Statcon Case Digest
Statcon Case Digest
Statcon Case Digest
issued by the Labor Arbiter dismissing the complaint and referred the case to
the parties to resolve their disputes in accordance with the machinery
established in the Collective Bargaining Agreement. From this order, both
parties appealed to the Commission. On 1 September 1978, the Commission
(Second Division) promulgated its decision, setting aside the order appealed
from and entering a new one dismissing the case for obvious lack of merit,
relying on a letter of the Undersecretary of Labor that agreement between the
parties was made 2 April 1977 granting P27 per month retroactive to 1 April
1977 which was squarely under the exceptions provided for in paragraph k of
the rules implementing PD 1123. The union filed for reconsideration, but the
Commission en banc dismissed the same on 8 February 1979. Hence, the
petition.
Issue: Whether the Commission was correct in determining the agreement falls
under the exceptions.
Held: The collective bargaining agreement was entered into on 3
September1977, when PD 1123 was already in force and effect, although the
increase on the first year was retroactive to 1 April 1977. There is nothing in
the records that the negotiated wage increases were granted or paid before May
1977, to allow the company to fall within the exceptions provided for in
paragraph k of the rules implementing PD 1123. There was neither a perfected
contract nor an actual payment of said increase. There was no grant of said
increases yet, despite the contrary opinion expressed in the letter of the
Undersecretary of Labor. It must be noted that the letter was based on a wrong
premise or representation on the part of the company. The company had
declared that the parties have agreed on 2 April 1977 in recognition of the
imperative need for employees to cope up with inflation brought about by,
among others, another increase in oil price, but omitting the fact that
negotiations were still being held on other unresolved economic and noneconomic bargaining items (which were only agreed upon on 3 September
1977).
The Department of Labor had the right to construe the word grant as used in
its rules implementing PD 1123, and its explanation regarding the exemptions
to PD 1123 should be given weight; but, when it is based on
misrepresentations as to the existence of an agreement between the parties,
the same cannot be applied. There is no distinction between interpretation and
explaining the extent and scope of the law; because where one explains the
intent and scope of a statute, he is interpreting it. Thus, the construction or
explanation of Labor Undersecretary is not only wrong as it was purely based
October 1976, the Labor Arbiter, instead of issuing a writ of execution, issued
an order enjoining the bank to continue paying its employees their regular
holiday pay. On 17 November 1976, the bank appealed from the order of the
Labor Arbiter to the NLRC. On 20 June 1978, the NLRC promulgated its
resolution en banc dismissing the banks appeal, and ordering the issuance of
the proper writ of execution. On 21 February 1979, the bank filed with the
Office of the Minister of Labor a motion for reconsideration/appeal with urgent
prayer to stay execution. On 13 August 1979,s the NLRC issued an order
directing the Chief of Research and Information of the Commission to compute
the holiday pay of the IBAA employees from April 1976 to the present in
accordance with the Labor Arbiter dated 25 August 1975. On 10 November
1979, the Office of the Minister of Labor, through Deputy Minister Amado G.
Inciong, issued an order setting aside the resolution en banc of the NLRC dated
20 June 1978, and dismissing the case for lack of merit. Hence, the petition for
certiorari charging Inciong with abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess
of jurisdiction.
Issue: Whether the Ministry of Labor is correct in determining that monthly
paid employees are excluded from the benefits of holiday pay.
