G.R. No. 103524 April 15, 1992
CESAR BENGZON, QUERUBE MAKALINTAL, LINO M. PATAJO, JOSE LEUTERIO, ET AL., petitioners,
vs.
HON. FRANKLIN N. DRILON, in his capacity as Executive Secretary, HON. GUILLERMO CARAGUE, in his capacity as Secretary of Department of Budget and Management, and HON. ROSALINA CAJUCOM, in her capacity as National Treasurer, respondents.
A.M. No. 91-8-225-CA April 15, 1992
REQUEST OF RETIRED JUSTICES MANUEL P. BARCELONA, JUAN P. ENRIQUEZ, JUAN O. REYES, JR. and GUARDSON R. LOOD FOR READJUSTMENT OF THEIR MONTHLY PENSION.
GUTIERREZ, JR., J.:
The
issue in this petition is the constitutionality of the veto by the
President of certain provisions in the General Appropriations Act for
the Fiscal Year 1992 relating to the payment of the adjusted pensions of
retired Justices of the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeals.
The petitioners are retired Justices of the Supreme
Court and Court of Appeals who are currently receiving monthly pensions
under Republic Act No. 910 as amended by Republic Act No. 1797. They
filed the instant petition on their own behalf and in representation of
all other retired Justices of the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeals
similarly situated.
Named respondents are Hon. Franklin Drilon the
Executive Secretary, Hon. Guillermo Carague as Secretary of the
Department of Budget and Management, and Hon. Rosalinda Cajucom, the
Treasurer of the Philippines. The respondents are sued in their official
capacities, being officials of the Executive Department involved in the
implementation of the release of funds appropriated in the Annual
Appropriations Law.
We treat the Comments of the Office of the Solicitor General (OSG) as an Answer and decide the petition on its merits.
The factual backdrop of this case is as follows:
On June 20, 1953, Republic Act No, 910 was enacted to
provide the retirement pensions of Justices of the Supreme Court and of
the Court of Appeals who have rendered at least twenty (20) years
service either in the Judiciary or in any other branch of the Government
or in both, having attained the age of seventy (70) years or who resign
by reason of incapacity to discharge the duties of the office. The
retired Justice shall receive during the residue of his natural life the
salary which he was receiving at the time of his retirement or
resignation.
Republic Act No. 910 was amended by Republic Act No. 1797 (approved on June 21, 1957) which provided that:
Sec.
3-A. In case the salary of Justices of the Supreme Court or of the
Court of Appeals is increased or decreased, such increased or decreased
salary shall, for purposes of this Act, be deemed to be the salary or
the retirement pension which a Justice who as of June twelve, nineteen
hundred fifty-four had ceased to be such to accept another position in
the Government or who retired was receiving at the time of his cessation
in office. Provided, that any benefits that have already accrued prior
to such increase or decrease shall not be affected thereby.
Identical
retirement benefits were also given to the members of the Constitutional
Commissions under Republic Act No. 1568, as amended by Republic Act No.
3595. On November 12, 1974, on the occasion of the Armed Forces Loyalty
Day, President Marcos signed Presidential Decree 578 which extended
similar retirement benefits to the members of the Armed Forces giving
them also the automatic readjustment features of Republic Act No. 1797
and Republic Act No. 3595.
Two months later, however, President Marcos issued
Presidential Decree 644 on January 25, 1975 repealing Section 3-A of
Republic Act No. 1797 and Republic Act No. 3595 (amending Republic Act
No. 1568 and Presidential Decree No. 578) which authorized the
adjustment of the pension of the retired Justices of the Supreme Court,
Court of Appeals, Chairman and members of the Constitutional Commissions
and the officers and enlisted members of the Armed Forces to the
prevailing rates of salaries.
Significantly, under Presidential Decree 1638 the
automatic readjustment of the retirement pension of officers and
enlisted men was subsequently restored by President Marcos. A later
decree Presidential Decree 1909 was also issued providing for the
automatic readjustment of the pensions of members of the Armed Forces
who have retired prior to September 10, 1979.
While the adjustment of the retirement pensions for
members of the Armed Forces who number in the tens of thousands was
restored, that of the retired Justices of the Supreme Court and Court of
Appeals who are only a handful and fairly advanced in years, was not.
Realizing the unfairness of the discrimination
against the members of the Judiciary and the Constitutional Commissions,
Congress approved in 1990 a bill for the reenactment of the repealed
provisions of Republic Act No. 1797 and Republic Act No. 3595. Congress
was under the impression that Presidential Decree 644 became law after
it was published in the Official Gazette on April 7, 1977. In the
explanatory note of House Bill No. 16297 and Senate Bill No. 740, the
legislature saw the need to reenact Republic Act Nos. 1797 and 3595 to
restore said retirement pensions and privileges of the retired Justices
and members of the Constitutional Commissions, in order to assure those
serving in the Supreme Court, Court of Appeals and Constitutional
Commissions adequate old age pensions even during the time when the
purchasing power of the peso has been diminished substantially by
worldwide recession or inflation. This is underscored by the fact that
the petitioner retired Chief Justice, a retired Associate Justice of the
Supreme Court and the retired Presiding Justice are presently receiving
monthly pensions of P3,333.33, P2,666.66 and P2,333.33 respectively.
