EN BANC
G.R. No. 166715 August 14, 2008ABAKADA GURO PARTY LIST (formerly AASJS)1 OFFICERS/MEMBERS SAMSON S. ALCANTARA, ED VINCENT S. ALBANO, ROMEO R. ROBISO, RENE B. GOROSPE and EDWIN R. SANDOVAL, petitioners,
vs.
HON. CESAR V. PURISIMA, in his capacity as Secretary of Finance, HON. GUILLERMO L. PARAYNO, JR., in his capacity as Commissioner of the Bureau of Internal Revenue, and HON. ALBERTO D. LINA, in his Capacity as Commissioner of Bureau of Customs, respondents.
D E C I S I O N
CORONA, J.:
This petition for prohibition1 seeks to prevent respondents from implementing and enforcing Republic Act (RA) 93352 (Attrition Act of 2005).
RA 9335 was enacted to optimize the
revenue-generation capability and collection of the Bureau of Internal
Revenue (BIR) and the Bureau of Customs (BOC). The law intends to
encourage BIR and BOC officials and employees to exceed their revenue
targets by providing a system of rewards and sanctions through the
creation of a Rewards and Incentives Fund (Fund) and a Revenue
Performance Evaluation Board (Board).3
It covers all officials and employees of the BIR and the BOC with at
least six months of service, regardless of employment status.4
The Fund is sourced from the collection of the BIR
and the BOC in excess of their revenue targets for the year, as
determined by the Development Budget and Coordinating Committee (DBCC).
Any incentive or reward is taken from the fund and allocated to the BIR
and the BOC in proportion to their contribution in the excess collection
of the targeted amount of tax revenue.5
The Boards in the BIR and the BOC are composed of the
Secretary of the Department of Finance (DOF) or his/her Undersecretary,
the Secretary of the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) or
his/her Undersecretary, the Director General of the National Economic
Development Authority (NEDA) or his/her Deputy Director General, the
Commissioners of the BIR and the BOC or their Deputy Commissioners, two
representatives from the rank-and-file employees and a representative
from the officials nominated by their recognized organization.6
Each Board has the duty to (1) prescribe the rules
and guidelines for the allocation, distribution and release of the Fund;
(2) set criteria and procedures for removing from the service officials
and employees whose revenue collection falls short of the target; (3)
terminate personnel in accordance with the criteria adopted by the
Board; (4) prescribe a system for performance evaluation; (5) perform
other functions, including the issuance of rules and regulations and (6)
submit an annual report to Congress.7
The DOF, DBM, NEDA, BIR, BOC and the Civil Service
Commission (CSC) were tasked to promulgate and issue the implementing
rules and regulations of RA 9335,8 to be approved by a Joint Congressional Oversight Committee created for such purpose.9
Petitioners, invoking their right as taxpayers filed
this petition challenging the constitutionality of RA 9335, a tax reform
legislation. They contend that, by establishing a system of rewards and
incentives, the law "transform[s] the officials and employees of the
BIR and the BOC into mercenaries and bounty hunters" as they will do
their best only in consideration of such rewards. Thus, the system of
rewards and incentives invites corruption and undermines the
constitutionally mandated duty of these officials and employees to serve
the people with utmost responsibility, integrity, loyalty and
efficiency.
Petitioners also claim that limiting the scope of the
system of rewards and incentives only to officials and employees of the
BIR and the BOC violates the constitutional guarantee of equal
protection. There is no valid basis for classification or distinction as
to why such a system should not apply to officials and employees of all
other government agencies.
In addition, petitioners assert that the law unduly
delegates the power to fix revenue targets to the President as it lacks a
sufficient standard on that matter. While Section 7(b) and (c) of RA
9335 provides that BIR and BOC officials may be dismissed from the
service if their revenue collections fall short of the target by at
least 7.5%, the law does not, however, fix the revenue targets to be
achieved. Instead, the fixing of revenue targets has been delegated to
the President without sufficient standards. It will therefore be easy
for the President to fix an unrealistic and unattainable target in order
to dismiss BIR or BOC personnel.
Finally, petitioners assail the creation of a
congressional oversight committee on the ground that it violates the
doctrine of separation of powers. While the legislative function is
deemed accomplished and completed upon the enactment and approval of the
law, the creation of the congressional oversight committee permits
legislative participation in the implementation and enforcement of the
law.
In their comment, respondents, through the Office of
the Solicitor General, question the petition for being premature as
there is no actual case or controversy yet. Petitioners have not
asserted any right or claim that will necessitate the exercise of this
Court’s jurisdiction. Nevertheless, respondents acknowledge that public
policy requires the resolution of the constitutional issues involved in
this case. They assert that the allegation that the reward system will
breed mercenaries is mere speculation and does not suffice to invalidate
the law. Seen in conjunction with the declared objective of RA 9335,
the law validly classifies the BIR and the BOC because the functions
they perform are distinct from those of the other government agencies
and instrumentalities. Moreover, the law provides a sufficient standard
that will guide the executive in the implementation of its provisions.
Lastly, the creation of the congressional oversight committee under the
law enhances, rather than violates, separation of powers. It ensures the
fulfillment of the legislative policy and serves as a check to any
over-accumulation of power on the part of the executive and the
implementing agencies.
After a careful consideration of the conflicting
contentions of the parties, the Court finds that petitioners have failed
to overcome the presumption of constitutionality in favor of RA 9335,
except as shall hereafter be discussed.
Actual Case And Ripeness
An actual case or controversy involves a conflict of
legal rights, an assertion of opposite legal claims susceptible of
judicial adjudication.10
A closely related requirement is ripeness, that is, the question must
be ripe for adjudication. And a constitutional question is ripe for
adjudication when the governmental act being challenged has a direct
adverse effect on the individual challenging it.11
Thus, to be ripe for judicial adjudication, the petitioner must show a
personal stake in the outcome of the case or an injury to himself that
can be redressed by a favorable decision of the Court.12
In this case, aside from the general claim that the
dispute has ripened into a judicial controversy by the mere enactment of
the law even without any further overt act,13
petitioners fail either to assert any specific and concrete legal claim
or to demonstrate any direct adverse effect of the law on them. They
are unable to show a personal stake in the outcome of this case or an
injury to themselves. On this account, their petition is procedurally
infirm.
This notwithstanding, public interest requires the
resolution of the constitutional issues raised by petitioners. The grave
nature of their allegations tends to cast a cloud on the presumption of
constitutionality in favor of the law. And where an action of the
legislative branch is alleged to have infringed the Constitution, it
becomes not only the right but in fact the duty of the judiciary to
settle the dispute.14
Accountability of
Public Officers
Public Officers
Section 1, Article 11 of the Constitution states:
Sec. 1. Public office is a public trust. Public
officers and employees must at all times be accountable to the people,
serve them with utmost responsibility, integrity, loyalty, and
efficiency, act with patriotism, and justice, and lead modest lives.
