EN BANC
[G.R. No. 132988. July 19, 2000]
AQUILINO Q. PIMENTEL JR., petitioner, vs. Hon. ALEXANDER AGUIRRE in his capacity as Executive Secretary, Hon. EMILIA BONCODIN in her capacity as Secretary of the Department of Budget and Management, respondents.
ROBERTO
PAGDANGANAN, intervenor.
D E C I S I O N
PANGANIBAN,
J.:
The Constitution vests
the President with the power of supervision, not control, over local government
units (LGUs). Such power enables him to
see to it that LGUs and their officials execute their tasks in accordance with
law. While he may issue advisories and
seek their cooperation in solving economic difficulties, he cannot prevent them
from performing their tasks and using available resources to achieve their
goals. He may not withhold or alter any
authority or power given them by the law.
Thus, the withholding of a portion of internal revenue allotments
legally due them cannot be directed by administrative fiat.
The Case
Before us is an original
Petition for Certiorari and Prohibition seeking (1) to annul Section 1
of Administrative Order (AO) No. 372, insofar as it requires local government
units to reduce their expenditures by 25 percent of their authorized regular
appropriations for non-personal services; and (2) to enjoin respondents from
implementing Section 4 of the Order, which withholds a portion of their
internal revenue allotments.
On November 17, 1998,
Roberto Pagdanganan, through Counsel Alberto C. Agra, filed a Motion for
Intervention/Motion to Admit Petition for Intervention,[1] attaching thereto his Petition in
Intervention[2] joining petitioner in the reliefs
sought. At the time, intervenor was the
provincial governor of Bulacan, national president of the League of Provinces
of the Philippines and chairman of the League of Leagues of Local
Governments. In a Resolution dated
December 15, 1998, the Court noted said Motion and Petition.
The Facts and the Arguments
On December 27, 1997, the
President of the Philippines issued AO 372.
Its full text, with emphasis on the assailed provisions, is as follows:
"ADMINISTRATIVE ORDER NO. 372
ADOPTION OF ECONOMY MEASURES IN GOVERNMENT FOR FY 1998
WHEREAS, the current economic difficulties brought about by the peso depreciation requires continued prudence in government fiscal management to maintain economic stability and sustain the country's growth momentum;
WHEREAS, it is imperative that all government agencies adopt cash management measures to match expenditures with available resources;
NOW, THEREFORE, I, FIDEL V. RAMOS, President of the Republic of the Philippines, by virtue of the powers vested in me by the Constitution, do hereby order and direct:
SECTION 1. All
government departments and agencies, including state universities and colleges,
government-owned and controlled corporations and local governments units will
identify and implement measures in FY 1998 that will reduce total expenditures
for the year by at least 25% of authorized regular appropriations for
non-personal services items, along the following suggested areas:
1. Continued implementation of the streamlining policy on organization and staffing by deferring action on the following:
a. Operationalization of new agencies;
b. Expansion of organizational units and/or creation of positions;
c. Filling of positions; and
d. Hiring of additional/new consultants, contractual and casual personnel, regardless of funding source.
2. Suspension of the following activities:
a. Implementation of new capital/infrastructure projects, except those which have already been contracted out;
b. Acquisition of new equipment and motor vehicles;
c. All foreign travels of government personnel, except those associated with scholarships and trainings funded by grants;
d. Attendance in conferences abroad where the cost is charged to the government except those clearly essential to Philippine commitments in the international field as may be determined by the Cabinet;
e. Conduct of trainings/workshops/seminars, except those conducted by government training institutions and agencies in the performance of their regular functions and those that are funded by grants;
f. Conduct of cultural and social celebrations and sports activities, except those associated with the Philippine Centennial celebration and those involving regular competitions/events;
g. Grant of honoraria, except in cases where it constitutes the only source of compensation from government received by the person concerned;
h. Publications, media advertisements and related items, except those required by law or those already being undertaken on a regular basis;
i. Grant of new/additional benefits to employees, except those expressly and specifically authorized by law; and
j. Donations, contributions, grants and gifts, except those given by institutions to victims of calamities.
3. Suspension of all tax expenditure subsidies to all GOCCs and LGUs
4. Reduction in the volume of consumption of fuel, water, office supplies, electricity and other utilities
5. Deferment of projects that are encountering significant implementation problems
6. Suspension of all realignment of funds and the use of savings and reserves
SECTION 2. Agencies are given the flexibility to identify the specific sources of cost-savings, provided the 25% minimum savings under Section 1 is complied with.
SECTION 3. A report on the estimated savings generated from these measures shall be submitted to the Office of the President, through the Department of Budget and Management, on a quarterly basis using the attached format.
SECTION 4. Pending
the assessment and evaluation by the Development Budget Coordinating Committee
of the emerging fiscal situation, the amount equivalent to 10% of the internal
revenue allotment to local government units shall be withheld.
SECTION 5. The Development Budget Coordination Committee shall conduct a monthly review of the fiscal position of the National Government and if necessary, shall recommend to the President the imposition of additional reserves or the lifting of previously imposed reserves.
SECTION 6. This Administrative Order shall take effect January 1, 1998 and shall remain valid for the entire year unless otherwise lifted.
DONE in the City of Manila, this 27th day of December, in the year of our Lord, nineteen hundred and ninety-seven."
Subsequently, on December
10, 1998, President Joseph E. Estrada issued AO 43, amending Section 4 of AO
372, by reducing to five percent (5%) the amount of internal revenue allotment
(IRA) to be withheld from the LGUs.
Petitioner contends that
the President, in issuing AO 372, was in effect exercising the power of control
over LGUs. The Constitution vests
in the President, however, only the power of general supervision over
LGUs, consistent with the principle of local autonomy. Petitioner further argues that the directive
to withhold ten percent (10%) of their IRA is in contravention of Section 286
of the Local Government Code and of Section 6, Article X of the Constitution,
providing for the automatic release to each of these units its share in
the national internal revenue.