President Aquino, however vetoed House Bill No. 16297
on July 11, 1990 on the ground that according to her "it would erode
the very foundation of the Government's collective effort to adhere
faithfully to and enforce strictly the policy on standardization of
compensation as articulated in Republic Act No. 6758 known as
Compensation and Position Classification Act of 1989." She further said
that "the Government should not grant distinct privileges to select
group of officials whose retirement benefits under existing laws already
enjoy preferential treatment over those of the vast majority of our
civil service servants."
Prior to the instant petition, however, Retired Court
of Appeals Justices Manuel P. Barcelona, Juan P. Enriquez, Juan O.
Reyes, Jr. and Guardson R. Lood filed a letter/petition dated April 22,
1991 which we treated as Administrative Matter No. 91-8-225-CA. The
petitioners asked this Court far a readjustment of their monthly
pensions in accordance with Republic Act No. 1797. They reasoned out
that Presidential Decree 644 repealing Republic Act No. 1797 did not
become law as there was no valid publication pursuant to Tañada v. Tuvera,
(136 SCRA 27 [1985]) and 146 SCRA 446 [1986]). Presidential Decree 644
promulgated on January 24, 1975 appeared for the first time only in the
supplemental issue of the Official Gazette, (Vol. 74, No. 14)
purportedly dated April 4, 1977 but published only on September 5, 1983.
Since Presidential Decree 644 has no binding force and effect of law,
it therefore did not repeal Republic Act No. 1797.
In a Resolution dated November 28, 1991 the Court acted favorably on the request. The dispositive portion reads as follows:
WHEREFORE,
the requests of retired Justices Manuel P. Barcelona, Juan P. Enriquez,
Juan O. Reyes and Guardson Lood are GRANTED. It is hereby AUTHORIZED
that their monthly pensions be adjusted and paid on the basis of RA 1797
effective January 1, 1991 without prejudice to the payment on their
pension differentials corresponding to the previous years upon the
availability of funds for the purpose.
Pursuant to
the above resolution, Congress included in the General Appropriations
Bill for Fiscal Year 1992 certain appropriations for the Judiciary
intended for the payment of the adjusted pension rates due the retired
Justices of the Supreme Court and Court of Appeals.
The pertinent provisions in House Bill No. 34925 are as follows:
XXVIII. THE JUDICIARY
A. Supreme Court of the Philippines and the Lower Courts.
For general administration, administration of
personnel benefits, supervision of courts, adjudication of
constitutional questions appealed and other cases, operation and
maintenance of the Judicial and Bar Council in the Supreme Court, and
the adjudication of regional court cases, metropolitan court cases,
municipal trial court cases in Cities, municipal circuit court cases,
municipal, court cases, Shari'a district court cases and Shari'a circuit
court cases as indicated hereunder P2,095,651,000
xxx xxx xxx
Special Provisions.
1. Augmentation of any Item in the Court's
Appropriations. Any savings in the appropriation for the Supreme Court
and the Lower Courts may be utilized by the Chief Justice of the Supreme
Court to augment any item of the Court's appropriations for: (a)
printing of decisions and publications of Philippine Reports; b)
commutable terminal leaves of Justices and other personnel of the
Supreme Court and any payment of adjusted pension rates to retired
Justices entitled thereto pursuant to Administrative Matter No.
91-8-225-CA; (c) repair, maintenance, improvement, and other
operating expenses of the courts' books and periodicals; (d) purchase,
maintenance and improvement of printing equipment; e) necessary expenses
for the employment of temporary employees, contractual and casual
employees, for judicial administration; f) maintenance and improvement
of the Court's Electronic Data Processing; (g) extraordinary expenses of
the Chief Justice, attendance in international conferences and conduct
of training programs; (h) commutable transportation and representation
allowances and fringe benefits for Justices, Clerks of Court, Court
Administrator, Chief of Offices and other Court personnel in accordance
with the rates prescribed by law; and (i) compensation of attorneys-de-oficio;
PROVIDED, that as mandated by LOI No. 489 any increases in salary and
allowances shall be subject to the usual procedures and policies as
provided for under P.D. No. 985 and other pertinent laws. (page 1071,
General Appropriations Act, FY 1992; Emphasis supplied)
xxx xxx xxx
4. Payment of Adjusted Pension Rates to Retired
Justices. The amount herein appropriated for payment of pensions to
retired judges and justices shall include the payment of pensions at the
adjusted rates to retired justices of the Supreme Court entitled
thereto pursuant to the ruling of the Court in Administrative Matter No.
91-8-225-C.A. (page 1071, General Appropriations Act, FY 1992).
xxx xxx xxx
Activities and Purposes
1. General Administration and Support Services.
b. Payment of retirement gratuity
of national goverment officials
and employees P 206,717,000
c. Payment of terminal leave benefits to
officials and employees antitled thereto P 55,316,000
d. Payment of pension totired jude
and justice entitled thereto P 22,500,000
(page 1071, General Appropriations Act, FY 1992)
C. COURT OF APPEALS
of personnel benefit, benefits and the
adjudication of appealed and other cases
as indicated hereunder P114,615,000
Special Provisions.
