental owned or
controlled corporation without original charter which, by virtue of the
Corporation Code, has expressly consented to be sued. At the very least, like the Labor Arbiter and the
Court of Appeals, this Court has no basis in fact to conclude or presume that
GTZ enjoys immunity from suit.[41]
(Emphasis supplied.)
Applying the foregoing ruling to the case at
bar, it is readily apparent that CNMEG cannot claim immunity from suit, even if
it contends that it performs governmental functions. Its designation as the
Primary Contractor does not automatically grant it immunity, just as the term
implementing agency has no precise definition for purposes of ascertaining
whether GTZ was immune from suit. Although CNMEG claims to be a
government-owned corporation, it failed to adduce evidence that it has not
consented to be sued under Chinese law. Thus, following this Courts ruling in Deutsche Gesellschaft, in the absence of
evidence to the contrary, CNMEG is to be presumed to be a government-owned and
-controlled corporation without an original charter. As a result, it has the
capacity to sue and be sued under Section 36 of the Corporation Code.
C.
CNMEG
failed to present a certification from the Department of Foreign Affairs.
In Holy See,[42] this Court reiterated the oft-cited doctrine that the determination by
the Executive that an entity is entitled to sovereign or diplomatic immunity is
a political question conclusive upon the courts, to wit:
In Public
International Law, when a state or international agency wishes to plead
sovereign or diplomatic immunity in a foreign court, it requests the Foreign Office of the state where it is sued to convey to
the court that said defendant is entitled to immunity.
xxx xxx xxx
In the
In the case at bench, the Department of Foreign Affairs, through the Office of Legal Affairs moved with this Court to be allowed to intervene on the side of petitioner. The Court allowed the said Department to file its memorandum in support of petitioners claim of sovereign immunity.
In some cases, the defense of sovereign immunity was submitted directly to the local courts by the respondents through their private counsels (Raquiza v. Bradford, 75 Phil. 50 [1945]; Miquiabas v. Philippine-Ryukyus Command, 80 Phil. 262 [1948]; United States of America v. Guinto, 182 SCRA 644 [1990] and companion cases). In cases where the foreign states bypass the Foreign Office, the courts can inquire into the facts and make their own determination as to the nature of the acts and transactions involved.[43] (Emphasis supplied.)
The question now is whether any
agency of the Executive Branch can make a determination of immunity from suit,
which may be considered as conclusive upon the courts. This Court, in Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) v.
National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC),[44] emphasized the DFAs competence and authority to provide such
necessary determination, to wit:
The DFAs function includes,
among its other mandates, the determination of persons and institutions covered
by diplomatic immunities, a determination which, when challenge, (sic) entitles
it to seek relief from the court so as not to seriously impair the conduct of
the country's foreign relations. The DFA must be allowed to
plead its case whenever necessary or advisable to enable it to help keep the
credibility of the Philippine government before the international community. When international agreements are
concluded, the parties thereto are deemed to have likewise accepted the
responsibility of seeing to it that their agreements are duly regarded. In our
country, this task falls principally of (sic) the DFA as being the highest
executive department with the competence and authority to so act in this aspect
of the international arena.[45] (Emphasis
supplied.)
Further, the fact that this
authority is exclusive to the DFA
was also emphasized in this Courts ruling in Deutsche Gesellschaft:
It is to be recalled that the Labor Arbiter, in
both of his rulings, noted that it was imperative for petitioners to secure from
the Department of Foreign Affairs a certification of respondents diplomatic
status and entitlement to diplomatic privileges including immunity from suits. The
requirement might not necessarily be imperative. However, had GTZ obtained such certification from the DFA, it would have
provided factual basis for its claim of immunity that would, at the very least,
establish a disputable evidentiary presumption that the foreign party is indeed
immune which the opposing party will have to overcome with its own factual
evidence. We do not see why GTZ could not have secured such certification or
endorsement from the DFA for purposes of this case. Certainly, it would
have been highly prudential for GTZ to obtain the same after the Labor Arbiter
had denied the motion to dismiss. Still, even at this juncture, we do not see any evidence that the DFA,
the office of the executive branch in charge of our diplomatic relations, has
indeed endorsed GTZs claim of immunity. It may be possible that GTZ tried,
but failed to secure such certification, due to the same concerns that we have
discussed herein.
Would the fact that the Solicitor General has endorsed GTZs claim of States immunity from suit before this Court sufficiently substitute for the DFA certification? Note that the rule in public international law quoted in Holy See referred to endorsement by the Foreign Office of the State where the suit is filed, such foreign office in the Philippines being the Department of Foreign Affairs. Nowhere in the Comment of the OSG is it manifested that the DFA has endorsed GTZs claim, or that the OSG had solicited the DFAs views on the issue. The arguments raised by the OSG are virtually the same as the arguments raised by GTZ without any indication of any special and distinct perspective maintained by the Philippine government on the issue. The Comment filed by the OSG does not inspire the same degree of confidence as a certification from the DFA would have elicited.[46] (Emphasis supplied.)
