Digests
There are 80 results on the current subject filter
| Title | IDs & Reference #s | Background | Primary Holding | Subject Matter |
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Ang Nars Party-List v. Executive Secretary (8th October 2019) |
AK585185 G.R. No. 215746 |
Republic Act No. 9173 (Philippine Nursing Act of 2002) was enacted to enhance the welfare of nurses by mandating a minimum base pay of Salary Grade 15 for those in public health institutions. In 2009, Congress passed Joint Resolution No. 4, authorizing the President to modify the government compensation and position classification system. President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo issued EO 811 pursuant to this resolution, setting the entry-level salary for Nurse I at Salary Grade 11 instead of 15, effectively disregarding the mandate of RA 9173 based on concerns over wage distortion and budget constraints. |
Only bills, and not joint resolutions, can be enacted into law under the 1987 Constitution, even if the joint resolution undergoes the same legislative process (three readings, bicameral approval, presidential signature) as a bill; consequently, a joint resolution cannot amend or repeal a prior substantive law. |
Statutory Construction |
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Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) vs. United Planners Consultants, Inc (23rd February 2015) |
AK719310 751 SCRA 389 754 Phil. 513 G.R. No. 212081 |
In 1993, DENR contracted UPCI for consultancy services regarding the Land Resource Management Master Plan Project. Despite UPCI's completion of the work in December 1994, DENR paid only 47% of the contract price. In 1994, COA issued a report finding the contract price excessive, but DENR nonetheless acknowledged its liability in 1998. UPCI subsequently filed a collection suit, which was referred to arbitration under the CIAC Rules. The Arbitral Tribunal rendered an award in favor of UPCI, which DENR sought to challenge through prohibited pleadings and delayed filings. |
The Special ADR Rules exclusively govern the procedure for executing a confirmed domestic arbitral award, and the 15-day period under Rule 19.28 applies to certiorari petitions assailing RTC orders in ADR proceedings; the Rules of Court have no suppletory application. Furthermore, execution of money judgments against government agencies requires prior approval by the Commission on Audit (COA) under Section 26 of PD 1445, which jurisdiction is not ousted by the finality of an arbitral award confirmed under the Special ADR Rules. |
Statutory Construction |
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Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. BASF Coating + Inks Phil., Inc (26th November 2014) |
AK919594 743 SCRA 113 748 Phil. 760 G.R. No. 198677 |
The case involves the dissolution of a corporation and the subsequent attempt by the BIR to assess deficiency taxes after the corporation had moved its operations and registered office. The dispute centers on whether the BIR’s knowledge of the taxpayer’s new address, absent a formal written notice of change of address, is sufficient to prevent the suspension of the prescriptive period for assessment. |
The running of the statute of limitations on tax assessments under Section 223 of the NIRC is suspended only when the BIR Commissioner is actually unaware of the taxpayer’s whereabouts; mere failure to file a formal written notice of change of address does not suspend the period if the BIR has actual knowledge of the new address through its records and prior dealings with the taxpayer. Furthermore, an assessment notice sent to an address known by the BIR to be incorrect is invalid and does not become final and executory. |
Statutory Construction |
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Araullo vs. Aquino (1st July 2014) |
AK306263 728 SCRA 1 737 Phil. 457 G.R. No. 209287 G.R. NO. 209135 G.R. NO. 209136 G.R. NO. 209155 G.R. NO. 209164 G.R. NO. 209260 G.R. NO. 209442 G.R. NO. 209517 G.R. NO. 209569 |
The controversy arose after Senator Jinggoy Estrada delivered a privilege speech on September 25, 2013, revealing that certain senators received additional funds from the DAP as an "incentive" for voting to convict Chief Justice Renato Corona. This exposed the existence of the DAP, a program implemented by the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) since 2011 to address economic slowdown caused by government underspending. The DAP involved pooling funds from various sources—including unreleased appropriations, unobligated allotments from "slow-moving" projects, and unprogrammed funds—to finance priority projects and augment existing items in the budget. The revelation sparked public outrage, leading various petitioners to challenge the program's constitutionality before the SC. |
The following acts and practices under the Disbursement Acceleration Program (DAP), National Budget Circular No. 541, and related executive issuances are unconstitutional and void:
Additionally, the use of unprogrammed funds is declared void where there is no certification by the National Treasurer that revenue collections exceeded the revenue targets for non-compliance with the conditions provided in the relevant GAAs. |