1. Authority to Use Savings. Subject to the
approval of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court in accordance with
Section 25(5), Article VI of the Constitution of the Republic of the
Philippines, the Presiding Justice may be authorized to use any savings
in any item of the appropriation for the Court of Appeals for purposes
of: (1) improving its compound and facilities; and (2) for augmenting
any deficiency in any item of its appropriation including its
extraordinary expenses and payment of adjusted pension rates to retired justices entitled thereto pursuant to Administrative Matter No. 91-8-225-C.A. (page 1079, General Appropriations Act, FY 1992; Emphasis supplied)
2. Payment of adjustment Pension Rates to Retired
Justices. The amount herein appropriated for payment of pensions to
retired judges and justices shall include the payment of pensions at the
adjusted rates to retired justices of the Court of Appeals entitled
thereto pursuant to the Ruling of the Supreme Court in Administrative
Matter No. 91-6-225-C.A. (page 1079 General Appropriations Act, FY
1992).
XL. GENERAL FUND ADJUSTMENT
operational and special requirements
as indicated hereunder P500,000,000
xxx xxx xxx
Special Provisions
1. Use of the Fund. This fund shall be used for:
xxx xxx xxx
1.3. Authorized overdrafts and/or valid unbooked
obligations, including the payment of back salaries and related
personnel benefits arising from decision of competent authority including the Supreme Court decision in Administrative Matter No. 91-8-225-C.A. and COA decision in No. 1704." (page 11649 Gen. Appropriations Act, FY 1992; Emphasis supplied)
On January
15, 1992, the President vetoed the underlined portions of Section 1 and
the entire Section 4 the Special Provisions for the Supreme Court of the
Philippines and the Lower Courts (General Appropriations Act, FY 1992,
page 1071) and the underlined portions of Section 1 and the entire
Section 2, of the Special Provisions for the Court of Appeals (page
1079) and the underlined portions of Section 1.3 of Article XLV of the
Special Provisions of the General Fund Adjustments (page 1164, General
Appropriations Act, FY 1992).
The reason given for the veto of said provisions is
that "the resolution of this Honorable Court in Administrative Matter
No. 91-8-225-CA pursuant to which the foregoing appropriations for the
payment of the retired Justices of the Supreme Court and the Court of
Appeals have been enacted effectively nullified the veto of the
President on House Bill No. 16297, the bill which provided for the
automatic increase in the retirement pensions of the Justices of the
Supreme Court and the Court of Appeals and chairmen of the
Constitutional Commissions by re-enacting Republic Act No. 1797 and
Republic Act No. 3595. The President's veto of the aforesaid provisions
was further justified by reiterating the earlier reasons for vetoing
House Bill No. 16297: "they would erode the very foundation of our
collective effort to adhere faithfully to and enforce strictly the
policy and standardization of compensation. We should not permit the
grant of distinct privileges to select group of officials whose
retirement pensions under existing laws already enjoy preferential
treatment over those of the vast majority of our civil servants."
Hence, the instant petition filed by the petitioners with the assertions that:
1) The subject veto is not an item veto;
2) The veto by the Executive is violative of the doctrine of separation of powers;
3) The veto deprives the retired Justices of their rights to the pensions due them;
4) The questioned veto impairs the Fiscal Autonomy guaranteed by the Constitution.
Raising similar grounds, the petitioners in
AM-91-8-225-CA, brought to the attention of this Court that the veto
constitutes no legal obstacle to the continued payment of the adjusted
pensions pursuant to the Court's resolution.
On February 14, 1992, the Court resolved to consolidate Administrative Matter No. 91-8-225-CA with G.R. No. 103524.
The petitioners' contentions are well-taken.
I
It cannot be overstressed that in a constitutional
government such as ours, the rule of law must prevail. The Constitution
is the basic and paramount law to which all other laws must conform and
to which all persons including the highest official of this land must
defer. From this cardinal postulate, it follows that the three branches
of government must discharge their respective functions within the
limits of authority conferred by the Constitution. Under the principle
of separation of powers, neither Congress, the President nor the
Judiciary may encroach on fields allocated to the other branches of
government. The legislature is generally limited to the enactment of
laws, the executive to the enforcement of laws and the judiciary to
their interpretation and application to cases and controversies.
The Constitution expressly confers or the judiciary
the power to maintain inviolate what it decrees. As the guardian of the
Constitution we cannot shirk the duty of seeing to it that the officers
in each branch of government do not go beyond their constitutionally
allocated boundaries and that the entire Government itself or any of its
branches does not violate the basic liberties of the people. The
essence of this judicial duty was emphatically explained by Justice
Laurel in the leading case of Angara v. Electoral Commission, (63 Phil. 139 [1936]) to wit:
The
Constitution is a definition of the powers of government. Who is to
determine the nature, scope and extent of such powers? The Constitution
itself has provided for the instrumentality of the judiciary as the
rational way. And when the judiciary mediates to allocate
constitutional boundaries it does not assert any superiority over the
other department, it does not in reality nullify or invalidate an act of
the legislature, but only asserts the solemn and sacred obligation
assigned to it by the Constitution to determine conflicting claims
of authority under the Constitution and to establish for the parties in
an actual controversy the rights which that instrument secures and
guarantees to them. (Emphasis supplied)
The act of
the Executive in vetoing the particular provisions is an exercise of a
constitutionally vested power. But even as the Constitution grants the
power, it also provides limitations to its exercise. The veto power is
not absolute.