Public office is a public trust. It must be
discharged by its holder not for his own personal gain but for the
benefit of the public for whom he holds it in trust. By demanding
accountability and service with responsibility, integrity, loyalty,
efficiency, patriotism and justice, all government officials and
employees have the duty to be responsive to the needs of the people they
are called upon to serve.
Public officers enjoy the presumption of regularity
in the performance of their duties. This presumption necessarily obtains
in favor of BIR and BOC officials and employees. RA 9335 operates on
the basis thereof and reinforces it by providing a system of rewards and
sanctions for the purpose of encouraging the officials and employees of
the BIR and the BOC to exceed their revenue targets and optimize their
revenue-generation capability and collection.15
The presumption is disputable but proof to the
contrary is required to rebut it. It cannot be overturned by mere
conjecture or denied in advance (as petitioners would have the Court do)
specially in this case where it is an underlying principle to advance a
declared public policy.
Petitioners’ claim that the implementation of RA 9335
will turn BIR and BOC officials and employees into "bounty hunters and
mercenaries" is not only without any factual and legal basis; it is also
purely speculative.
A law enacted by Congress enjoys the strong
presumption of constitutionality. To justify its nullification, there
must be a clear and unequivocal breach of the Constitution, not a
doubtful and equivocal one.16
To invalidate RA 9335 based on petitioners’ baseless supposition is an
affront to the wisdom not only of the legislature that passed it but
also of the executive which approved it.
Public service is its own reward. Nevertheless,
public officers may by law be rewarded for exemplary and exceptional
performance. A system of incentives for exceeding the set expectations
of a public office is not anathema to the concept of public
accountability. In fact, it recognizes and reinforces dedication to
duty, industry, efficiency and loyalty to public service of deserving
government personnel.
In United States v. Matthews,17
the U.S. Supreme Court validated a law which awards to officers of the
customs as well as other parties an amount not exceeding one-half of the
net proceeds of forfeitures in violation of the laws against smuggling.
Citing Dorsheimer v. United States,18 the U.S. Supreme Court said:
The offer of a portion of such penalties to the
collectors is to stimulate and reward their zeal and industry in
detecting fraudulent attempts to evade payment of duties and taxes.
In the same vein, employees of the BIR and the BOC
may by law be entitled to a reward when, as a consequence of their zeal
in the enforcement of tax and customs laws, they exceed their revenue
targets. In addition, RA 9335 establishes safeguards to ensure that the
reward will not be claimed if it will be either the fruit of "bounty
hunting or mercenary activity" or the product of the irregular
performance of official duties. One of these precautionary measures is
embodied in Section 8 of the law:
SEC. 8. Liability of Officials, Examiners and Employees of the BIR and the BOC. – The
officials, examiners, and employees of the [BIR] and the [BOC] who
violate this Act or who are guilty of negligence, abuses or acts of
malfeasance or misfeasance or fail to exercise extraordinary diligence
in the performance of their duties shall be held liable for any loss or
injury suffered by any business establishment or taxpayer as a result of
such violation, negligence, abuse, malfeasance, misfeasance or failure
to exercise extraordinary diligence.
Equal Protection
Equality guaranteed under the equal protection clause
is equality under the same conditions and among persons similarly
situated; it is equality among equals, not similarity of treatment of
persons who are classified based on substantial differences in relation
to the object to be accomplished.19 When things or persons are different in fact or circumstance, they may be treated in law differently. In Victoriano v. Elizalde Rope Workers’ Union,20 this Court declared:
The guaranty of equal protection of the laws is not a
guaranty of equality in the application of the laws upon all citizens
of the [S]tate. It is not, therefore, a requirement, in order to avoid
the constitutional prohibition against inequality, that every man, woman
and child should be affected alike by a statute. Equality of operation
of statutes does not mean indiscriminate operation on persons merely as
such, but on persons according to the circumstances surrounding them. It
guarantees equality, not identity of rights. The Constitution does
not require that things which are different in fact be treated in law as
though they were the same. The equal protection clause does not forbid
discrimination as to things that are different. It does not prohibit legislation which is limited either in the object to which it is directed or by the territory within which it is to operate.
The equal protection of the laws clause of the
Constitution allows classification. Classification in law, as in the
other departments of knowledge or practice, is the grouping of things in
speculation or practice because they agree with one another in certain
particulars. A law is not invalid because of simple inequality. The very
idea of classification is that of inequality, so that it goes without
saying that the mere fact of inequality in no manner determines the
matter of constitutionality. All that is required of a valid
classification is that it be reasonable, which means that the
classification should be based on substantial distinctions which make
for real differences, that it must be germane to the purpose of the law;
that it must not be limited to existing conditions only; and that it
must apply equally to each member of the class. This Court has held that the
standard is satisfied if the classification or distinction is based on a
reasonable foundation or rational basis and is not palpably arbitrary.
In the exercise of its power to make classifications
for the purpose of enacting laws over matters within its jurisdiction,
the state is recognized as enjoying a wide range of discretion. It is
not necessary that the classification be based on scientific or marked
differences of things or in their relation. Neither is it necessary that
the classification be made with mathematical nicety. Hence, legislative
classification may in many cases properly rest on narrow distinctions,
for the equal protection guaranty does not preclude the legislature from
recognizing degrees of evil or harm, and legislation is addressed to
evils as they may appear.21 (emphasis supplied)
The equal protection clause recognizes a valid
classification, that is, a classification that has a reasonable
foundation or rational basis and not arbitrary.22
With respect to RA 9335, its expressed public policy is the
optimization of the revenue-generation capability and collection of the
BIR and the BOC.23
Since the subject of the law is the revenue- generation capability and
collection of the BIR and the BOC, the incentives and/or sanctions
provided in the law should logically pertain to the said agencies.
Moreover, the law concerns only the BIR and the BOC because they have
the common distinct primary function of generating revenues for the
national government through the collection of taxes, customs duties,
fees and charges.