The solicitor general, on
behalf of the respondents, claims on the other hand that AO 372 was issued to
alleviate the "economic difficulties brought about by the peso
devaluation" and constituted merely an exercise of the President's power
of supervision over LGUs. It allegedly
does not violate local fiscal autonomy, because it merely directs local
governments to identify measures that will reduce their total expenditures for
non-personal services by at least 25 percent.
Likewise, the withholding of 10 percent of the LGUs’ IRA does not
violate the statutory prohibition on the imposition of any lien or holdback on
their revenue shares, because such withholding is "temporary in nature
pending the assessment and evaluation by the Development Coordination Committee
of the emerging fiscal situation."
The Issues
The Petition[3] submits the following issues for the Court's
resolution:
"A. Whether or not the president committed grave abuse of discretion [in] ordering all LGUS to adopt a 25% cost reduction program in violation of the LGU[']S fiscal autonomy
"B. Whether or not the president committed grave abuse of discretion in ordering the withholding of 10% of the LGU[']S IRA"
In sum, the main issue is
whether (a) Section 1 of AO 372, insofar as it "directs" LGUs to
reduce their expenditures by 25 percent; and (b) Section 4 of the same
issuance, which withholds 10 percent of their internal revenue allotments, are
valid exercises of the President's power of general supervision over local
governments.
Additionally, the Court
deliberated on the question whether petitioner had the locus standi to bring this suit, despite respondents'
failure to raise the issue.[4]
However, the intervention of Roberto Pagdanganan has rendered academic
any further discussion on this matter.
The Court's Ruling
The Petition is partly
meritorious.
Main Issue:
Validity of AO 372
Insofar as LGUs Are
Concerned
Before resolving the main
issue, we deem it important and appropriate to define certain crucial
concepts: (1) the scope of the
President's power of general supervision over local governments and (2) the
extent of the local governments' autonomy.
Scope of President's Power
of Supervision Over LGUs
Section 4 of Article X of
the Constitution confines the President's power over local governments to one
of general supervision. It reads as
follows:
"Sec. 4. The President of the Philippines shall exercise general supervision over local governments. x x x"
This provision has been
interpreted to exclude the power of control.
In Mondano v. Silvosa,[5] the Court contrasted the President's power
of supervision over local government officials with that of his power of
control over executive officials of the national government. It was emphasized that the two terms --
supervision and control -- differed in meaning and extent. The Court distinguished them as follows:
"x x x In
administrative law, supervision means overseeing or the power or authority of
an officer to see that subordinate officers perform their duties. If the latter fail or neglect to fulfill
them, the former may take such action or step as prescribed by law to make them
perform their duties. Control, on the
other hand, means the power of an officer to alter or modify or nullify or set
aside what a subordinate officer ha[s] done in the performance of his duties
and to substitute the judgment of the former for that of the latter."[6]
In Taule v. Santos,[7] we further stated that the Chief Executive wielded no more authority
than that of checking whether local governments or their officials were
performing their duties as provided by the fundamental law and by
statutes. He cannot interfere with
local governments, so long as they act within the scope of their
authority. "Supervisory power,
when contrasted with control, is the power of mere oversight over an inferior
body; it does not include any restraining authority over such body,"[8] we said.
In a more recent case, Drilon
v. Lim,[9] the difference between control
and supervision was further delineated.
Officers in control lay down the rules in the performance or
accomplishment of an act. If these
rules are not followed, they may, in their discretion, order the act undone or
redone by their subordinates or even decide to do it themselves. On the other hand, supervision does not
cover such authority. Supervising
officials merely see to it that the rules are followed, but they themselves do
not lay down such rules, nor do they have the discretion to modify or replace
them. If the rules are not observed,
they may order the work done or redone, but only to conform to such rules. They may not prescribe their own manner of
execution of the act. They have no
discretion on this matter except to see to it that the rules are followed.
Under our present system
of government, executive power is vested in the President.[10] The members of the Cabinet and other
executive officials are merely alter egos.
As such, they are subject to the power of control of the President, at
whose will and behest they can be removed from office; or their actions and
decisions changed, suspended or reversed.[11] In contrast, the heads of political
subdivisions are elected by the people.
Their sovereign powers emanate from the electorate, to whom they are
directly accountable. By constitutional
fiat, they are subject to the President’s supervision only, not control, so long
as their acts are exercised within the sphere of their legitimate powers. By the same token, the President may not
withhold or alter any authority or power given them by the Constitution and the
law.
Extent of Local Autonomy
Hand in hand with the
constitutional restraint on the President's power over local governments is the
state policy of ensuring local autonomy.[12]
In Ganzon v. Court of
Appeals,[13] we said that local autonomy signified "a more responsive
and accountable local government structure instituted through a system of
decentralization." The grant of
autonomy is intended to "break up the monopoly of the national government
over the affairs of local governments,
x x x not x x x
to end the relation of partnership and interdependence between the
central administration and local government units x x x."
Paradoxically, local governments are still subject to regulation,
however limited, for the purpose of enhancing self-government.[14]
Decentralization simply means the devolution of national
administration, not power, to local governments. Local officials remain accountable to the central government as
the law may provide.[15] The difference between decentralization of
administration and that of power was explained in detail in Limbona v.
Mangelin[16] as follows:
"Now, autonomy is either decentralization of administration or
decentralization of power. There is
decentralization of administration when the central government delegates
administrative powers to political subdivisions in order to broaden the base of
government power and in the process to make local governments 'more responsive
and accountable,'[17] and 'ensure their fullest development as self-reliant
communities and make them more effective partners in the pursuit of national
development and social progress.'[18] At the same time, it relieves the central government
of the burden of managing local affairs and enables it to concentrate on
national concerns. The President
exercises 'general supervision'[19] over them, but only to 'ensure that local affairs are
administered according to law.'[20] He has no control over their acts in the sense that
he can substitute their judgments with his own.[21]
Decentralization of power, on the other hand, involves an
abdication of political power in the favor of local government units declared
to be autonomous. In that case, the
autonomous government is free to chart its own destiny and shape its future
with minimum intervention from central authorities. According to a constitutional author, decentralization of power
amounts to 'self-immolation,' since in that event, the autonomous government
becomes accountable not to the central authorities but to its
constituency."[22]
Under the Philippine
concept of local autonomy, the national government has not completely
relinquished all its powers over local governments, including autonomous
regions. Only administrative powers
over local affairs are delegated to political subdivisions. The purpose of the delegation is to make
governance more directly responsive and effective at the local levels. In turn, economic, political and social
development at the smaller political units are expected to propel social and
economic growth and development. But to
enable the country to develop as a whole, the programs and policies effected
locally must be integrated and coordinated towards a common national goal. Thus, policy-setting for the entire country
still lies in the President and Congress.