The pertinent provision of the Constitution reads:
The
President shall have the power to veto any particular item or items in
an appropriation, revenue or tariff bill but the veto shall not affect
the item or items to which he does not object. (Section 27(2), Article
VI, Constitution)
The OSG is
correct when it states that the Executive must veto a bill in its
entirety or not at all. He or she cannot act like an editor crossing out
specific lines, provisions, or paragraphs in a bill that he or she
dislikes. In the exercise of the veto power, it is generally all or
nothing. However, when it comes to appropriation, revenue or tariff
bills, the Administration needs the money to run the machinery of
government and it can not veto the entire bill even if it may contain
objectionable features. The President is, therefore, compelled to
approve into law the entire bill, including its undesirable parts. It is
for this reason that the Constitution has wisely provided the "item
veto power" to avoid inexpedient riders being attached to an
indispensable appropriation or revenue measure.
The Constitution provides that only a particular item
or items may be vetoed. The power to disapprove any item or items in an
appropriate bill does not grant the authority to veto a part of an item
and to approve the remaining portion of the same item. (Gonzales v.
Macaraig, Jr., 191 SCRA 452, 464 [1990])
We distinguish an item from a provision in the following manner:
The terms item and provision in budgetary legislation and practice are concededly different. An item in a bill refers to the particulars, the details, the distinct and severable parts . . . of the bill (Bengzon, supra, at
916.) It is an indivisible sum of money dedicated to a stated purpose
(Commonwealth v. Dodson, 11 S.E. 2d 120, 124, 125, etc., 176 Va. 281)
The United States Supreme Court, in the case of Bengzon v. Secretary of Justice (299 U.S. 410, 414, 57 Ct. 252, 81 L. Ed, 312) declared "that an "tem" of an appropriation bill obviously means an item which in itself is a specific appropriation of money, not some general provision of law, which happens to be put into an appropriation bill." (id. at page 465)
We regret having to state that misimpressions or unfortunately wrong advice must have been the basis of the disputed veto.
The general fund adjustment is an item which
appropriates P500,000,000.00 to enable the Government to meet certain
unavoidable obligations which may have been inadequately funded by the
specific items for the different branches, departments, bureaus,
agencies, and offices of the government.
The President did not veto this item. What were
vetoed were methods or systems placed by Congress to insure that
permanent and continuing obligations to certain officials would be paid
when they fell due.
An examination of the entire sections and the
underlined portions of the law which were vetoed will readily show that
portions of the item have been chopped up into vetoed and unvetoed
parts. Less than all of an item has been vetoed. Moreover, the vetoed
portions are not items. They are provisions.
Thus, the augmentation of specific
appropriations found inadequate to pay retirement payments, by
transferring savings from other items of appropriation is a provision
and not an item. It gives power to the Chief Justice to transfer funds
from one item to another. There is no specific appropriation of money
involved.
In the same manner, the provision which states that
in compliance with decisions of the Supreme Court and the Commission on
Audit, funds still undetermined in amount may be drawn from the general
fund adjustment is not an item. It is the "general fund adjustment"
itself which is the item. This was not touched. It was not vetoed.
More ironic is the fact that misinformation led the
Executive to believe that the items in the 1992 Appropriations Act were
being vetoed when, in fact, the veto struck something else.
What were really vetoed are:
(1) Republic Act No. 1797 enacted as early as June 21, 1957; and
(2) The Resolution of the Supreme Court dated November 28, 1991 in Administrative Matter No. 91-8-225-CA.
We need no lengthy justifications or citations of
authorities to declare that no President may veto the provisions of a
law enacted thirty-five (35) years before his or her term of office.
Neither may the President set aside or reverse a final and executory
judgment of this Court through the exercise of the veto power.
A few background facts may be reiterated to fully explain the unhappy situation.
Republic Act No. 1797 provided for the adjustment of
pensions of retired Justices which privilege was extended to retired
members of Constitutional Commissions by Republic Act No. 3595.
On January 25, 1975, President Marcos issued
Presidential Decree No. 644 which repealed Republic Acts 1797 and 3595.
Subsequently, automatic readjustment of pensions for retired Armed
Forces officers and men was surreptitiously restored through
Presidential Decree Nos. 1638 and 1909.
It was the impression that Presidential Decree No.
644 had reduced the pensions of Justices and Constitutional
Commissioners which led Congress to restore the repealed provisions
through House Bill No. 16297 in 1990. When her finance and budget
advisers gave the wrong information that the questioned provisions in
the 1992 General Appropriations Act were simply an attempt to overcome
her earlier 1990 veto, she issued the veto now challenged in this
petition.
It turns out, however, that P.D. No. 644 never became
valid law. If P.D. No. 644 was not law, it follows that Rep. Act No.