The BIR performs the following functions:
Sec. 18. The Bureau of Internal Revenue. – The
Bureau of Internal Revenue, which shall be headed by and subject to the
supervision and control of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, who
shall be appointed by the President upon the recommendation of the
Secretary [of the DOF], shall have the following functions:
(1) Assess and collect all taxes, fees and charges and account for all revenues collected;
(2) Exercise duly delegated police powers for the proper performance of its functions and duties;
(3) Prevent and prosecute tax evasions and all other illegal economic activities;
(4) Exercise supervision and control over its constituent and subordinate units; and
(5) Perform such other functions as may be provided by law.24
xxx xxx xxx (emphasis supplied)
On the other hand, the BOC has the following functions:
Sec. 23. The Bureau of Customs. – The Bureau
of Customs which shall be headed and subject to the management and
control of the Commissioner of Customs, who shall be appointed by the
President upon the recommendation of the Secretary[of the DOF] and
hereinafter referred to as Commissioner, shall have the following
functions:
(1) Collect custom duties, taxes and the corresponding fees, charges and penalties;
(2) Account for all customs revenues collected;
(3) Exercise police authority for the enforcement of tariff and customs laws;
(4) Prevent and suppress smuggling, pilferage and all other economic frauds within all ports of entry;
(5) Supervise and control exports, imports, foreign mails and the clearance of vessels and aircrafts in all ports of entry;
(6) Administer all legal requirements that are appropriate;
(7) Prevent and prosecute smuggling and other illegal activities in all ports under its jurisdiction;
(8) Exercise supervision and control over its constituent units;
(9) Perform such other functions as may be provided by law.25
xxx xxx xxx (emphasis supplied)
Both the BIR and the BOC are bureaus under the DOF.
They principally perform the special function of being the
instrumentalities through which the State exercises one of its great
inherent functions – taxation. Indubitably, such substantial distinction
is germane and intimately related to the purpose of the law. Hence, the
classification and treatment accorded to the BIR and the BOC under RA
9335 fully satisfy the demands of equal protection.
Undue Delegation
Two tests determine the validity of delegation of
legislative power: (1) the completeness test and (2) the sufficient
standard test. A law is complete when it sets forth therein the policy
to be executed, carried out or implemented by the delegate.26
It lays down a sufficient standard when it provides adequate guidelines
or limitations in the law to map out the boundaries of the delegate’s
authority and prevent the delegation from running riot.27
To be sufficient, the standard must specify the limits of the
delegate’s authority, announce the legislative policy and identify the
conditions under which it is to be implemented.28
RA 9335 adequately states the policy and standards to
guide the President in fixing revenue targets and the implementing
agencies in carrying out the provisions of the law. Section 2 spells out
the policy of the law:
SEC. 2. Declaration of Policy. – It is the
policy of the State to optimize the revenue-generation capability and
collection of the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) and the Bureau of
Customs (BOC) by providing for a system of rewards and sanctions through
the creation of a Rewards and Incentives Fund and a Revenue Performance
Evaluation Board in the above agencies for the purpose of encouraging
their officials and employees to exceed their revenue targets.
Section 4 "canalized within banks that keep it from overflowing"29 the delegated power to the President to fix revenue targets:
SEC. 4. Rewards and Incentives Fund. – A
Rewards and Incentives Fund, hereinafter referred to as the Fund, is
hereby created, to be sourced from the collection of the BIR and the BOC
in excess of their respective revenue targets of the year, as determined by the Development Budget and Coordinating Committee (DBCC), in the following percentages:
Excess of Collection of the Excess the Revenue Targets
|
Percent (%) of the Excess Collection to Accrue to the Fund
|
30% or below
|
– 15%
|
More than 30%
|
– 15% of the first 30% plus 20% of the remaining excess
|
The Fund shall be deemed automatically appropriated
the year immediately following the year when the revenue collection
target was exceeded and shall be released on the same fiscal year.
Revenue targets shall refer to the original
estimated revenue collection expected of the BIR and the BOC for a given
fiscal year as stated in the Budget of Expenditures and Sources of
Financing (BESF) submitted by the President to Congress. The BIR and
the BOC shall submit to the DBCC the distribution of the agencies’
revenue targets as allocated among its revenue districts in the case of
the BIR, and the collection districts in the case of the BOC.
xxx xxx xxx (emphasis supplied)
Revenue targets are based on the original estimated
revenue collection expected respectively of the BIR and the BOC for a
given fiscal year as approved by the DBCC and stated in the BESF
submitted by the President to Congress.30 Thus, the determination of revenue targets does not rest solely on the President as it also undergoes the scrutiny of the DBCC.
On the other hand, Section 7 specifies the limits of
the Board’s authority and identifies the conditions under which
officials and employees whose revenue collection falls short of the
target by at least 7.5% may be removed from the service:
SEC. 7. Powers and Functions of the Board. – The Board in the agency shall have the following powers and functions:
xxx xxx xxx
(b) To set the criteria and procedures for removing
from service officials and employees whose revenue collection falls
short of the target by at least seven and a half percent (7.5%), with
due consideration of all relevant factors affecting the level of
collection as provided in the rules and regulations promulgated under this Act, subject to civil service laws, rules and regulations and compliance with substantive and procedural due process: Provided, That the following exemptions shall apply:
1. Where the district or area of responsibility is
newly-created, not exceeding two years in operation, as has no
historical record of collection performance that can be used as basis
for evaluation; and
2. Where the revenue or customs official or employee
is a recent transferee in the middle of the period under consideration
unless the transfer was due to nonperformance of revenue targets or
potential nonperformance of revenue targets: Provided, however, That
when the district or area of responsibility covered by revenue or
customs officials or employees has suffered from economic difficulties
brought about by natural calamities or force majeure or economic
causes as may be determined by the Board, termination shall be
considered only after careful and proper review by the Board.
(c) To terminate personnel in accordance with the
criteria adopted in the preceding paragraph: Provided, That such
decision shall be immediately executory: Provided, further, That the
application of the criteria for the separation of an official or
employee from service under this Act shall be without prejudice to the
application of other relevant laws on accountability of public officers
and employees, such as the Code of Conduct and Ethical Standards of
Public Officers and Employees and the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices
Act;
xxx xxx xxx (emphasis supplied)
Clearly, RA 9335 in no way violates the security of
tenure of officials and employees of the BIR and the BOC. The guarantee
of security of tenure only means that an employee cannot be dismissed
from the service for causes other than those provided by law and only
after due process is accorded the employee.31
In the case of RA 9335, it lays down a reasonable yardstick for removal
(when the revenue collection falls short of the target by at least
7.5%) with due consideration of all relevant factors affecting the level
of collection. This standard is analogous to inefficiency and
incompetence in the performance of official duties, a ground for
disciplinary action under civil service laws.32
The action for removal is also subject to civil service laws, rules and
regulations and compliance with substantive and procedural due process.
At any rate, this Court has recognized the following
as sufficient standards: "public interest," "justice and equity,"
"public convenience and welfare" and "simplicity, economy and welfare."33
In this case, the declared policy of optimization of the
revenue-generation capability and collection of the BIR and the BOC is
infused with public interest.
Separation Of Powers
Section 12 of RA 9335 provides:
SEC. 12. Joint Congressional Oversight Committee.
– There is hereby created a Joint Congressional Oversight Committee
composed of seven Members from the Senate and seven Members from the
House of Representatives. The Members from the Senate shall be appointed
by the Senate President, with at least two senators representing the
minority. The Members from the House of Representatives shall be
appointed by the Speaker with at least two members representing the
minority. After the Oversight Committee will have approved the
implementing rules and regulations (IRR) it shall thereafter become functus officio and therefore cease to exist.