In the case at bar, CNMEG offers the Certification executed by the
Economic and Commercial Office of the Embassy of the Peoples Republic of
China, stating that the Northrail Project is in pursuit of a sovereign
activity.[47] Surely, this is not the kind of certification that can establish
CNMEGs entitlement to immunity from suit, as Holy See unequivocally refers to the determination of the Foreign
Office of the state where it is sued.
Further, CNMEG also claims that its immunity from suit has the
executive endorsement of both the OSG and the Office of the Government
Corporate Counsel (OGCC), which must be respected by the courts. However, as
expressly enunciated in Deutsche
Gesellschaft, this determination
by the OSG, or by the OGCC for that matter, does not inspire the same degree of
confidence as a DFA certification. Even with a DFA certification, however, it
must be remembered that this Court is not precluded from making an inquiry into
the intrinsic correctness of such certification.
D.
An
agreement to submit any dispute to arbitration may be construed as an implicit
waiver of immunity from suit.
In the
The Conditions of Contract,[48] which is an integral part of the Contract Agreement,[49] states:
33.
SETTLEMENT OF DISPUTES AND ARBITRATION
33.1. Amicable Settlement
Both parties shall attempt
to amicably settle all disputes or controversies arising from this Contract
before the commencement of arbitration.
33.2. Arbitration
All disputes or
controversies arising from this Contract which cannot be settled between the
Employer and the Contractor shall be submitted to arbitration in accordance
with the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules at present in force and as may be amended
by the rest of this Clause. The appointing authority shall be
Under the
above provisions, if any dispute arises between Northrail and CNMEG, both
parties are bound to submit the matter to the HKIAC for arbitration. In case
the HKIAC makes an arbitral award in favor of Northrail, its enforcement in the
From all the foregoing, it is
clear that CNMEG has agreed that it will not be afforded immunity from suit.
Thus, the courts have the competence and jurisdiction to ascertain the validity
of the Contract Agreement.
Second issue: Whether the Contract
Agreement is an executive agreement
Article 2(1) of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (Vienna
Convention) defines a treaty as follows:
[A]n international
agreement concluded between States in written form and governed by international
law, whether embodied in a single instrument or in two or more related
instruments and whatever its particular designation.
In Bayan Muna v. Romulo,
this Court held that an executive agreement is similar to a treaty, except that
the former (a) does not require legislative concurrence; (b) is usually less
formal; and (c) deals with a narrower range of subject matters.[50]
Despite
these differences, to be considered an executive agreement, the following three
requisites provided under the Vienna Convention must nevertheless concur: (a)
the agreement must be between states; (b) it must be written; and (c) it must
governed by international law. The first
and the third requisites do not obtain in the case at bar.
A.
CNMEG is neither a government nor a government
agency.
The Contract Agreement was not
concluded between the
Neither can it be said that CNMEG
acted as agent of the Chinese government. As previously discussed, the fact
that Amb. Wang, in his letter dated 1 October 2003,[53] described CNMEG as a state corporation and declared its designation
as the Primary Contractor in the Northrail Project did not mean it was to
perform sovereign functions on behalf of
B.
The Contract Agreement is to be governed by
Philippine law.
Article 2 of the Conditions of Contract,[54] which under Article 1.1 of the Contract Agreement is an integral part
of the latter, states:
APPLICABLE LAW AND GOVERNING LANGUAGE
The contract shall in all respects be read and
construed in accordance with the laws of the
The contract shall be
written in English language. All correspondence and other documents pertaining
to the Contract which are exchanged by the parties shall be written in English
language.
Since the
Contract Agreement explicitly provides that Philippine law shall be applicable,
the parties have effectively conceded that their rights and obligations
thereunder are not governed by international law.
It is therefore clear from the
foregoing reasons that the Contract Agreement does not partake of the nature of
an executive agreement. It is merely an ordinary commercial contract that can
be questioned before the local courts.
WHEREFORE, the instant Petition is DENIED. Petitioner China National Machinery &
Equipment Corp. (Group) is not entitled to immunity from suit, and the Contract Agreement is
not an executive agreement. CNMEGs
prayer for the issuance of a TRO and/or Writ of Preliminary Injunction is DENIED for being moot and
academic. This case is REMANDED to the Regional Trial Court of Makati,
Branch 145, for further proceedings as
regards the validity of the contracts subject of Civil
Case No. 06-203.