1797 was not repealed and continues to be effective up to the present.
In the same way that it was enforced from 1951 to 1975, so should it be
enforced today.
House Bill No. 16297 was superfluous as it tried to
restore benefits which were never taken away validly. The veto of House
Bill No. 16297 in 1991 did not also produce any effect. Both were based
on erroneous and non-existent premises.
From the foregoing discussion, it can be seen that
when the President vetoed certain provisions of the 1992 General
Appropriations Act, she was actually vetoing Republic Act No. 1797
which, of course, is beyond her power to accomplish.
Presidential Decree No. 644 which purportedly
repealed Republic Act No. 1717 never achieved that purpose because it
was not properly published. It never became a law.
The case of Tañda v. Tuvera (134 SCRA 27
[1985]and 146 SCRA 446 [1986]) specifically requires that "all laws
shall immediately upon their approval or as soon thereafter as possible,
be published in full in the Official Gazette, to become effective only
after fifteen days from their publication, or on another date specified
by the legislature, in accordance with Article 2 of the Civil Code."
This was the Court's answer to the petition of Senator Lorenzo Tañada
and other opposition leaders who challenged the validity of Marcos'
decrees which, while never published, were being enforced. Secret
decrees are anathema in a free society.
In support of their request, the petitioners in
Administrative Matter No. 91-9-225-CA secured certification from
Director Lucita C. Sanchez of the National Printing Office that the
April 4, 1977 Supplement to the Official Gazette was published only on
September 5, 1983 and officially released on September 29, 1983.
On the issue of whether or not Presidential Decree
644 became law, the Court has already categorically spoken in a
definitive ruling on the matter, to wit:
xxx xxx xxx
PD 644 was promulgated by President Marcos on January
24, 1975, but was not immediately or soon thereafter published although
preceding and subsequent decrees were duly published in the Official
Gazette. It now appears that it was intended as a secret decree "NOT FOR
PUBLICATION" as the notation on the face of the original copy thereof
plainly indicates (Annex B). It is also clear that the decree was
published in the back-dated Supplement only after it was challenged in
the Tañada case as among the presidential decrees that had not
become effective for lack of the required publication. The petition was
filed on May 7, 1983, four months before the actual publication of the
decree.
It took more than eight years to publish the decree
after its promulgation in 1975. Moreover, the publication was made in
bad faith insofar as it purported to show that it was done in 1977 when
the now demonstrated fact is that the April 4, 1977 supplement was
actually published and released only in September 1983. The belated
publication was obviously intended to refute the petitioner's claim in
the Tañada case and to support the Solicitor General's submission that the petition had become moot and academic.
xxx xxx xxx
We agree that PD 644 never became a law because it
was not validly published and that, consequently, it did not have the
effect of repealing RA 1797. The requesting Justices (including Justice
Lood, whose request for the upgrading of his pension was denied on
January 15, 1991) are therefore entitled to be paid their monthly
pensions on the basis of the latter measure, which remains unchanged to
date.
The Supreme
Court has spoken and it has done so with finality, logically and
rightly so as to assure stability in legal relations, and avoid
confusion. (see Ver v. Quetullo, 163 SCRA 80 [1988]) Like other
decisions of this Court, the ruling and principles set out in the Court
resolution constitute binding precedent. (Bulig-Bulig Kita Kamaganak
Association, et al. v. Sulpicio Lines, Inc., Regional Trial Court, etc.,
G.R. 847500 16 May 1989, En Banc, Minute Resolution)
The challenged veto has far-reaching implications
which the Court can not countenance as they undermine the principle of
separation of powers. The Executive has no authority to set aside and
overrule a decision of the Supreme Court.
We must emphasize that the Supreme Court did not
enact Rep. Act No. 1797. It is not within its powers to pass laws in the
first place. Its duty is confined to interpreting or defining what the
law is and whether or not it violates a provision of the Constitution.
As early as 1953, Congress passed a law providing for
retirement pensions to retired Justices of the Supreme Court and the
Court of Appeals. This law was amended by Republic Act 1797 in 1957.
Funds necessary to pay the retirement pensions under these statutes are
deemed automatically appropriated every year.
Thus, Congress included in the General Appropriations
Act of 1992, provisions identifying funds and savings which may be used
to pay the adjusted pensions pursuant to the Supreme Court Resolution.
As long as retirement laws remain in the statute book, there is an
existing obligation on the part of the government to pay the adjusted
pension rate pursuant to RA 1797 and AM-91-8-225-CA.
Neither may the veto power of the President be
exercised as a means of repealing RA 1797. This is arrogating unto the
Presidency legislative powers which are beyond its authority. The
President has no power to enact or amend statutes promulgated by her
predecessors much less to repeal existing laws. The President's power is
merely to execute the laws as passed by Congress.
II
There is a matter of greater consequence arising from
this petition. The attempt to use the veto power to set aside a
Resolution of this Court and to deprive retirees of benefits given them
by Rep. Act No. 1797 trenches upon the constitutional grant of fiscal
autonomy to the Judiciary.
Sec. 3, Art. VIII mandates that:
Sec.