The Joint Congressional Oversight Committee in RA
9335 was created for the purpose of approving the implementing rules and
regulations (IRR) formulated by the DOF, DBM, NEDA, BIR, BOC and CSC.
On May 22, 2006, it approved the said IRR. From then on, it became functus officio
and ceased to exist. Hence, the issue of its alleged encroachment on
the executive function of implementing and enforcing the law may be
considered moot and academic.
This notwithstanding, this might be as good a time as
any for the Court to confront the issue of the constitutionality of the
Joint Congressional Oversight Committee created under RA 9335 (or other
similar laws for that matter).
The scholarly discourse of Mr. Justice (now Chief Justice) Puno on the concept of congressional oversight in Macalintal v. Commission on Elections34 is illuminating:
Concept and bases of congressional oversight
Broadly defined, the power of oversight embraces all activities undertaken by Congress to enhance its understanding of and influence over the implementation of legislation it has enacted. Clearly, oversight concerns post-enactment
measures undertaken by Congress: (a) to monitor bureaucratic compliance
with program objectives, (b) to determine whether agencies are properly
administered, (c) to eliminate executive waste and dishonesty, (d) to
prevent executive usurpation of legislative authority, and (d) to assess
executive conformity with the congressional perception of public
interest.
The power of oversight has been held to be intrinsic
in the grant of legislative power itself and integral to the checks and
balances inherent in a democratic system of government. x x x x x x x x
x
Over the years, Congress has invoked its oversight
power with increased frequency to check the perceived "exponential
accumulation of power" by the executive branch. By the beginning of the
20th century, Congress has delegated an enormous amount of
legislative authority to the executive branch and the administrative
agencies. Congress, thus, uses its oversight power to make sure that the
administrative agencies perform their functions within the authority
delegated to them. x x x x x x x x x
Categories of congressional oversight functions
The acts done by Congress purportedly in the exercise of its oversight powers may be divided into three categories, namely: scrutiny, investigation and supervision.
a. Scrutiny
Congressional scrutiny implies a lesser
intensity and continuity of attention to administrative operations. Its
primary purpose is to determine economy and efficiency of the operation
of government activities. In the exercise of legislative scrutiny,
Congress may request information and report from the other branches of
government. It can give recommendations or pass resolutions for
consideration of the agency involved.
xxx xxx xxx
b. Congressional investigation
While congressional scrutiny is regarded as a passive process of looking at the facts that are readily available, congressional investigation involves a more intense digging of facts.
The power of Congress to conduct investigation is recognized by the
1987 Constitution under section 21, Article VI, xxx xxx xxx
c. Legislative supervision
The third and most encompassing form by which
Congress exercises its oversight power is thru legislative supervision.
"Supervision" connotes a continuing and informed awareness on the part
of a congressional committee regarding executive operations in a given administrative area. While both congressional scrutiny and investigation involve inquiry into past executive branch actions in order to influence future executive branch performance, congressional
supervision allows Congress to scrutinize the exercise of delegated
law-making authority, and permits Congress to retain part of that
delegated authority.
Congress exercises supervision over the executive
agencies through its veto power. It typically utilizes veto provisions
when granting the President or an executive agency the power to
promulgate regulations with the force of law. These provisions require
the President or an agency to present the proposed regulations to
Congress, which retains a "right" to approve or disapprove any
regulation before it takes effect. Such legislative veto provisions
usually provide that a proposed regulation will become a law after the
expiration of a certain period of time, only if Congress does not
affirmatively disapprove of the regulation in the meantime. Less
frequently, the statute provides that a proposed regulation will become
law if Congress affirmatively approves it.
Supporters of legislative veto stress that it
is necessary to maintain the balance of power between the legislative
and the executive branches of government as it offers lawmakers a way to
delegate vast power to the executive branch or to independent agencies
while retaining the option to cancel particular exercise of such power
without having to pass new legislation or to repeal existing law. They
contend that this arrangement promotes democratic accountability as it
provides legislative check on the activities of unelected administrative
agencies. One proponent thus explains:
It is too late to debate the merits of this
delegation policy: the policy is too deeply embedded in our law and
practice. It suffices to say that the complexities of modern government
have often led Congress-whether by actual or perceived necessity- to
legislate by declaring broad policy goals and general statutory
standards, leaving the choice of policy options to the discretion of an
executive officer. Congress articulates legislative aims, but leaves
their implementation to the judgment of parties who may or may not have
participated in or agreed with the development of those aims.
Consequently, absent safeguards, in many instances the reverse of our
constitutional scheme could be effected: Congress proposes, the
Executive disposes. One safeguard, of course, is the legislative power
to enact new legislation or to change existing law. But without some
means of overseeing post enactment activities of the executive branch,
Congress would be unable to determine whether its policies have been
implemented in accordance with legislative intent and thus whether
legislative intervention is appropriate.
Its opponents, however, criticize the legislative veto as undue encroachment upon the executive prerogatives. They urge that any
post-enactment measures undertaken by the legislative branch should be
limited to scrutiny and investigation; any measure beyond that would
undermine the separation of powers guaranteed by the Constitution.
They contend that legislative veto constitutes an impermissible evasion
of the President’s veto authority and intrusion into the powers vested
in the executive or judicial branches of government. Proponents counter
that legislative veto enhances separation of powers as it prevents the
executive branch and independent agencies from accumulating too much
power. They submit that reporting requirements and congressional
committee investigations allow Congress to scrutinize only the exercise
of delegated law-making authority. They do not allow Congress to review
executive proposals before they take effect and they do not afford the
opportunity for ongoing and binding expressions of congressional intent.
In contrast, legislative veto permits Congress to participate
prospectively in the approval or disapproval of "subordinate law"
or those enacted by the executive branch pursuant to a delegation of
authority by Congress. They further argue that legislative veto "is a
necessary response by Congress to the accretion of policy control by
forces outside its chambers." In an era of delegated authority, they
point out that legislative veto "is the most efficient means Congress
has yet devised to retain control over the evolution and implementation
of its policy as declared by statute."
In Immigration and Naturalization Service v. Chadha, the U.S. Supreme Court resolved the validity of legislative veto provisions.
The case arose from the order of the immigration judge suspending the
deportation of Chadha pursuant to § 244(c)(1) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act. The United States House of Representatives passed a
resolution vetoing the suspension pursuant to § 244(c)(2) authorizing
either House of Congress, by resolution, to invalidate the decision of
the executive branch to allow a particular deportable alien to remain in
the United States. The immigration judge reopened the deportation
proceedings to implement the House order and the alien was ordered
deported. The Board of Immigration Appeals dismissed the alien’s appeal,
holding that it had no power to declare unconstitutional an act of
Congress. The United States Court of Appeals for Ninth Circuit held that
the House was without constitutional authority to order the alien’s
deportation and that § 244(c)(2) violated the constitutional doctrine on
separation of powers.