As we stated in Magtajas v. Pryce Properties Corp., Inc., municipal
governments are still agents of the national government.[23]
The Nature of AO 372
Consistent with the
foregoing jurisprudential precepts, let us now look into the nature of AO
372. As its preambular clauses declare,
the Order was a "cash management measure" adopted by the government "to
match expenditures with available resources," which were presumably
depleted at the time due to "economic difficulties brought about by the
peso depreciation." Because of a
looming financial crisis, the President deemed it necessary to "direct all
government agencies, state universities and colleges, government-owned and
controlled corporations as well as local governments to reduce their total
expenditures by at least 25 percent along suggested areas mentioned in AO 372.
Under existing law, local
government units, in addition to having administrative autonomy in the exercise
of their functions, enjoy fiscal autonomy as well. Fiscal autonomy means that local governments have the power to
create their own sources of revenue in addition to their equitable share in the
national taxes released by the national government, as well as the power to
allocate their resources in accordance with their own priorities. It extends to the preparation of their
budgets, and local officials in turn have to work within the constraints
thereof. They are not formulated at the
national level and imposed on local governments, whether they are relevant to
local needs and resources or not.
Hence, the necessity of a balancing of viewpoints and the harmonization
of proposals from both local and national officials,[24] who in any case are partners in the
attainment of national goals.
Local fiscal autonomy
does not however rule out any manner of national government intervention by way
of supervision, in order to ensure that local programs, fiscal and otherwise,
are consistent with national goals.
Significantly, the President, by constitutional fiat, is the head of the
economic and planning agency of the government,[25] primarily responsible for formulating and
implementing continuing, coordinated and integrated social and economic
policies, plans and programs[26] for the entire country. However, under the Constitution, the
formulation and the implementation of such policies and programs are subject to
"consultations with the appropriate public agencies, various private
sectors, and local government units."
The President cannot do so unilaterally.
Consequently, the Local
Government Code provides:[27]
"x x x [I]n the event the national government incurs an unmanaged public sector deficit, the President of the Philippines is hereby authorized, upon the recommendation of [the] Secretary of Finance, Secretary of the Interior and Local Government and Secretary of Budget and Management, and subject to consultation with the presiding officers of both Houses of Congress and the presidents of the liga, to make the necessary adjustments in the internal revenue allotment of local government units but in no case shall the allotment be less than thirty percent (30%) of the collection of national internal revenue taxes of the third fiscal year preceding the current fiscal year x x x."
There are therefore
several requisites before the President may interfere in local fiscal
matters: (1) an unmanaged public sector
deficit of the national government; (2) consultations with the presiding
officers of the Senate and the House of Representatives and the presidents
of the various local leagues; and (3) the corresponding recommendation of
the secretaries of the Department of Finance, Interior and Local Government,
and Budget and Management. Furthermore,
any adjustment in the allotment shall in no case be less than thirty percent
(30%) of the collection of national internal revenue taxes of the third fiscal
year preceding the current one.
Petitioner points
out that respondents failed to comply
with these requisites before the issuance and the implementation of AO
372. At the very least, they did not
even try to show that the national government was suffering from an
unmanageable public sector deficit.
Neither did they claim having conducted consultations with the different
leagues of local governments. Without
these requisites, the President has no authority to adjust, much less to
reduce, unilaterally the LGU's internal revenue allotment.
The solicitor general
insists, however, that AO 372 is merely directory and has been issued by the
President consistent with his power of supervision over local governments. It is intended only to advise all
government agencies and instrumentalities to undertake cost-reduction measures
that will help maintain economic stability in the country, which is facing
economic difficulties. Besides, it does
not contain any sanction in case of noncompliance. Being merely an advisory, therefore, Section 1 of AO 372 is well
within the powers of the President.
Since it is not a mandatory imposition, the directive cannot be
characterized as an exercise of the power of control.
While the wordings of
Section 1 of AO 372 have a rather commanding tone, and while we agree with
petitioner that the requirements of Section 284 of the Local Government Code
have not been satisfied, we are prepared to accept the solicitor general's
assurance that the
directive to "identify and implement measures x x x
that will reduce total expenditures
x x x by at least 25% of
authorized regular appropriation" is merely advisory in character, and
does not constitute a mandatory or binding order that interferes with local
autonomy. The language used, while
authoritative, does not amount to a command that emanates from a boss to a
subaltern.
Rather, the provision is
merely an advisory to prevail upon local executives to recognize the need for
fiscal restraint in a period of economic difficulty. Indeed, all concerned would do well to heed the President's call
to unity, solidarity and teamwork to help alleviate the crisis. It is understood, however, that no legal
sanction may be imposed upon LGUs and their officials who do not follow such
advice. It is in this light that we
sustain the solicitor general's contention in regard to Section 1.
Withholding a Part of
LGUs' IRA
Section 4 of AO 372
cannot, however, be upheld. A basic
feature of local fiscal autonomy is the automatic release of the shares
of LGUs in the national internal revenue.
This is mandated by no less than the Constitution.[28] The Local Government Code[29] specifies further that the release shall be
made directly to the LGU concerned within five (5) days after every quarter of
the year and "shall not be subject to any lien or holdback that may be
imposed by the national government for whatever purpose."[30] As a rule, the term "shall" is a
word of command that must be given a compulsory meaning.[31] The provision is, therefore, imperative.
Section 4 of AO 372,
however, orders the withholding, effective January 1, 1998, of 10 percent of
the LGUs' IRA "pending the assessment and evaluation by the Development
Budget Coordinating Committee of the emerging fiscal situation" in the
country. Such withholding clearly
contravenes the Constitution and the law.