Constitutional Law I Persons and Family Law Philosophy of Law Statutory Construction |
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Disini vs. Secretary of Justice (11th February 2014) |
AK238408 727 Phil. 28 G.R. No. 203335 G.R. No. 203299 G.R. No. 203306 G.R. No. 203359 G.R. No. 203378 G.R. No. 203391 G.R. No. 203407 G.R. No. 203440 G.R. No. 203453 G.R. No. 203454 G.R. No. 203469 G.R. No. 203501 G.R. No. 203501 G.R. No. 203515 G.R. No. 203518 |
R.A. 10175 was enacted to address cybercrimes such as hacking, identity theft, cybersex, child pornography, and online libel. It granted law enforcement expansive powers, including real-time data collection and executive authority to block access to data. Petitioners—lawyers, journalists, academics, and civil society groups—filed facial challenges arguing the law was overbroad, vague, and created a chilling effect on free speech and privacy. |
Cyberlibel is constitutional only with respect to the original author of the post; those who merely receive and react to it (e.g., by liking, sharing, or commenting) are not liable. Additionally, the State cannot criminalize mere unsolicited commercial communications (spam), authorize warrantless real-time collection of traffic data, or allow executive agencies to block access to computer data without judicial intervention, as these constitute unconstitutional prior restraints, unreasonable searches, or abridgments of free speech. |
Constitutional Law II Criminal Law II Philosophy of Law Statutory Construction Police Power; Freedom of Expression, Libel, and Cyberlibel |
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Belgica vs. Ochoa (19th November 2013) |
AK249819 710 SCRA 1 721 Phil. 416 G.R. No. 208566 G.R. No. 208493 G.R. No. 209251 |
“Pork Barrel” refers to lump-sum, discretionary funds historically traced to American legislative practice of directing federal budgets to local districts. In the Philippines, this evolved from Act 3044 (1922) requiring post-enactment legislator approval for public works fund distribution, to the Countrywide Development Fund (CDF) in the 1990s, and eventually the Priority Development Assistance Fund (PDAF) from 2000 onward. The system allowed individual legislators to identify local projects for funding after the General Appropriations Act (GAA) was passed. In 2013, the Commission on Audit (CoA) released a report documenting massive irregularities in PDAF utilization from 2007-2009—including ghost projects, questionable NGOs, and kickbacks—sparked by the “Napoles controversy,” prompting these petitions. |
The 2013 PDAF Article and all other Congressional Pork Barrel Laws containing post-enactment measures that authorize legislators to intervene in project identification, fund release, or realignment are unconstitutional for violating the principle of separation of powers and the non-delegability of legislative power. Furthermore, the phrases “and for such other purposes as may be hereafter directed by the President” (Section 8, PD 910) and “to finance the priority infrastructure development projects” (Section 12, PD 1869, as amended) are unconstitutional for constituting undue delegation of legislative power without sufficient standards. |
Constitutional Law I Constitutional Law II Statutory Construction |
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Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. San Roque Power Corporation (8th October 2013) |
AK589834 690 SCRA 336 719 Phil. 137 G.R. No. 187485 G.R. No. 196113 G.R. No. 197156 |
The cases involve claims for refund or tax credit of unutilized input VAT attributable to zero-rated sales or capital goods purchases. The central controversy revolves around the interpretation of Section 112(D) of the NIRC (renumbered as Section 112(C) by RA 9337), specifically whether the 120-day waiting period for the Commissioner’s decision and the 30-day appeal period are mandatory or merely directory. Prior to this decision, conflicting doctrines existed: Atlas Consolidated Mining (2007) reckoned the 2-year prescriptive period from the date of payment, while Mirant Pagbilao (2008) reckoned it from the close of the taxable quarter. Meanwhile, BIR Ruling No. DA-489-03 (2003) and Revenue Regulations No. 7-95 allowed taxpayers to file judicial claims without waiting for the 120-day period to lapse, provided the 2-year prescriptive period was observed. |
The 120-day period for the Commissioner to decide administrative claims for VAT refund/credit and the 30-day period for taxpayers to appeal to the CTA are mandatory and jurisdictional; however, taxpayers who relied on BIR Ruling No. DA-489-03 (December 10, 2003) are entitled to equitable estoppel under Section 246 of the NIRC, protecting their prematurely filed claims filed between December 10, 2003 and October 6, 2010. |
Basic Taxation Law Statutory Construction |
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Dayao vs. Commission on Elections (29th January 2013) |
AK885502 689 SCRA 412 702 Phil. 348 G.R. No. 193643 |
The case involves the party-list accreditation of LPG Marketers Association, Inc. (LPGMA), a non-stock, non-profit association of LPG consumers and small industry players. LPGMA sought accreditation to participate in the May 2010 elections, advocating for affordable LPG and fair trade practices. Competing dealers and industry groups later challenged its registration, claiming LPGMA represented big business rather than marginalized sectors. |