3 The Judiciary shall enjoy fiscal autonomy. Appropriations for the
Judiciary may not be reduced by the legislature below the amount
appropriated for the previous year and, after approval, shall be
automatically and regularly released.
We can not overstress the importance of and the need
for an independent judiciary. The Court has on various past occasions
explained the significance of judicial independence. In the case of De la Llana v. Alba (112 SCRA 294 [1982]), it ruled:
It is a cardinal rule of faith of our constitutional
regime that it is the people who are endowed with rights, to secure
which a government is instituted. Acting as it does through public
officials, it has to grant them either expressly or implicitly certain
powers. These they exercise not for their own benefit but for the body
politic. . . .
A public office is a public trust. That is more than a
moral adjuration. It is a legal imperative. The law may vest in a
public official certain rights. It does so to enable them to perform his
functions and fulfill his responsibilities more efficiently. . . . It
is an added guarantee that justices and judges can administer justice
undeterred by any fear of reprisal or untoward consequence. Their
judgments then are even more likely to be inspired solely by their
knowledge of the law and the dictates of their conscience, free from the
corrupting influence of base or unworthy motives. The independence of
which they are assured is impressed with a significance transcending
that of a purely personal right. (At pp. 338-339)
The
exercise of the veto power in this case may be traced back to the
efforts of the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) to ignore or
overlook the plain mandate of the Constitution on fiscal autonomy. The
OSG Comment reflects the same truncated view of the provision.
We have repeatedly in the past few years called the
attention of DBM that not only does it allocate less than one percent
(1%) of the national budget annually for the 22,769 Justices, Judges,
and court personnel all over the country but it also examines with a
fine-toothed come how we spend the funds appropriated by Congress based
on DBM recommendations.
The gist of our position papers and arguments before Congress is as follows:
The
DBM requires the Supreme Court, with Constitutional Commissions, and
the Ombudsman to submit budget proposals in accordance with parameters
it establishes. DBM evaluates the proposals, asks each agency to defend
its proposals during DBM budget hearings, submits its own version of the
proposals to Congress without informing the agency of major alterations
and mutilations inflicted on their proposals, and expects each agency
to defend in Congress proposals not of the agency's making.
After the general appropriations bill is passed by
Congress and signed into law by the President, the tight and officious
control by DBM continues. For the release of appropriated funds, the
Judiciary, Constitutional Commissions, and Ombudsman are instructed
through "guidelines", how to prepare Work and Financial Plans and
requests for monthly allotments. The DBM evaluates and approves these
plans and requests and on the basis of its approval authorizes the
release of allotments with corresponding notices of cash allocation.
These notices specify the maximum withdrawals each month which the
Supreme Court, the Commissions and the Ombudsman may make from the
servicing government bank. The above agencies are also required to
submit to DBM monthly, quarterly and year-end budget accountability
reports to indicate their performance, physical and financial operations
and income,
The DBM reserves to itself the power to review the
accountability reports and when importuned for needed funds, to release
additional allotments to the agency. Since DBM always prunes the
budget proposals to below subsistence levels and since emergency
situations usually occur during the fiscal year, the Chief Justices,
Chairmen of the Commissions, and Ombudsman are compelled to make
pilgrimages to DBM for additional funds to tide their respective
agencies over the emergency.
What is fiscal autonomy?
As envisioned in the Constitution, the fiscal
autonomy enjoyed by the Judiciary, the Civil Service Commission, the
Commission on Audit, the Commission on Elections, and the Office of the
Ombudsman contemplates a guarantee on full flexibility to allocate and
utilize their resources with the wisdom and dispatch that their needs
require. It recognizes the power and authority to levy, assess and
collect fees, fix rates of compensation not exceeding the highest rates
authorized by law for compensation and pay plans of the government and
allocate and disburse such sums as may be provided by law or prescribed
by them in the course of the discharge of their functions.
Fiscal autonomy means freedom from outside control.
If the Supreme Court says it needs 100 typewriters but DBM rules we need
only 10 typewriters and sends its recommendations to Congress without
even informing us, the autonomy given by the Constitution becomes an
empty and illusory platitude.
The Judiciary, the Constitutional Commissions, and
the Ombudsman must have the independence end flexibility needed in the
discharge of their constitutional duties. The imposition of restrictions
and constraints on the manner the independent constitutional offices
allocate and utilize the funds appropriated for their operations is
anathema to fiscal autonomy and violative not only of the express
mandate of the Constitution but especially as regards the Supreme Court,
of the independence and separation of powers upon which the entire
fabric of our constitutional system is based. In the interest of comity
and cooperation, the Supreme Court, Constitutional Commissions, and the
Ombudsman have so far limited their objections to constant reminders. We
now agree with the petitioners that this grant of autonomy should cease
to be a meaningless provision.
In the case at bar, the veto of these specific
provisions in the General Appropriations Act is tantamount to dictating
to the Judiciary how its funds should be utilized, which is clearly
repugnant to fiscal autonomy. The freedom of the Chief Justice to make
adjustments in the utilization of the funds appropriated for the
expenditures of the judiciary, including the use of any savings from any
particular item to cover deficits or shortages in other items of the
Judiciary is withheld. Pursuant to the Constitutional mandate, the
Judiciary must enjoy freedom in the disposition of the funds allocated
to it in the appropriations law. It knows its priorities just as it is
aware of the fiscal restraints. The Chief Justice must be given a free
hand on how to augment appropriations where augmentation is needed.