Held: From Article 92 of the Labor Code, as amended by Presidential Decree
850, and Article 82 of the same Code, it is clear that monthly paid employees
are not excluded from the benefits of holiday pay. However, the implementing
rules on holiday pay promulgated by the then Secretary of Labor excludes
monthly paid employees from the said benefits by inserting, under Rule IV,
Book Ill of the implementing rules, Section 2, which provides that: employees
who are uniformly paid by the month, irrespective of the number of working
days therein, with a salary of not less than the statutory or established
minimum wage shall be presumed to be paid for all days in the month whether
worked or not. Even if contemporaneous construction placed upon a statute by
executive officers whose duty is to enforce it is given great weight by the courts,
still if such construction is so erroneous, the same must be declared as null
and void. So long, as the regulations relate solely to carrying into effect the
provisions of the law, they are valid. Where an administrative order betrays
inconsistency or repugnancy to the provisions of the Act, the mandate of the
Act must prevail and must be followed. A rule is binding on the Courts so long
as the procedure fixed for its promulgation is followed and its scope is within
the statutory authority granted by the legislature, even if the courts are not in
agreement with the policy stated therein or its innate wisdom. Further,
withholds, is obviously ultra vires. In the present case, the provisions of the
Labor Code on the entitlement to the benefits of holiday pay are clear and
explicit, it provides for both the coverage of and exclusion from the benefit. In
Policy Instruction 9, the Secretary of Labor went as far as to categorically state
that the benefit is principally intended for daily paid employees, when the law
clearly states that every worker shall be paid their regular holiday pay.
While it is true that the contemporaneous construction placed upon a statute
by executive officers whose duty is to enforce it should be given great weight by
the courts, still if such construction is so erroneous, the same must be
declared as null and void. It is the role of the Judiciary to refine and, when
necessary, correct constitutional (and/or statutory) interpretation, in the
context of the interactions of the three branches of the government, almost
always in situations where some agency of the State has engaged in action that
stems ultimately from some legitimate area of governmental power. Section 2,
Rule IV, Book III of the Rules to implement the Labor Code and Policy
Instruction was declared null and void in IBAAEU v. Inciong, and thus applies
in the case at bar. Since the private respondent premises its action on the
invalidated rule and policy instruction, it is clear that the employees belonging
to the petitioner association are entitled to the payment of 10 legal holidays
under Articles 82 and 94 of the Labor Code, aside from their monthly salary.
They are not among those excluded by law from the benefits of such holiday
pay
The Supreme Court reversed and set aside the Labor Ministers 7 September
1976 order, and reinstated with modification (deleting the interest payments)
the 24 March 1976 decision of the NLRC affirming the 30 October 1975
resolution of the Labor Arbiter.
2. Constitutional Construction
The fundamental principle of constitutional construction is to give effect to the
intent of the framers of the organic law and of the people adopting it. The
intention to which force is to be given is that which is embodied and expressed
in the constitutional provisions themselves. (Gold Creek Mining v. Rodriguez)
The Court will thus construe the applicable constitutional provisions, not in
accordance with how the executive or the legislative department may want
them construed, but in accordance with what they say and provide.
3. Presidents power to appoint
Section 16, Article VII of the 1987 Constitution empowers the President to
appoint 4 groups of officers: (1) the heads of the executive departments,
ambassadors, other public ministers and consuls, officers of the armed forces
from the rank of colonel or naval captain, and other officers whose
appointments are vested in him in this Constitution; (2) all other officers of
the Government whose appointments are not otherwise provided for by law;
(3) those whom the President may be authorized by law to appoint; and (4)
officers lower in rank 4 whose appointments the Congress may by law vest in
the President alone. The first group is clearly appointed with the consent of the
Commission on Appointments. Appointments of such officers are initiated by
nomination and, if the nomination is confirmed by the Commission on
Appointments, the President appoints. The second and third groups of officers
can be made by the President without the consent (confirmation) of the
Commission on Appointments, as can be determined through the recorded
proceedings of Constitutional Commission.
4. Express enumeration excludes others not enumerated
It is an accepted rule in constitutional and statutory construction that an
express enumeration of subjects excludes others not enumerated. In the case
at bar, it would follow that only those appointments to positions expressly
stated in the first group require the consent (confirmation) of the Commission
on Appointments.