Although temporary, it is equivalent to a holdback, which means
"something held back or withheld, often temporarily."[32] Hence, the "temporary" nature of
the retention by the national government does not matter. Any retention is prohibited.
In sum, while Section 1
of AO 372 may be upheld as an advisory effected in times of national crisis,
Section 4 thereof has no color of validity at all. The latter provision effectively encroaches on the fiscal
autonomy of local governments.
Concededly, the President was well-intentioned in issuing his Order to
withhold the LGUs’ IRA, but the rule of law requires that even the best
intentions must be carried out within the parameters of the Constitution and
the law. Verily, laudable purposes must
be carried out by legal methods.
Refutation of
Justice Kapunan's Dissent
Mr. Justice Santiago M.
Kapunan dissents from our Decision on the grounds that, allegedly, (1) the Petition is premature; (2) AO 372
falls within the powers of the President as chief fiscal officer; and (3) the
withholding of the LGUs’ IRA is implied in the President's authority to adjust
it in case of an unmanageable public sector deficit.
First, on prematurity. According to the Dissent, when "the conduct has not yet
occurred and the challenged construction has not yet been adopted by the agency
charged with administering the administrative order, the determination of the
scope and constitutionality of the executive action in advance of its immediate
adverse effect involves too remote and abstract an inquiry for the proper exercise
of judicial function."
This is a rather novel
theory -- that people should await the implementing evil to befall on them
before they can question acts that are illegal or unconstitutional. Be it remembered that the real issue here is
whether the Constitution and the law are contravened by Section 4 of AO 372,
not whether they are violated by the acts implementing it. In the unanimous en banc case Tañada v.
Angara,[33] this Court held that when an act of the
legislative department is seriously alleged to have infringed the Constitution,
settling the controversy becomes the duty of this Court. By the mere enactment of the questioned law
or the approval of the challenged action, the dispute is said to have ripened into
a judicial controversy even without any other overt act. Indeed, even a singular violation of the
Constitution and/or the law is enough to awaken judicial duty. Said the Court:
"In seeking to nullify an act of the Philippine Senate on the
ground that it contravenes the Constitution, the petition no doubt raises a
justiciable controversy. Where an
action of the legislative branch is seriously alleged to have infringed the
Constitution, it becomes not only the right but in fact the duty of the
judiciary to settle the dispute. 'The
question thus posed is judicial rather than political. The duty (to adjudicate) remains to assure
that the supremacy of the Constitution is upheld.'[34]
Once a 'controversy as to the application or
interpretation of a constitutional provision is raised before this Court x x x , it becomes a legal issue which the
Court is bound by constitutional mandate to decide.'[35]
x x x x x x x x x
"As this Court has repeatedly and firmly emphasized in many
cases,[36] it will not shirk, digress from or abandon its sacred
duty and authority to uphold the Constitution in matters that involve grave
abuse of discretion brought before it in appropriate cases, committed by any
officer, agency, instrumentality or department of the government."
In the same vein, the
Court also held in Tatad v. Secretary of the Department of Energy:[37]
"x x x Judicial power includes not only the duty of the courts to settle actual controversies involving rights which are legally demandable and enforceable, but also the duty to determine whether or not there has been grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction on the part of any branch or instrumentality of government. The courts, as guardians of the Constitution, have the inherent authority to determine whether a statute enacted by the legislature transcends the limit imposed by the fundamental law. Where the statute violates the Constitution, it is not only the right but the duty of the judiciary to declare such act unconstitutional and void."
By the same token, when
an act of the President, who in our constitutional scheme is a coequal of
Congress, is seriously alleged to have infringed the Constitution and the laws,
as in the present case, settling the dispute becomes the duty and the
responsibility of the courts.
Besides, the issue that
the Petition is premature has not been raised by the parties; hence it is
deemed waived. Considerations of due
process really prevents its use against a party that has not been given
sufficient notice of its presentation, and thus has not been given the
opportunity to refute it.[38]
Second, on the President's power as chief fiscal
officer of the country. Justice Kapunan
posits that Section 4 of AO 372 conforms with the President's role as chief
fiscal officer, who allegedly "is clothed by law with certain powers to
ensure the observance of safeguards and auditing requirements, as well as the
legal prerequisites in the release and use of IRAs, taking into account the
constitutional and statutory mandates."[39] He cites instances when the President may
lawfully intervene in the fiscal affairs of LGUs.
Precisely, such powers
referred to in the Dissent have specifically been authorized by law and have
not been challenged as violative of the Constitution. On the other hand, Section 4 of AO 372, as explained earlier,
contravenes explicit provisions of the Local Government Code (LGC) and the
Constitution. In other words, the
acts alluded to in the Dissent are indeed authorized by law; but, quite the
opposite, Section 4 of AO 372 is bereft of any legal or constitutional basis.
Third, on the President's authority to adjust the
IRA of LGUs in case of an unmanageable public sector deficit. It must be emphasized that in striking down
Section 4 of AO 372, this Court is not ruling out any form of reduction in the
IRAs of LGUs. Indeed, as the President
may make necessary adjustments in case of an unmanageable public sector
deficit, as stated in the main part of this Decision, and in line with Section
284 of the LGC, which Justice Kapunan cites.
He, however, merely glances over a specific requirement in the same
provision -- that such reduction is subject to consultation with the presiding
officers of both Houses of Congress and, more importantly, with the
presidents of the leagues of local governments.
Notably, Justice Kapunan
recognizes the need for "interaction between the national government and
the LGUs at the planning level," in order to ensure that "local
development plans x x x hew to national policies and
standards." The problem is that no
such interaction or consultation was ever held prior to the issuance of AO
372. This is why the petitioner and the
intervenor (who was a provincial governor and at the same time president of the
League of Provinces of the Philippines and chairman of the League of Leagues of
Local Governments) have protested and instituted this action. Significantly, respondents do not deny the
lack of consultation.
In addition, Justice
Kapunan cites Section 287[40] of the LGC as impliedly authorizing the
President to withhold the IRA of an LGU, pending its compliance with certain
requirements. Even a cursory reading of
the provision reveals that it is totally inapplicable to the issue at bar. It directs LGUs to appropriate in their
annual budgets 20 percent of their respective IRAs for development
projects. It speaks of no positive
power granted the President to priorly withhold any amount. Not at all.