Furthermore, in the case of Gonzales v. Macaraig
(191 SCRA 452 [1990]), the Court upheld the authority of the President
and other key officials to augment any item or any appropriation from
savings in the interest of expediency and efficiency. The Court stated
that:
There
should be no question, therefore, that statutory authority has, in
fact, been granted. And once given, the heads of the different branches
of the Government and those of the Constitutional Commissions are
afforded considerable flexibility in the use of public funds and
resources (Demetria v. Alba, supra). The doctrine of separation
of powers is in no way endangered because the transfer is made within a
department (or branch of government) and not from one department
(branch) to another.
The Constitution, particularly Article VI, Section 25(5) also provides:
Sec.
25. (5) No law shall be passed authorizing any transfer of
appropriations; however, the President, the President of the Senate, the
Speaker of the House of Representatives, the Chief Justice of the
Supreme Court, and the heads of Constitutional Commissions may, by law,
be authorized to augment any item in the general appropriations law for
their respective offices from savings in other items of their respective
appropriations.
In the
instant case, the vetoed provisions which relate to the use of savings
for augmenting items for the payment of the pension differentials, among
others, are clearly in consonance with the abovestated pronouncements
of the Court. The veto impairs the power of the Chief Justice to augment
other items in the Judiciary's appropriation, in contravention of the
constitutional provision on "fiscal autonomy."
III
Finally, it can not be denied that the retired
Justices have a vested right to the accrued pensions due them pursuant
to RA 1797.
The right to a public pension is of statutory origin
and statutes dealing with pensions have been enacted by practically all
the states in the United States (State ex rel. Murray v, Riley, 44 Del
505, 62 A2d 236), and presumably in most countries of the world.
Statutory provisions for the support of Judges or Justices on retirement
are founded on services rendered to the state. Where a judge has
complied with the statutory prerequisite for retirement with pay, his
right to retire and draw salary becomes vested and may not, thereafter,
be revoked or impaired. (Gay v. Whitehurst, 44 So ad 430)
Thus, in the Philippines, a number of retirement laws
have been enacted, the purpose of which is to entice competent men and
women to enter the government service and to permit them to retire
therefrom with relative security, not only those who have retained their
vigor but, more so, those who have been incapacitated by illness or
accident. (In re: Amount of the Monthly Pension of Judges and Justices
Starting From the Sixth Year of their Retirement and After the
Expiration of the Initial Five-year Period of Retirement, (190 SCRA 315
[1990]).
As early as 1953, Rep. Act No. 910 was enacted to grant pensions to retired Justices of the Supreme Court and Court of Appeals.
This was amended by RA 1797 which provided for an
automatic adjustment of the pension rates. Through the years, laws were
enacted and jurisprudence expounded to afford retirees better benefits.
P.D. No. 1438, for one, was promulgated on June 10,
1978 amending RA 910 providing that the lump sum of 5 years gratuity to
which the retired Justices of the Supreme Court and Court of Appeals
were entitled was to be computed on the basis of the highest monthly
aggregate of transportation, living and representation allowances each
Justice was receiving on the date of his resignation. The Supreme Court
in a resolution dated October 4, 1990, stated that this law on
gratuities covers the monthly pensions of retired Judges and Justices
which should include the highest monthly aggregate of transportation,
living and representation allowances the retiree was receiving on the
date of retirement. (In Re: Amount of the Monthly Pension of Judges and
Justices, supra)
The rationale behind the veto which implies that
Justices and Constitutional officers are unduly favored is, again, a
misimpression.
Immediately, we can state that retired Armed Forces officers and enlisted men number
in the tens of thousands while retired Justices are so few they can be
immediately identified. Justices retire at age 70 while military men
retire at a much younger age — some retired Generals left the military
at age 50 or earlier. Yet the benefits in Rep. Act No. 1797 are made to
apply equally to both groups. Any ideas arising from an alleged
violation of the equal protection clause should first be directed to
retirees in the military or civil service where the reason for the
retirement provision is not based on indubitable and constitutionally
sanctioned grounds, not to a handful of retired Justices whose
retirement pensions are founded on constitutional reasons.
The provisions regarding retirement pensions of
justices arise from the package of protections given by the Constitution
to guarantee and preserve the independence of the Judiciary.
The Constitution expressly vests the power of
judicial review in this Court. Any institution given the power to
declare, in proper cases, that act of both the President and Congress
are unconstitutional needs a high degree of independence in the exercise
of its functions. Our jurisdiction may not be reduced by Congress.
Neither may it be increased without our advice and concurrence. Justices
may not be removed until they reach age 70 except through impeachment.
All courts and court personnel are under the administrative supervision
of the Supreme Court. The President may not appoint any Judge or Justice
unless he or she has been nominated by the Judicial and Bar Council
which, in turn, is under the Supreme Court's supervision. Our salaries
may not be decreased during our continuance in office. We cannot be
designated to any agency performing administrative or quasi-judicial functions.