On appeal, the U.S. Supreme Court declared § 244(c)(2) unconstitutional. But the Court shied away from the issue of separation of powers
and instead held that the provision violates the presentment clause and
bicameralism. It held that the one-house veto was essentially
legislative in purpose and effect. As such, it is subject to the
procedures set out in Article I of the Constitution requiring the
passage by a majority of both Houses and presentment to the President. x
x x x x x x x x
Two weeks after the Chadha decision, the Court
upheld, in memorandum decision, two lower court decisions invalidating
the legislative veto provisions in the Natural Gas Policy Act of 1978
and the Federal Trade Commission Improvement Act of 1980. Following this
precedence, lower courts invalidated statutes containing legislative
veto provisions although some of these provisions required the approval
of both Houses of Congress and thus met the bicameralism requirement of
Article I. Indeed, some of these veto provisions were not even
exercised.35 (emphasis supplied)
In Macalintal, given the concept and
configuration of the power of congressional oversight and considering
the nature and powers of a constitutional body like the Commission on
Elections, the Court struck down the provision in RA 9189 (The Overseas
Absentee Voting Act of 2003) creating a Joint Congressional Committee.
The committee was tasked not only to monitor and evaluate the
implementation of the said law but also to review, revise, amend and
approve the IRR promulgated by the Commission on Elections. The Court
held that these functions infringed on the constitutional independence
of the Commission on Elections.36
With this backdrop, it is clear that congressional oversight is not unconstitutional per se,
meaning, it neither necessarily constitutes an encroachment on the
executive power to implement laws nor undermines the constitutional
separation of powers. Rather, it is integral to the checks and balances
inherent in a democratic system of government. It may in fact even
enhance the separation of powers as it prevents the over-accumulation of
power in the executive branch.
However, to forestall the danger of congressional
encroachment "beyond the legislative sphere," the Constitution imposes
two basic and related constraints on Congress.37 It may not vest itself, any of its committees or its members with either executive or judicial power.38
And, when it exercises its legislative power, it must follow the
"single, finely wrought and exhaustively considered, procedures"
specified under the Constitution,39 including the procedure for enactment of laws and presentment.
Thus, any post-enactment congressional measure such
as this should be limited to scrutiny and investigation. In particular,
congressional oversight must be confined to the following:
(1) scrutiny based primarily on Congress’ power of
appropriation and the budget hearings conducted in connection with it,
its power to ask heads of departments to appear before and be heard by
either of its Houses on any matter pertaining to their departments and
its power of confirmation40 and
Any action or step beyond that will undermine the
separation of powers guaranteed by the Constitution. Legislative vetoes
fall in this class.
Legislative veto is a statutory provision requiring
the President or an administrative agency to present the proposed
implementing rules and regulations of a law to Congress which, by itself
or through a committee formed by it, retains a "right" or "power" to
approve or disapprove such regulations before they take effect. As such,
a legislative veto in the form of a congressional oversight committee
is in the form of an inward-turning delegation designed to attach a
congressional leash (other than through scrutiny and investigation) to
an agency to which Congress has by law initially delegated broad powers.43
It radically changes the design or structure of the Constitution’s
diagram of power as it entrusts to Congress a direct role in enforcing,
applying or implementing its own laws.44
Congress has two options when enacting legislation to
define national policy within the broad horizons of its legislative
competence.45
It can itself formulate the details or it can assign to the executive
branch the responsibility for making necessary managerial decisions in
conformity with those standards.46
In the latter case, the law must be complete in all its essential terms
and conditions when it leaves the hands of the legislature.47
Thus, what is left for the executive branch or the concerned
administrative agency when it formulates rules and regulations
implementing the law is to fill up details (supplementary rule-making)
or ascertain facts necessary to bring the law into actual operation
(contingent rule-making).48
Administrative regulations enacted by administrative
agencies to implement and interpret the law which they are entrusted to
enforce have the force of law and are entitled to respect.49 Such rules and regulations partake of the nature of a statute50
and are just as binding as if they have been written in the statute
itself. As such, they have the force and effect of law and enjoy the
presumption of constitutionality and legality until they are set aside
with finality in an appropriate case by a competent court.51
Congress, in the guise of assuming the role of an overseer, may not
pass upon their legality by subjecting them to its stamp of approval
without disturbing the calculated balance of powers established by the
Constitution. In exercising discretion to approve or disapprove the IRR
based on a determination of whether or not they conformed with the
provisions of RA 9335, Congress arrogated judicial power unto itself, a
power exclusively vested in this Court by the Constitution.
Considered Opinion of
Mr. Justice Dante O. Tinga
Mr. Justice Dante O. Tinga
Moreover, the requirement that the implementing rules
of a law be subjected to approval by Congress as a condition for their
effectivity violates the cardinal constitutional principles of
bicameralism and the rule on presentment.52
Section 1, Article VI of the Constitution states:
Section 1. The legislative power shall be vested
in the Congress of the Philippines which shall consist of a Senate and a
House of Representatives, except to the extent reserved to the people by the provision on initiative and referendum. (emphasis supplied)
Legislative power (or the power to propose, enact, amend and repeal laws)53
is vested in Congress which consists of two chambers, the Senate and
the House of Representatives. A valid exercise of legislative power
requires the act of both chambers. Corrollarily, it can be exercised
neither solely by one of the two chambers nor by a committee of either
or both chambers. Thus, assuming the validity of a legislative veto,
both a single-chamber legislative veto and a congressional committee
legislative veto are invalid.
Additionally, Section 27(1), Article VI of the Constitution provides:
Section 27. (1) Every bill passed by the Congress shall, before it becomes a law, be presented to the President.
If he approves the same, he shall sign it, otherwise, he shall veto it
and return the same with his objections to the House where it
originated, which shall enter the objections at large in its Journal and
proceed to reconsider it. If, after such reconsideration, two-thirds of
all the Members of such House shall agree to pass the bill, it shall be
sent, together with the objections, to the other House by which it
shall likewise be reconsidered, and if approved by two-thirds of all the
Members of that House, it shall become a law. In all such cases, the
votes of each House shall be determined by yeas or nays,
and the names of the members voting for or against shall be entered in
its Journal. The President shall communicate his veto of any bill to the
House where it originated within thirty days after the date of receipt
thereof; otherwise, it shall become a law as if he had signed it.
(emphasis supplied)
Every bill passed by Congress must be presented to
the President for approval or veto. In the absence of presentment to the
President, no bill passed by Congress can become a law. In this sense,
law-making under the Constitution is a joint act of the Legislature and
of the Executive. Assuming that legislative veto is a valid legislative
act with the force of law, it cannot take effect without such
presentment even if approved by both chambers of Congress.