WHEREFORE, the Petition is GRANTED. Respondents and their successors are hereby
permanently PROHIBITED from implementing Administrative Order Nos.
372 and 43, respectively dated December 27, 1997 and December 10, 1998, insofar
as local government units are concerned.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr., C.J.,
Bellosillo, Melo, Puno, Vitug, Mendoza,
Quisumbing, Pardo, Buena, Gonzaga-Reyes, and De
Leon, Jr., JJ., concur.
Kapunan, J., see dissenting opinion.
Purisima, and
Ynares-Santiago, JJ., join J. Kapunan in his dissenting
opinion.
DISSENTING OPINION
KAPUNAN,
J.:
In striking down as
unconstitutional and illegal Section 4 of Administrative Order No. 372
("AO No. 372"), the majority opinion posits that the President
exercised power of control over the local government units ("LGU”), which
he does not have, and violated the provisions of Section 6, Article X of the
Constitution, which states:
SEC. 6. Local government units shall have a just share, as determined by law, in the national taxes which shall be automatically released to them.
and
Section 286(a) of the Local Government Code, which provides:
SEC. 286. Automatic Release of Shares. - (a) The share of each local government unit shall be released, without need of any further action, directly to the provincial, city, municipal or barangay treasurer, as the case may be, on a quarterly basis within five (5) days after the end of each quarter, and which shall not be subject to any lien or holdback that may be imposed by the national government for whatever purpose.
The share of the LGUs in
the national internal revenue taxes is defined in Section 284 of the same Local
Government Code, to wit:
SEC. 284. Allotment of Internal Revenue Taxes. - Local government units shall have a share in the national internal revenue taxes based on the collection of the third fiscal year preceding the current fiscal year as follows:
(a) On the first year of the effectivity of this Code, thirty percent (30%);
(b) On the second year, thirty-five (35%) percent; and
(c) On the third year and thereafter, forty percent (40%).
Provided, That in the event that the national government incurs an unmanageable public sector deficit, the President of the Philippines is hereby authorized, upon the recommendation of Secretary of Finance, Secretary of Interior and Local Government and Secretary of Budget and Management, and subject to consultation with the presiding officers of both Houses of Congress and the presidents of the “liga,” to make the necessary adjustments in the internal revenue allotment of local government units but in no case shall the allotment be less than thirty percent (30%) of the collection of national internal revenue taxes of the third fiscal year preceding the current fiscal year: Provided, further, That in the first year of the effectivity of this Code, the local government units shall, in addition to the thirty percent (30%) internal revenue allotment which shall include the cost of devolved functions for essential public services, be entitled to receive the amount equivalent to the cost of devolved personal services.
x x x
The majority opinion
takes the view that the withholding of ten percent (10%) of the internal
revenue allotment ("IRA") to the LGUs pending the assessment and
evaluation by the Development Budget Coordinating Committee of the emerging
fiscal situation as called for in Section 4 of AO No. 372 transgresses against
the above-quoted provisions which mandate the "automatic" release of
the shares of the LGUs in the national internal revenue in consonance with
local fiscal autonomy. The pertinent portions of AO No. 372 are reproduced
hereunder:
ADMINISTRATIVE ORDER NO. 372
ADOPTION OF ECONOMY MEASURES IN GOVERNMENT FOR FY 1998
WHEREAS, the current economic difficulties brought about by the peso depreciation requires continued prudence in government fiscal management to maintain economic stability and sustain the country’s growth momentum;
WHEREAS, it is imperative that all government agencies adopt cash management measures to match expenditures with available resources; NOW THEREFORE, I, FIDEL V. RAMOS, President of the Republic of the Philippines, by virtue of the powers vested in me by the Constitution, do hereby order and direct:
SECTION 1. All government departments and agencies, including x x x local government units will identify and implement measures in FY 1998 that will reduce total appropriations for non-personal services items, along the following suggested areas:
x x x
SECTION 4. Pending the assessment and evaluation by the Development Budget Coordinating Committee of the emerging fiscal situation the amount equivalent to 10% of the internal revenue allotment to local government units shall be withheld.
x x x
Subsequently, on December
10, 1998, President Joseph E. Estrada issued Administrative Order No. 43 (“AO
No. 43”), amending Section 4 of AO No. 372, by reducing to five percent (5%)
the IRA to be withheld from the LGUs, thus:
ADMINISTRATIVE ORDER NO. 43
AMENDING ADMINISTRATIVE ORDER NO. 372 DATED 27 DECEMBER 1997 ENTITLED "ADOPTION OF ECONOMY MEASURES IN GOVERNMENT FOR FY 1998"
WHEREAS, Administrative Order No. 372 dated 27 December 1997 entitled "Adoption of Economy Measures in Government for FY 1998" was issued to address the economic difficulties brought about by the peso devaluation in 1997;
WHEREAS, Section 4 of Administrative Order No. 372 provided that the amount equivalent to 10% of the internal revenue allotment to local government units shall be withheld; and,
WHEREAS, there is a need to release additional funds to local government units for vital projects and expenditures.
NOW, THEREFORE, I, JOSEPH EJERCITO ESTRADA, President of the Republic of the Philippines, by virtue of the powers vested in me by law, do hereby order the reduction of the withheld Internal Revenue Allotment (IRA) of local government units from ten percent to five percent.
The five percent reduction in the IRA withheld for 1998 shall be released before 25 December 1998.
DONE in the City of Manila, this 10th day of December, in the year of our Lord, nineteen hundred and ninety eight.
With all due respect, I
beg to disagree with the majority opinion.
Section 4 of AO No. 372
does not present a case ripe for adjudication.