5. Constitutional provision presumed to have been framed and adopted
in light of prior laws
A constitutional provision must be presumed to have been framed and adopted
in the light and understanding of prior and existing laws and with reference to
them. Courts are bound to presume that the people adopting a constitution are
familiar with the previous and existing laws upon the subjects to which its
provisions relate, and upon which they express their judgment and opinion in
compensation and power and need of security, the judiciary is on a par with
the Executive. Such assumption certainly ignores the prevailing state of
affairs. Further, the Constitution provides that judges shall hold their offices
during good behavior, and shall at stated times receive for their services a
compensation which shall not be diminished during their continuance in office.
Thus, next to permanency in office, nothing can contribute more to the
independence of the judges than a fixed provision for their support. In the
general course of human nature, a power over a mans subsistence amounts to
a power over his will. The independence of the judges as of far greater
importance than any revenue that could come from taxing their salaries.
Exemption of the judicial salary from reduction by taxation is not really a
gratuity or privilege. It is essentially and primarily compensation based upon
valuable consideration. The covenant on the part of the government is a
guaranty whose fulfillment is as much as part of the consideration agreed as is
the money salary. The undertaking has its own particular value to the citizens
in securing the independence of the judiciary in crises; and in the
establishment of the compensation upon a permanent foundation whereby
judicial preferment may be prudently accepted by those who are qualified by
talent, knowledge, integrity and capacity, but are not possessed of such a
private fortune as to make an assured salary an object of personal concern. On
the other hand, the members of the judiciary relinquish their position at the
bar, with all its professional emoluments, sever their connection with their
clients, and dedicate themselves exclusively to the discharge of the onerous
duties of their high office. So, it is irrefutable that the guaranty against a
reduction of salary by the imposition of a tax is not an exemption from taxation
in the sense of freedom from a burden or service to which others are liable. The
exemption for a public purpose or a valid consideration is merely a nominal
exemption, since the valid and full consideration or the public purpose
promoted is received in the place of the tax.
The Supreme Court affirmed the judgment.
Endencia v. David
GR L-6355-56, 31 August 1953 (93 Phil 696)
En Banc, Montemayor (p): 6 concur
Facts: Saturnino David, as a Collector of Internal Revenue collected income
taxes from Justices Endencia and Jugo, as Presiding Justice of the Court of
Appeals and Associate Justice of the Supreme Court respectively. The lower
court held that under the doctrine laid down in the case of Perfecto vs. Meer,
85 Phil., 552, the collection of income taxes from the salaries of Justice Jugo
and Justice Endencia was a diminution of their compensation and therefore
was in violation of the Constitution of the Philippines, and so ordered the
refund of said taxes. Respondent, through the Solicitor General contended
that the collection was done pursuant to Section 13 of Republic Act 590 which
Congress enacted to authorize and legalize the collection of income tax on the
salaries of judicial officers, if not to counteract the ruling on the Perfecto Case.
Issue: Whether the Legislature may lawfully declare the collection of income
tax on the salary of a public official, specially a judicial officer, not a decrease
of his salary, after the Supreme Court has found and decided otherwise.
Held: The Legislature cannot lawfully declare the collection of income tax on
the salary of a public official, specially a judicial officer, not a decrease of his
salary, after the Supreme Court has found and decided otherwise. The
interpretation and application of the Constitution and of statutes is within the
exclusive province and jurisdiction of the judicial department, and that in
enacting a law, the Legislature may not legally provide therein that it be
interpreted in such a way that it may not violate a Constitutional prohibition,
thereby tying the hands of the courts in their task of later interpreting said
statute, specially when the interpretation sought and provided in said statute
runs counter to a previous interpretation already given in a case by the highest
court of the land. In the case at bar, Section 13 of Republic Act 590 interpreted
or ascertained the meaning of the phrase which shall not be diminished
during their continuance in office, found in section 9, Article VIII of the
Constitution, referring to the salaries of judicial officers. This act of
interpreting the Constitution or any part thereof by the Legislature is an
invasion of the well-defined and established province and jurisdiction of the
Judiciary. The Legislature under our form of government is assigned the task
and the power to make and enact laws, but not to interpret them. This is more
true with regard to the interpretation of the basic law, the Constitution, which
is not within the sphere of the Legislative department. Allowing the legislature
to interpret the law would bring confusion and instability in judicial processes
and court decisions.