In sum, two steps are required before a bill becomes a law. First, it must be approved by both Houses of Congress.54 Second, it must be presented to and approved by the President.55 As summarized by Justice Isagani Cruz56 and Fr. Joaquin G. Bernas, S.J.57, the following is the procedure for the approval of bills:
A bill is introduced by any member of the House of
Representatives or the Senate except for some measures that must
originate only in the former chamber.
The first reading involves only a reading of the
number and title of the measure and its referral by the Senate President
or the Speaker to the proper committee for study.
The bill may be "killed" in the committee or it may
be recommended for approval, with or without amendments, sometimes after
public hearings are first held thereon. If there are other bills of the
same nature or purpose, they may all be consolidated into one bill
under common authorship or as a committee bill.
Once reported out, the bill shall be calendared for
second reading. It is at this stage that the bill is read in its
entirety, scrutinized, debated upon and amended when desired. The second
reading is the most important stage in the passage of a bill.
The bill as approved on second reading is printed in
its final form and copies thereof are distributed at least three days
before the third reading. On the third reading, the members merely
register their votes and explain them if they are allowed by the rules.
No further debate is allowed.
Once the bill passes third reading, it is sent to the
other chamber, where it will also undergo the three readings. If there
are differences between the versions approved by the two chambers, a
conference committee58
representing both Houses will draft a compromise measure that if
ratified by the Senate and the House of Representatives will then be
submitted to the President for his consideration.
The bill is enrolled when printed as finally approved
by the Congress, thereafter authenticated with the signatures of the
Senate President, the Speaker, and the Secretaries of their respective
chambers…59
The President’s role in law-making.
The final step is submission to the President for
approval. Once approved, it takes effect as law after the required
publication.60
Where Congress delegates the formulation of rules to
implement the law it has enacted pursuant to sufficient standards
established in the said law, the law must be complete in all its
essential terms and conditions when it leaves the hands of the
legislature. And it may be deemed to have left the hands of the
legislature when it becomes effective because it is only upon
effectivity of the statute that legal rights and obligations become
available to those entitled by the language of the statute. Subject to
the indispensable requisite of publication under the due process clause,61 the determination as to when a law takes effect is wholly the prerogative of Congress.62
As such, it is only upon its effectivity that a law may be executed and
the executive branch acquires the duties and powers to execute the said
law. Before that point, the role of the executive branch, particularly
of the President, is limited to approving or vetoing the law.63
From the moment the law becomes effective, any
provision of law that empowers Congress or any of its members to play
any role in the implementation or enforcement of the law violates the
principle of separation of powers and is thus unconstitutional. Under
this principle, a provision that requires Congress or its members to
approve the implementing rules of a law after it has already taken
effect shall be unconstitutional, as is a provision that allows Congress
or its members to overturn any directive or ruling made by the members
of the executive branch charged with the implementation of the law.
Following this rationale, Section 12 of RA 9335
should be struck down as unconstitutional. While there may be similar
provisions of other laws that may be invalidated for failure to pass
this standard, the Court refrains from invalidating them wholesale but
will do so at the proper time when an appropriate case assailing those
provisions is brought before us.64
The next question to be resolved is: what is the
effect of the unconstitutionality of Section 12 of RA 9335 on the other
provisions of the law? Will it render the entire law unconstitutional?
No.
Section 13 of RA 9335 provides:
SEC. 13. Separability Clause. – If any
provision of this Act is declared invalid by a competent court, the
remainder of this Act or any provision not affected by such declaration
of invalidity shall remain in force and effect.
In Tatad v. Secretary of the Department of Energy,65 the Court laid down the following rules:
The general rule is that where part of a
statute is void as repugnant to the Constitution, while another part is
valid, the valid portion, if separable from the invalid, may stand and
be enforced. The presence of a separability clause in a statute creates
the presumption that the legislature intended separability, rather than
complete nullity of the statute. To justify this result, the valid
portion must be so far independent of the invalid portion that it is
fair to presume that the legislature would have enacted it by itself if
it had supposed that it could not constitutionally enact the other.
Enough must remain to make a complete, intelligible and valid statute,
which carries out the legislative intent. x x x
The exception to the general rule is
that when the parts of a statute are so mutually dependent and
connected, as conditions, considerations, inducements, or compensations
for each other, as to warrant a belief that the legislature intended
them as a whole, the nullity of one part will vitiate the rest. In
making the parts of the statute dependent, conditional, or connected
with one another, the legislature intended the statute to be carried out
as a whole and would not have enacted it if one part is void, in which
case if some parts are unconstitutional, all the other provisions thus
dependent, conditional, or connected must fall with them.
The separability clause of RA 9335 reveals the
intention of the legislature to isolate and detach any invalid provision
from the other provisions so that the latter may continue in force and
effect. The valid portions can stand independently of the invalid
section. Without Section 12, the remaining provisions still constitute a
complete, intelligible and valid law which carries out the legislative
intent to optimize the revenue-generation capability and collection of
the BIR and the BOC by providing for a system of rewards and sanctions
through the Rewards and Incentives Fund and a Revenue Performance
Evaluation Board.
To be effective, administrative rules and regulations
must be published in full if their purpose is to enforce or implement
existing law pursuant to a valid delegation. The IRR of RA 9335 were
published on May 30, 2006 in two newspapers of general circulation66 and became effective 15 days thereafter.67
Until and unless the contrary is shown, the IRR are presumed valid and
effective even without the approval of the Joint Congressional Oversight
Committee.
WHEREFORE, the petition is hereby PARTIALLY GRANTED. Section
12 of RA 9335 creating a Joint Congressional Oversight Committee to
approve the implementing rules and regulations of the law is declared UNCONSTITUTIONAL and therefore NULL and VOID. The constitutionality of the remaining provisions of RA 9335 is UPHELD. Pursuant to Section 13 of RA 9335, the rest of the provisions remain in force and effect.
SO ORDERED.
Puno, C.J., Quisumbing, Ynares-Santiago, Carpio, Austria-Martinez, Corona, Carpio-Morales, Azcuna, Tinga, Chico-Nazario, Velasco, Jr., Nachura, Reyes, Leonardo-de-Castro, Brion, JJ., concur.
Footnotes
1 Under Rule 65 of the Rules of Court.
2 An Act to Improve Revenue Collection Performance of the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) and the Bureau of Customs (BOC) Through the Creation of a Rewards and Incentives Fund and of a Revenue Performance Evaluation Board and for Other Purposes.
3 Section 2, RA 9335.
4 Section 3, id.
5 Section 4, id.
6 Section 6, id.
7 Section 7, id.
8 Section 11, id.
9 Section 12, id.
10 Cruz, Isagani, Philippine Constitutional Law, 1995 edition, p. 23.
11 Bernas, Joaquin, The 1987 Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines: A Commentary, 1996 edition, pp. 848-849.