No pronouncement on costs of suit.
SO ORDERED.
MARIA LOURDES P. A. SERENO
Associate Justice
WE
CONCUR:
ANTONIO T. CARPIO PRESBITERO J. VELASCO,
JR.
Associate Justice Associate Justice
TERESITA J. LEONARDO-DE CASTRO ARTURO D. BRION
Associate Justice Associate Justice
DIOSDADO
M. PERALTA LUCAS P. BERSAMIN
Associate Justice Associate Justice
(ON LEAVE)
MARIANO C.
DEL CASTILLO ROBERTO A. ABAD
Associate Justice Associate Justice
MARTIN S. VILLARAMA, JR. JOSE PORTUGAL PEREZ
Associate Justice Associate Justice
JOSE
C. MENDOZA BIENVENIDO L.
REYES
Associate Justice Associate Justice
ESTELA M. PERLAS-BERNABE
Associate Justice
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.
RENATO
C. CORONA
Chief Justice
[1] China National Machinery & Equipment Corporation (Group) v. Hon. Cesar D. Santamaria, et al.
[2] Petition, rollo, Vol. I, p. 25; Memorandum of Understanding dated 14 September 2002, rollo, Vol. I, pp. 400-406.
[3] Petition, rollo, Vol. I, pp. 25-26; Memorandum of Understanding dated 30 August 2003, rollo, Vol. I, pp. 308-310, 407-409.
[4] Id.
[5] Memorandum of Understanding dated 30 August 2003, rollo, Vol. I, pp. 308-310, 407-409.
[6] Petition, rollo, Vol. I, p. 26; Letter dated 1 October 2003, rollo, Vol. I, pp. 311-312.
[7] Contract Agreement, rollo, Vol. I, pp. 126-130, 412-414.
[8] Memorandum of Agreement dated December 2003, rollo, Vol. I, pp. 198-201.
[9] Loan Agreement, rollo, Vol. I, pp. 242-282.
[10] Id.
[11] Complaint, rollo, Vol. I, pp. 102-125.
[12] Id.
[13] Order dated 17 March 2006, rollo, Vol. I, pp. 290-291.
[14] Urgent Motion for
Reconsideration, rollo, Vol. I, pp. 292-307
[15] Motion to Dismiss, rollo, Vol. I, pp. 324-369.
[16] Omnibus Order dated 15 May 2007, rollo, Vol. I, pp. 648-658.
[17] Motion for Reconsideration, rollo, Vol. I, pp. 663-695.
[18] Order dated 10 March 2008, rollo, Vol. I, p. 737.
[19] Petition for Certiorari, rollo, Vol. I, pp. 738-792.
[20] CA Decision, rollo, Vol. I, pp. 81-99.
[21] Motion for Reconsideration, rollo, Vol. I, pp. 971-1001.
[22] CA Resolution, rollo, Vol. I, pp. 100-102.
[23] Petition, rollo, Vol. I, pp. 27-28.
[24] G.R. No. 101949, 1 December 1994, 238 SCRA 524, 535.
[25] G.R. No. 108813, 15 December 1994, 239 SCRA 224.
[26] Id. at 231-232.
[27] 221 Phil. 179 (1985).
[28] Id. at 184.
[29] Contract Agreement, rollo, Vol. I, pp. 127, 413.
[30] Supra note 2.
[31] Supra note 6.
[32] Supra note 9.
[33] Supra note 2, at
400-402.
[34] Supra note 6.
[35] Supra note 8.
[36] Supra note 9, at 260-261.
[37] Id. at 268-269.
[38] Petition, rollo, Vol. I, p. 47.
[39] 222 Phil 381, 384 (1985).
[40] G.R. No. 152318, 16 April 2009, 585 SCRA 150.
[41] Id. at 165-173.
[42] Supra note 24.
[43] Id. at 531-533.
[44] 330 Phil 573 (1996).
[45] Id. at 587-588.
[46] Supra note 40, at 174-175.
[47] Petition, rollo, Vol. I, p. 30.
[48] Conditions of Contract, rollo, Vol. I, pp. 202-241, 415-455.
[49] Supra note 7. Clause 1.1 of the Contract Agreement provides:
The following documents shall constitute the Contract between the Employer and the Contractor, and each shall be read and construed as an integral part of the Contract:
(1) Contract Agreement
(2) Amendments, if any to the Contract documents agreed by the Parties
(3) Conditions of Contract
(4) Technical Documents
(5) Preliminary Engineering Design including Bill of Quantities
(6) Technical Specification
[50] G.R. No. 159618, 1 February 2011, 641 SCRA 244, 258-259.
[51] Supra note 7.
[52] Id.
[53] Supra note 6.
[54] Supra note 48.