The language of Section 4 does not conclusively show that, on its face,
the constitutional provision on the automatic release of the IRA shares of the
LGUs has been violated. Section 4, as worded, expresses the idea that the
withholding is merely temporary which fact alone would not merit an outright
conclusion of its unconstitutionality, especially in light of the reasonable
presumption that administrative agencies act in conformity with the law and the
Constitution. Where the conduct has not yet occurred and the challenged
construction has not yet been adopted by the agency charged with administering
the administrative order, the determination of the scope and constitutionality
of the executive action in advance of its immediate adverse effect involves too
remote and abstract an inquiry for the proper exercise of judicial function.
Petitioners have not shown that the alleged 5% IRA share of LGUs that was
temporarily withheld has not yet been released, or that the Department of
Budget and Management (DBM) has refused and continues to refuse its
release. In view thereof, the Court
should not decide as this case suggests an abstract proposition on
constitutional issues.
The President is the chief fiscal officer of
the country. He is ultimately responsible for the collection and distribution
of public money:
SECTION 3. Powers and Functions. -
The Department of Budget and Management shall assist the President in the
preparation of a national resources and expenditures budget, preparation,
execution and control of the National Budget, preparation and maintenance of
accounting systems essential to the budgetary process, achievement of more
economy and efficiency in the management of government operations,
administration of compensation and position classification systems, assessment
of organizational effectiveness and review and evaluation of legislative
proposals having budgetary or organizational implications.1
In
a larger context, his role as chief fiscal officer is directed towards
"the nation's efforts at economic and social upliftment"2
for which more specific economic powers are delegated. Within statutory limits,
the President can, thus, fix "tariff rates, import and export quotas,
tonnage and wharfage dues, and other duties or imposts within the framework of
the national development program of the government,”3 as he is also responsible for enlisting the
country in international economic agreements.4 More than this, to achieve "economy and
efficiency in the management of government operations," the President is
empowered to create appropriation reserves,5 suspend expenditure appropriations,6
and institute cost reduction schemes.7
As chief fiscal officer
of the country, the President supervises fiscal development in the local
government units and ensures that laws are faithfully executed.8
For this reason, he can set aside tax ordinances if he finds them contrary to
the Local Government Code.9 Ordinances cannot contravene statutes and
public policy as declared by the national govemment.10
The goal of local economy is not to "end the relation of partnership and
inter-dependence between the central administration and local government
units,"11 but to make local governments "more
responsive and accountable" [to] "ensure their fullest development as
self-reliant communities and make them more effective partners in the pursuit
of national development and social progress."12
The interaction between
the national government and the local government units is mandatory at the
planning level. Local development plans must thus hew to "national
policies and standards”13 as these are integrated into the regional
development plans for submission to the National Economic Development
Authority. "14 Local budget plans and goals must also be
harmonized, as far as practicable, with "national development goals and
strategies in order to optimize the utilization of resources and to avoid
duplication in the use of fiscal and physical resources."15
Section 4 of AO No. 372
was issued in the exercise by the President not only of his power of general supervision,
but also in conformity with his role as chief fiscal officer of the country in
the discharge of which he is clothed by law with certain powers to ensure the
observance of safeguards and auditing requirements, as well as the legal
prerequisites in the release and use of IRAs, taking into account the
constitutional16 and statutory17
mandates.
However, the phrase
"automatic release" of the LGUs' shares does not mean that the
release of the funds is mechanical, spontaneous, self-operating or reflex. IRAs
must first be determined, and the money for their payment collected.18
In this regard, administrative documentations are also undertaken to ascertain
their availability, limits and extent. The phrase, thus, should be used in the
context of the whole budgetary process and in relation to pertinent laws
relating to audit and accounting requirements. In the workings of the budget
for the fiscal year, appropriations for expenditures are supported by existing
funds in the national coffers and by proposals for revenue raising. The money,
therefore, available for IRA release may not be existing but merely inchoate,
or a mere expectation. It is not infrequent that the Executive Department's
proposals for raising revenue in the form of proposed legislation may not be
passed by the legislature. As such, the release of IRA should not mean release
of absolute amounts based merely on mathematical computations. There must be a
prior determination of what exact amount the local government units are
actually entitled in light of the economic factors which affect the fiscal
situation in the country. Foremost of these is where, due to an unmanageable
public sector deficit, the President may make the necessary adjustments in the
IRA of LGUs. Thus, as expressly provided in Article 284 of the Local Government
Code:
x x x (I)n the event that the national government incurs an unmanageable public sector deficit, the President of the Philippines is hereby authorized, upon the recommendation of Secretary of Finance, Secretary of Interior and Local Government and Secretary of Budget and Management and subject to consultation with the presiding officers of both Houses of Congress and the presidents of the "liga," to make the necessary adjustments in the internal revenue allotment of local government units but in no case shall the allotment be less than thirty percent (30%) of the collection of national internal revenue taxes of the third fiscal year preceding the current fiscal year. x x x.
Under the aforecited
provision, if facts reveal that the economy has sustained or will likely
sustain such "unmanageable public sector deficit," then the LGUs
cannot assert absolute right of entitlement to the full amount of forty percent
(40%) share in the IRA, because the President is authorized to make an
adjustment and to reduce the amount to not less than thirty percent (30%). It
is, therefore, impractical to immediately release the full amount of the IRAs
and subsequently require the local government units to return at most ten
percent (10%) once the President has ascertained that there exists an
unmanageable public sector deficit.
By necessary implication,
the power to make necessary adjustments (including reduction) in the IRA in
case of an unmanageable public sector deficit, includes the discretion to
withhold the IRAs temporarily until such time that the determination of the
actual fiscal situation is made. The test in determining whether one power is
necessarily included in a stated authority is: "The exercise of a more
absolute power necessarily includes the lesser power especially where it is
needed to make the first power effective."19
If the discretion to suspend temporarily the release of the IRA pending such
examination is withheld from the President, his authority to make the necessary
IRA adjustments brought about by the unmanageable public sector deficit would
be emasculated in the midst of serious economic crisis. In the situation
conjured by the majority opinion, the money would already have been gone even
before it is determined that fiscal crisis is indeed happening.
The majority opinion
overstates the requirement in Section 286 of the Local Government Code that the
IRAs "shall not be subject to any lien or holdback that may be imposed by
the national government for whatever purpose" as proof that no withholding
of the release of the IRAs is allowed albeit temporary in nature.