Further, under the Philippine system of constitutional government, the
Legislative department is assigned the power to make and enact laws. The
Executive department is charged with the execution or carrying out of the
provisions of said laws. But the interpretation and application of said laws
belong exclusively to the Judicial department. And this authority to interpret
and apply the laws extends to the Constitution. Before the courts can
Held: A provision which lays down a general principle, such as those found in
Article II of the 1987 Constitution, is usually not self-executing. But a provision
which is complete in itself and becomes operative without the aid of
supplementary or enabling legislation, or that which supplies sufficient rule by
means of which the right it grants may be enjoyed or protected, is selfexecuting. Thus a constitutional provision is self-executing if the nature and
extent of the right conferred and the liability imposed are fixed by the
constitution itself, so that they can be determined by an examination and
construction of its terms, and there is no language indicating that the subject
is referred to the legislature for action. In self-executing constitutional
provisions, the legislature may still enact legislation to facilitate the exercise of
powers directly granted by the constitution, further the operation of such a
provision, prescribe a practice to be used for its enforcement, provide a
convenient remedy for the protection of the rights secured or the determination
thereof, or place reasonable safeguards around the exercise of the right. The
mere fact that legislation may supplement and add to or prescribe a penalty for
the violation of a self-executing constitutional provision does not render such a
provision ineffective in the absence of such legislation. The omission from a
constitution of any express provision for a remedy for enforcing a right or
liability is not necessarily an indication that it was not intended to be selfexecuting. The rule is that a self-executing provision of the constitution does
not necessarily exhaust legislative power on the subject, but any legislation
Tanada v. Tuvera
GR L-63915, 24 April 1985 (136 SCRA 27)
En Banc, Escolin (p): 1 concur, 2 concur with reservation, 1 took no part, 1 on
leave
Facts: Invoking the peoples right to be informed on matters of public concern
(Section 6, Article IV of the 1973 Philippine Constitution) as well as the
principle that laws to be valid and enforceable must be published in the Official
Gazette or otherwise effectively promulgated, petitioners seek a writ of
mandamus to compel respondent public officials to publish, and or cause the
publication in the Official Gazette of various presidential decrees, letters of
instructions, general orders, proclamations, executive orders, letter of
implementation and administrative orders. They maintain that since the
subject of the petition concerns a public right and its object is to compel the
performance of a public duty, they are proper parties for the petition. The
respondents alleged, however through the Solicitor-General, that petitioners
have no legal personality or standing to bring the instant petition. They further
contend that publication in the Official Gazette is not a sine qua non
requirement for the effectiveness of laws where the laws provide for their own
effectivity dates. Thus publication is not indispensable.
Issue: Whether publication is an indispensable requirement for the effectivity
of laws
Held: Publication in the Official Gazette is necessary in those cases where the
legislation itself does not provide for its effectivity date for then the date of
publication is material for determining its date of effectivity, which is the
fifteenth day following its publication but not when the law itself provides for
the date when it goes into effect. This is correct insofar as it equates the
effectivity of laws with the fact of publication. Article 2 however, considered in
the light of other statutes applicable to the issue does not preclude the
requirement of publication in the Official Gazette, even if the law itself provides
for the date of its effectivity. The clear object of the such provision is to give the
general public adequate notice of the various laws which are to regulate their
actions and conduct as citizens. Without such notice and publication, there
would be no basis for the application of the maxim ignorantia legis non
excusat. It would be the height of injustice to punish or otherwise burden a
citizen for the transgression of a law of which he had no notice whatsoever, not
even a constructive one. Further, publication is necessary to apprise the public
of the contents of regulations and make the said penalties binding on the
national territory and directly affects only the inhabitants of that place; (5)
Monetary Board circulars to fill in the details of the Central Bank Act which
that body is supposed to enforce. Further, publication must be in full or it is no
publication at all since its purpose is to inform the public of the contents of the
laws.