We are specifically given fiscal autonomy. The Judiciary is not only
independent of, but also co-equal and coordinate with the Executive and
Legislative Departments. (Article VIII and section 30, Article VI,
Constitution)
Any argument which seeks to remove special privileges
given by law to former Justices of this Court and the ground that there
should be no "grant of distinct privileges" or "preferential treatment"
to retired Justices ignores these provisions of the Constitution and,
in effect, asks that these Constitutional provisions on special
protections for the Judiciary be repealed. The integrity of our entire
constitutional system is premised to a large extent on the independence
of the Judiciary. All these provisions are intended to preserve that
independence. So are the laws on retirement benefits of Justices.
One last point.
The Office of the Solicitor General argues that:
. .
. Moreover, by granting these benefits to retired Justices implies that
public funds, raised from taxes on other citizens, will be paid off to
select individuals who are already leading private lives and have ceased
performing public service. Said the United States Supreme Court,
speaking through Mr. Justice Miller: "To lay with one hand the power
of the government on the property of the citizen, and with the other to
bestow upon favored individuals . . . is nonetheless a robbery because
it is done under the forms of law . . ." (Law Association V. Topeka, 20 Wall. 655) (Comment, p. 16)
The above
arguments are not only specious, impolite and offensive; they certainly
are unbecoming of an office whose top officials are supposed to be,
under their charter, learned in the law.
Chief Justice Cesar Bengzon and Chief Justice Querube
Makalintal, Justices J.B.L. Reyes, Cecilia Muñoz Palma, Efren Plana,
Vicente Abad Santos, and, in fact, all retired Justices of the Supreme
Court and the Court of Appeals may no longer be in the active service.
Still, the Solicitor General and all lawyers under him who represent the
government before the two courts and whose predecessors themselves
appeared before these retirees, should show some continuing esteem and
good manners toward these Justices who are now in the evening of their
years.
All that the retirees ask is to be given the benefits granted by law. To
characterize them as engaging in "robbery" is intemperate, abrasive,
and disrespectful more so because the argument is unfounded.
If the Comment is characteristic of OSG pleadings
today, then we are sorry to state that the then quality of research in
that institution has severely deteriorated.
In the first place, the citation of the case is, wrong. The title is not LAW Association v. Topeka but Citizen's Savings and Loan Association of Cleveland, Ohio v. Topeka City
(20 Wall. 655; 87 U.S. 729; 22 Law. Ed. 455 [1874]. Second, the case
involved the validity of a statute authorizing cities and counties to
issue bonds for the purpose of building bridges, waterpower, and other
public works to aid private railroads improve their services. The law
was declared void on the ground that the right of a municipality to
impose a tax cannot be used for private interests.
The case was decided in 1874. The world has turned
over more than 40,000 times since that ancient period. Public use is now
equated with public interest. Public money may now be used for slum
clearance, low-cost housing, squatter resettlement, urban and agrarian
reform where only private persons are the immediate beneficiaries. What
was "robbery" in 1874 is now called "social justice." There is nothing
about retirement benefits in the cited case. Obviously, the OSG lawyers
cited from an old textbook or encyclopedia which could not even spell
"loan" correctly. Good lawyers are expected to go to primary sources and
to use only relevant citations.
The Court has been deluged with letters and petitions
by former colleagues in the Judiciary requesting adjustments in their
pensions just so they would be able to cope with the everyday living
expenses not to mention the high cost of medical bills that old age
entails. As Justice Cruz aptly stated in Teodoro J. Santiago v. COA, (G.R. No. 92284, July 12, 1991);
Retirement
laws should be interpreted liberally in favor of the retiree because
their intention is to provide for his sustenance, and hopefully even
comfort, when he no longer has the stamina to continue earning his
livelihood. After devoting the best years of his life to the public
service, he deserves the appreciation of a grateful government as best
concretely expressed in a generous retirement gratuity commensurate with
the value and length of his services. That generosity is the least he
should expect now that his work is done and his youth is gone. Even as
he feels the weariness in his bones and glimpses the approach of the
lengthening shadows, he should be able to luxuriate in the thought that
he did his task well, and was rewarded for it.
For as long
as these retired Justices are entitled under laws which continue to be
effective, the government can not deprive them of their vested right to
the payment of their pensions.
WHEREFORE, the petition is hereby GRANTED. The
questioned veto is SET ASIDE as illegal and unconstitutional. The vetoed
provisions of the 1992 Appropriations Act are declared valid and
subsisting. The respondents are ordered to automatically and regularly
release pursuant to the grant of fiscal autonomy the funds appropriated
for the subject pensions as well as the other appropriations for the
Judiciary. The resolution in Administrative Matter No. 91-8-225-CA dated
November 28, 1991 is likewise ordered to be implemented as promulgated.
SO ORDERED.
Narvasa, C.J., Melencio-Herrera, Cruz, Paras, Feliciano, Padilla,
Bidin, Griño-Aquino, Medialdea, Regalado, Davide, Jr., Romero and Nocon,
JJ., concur.Bellosillo, J., is on leave.
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