It is worthy to note that
this provision does not appear in the Constitution. Section 6, Art X of the
Constitution merely directs that LGUs "shall have a just share" in
the national taxes "as determined by law" and which share “shall be
automatically released to them.” This
means that before the LGU’s share is released, there should be first a
determination, which requires a process, of what is the correct amount as
dictated by existing laws. For one, the Implementing Rules of the Local
Government Code allows deductions from the IRAs, to wit:
Article 384. Automatic Release of IRA Shares of LGUs:
x x x
(c) The IRA share of LGUs shall not be subject to any lien or hold back that may be imposed by the National Government for whatever purpose unless otherwise provided in the Code or other applicable laws and loan contract on project agreements arising from foreign loans and international commitments, such as premium contributions of LGUs to the Government Service Insurance System and loans contracted by LGUs under foreign-assisted projects.
Apart from the above,
other mandatory deductions are made from the IRAs prior to their release, such
as: (1) total actual cost of devolution and the cost of city-funded hospitals;20
and (2) compulsory contributions21 and other remittances.22
It follows, therefore, that the President can withhold portions of IRAs in
order to set-off or compensate legitimately incurred obligations and
remittances of LGUs.
Significantly, Section
286 of the Local Government Code does not make mention of the exact amount that
should be automatically released to the LGUs. The provision does not mandate
that the entire 40% share mentioned in Section 284 shall be released. It merely
provides that the "share" of each LGU shall be released and
which "shall not be subject to any lien or holdback that may be imposed by
the national government for whatever purpose." The provision on automatic
release of IRA share should, thus, be read together with Section 284, including
the proviso on adjustment or reduction of IRAs, as well as other relevant laws.
It may happen that the share of the LGUs may amount to the full forty percent
(40%) or the reduced amount of thirty percent (30%) as adjusted without any law
being violated. In other words, all that Section 286 requires is the automatic
release of the amount that the LGUs are rightfully and legally entitled to, which,
as the same section provides, should not be less than thirty percent (30%) of
the collection of the national revenue taxes. So that even if five percent (5%)
or ten percent (10%) is either temporarily or permanently withheld, but the
minimum of thirty percent (30%) allotment for the LGUs is released pursuant to
the President's authority to make the necessary adjustment in the LGUS' share,
there is still full compliance with the requirements of the automatic release
of the LGUs' share.
Finally, the majority
insists that the withholding of ten percent (10%) or five percent (5%) of the
IRAs could not have been done pursuant to the power of the President to adjust
or reduce such shares under Section 284 of the Local Government Code because
there was no showing of an unmanageable public sector deficit by the national
government, nor was there evidence that consultations with the presiding
officers of both Houses of Congress and the presidents of the various leagues
had taken place and the corresponding recommendations of the Secretary of
Finance, Secretary of Interior and Local Government and the Budget Secretary
were made.
I beg to differ. The power to determine
whether there is an unmanageable public sector deficit is lodged in the
President. The President's determination, as fiscal manager of the country, of
the existence of economic difficulties which could amount to "unmanageable
public sector deficit" should be accorded respect. In fact, the
withholding of the ten percent (10%) of the LGUs' share was further justified
by the current economic difficulties brought about by the peso depreciation as
shown by one of the "WHEREASES" of AO No. 372.23 In the absence of any showing to the contrary, it is presumed that the
President had made prior consultations with the officials thus mentioned and
had acted upon the recommendations of the Secretaries of Finance, Interior and
Local Government and Budget.24
Therefore, even assuming
hypothetically that there was effectively a deduction of five percent (5%) of
the LGUs' share, which was in accordance with the President's prerogative in
view of the pronouncement of the existence of an unmanageable public sector
deficit, the deduction would still be valid in the absence of any proof that
the LGUs' allotment was less than the thirty percent (30%) limit provided for
in Section 284 of the Local Government Code.
In resume, the
withholding of the amount equivalent to five percent (5%) of the IRA to the
LGUs was temporary pending determination by the Executive of the actual share
which the LGUs are rightfully entitled to on the basis of the applicable laws,
particularly Section 284 of the Local Government Code, authorizing the
President to make the necessary adjustments in the IRA of LGUs in the event of
an unmanageable public sector deficit. And assuming that the said five percent (5%)
of the IRA pertaining to the 1998 Fiscal Year has been permanently withheld,
there is no showing that the amount actually released to the LGUs that same
year was less than thirty percent (30%) of the national internal revenue taxes
collected, without even considering the proper deductions allowed by law.
WHEREFORE, I vote to DISMISS the petition.
1 Executive Order No. 292, Book IV, Title XVII, Chapter 1.
2 Garcia v. Corona, G.R. No. 132451, December 17, 1999.
3 1987 CONSTITUTION, Article VI, Section 28 (2).
4 Tañada v. Angara, 272 SCRA 18 (1997).
5 Executive Order No. 292, Book VI, Chapter 5, Section 37.
6 Id., at Section 38.
7 Id., at Section 48.
8 San Juan v. CSC, 196 SCRA 69 (1991).
9 Drilon v. Lim, 235 SCRA 135 (1994).
10 Magtajas v. Pryce Properties Corp., Inc. and PAGCOR, 234 SCRA 255 (1994).
11 Ganzon v. CA, 200 SCRA 271, 286 (1991).
12 Id., at 287.
13 Rules and Regulations Implementing the Local Government code of 1991, Rule XXIII, Article 182 (1) (3).
14 Rules and Regulations Implementing the Local Government Code of 1991, Rule XXIII, Article 182 (j) (1) (2).
15 Rules and
Regulations Implementing the Local Government Code of 1991, Rule XXXIV, Article
405 (b).
16 1987 CONSTITUTION, Art. X, Section 6.
17 Republic Act No. 7160, Title III, Section 286.
18 Hector De Leon, PHILIPPINE CONSTITUTIONAL LAW: PRINCIPLES AND CASES, p. 505 (1991).
19 Separate Opinion of J. Esguerra in Aquino v. Enrile, 59 SCRA 183 (1974).
20 Republic Act No. 8760 (General Appropriations ACT for FY 2000).
21 See Eexecutive Order No. 190 (1999), Directing The Department of Budget And Management To Remit directly The Contributions And Other Remittances Of Local Government Units To the Concerned National Government Agencies (NGA), Government Financial Institutions (GFI), And Government Owned And/Or Controlled Corporations (GOCC).