The Supreme Court declared that all laws as above defined shall immediately
upon their approval, or as soon thereafter as possible, be published in full in
the Official Gazette, to become effective only after 15 days from their
publication, or on another date specified by the legislature, in accordance with
Article 2 of the Civil Code.
Primicias v. Urdaneta
GR L-26702, 18 October 1979 (93 SCRA 462)
First Division, de Castro (p): 8 concurring, 1 on leave, 1 did not take part.
Facts: On 13 March 1964, Ordinance 3 (Series of 1964) was enacted by the
Municipal Council of Urdaneta, Pangasinan. Ordinance is patterned after and
based on Section 53, 5 paragraph 4 of Act 3992, as amended (Revised Motor
Vehicle Law). On 20 June 1964, RA 4136 (Land Transportation and Traffic
Code) became effective. Section 63 explicitly repealed Act 3992.
On 8 February 1965, Juan Augusto B. Primicias was driving his car within
Urdaneta when a member of Urdanetas Municipal Police asked him to stop. He
was told, upon stopping, that he had violated Municipal Ordinance 3 (S. 1964),
for overtaking a truck. The policeman then asked for plaintiffs license which
he surrendered, and a temporary operators permit was issued to him. This
incident took place about 200 meters away from a school building, at Barrio
Nancamaliran, Urdaneta. Thereafter, a criminal complaint was filed in the
Municipal Court of Urdaneta against Primicias for violation of Ordinance 3 (S.
1964).
Due to the institution of the criminal case, Primicias initiated an action for the
annulment of said ordinance with prayer for the issuance of preliminary
injunction for the purpose of restraining defendants Municipality of Urdaneta,
Mayor Perez, Police Chief Suyat, Judge Soriano and Patrolman Andrada from
enforcing the ordinance. The writ was issued and Judge Soriano was enjoined
from further proceeding in the criminal case. On 29 June 1966, the Court of
First Instance Lingayen held in its decision that the ordinance was null and
void and had been repealed by RA 4136. The writ of preliminary injunction
against Judge Soriano definite and permanent. It also restrained Perez, Suyat,
and Andrada from enforcing said ordinace throughout Urdaneta, ordering them
to return the plaintiffs drivers license, and to pay the cost of the suit. The
public officials appealed to the Supreme Court.
Issue: Whether the ordinance is valid.
Held: The general rule is that a later law prevails over an earlier law. The
ordinances validity should be determined vis-a-vis RA 4136, the mother
statute (not Act 3992), which was in force at the time the criminal case was
brought against Primicias. Further, when the Municipal Council of Urdaneta
used the phrase vehicular traffic (Section 1, Ordinance) it did not distinguish
between passenger cars and motor vehicles and motor trucks and buses.
Considering that this is a regulatory ordinance, its clearness, definiteness and
certainty are all the more important so that an average man should be able
with due care, after reading it, to understand and ascertain whether he will
incur a penalty for particular acts or courses of conduct. Thus, as the
Municipal Council of Urdaneta did not make any classification of its
thoroughfares, contrary to the explicit requirement laid down by Section 38, RA
4136. The Ordinance refers to only one of the four classifications mentioned in
paragraph (b), Section 35. The classifications which must be based on Section
35 are necessary in view of Section 36 which states that no provincial, city or
municipal authority shall enact or enforce any ordinance or resolution
specifying maximum allowable speeds other than those provided in this Act.
The ordinance, therefore in view of the foregoing, is void.
The Supreme Court affirmed the appealed decision.