12 Cruz v. Secretary of Environment and Natural Resources, 400 Phil. 904 (2000). (Vitug, J., separate opinion)
13 See La Bugal-B’Laan Tribal Association, Inc. v. Ramos, G.R. No. 127882, 01 December 2004, 445 SCRA 1.
14 Tañada v. Angara, 338 Phil. 546 (1997).
15 Section 2, id.
16 Central Bank Employees Association, Inc. v. Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, G.R. No. 148208, 15 December 2004, 446 SCRA 299.
17 173 U.S. 381 (1899).
18 74 U.S. 166 (1868).
19 Black’s Law Dictionary, Special De Luxe 5th Edition, West, p. 481.
20 158 Phil. 60 (1974).
21 Id. Citations omitted.
22 Ambros v. Commission on Audit, G.R. No. 159700, 30 June 2005, 462 SCRA 572.
23 Section 2, RA 9335.
24 Section 18, Chapter 4, Title II, Book IV, Administrative Code of 1987.
25 Section 23, id.
26 Pelaez v. Auditor General, 122 Phil. 965 (1965).
27 Eastern Shipping Lines, Inc. v. POEA, G.R. No. L-76633, 18 October 1988, 166 SCRA 533.
28 Cruz, Isagani, Philippine Political Law, 1991 edition, p. 97.
29 Panama Refining Co. v. Ryan, 293 U.S. 388 (1935), (Cardozo, J., dissenting).
30 Section 5, Rule II, Implementing Rules and Regulations of RA 9335.
31 De Guzman, Jr. v. Commission on Elections, 391 Phil. 70 (2000).
32 See Section 46(b)(8), Chapter 6, Title I, Subtitle A, Book V, Administrative Code of 1987.
33 Equi-Asia Placement, Inc. v. Department of Foreign Affairs, G.R. No. 152214, 19 September 2006, 502 SCRA 295.
34 453 Phil. 586 (2003). Mr. Justice (now Chief Justice) Puno’s separate opinion was adopted as part of the ponencia in this case insofar as it related to the creation of and the powers given to the Joint Congressional Oversight Committee.
35 Id. (italics in the original)
36 Id.
37 Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority v. Citizens for the Abatement of Aircraft Noise, 501 U.S. 252 (1991).
38 Id.
39 Id.
40 See Mr. Justice (now Chief Justice) Puno’s separate opinion in Macalintal.
41 E.g., by requiring the regular submission of reports.
42 See Mr. Justice (now Chief Justice) Puno’s separate opinion in Macalintal.
43 See Tribe, Lawrence, I American Constitutional Law 131 (2000).
44 Id.
45 Id. at 141.
46 Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority v. Citizens for the Abatement of Airport Noise, supra.
47 Edu v. Ericta, 146 Phil. 469 (1970).
48 Bernas, Joaquin, The 1987 Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines: A Commentary, 2003 edition, p. 664 citing Wayman v. Southward, 10 Wheat 1 (1852) and The Brig Aurora, 7 Cr. 382 (1813)).
49 Eslao v. Commission on Audit, G.R. No. 108310, 01 September 1994, 236 SCRA 161; Sierra Madre Trust v. Secretary of Agriculture and Natural Resources, 206 Phil. 310 (1983).
50 People v. Maceren, 169 Phil. 437 (1977).
51 See Eslao v. Commission on Audit, supra.
52 It is also for these reasons that the United States Supreme Court struck down legislative vetoes as unconstitutional in Immigration and Naturalization Service v. Chadha (462 U.S. 919 [1983]).
53 Nachura, Antonio B., Outline Reviewer in Political Law, 2006 edition, p. 236.
54 Section 26, Article VI of the Constitution provides:
(2) No bill passed by either House shall become a law unless it has passed three readings on separate days, and printed copies thereof in its final form have been distributed to its Members three days before its passage, except when the President certifies to the necessity of its immediate enactment to meet a public calamity or emergency. Upon the last reading of a bill, no amendment thereto shall be allowed, and the vote thereon shall be taken immediately thereafter, and the yeas and nays entered in the Journal.
56 Philippine Political Law, 2002 edition, Central Lawbook Publishing Co., Inc., pp. 152-153.
57 The Philippine Constitution for Ladies, Gentlemen And Others, 2007 edition, Rex Bookstore, Inc., pp. 118-119.
58 The conference committee consists of members nominated by both Houses. The task of the conference committee, however, is not strictly limited to reconciling differences. Jurisprudence also allows the committee to insert new provision[s] not found in either original provided these are germane to the subject of the bill. Next, the reconciled version must be presented to both Houses for ratification. (Id.)
59 Supra note 56.
60 Supra note 57.
61 See Section 1, Article III of the Constitution. In Tañada v. Tuvera (230 Phil. 528), the Court also cited Section 6, Article III which recognizes "the right of the people to information on matters of public concern."
62 As much is recognized in Article 2 of the Civil Code which states that "Laws shall take effect after fifteen days following the completion of their publication either in the Official Gazette, or in a newspaper of general circulation in the Philippines, unless it is otherwise provided." Tañada recognized that "unless it is otherwise provided" referred to the date of effectivity. Simply put, a law which is silent as to its effectivity date takes effect fifteen days following publication, though there is no impediment for Congress to provide for a different effectivity date.
63 It has been suggested by Mr. Justice Antonio T. Carpio that Section 12 of RA 9335 is likewise unconstitutional because it violates the principle of separation of powers, particularly with respect to the executive and the legislative branches. Implicit in this claim is the proposition that the ability of the President to promulgate implementing rules to legislation is inherent in the executive branch.
There has long been a trend towards the delegation of powers, especially of legislative powers, even if not expressly permitted by the Constitution. (I. Cortes, Administrative Law, at 12-13.) Delegation of legislative powers is permissible unless the delegation amounts to a surrender or abdication of powers. (Id.) Recent instances of delegated legislative powers upheld by the Court include the power of the Departments of Justice and Health to promulgate rules and regulations on lethal injection (Echegaray v. Secretary of Justice, 358 Phil. 410 [1998]); the power of the Secretary of Health to phase out blood banks (Beltran v. Secretary of Health, G.R. No. 133640, 133661, & 139147, 25 November 2005, 476 SCRA 168); and the power of the Departments of Finance and Labor to promulgate Implementing Rules to the Migrant Workers and Overseas Filipinos Act. (Equi-Asia Placement v.DFA, G.R. No. 152214, 19 September 2006, 502 SCRA 295.)