22 Republic Act
No. 8760 (General Appropriations Act for FY 2000). Includes debt write-offs under Sec. 531 of the Local Government
Code: Debt Relief for Local Government Units.-- xxx
(e) Recovery schemes for the national government.---xxx
The national government is hereby authorized to deduct from the quarterly share of each local government unit in the internal revenue collections an amount to be determined on the basis of the amortization schedule of the local unit concerned: Provided, That such amount shall not exceed five percent (5%) of the monthly internal revenue allotment of the local government unit concerned.
23 WHEREAS, the current economic difficulties brought about by the peso depreciation requires continued prudence in government fiscal management to maintain economic stability and sustain the country’s growth momentum.
24 Section 3, Rule
131 of the RULES OF COURT provides:
SEC. 3 Disputable presumptions. – The following presumptions are satisfactory if uncontradicted, but may be contradicted and overcome by other evidence:
xxx
(m) That official duty has been regularly performed;
xxx.
[1] Rollo,
pp. 48-55.
[2] Ibid.,
pp. 56-75.
[3] This
case was deemed submitted for decision on September 27, 1999, upon receipt by
this Court of respondents' 10-page Memorandum, which was signed by Asst. Sol.
Gen. Mariano M. Martinez and Sol. Ofelia B. Cajigal. Petitioner's Memorandum was filed earlier, on September 21,
1999. Intervenor failed, despite due
notice, to submit a memorandum within the alloted time; thus, he is deemed to
have waived the filing of one.
[4] Issues
of mootness and locus standi were not raised by the respondents. However, the intervention of Roberto
Pagdanganan, as explained in the main text, has stopped any further discussion
of petitioner's standing. On the other
hand, by the failure of respondents to raise mootness as an issue, the Court
thus understands that the main issue is still justiciable. In any case, respondents are deemed to have
waived this defense or, at the very least, to have submitted the Petition for
resolution on the merits, for the future guidance of the government, the bench and the bar.
[5] 97
Phil. 143, May 30, 1955; per Padilla, J.
[6] Ibid.,
pp. 147-148. Reiterated in Ganzon v.
Kayanan, 104 Phil. 484 (1985); Ganzon v. Court of Appeals, 200 SCRA 271,
August 5, 1991; Taule v. Santos, 200 SCRA 512, August 12, 1991.
[7] Ibid.;
citing Pelaez v. Auditor General, 15 SCRA 569, December 24, 1965; Hebron
v. Reyes, 104 Phil. 175 (1958); and Mondano v. Silvosa, supra.
[8] Ibid.,
p. 522; citing Hebron v. Reyes, ibid., per Concepcion, J.
[9] 235
SCRA 135, 142, August 4, 1994.
[10] §1,
Art. VII of the Constitution.
[11] Joaquin
G. Bernas, SJ, The 1987 Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines: A Commentary, 1996 ed., p. 739.
[12] The Constitution provides:
"Sec. 25[, Art. II]. The State shall ensure the autonomy of local governments."
"Sec. 2[, Art. X].
The territorial and political subdivisions shall enjoy local
autonomy."
[13] 200
SCRA 271, 286, August 5, 1991, per Sarmiento, J.; citing §3, Art. X of
the Constitution.
[14] Ibid.
[15] Ibid.
[16] 170
SCRA 786, 794-795, February 28, 1989, per Sarmiento, J.
[17] Citing
§3, Art. X, 1987 Const.
[18] Citing
§2, BP 337.
[19] Citing
§4, Art. X, 1987 Const.
[20] Citing
BP 337; and Hebron v. Reyes, supra.
[21] Citing
Hebron v. Reyes, supra.
[22] Citing
Bernas, "Brewing storm over autonomy," The Manila Chronicle, pp. 4-5.
[23] 234
SCRA 255, 272, July 20,1994.
[24] San
Juan v. Civil Service Commission, 196 SCRA 69, 79, April 19, 1991.
[25] §9,
Art. XII of the Constitution.
[26] §3,
Chapter 1, Subtitle C, Title II, Book V, EO 292 (Administrative Code of 1987).
[27] §284. See also Art. 379 of the Rules and
Regulations Implementing the Local Government Code of 1991.
[28] §6 of Art. X of the Constitution reads:
"Local government units shall have a just share, as
determined by law, in the national taxes which shall be automatically released
to them."
[29] §286 (a) provides:
"Automatic Release of Shares. -- (a) The share of each
local government unit shall be released, without need of any further action,
directly to the provincial, city, municipal or barangay treasurer, as the case
may be, on a quarterly basis within (5) days after the end of each quarter, and
which shall not be subject to any lien or holdback that may be imposed by the
national government for whatever purpose."
[30] Emphasis
supplied.
[31] Ruben
E. Agpalo, Statutory Construction, 1990 ed., p. 239.
[32] Webster's
Third New International Dictionary, 1993 ed.
[33] 272
SCRA 18, May 2, 1997, per Panganiban, J.
[34] Citing
Aquino Jr. v. Ponce Enrile, 59 SCRA 183, 196, September 17, 1974.
[35] Citing
Guingona Jr. v. Gonzales, 219
SCRA 326, 337, March 1, 1993.
[36] Cf.
Daza v. Singson, 180 SCRA 496, December 21, 1989.
[37] 281
SCRA 330, 347-48, November 5, 1997, per Puno, J.
[38] See
Philippine National Bank v. Sayo, Jr., 292 SCRA 202, July 9, 1998; Vinta
Maritime Co., Inc. v. NLRC, 284 SCRA 656, January 23, 1998.
[39] Footnotes
omitted.
[40] "Sec.
287. Local Development Projects. --
Each local government unit shall appropriate in its annual budget no less than
twenty percent (20%) of its annual internal revenue allotment for development
projects. Copies of the development
plans of local government units shall be furnished the Department of Interior
and Local Government."