An opposition to a petition for party-list registration is not a condition precedent to the filing of a complaint for cancellation under Section 6 of R.A. No. 7941; the COMELEC's power to cancel registration is distinct from its power to refuse registration, and accreditation is a mere concession that never attains perpetual or irrefutable conclusiveness against the granting authority. |
Statutory Construction |
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Giron vs. Commission on Elections (22nd January 2013) |
AK774340 689 SCRA 97 702 Phil. 30 G.R. No. 188179 |
R.A. 9006 was enacted to enhance the holding of free, orderly, honest, peaceful, and credible elections through fair election practices. During bicameral deliberations, Congress deliberately selected a generic title to accommodate provisions addressing various inequities in the electoral system, including the automatic resignation of elective officials upon filing certificates of candidacy for other offices (previously governed by Section 67 of B.P. 881) and the treatment of votes cast for substituted candidates after ballot printing. |
The "one subject-one title" rule is satisfied when a statute's title is comprehensive enough reasonably to include the general object which the statute seeks to effect; the title need not express each and every end and means necessary for accomplishing that object, nor serve as an abstract or index of the Act. The title "Fair Election Act" is sufficiently broad to cover Sections 12 and 14 as they relate to ensuring fair election practices and leveling the playing field. |
Statutory Construction |
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Chavez vs. Judicial and Bar Council (17th July 2012) |
AK960332 676 SCRA 579 691 Phil. 173 G.R. No. 202242 |
The controversy arose following the impeachment and departure of Chief Justice Renato C. Corona in May 2012. Petitioner Francisco I. Chavez, nominated as a candidate for Chief Justice, questioned the composition of the JBC, which at the time included eight members: two representatives from Congress (one Senator and one House Representative), each exercising one full vote. The constitutional provision was crafted to insulate judicial appointments from political pressure, creating a body representative of stakeholders in the judicial appointment process. |
Section 8(1), Article VIII of the 1987 Constitution mandates that Congress is entitled to only one (1) representative in the Judicial and Bar Council, and such representative must exercise one (1) full vote; the practice of having two representatives from the Senate and the House of Representatives sitting simultaneously is unconstitutional. |
Statutory Construction |
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Liwag vs. Happy Glen Loop Homeowners Association, Inc (4th July 2012) |
AK931594 675 SCRA 744 690 Phil. 321 G.R. No. 189755 |
The controversy originates from Happy Glen Loop Subdivision in Deparo, Caloocan City. In 1978, the original developer (F.G.R. Sales) assigned its rights to Ernesto Marcelo to settle a debt. Marcelo, as successor-in-interest, represented to the NHA, HSRC, and lot buyers that adequate water facilities existed. For approximately 30 years, residents relied exclusively on a deep well and overhead tank located on Lot 11, Block 5. In 1995, Marcelo sold this specific lot to Hermogenes Liwag, who was then president of the respondent Homeowners Association. TCT No. C-350099 was issued in the spouses' names. Hermogenes died in 2003, and petitioner (his widow) subsequently demanded the tank's removal, leading to the instant dispute. |
Open spaces in subdivisions, including areas reserved for essential water facilities, are reserved for public use, beyond the commerce of man, and cannot be alienated by the developer; any such sale is void ab initio and subject to annulment by the HLURB as an unsound real estate business practice. |
Statutory Construction |
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Commissioner of Customs vs. Hypermix Feeds Corporation (1st February 2012) |
AK490989 664 SCRA 666 680 Phil. 681 G.R. No. 179579 |
The Bureau of Customs sought to prevent misclassification of wheat imports by issuing a memorandum that created a predetermined classification system based on importer profiles rather than actual commodity inspection, effectively bypassing individual examination requirements under the Tariff and Customs Code. |
Administrative regulations that substantially increase the burden on regulated parties by creating new legal obligations (legislative rules) must comply with the procedural requirements of notice, hearing, and publication under the Revised Administrative Code; classification schemes based on importer identity rather than commodity characteristics violate the equal protection clause; and administrative regulations cannot diminish statutory duties conferred by law upon implementing officers. |
Statutory Construction |
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Datu Michael Abas Kida vs. Senate of the Philippines (18th October 2011) |
AK191813 659 SCRA 270 675 Phil. 316 G.R. No. 196271 G.R. NO. 196305 G.R. NO. 197221 G.R. NO. 197282 G.R. NO. 197392 G.R. NO. 197454 |