The delegation to the executive branch of the power to formulate and enact implementing rules falls within the class of permissible delegation of legislative powers. Most recently, in Executive Secretary v. Southwing Heavy Industries (G.R. Nos. 164171, 164172 &168741, 20 February 2006, 482 SCRA 673), we characterized such delegation as "confer[ring] upon the President quasi-legislative power which may be defined as the authority delegated by the law-making body to the administrative body to adopt rules and regulations intended to carry out the provisions of the law and implement legislative policy." (Id., at 686, citing Cruz, Philippine Administrative Law, 2003 Edition, at 24.) Law book authors are likewise virtually unanimous that the power of the executive branch to promulgate implementing rules arises from legislative delegation. Justice Nachura defines the nature of the rule-making power of administrative bodies in the executive branch as "the exercise of delegated legislative power, involving no discretion as to what the law shall be, but merely the authority to fix the details in the execution or enforcement of a policy set out in the law itself." (A.E. Nachura, Outline Reviewer in Political Law [2000 ed.], at 272.) He further explains that rules and regulations that "fix the details in the execution and enforcement of a policy set out in the law" are called "supplementary or detailed legislation". (Id., at 273.) Other commentators such as Fr. Bernas (Bernas, supra note 48, at 611), De Leon and De Leon (H. De Leon & H. De Leon, Jr., Administrative Law: Text and Cases (1998 ed), at 79-80; citing 1 Am. Jur. 2d 891) and Carlos Cruz (C. Cruz, Philippine Administrative Law (1998 ed), at 19-20, 22, 23) have similar views.
The Congress may delegate the power to craft implementing rules to the President in his capacity as the head of the executive branch, which is tasked under the Constitution to execute the law. In effecting this delegation, and as with any other delegation of legislative powers, Congress may impose conditions or limitations which the executive branch is bound to observe. A usual example is the designation by Congress of which particular members of the executive branch should participate in the drafting of the implementing rules. This set-up does not offend the separation of powers between the branches as it is sanctioned by the delegation principle.
Apart from whatever rule-making power that Congress may delegate to the President, the latter has inherent ordinance powers covering the executive branch as part of the power of executive control ("The President shall have control of all the executive departments, bureaus and offices…" Section 17, Article VII, Constitution.). By its nature, this ordinance power does not require or entail delegation from Congress. Such faculty must be distinguished from the authority to issue implementing rules to legislation which does not inhere in the presidency but instead, as explained earlier, is delegated by Congress.
The marked distinction between the President’s power to issue intrabranch orders and instructions or internal rules for the executive branch, on one hand, and the President’s authority by virtue of legislative delegation to issue implementing rules to legislation, on the other, is embodied in the rules on publication, as explained in Tañada v. Tuvera (G.R. No. L-63915, 29 December 1986, 146 SCRA 446). The Court held therein that internal regulations applicable to members of the executive branch, "that is, regulating only the personnel of the administrative agency and not the public, need not be published. Neither is publication required of the so-called letters of instructions issued by administrative superiors concerning the rules or guidelines to be followed by their subordinates in the performance of their duties." (Id., at 454) The dispensation with publication in such instances is rooted in the very nature of the issuances, i.e., they are not binding on the public. They neither create rights nor impose obligations which are enforceable in court. Since they are issued pursuant to the power of executive control, and are directed only at members of the executive branch, there is no constitutional need for their publication.
However, when the presidential issuance does create rights and obligations affecting the public at large, as implementing rules certainly do, then publication is mandatory. In explaining why this is so, the Court went as far as to note that such rules and regulations are designed "to enforce or implement existing law pursuant to a valid delegation." (Id., at 254.) The Court would not have spoken of "valid delegation" if indeed the power to issue such rules was inherent in the presidency. Moreover, the creation of legal rights and obligations is legislative in character, and the President in whom legislative power does not reside cannot confer legal rights or impose obligations on the people absent the proper empowering statute. Thus, any presidential issuance which purports to bear such legal effect on the public, such as implementing rules to legislation, can only emanate from a legislative delegation to the President.
The prevalent practice in the Office of the President is to issue orders or instructions to officials of the executive branch regarding the enforcement or carrying out of the law. This practice is valid conformably with the President’s power of executive control. The faculty to issue such orders or instructions is distinct from the power to promulgate implementing rules to legislation. The latter originates from a different legal foundation – the delegation of legislative power to the President.
Justice Carpio cites an unconventional interpretation of the ordinance power of the President, particularly the power to issue executive orders, as set forth in the Administrative Code of 1987. Yet, by practice, implementing rules are never contained in executive orders. They are, instead, contained in a segregate promulgation, usually entitled "Implementing Rules and Regulations," which derives not from the Administrative Code, but rather from the specific grants in the legislation itself sought to be implemented.
His position does not find textual support in the Administrative Code itself. Section 2, Chapter 2, Title 1, Book III of the Code, which defines "Executive orders" as "[a]cts of the President providing for rules of a general or permanent character in the implementation or execution of constitutional or statutory powers". Executive orders are not the vehicles for rules of a general or permanent character in the implementation or execution of laws. They are the vehicle for rules of a general or permanent character in the implementation or execution of the constitutional or statutory powers of the President himself. Since by definition, the statutory powers of the President consist of a specific delegation by Congress, it necessarily follows that the faculty to issue executive orders to implement such delegated authority emanates not from any inherent executive power but from the authority delegated by Congress.
It is not correct, as Justice Carpio posits, that without implementing rules, legislation cannot be faithfully executed by the executive branch. Many of our key laws, including the Civil Code, the Revised Penal Code, the Corporation Code, the Land Registration Act and the Property Registration Decree, do not have Implementing Rules. It has never been suggested that the enforcement of these laws is unavailing, or that the absence of implementing rules to these laws indicates insufficient statutory details that should preclude their enforcement. (See DBM v.Kolonwel Trading, G.R. Nos. 175608, 175616 & 175659, 8 June 2007, 524 SCRA 591, 603.)
In rejecting the theory that the power to craft implementing rules is executive in character and reaffirming instead that such power arises from a legislative grant, the Court asserts that Congress retains the power to impose statutory conditions in the drafting of implementing rules, provided that such conditions do not take on the character of a legislative veto. Congress can designate which officers or entities should participate in the drafting of implementing rules. It may impose statutory restraints on the participants in the drafting of implementing rules, and the President is obliged to observe such restraints on the executive officials, even if he thinks they are unnecessary or foolhardy. The unconstitutional nature of the legislative veto does not however bar Congress from imposing conditions which the President must comply with in the execution of the law. After all, the President has the constitutional duty to faithfully execute the laws.
64 This stance is called for by judicial restraint as well as the presumption of constitutionality accorded to laws enacted by Congress, a co-equal branch. It is also finds support in Pelaez v. Auditor General (122 Phil. 965 [1965]).
65 346 Phil. 321 (1997). Emphasis in the original.
66 In particular, the Philippine Star and the Manila Standard.
67 Section 36, IRR of RA 9335.
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