The 1987 Constitution mandates the creation of autonomous regions in Muslim Mindanao and the Cordilleras (Article X, Sections 15-22). Congress enacted RA No. 6734 (the first Organic Act) in 1989, establishing the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM). This was amended by RA No. 9054 in 2001, which provided for the first regular elections in September 2001. Over the years, Congress enacted several laws (RA Nos. 9140, 9333) resetting the ARMM election dates, resulting in a desynchronization with national elections held every second Monday of May. To align ARMM elections with the national schedule, Congress enacted RA No. 10153, resetting the elections to May 2013 and authorizing the President to appoint OICs to serve until the newly elected officials assume office. |
RA No. 10153 is constitutional in its entirety, including the grant to the President of the power to appoint OICs for ARMM positions, as a valid interim measure to achieve the constitutional mandate of synchronizing national and local elections without violating the fixed three-year term limit for local officials or the autonomy provisions of the Constitution. |
Constitutional Law I Statutory Construction |
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Navarro vs. Ermita (12th April 2011) |
AK213242 648 SCRA 400 663 Phil. 546 G.R. No. 180050 |
The case concerns the creation of the Province of Dinagat Islands via RA 9355, approved in 2006 and ratified through a plebiscite. Petitioners, former political leaders of Surigao del Norte, challenged the law before the SC, arguing that Dinagat failed to meet the statutory requirements of 2,000 square kilometers in land area and 250,000 in population under the LGC. The initial SC decision declared the law unconstitutional, creating uncertainty regarding the status of elected officials and the validity of subsequent elections. |
Provinces composed of one or more islands are exempt from the minimum land area requirement of 2,000 square kilometers under Section 461 of the Local Government Code, as the exemption in Article 9(2) of the LGC-IRR validly corrects a congressional oversight and reflects the true legislative intent to prioritize economic viability over territorial size in the creation of local government units. |
Statutory Construction |
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League of Cities of the Philippines (LCP) vs. Commission on Elections (12th April 2011) |
AK614037 663 Phil. 496 G.R. No. 176951 G.R. No. 177499 G.R. NO. 178056 |
RA 9009 amended the Local Government Code of 1991, increasing the income requirement for conversion of municipalities to cities from P20 million to P100 million in locally generated revenue. During the 11th Congress (1998-2001), several municipalities had pending conversion bills. When RA 9009 took effect on June 30, 2001, these municipalities were caught by the new requirement. The House attempted to exempt them through Joint Resolution No. 29 (later re-adopted as Joint Resolution No. 1), but the Senate failed to act. Subsequently, during the 12th and 13th Congresses, individual Cityhood Laws were enacted for 16 municipalities, each containing an exemption clause effectively reverting to the P20 million requirement or explicitly exempting them from RA 9009. The LCP challenged these laws as unconstitutional, leading to multiple rounds of litigation and shifting majorities in the SC. |
The Cityhood Laws are constitutional because the exemption clauses therein constitute valid amendments to the Local Government Code, exempting the respondent municipalities from the P100 million income requirement under RA 9009 in recognition of their distinct class and proven viability as centers of trade and commerce. |
Constitutional Law I Constitutional Law II Corporation and Basic Securities Law Philosophy of Law Statutory Construction Equal Protection |
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Gutierrez vs. The House of Representatives Committee on Justice, Hontiveros-Baraquel, et al. (15th February 2011) |
AK949647 643 SCRA 198 660 Phil. 271 G.R. No. 193459 |
The case arose during the opening of the 15th Congress, when two separate groups filed verified impeachment complaints against Ombudsman Gutierrez for betrayal of public trust and culpable violation of the Constitution. The complaints alleged various failures in her official duties, including low conviction rates, inaction on high-profile cases (NBN-ZTE, Fertilizer Fund Scam), and refusal to grant access to public records. The House provisionally adopted the Impeachment Rules of the 14th Congress and simultaneously referred both complaints to the Committee on Justice, which found them sufficient in form and substance despite Gutierrez’s objections. |
The term "initiate" in Section 3(5), Article XI of the Constitution refers to the filing of an impeachment complaint coupled with Congress’ taking initial action on it, which is the referral of the complaint to the Committee on Justice. Simultaneous referral of multiple complaints to the Committee constitutes a single initiation of impeachment proceedings, not a prohibited second initiation. |
Statutory Construction |
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Lokin, Jr. vs. Commission on Elections (22nd June 2010) |
AK434539 621 SCRA 385 635 Phil. 372 G.R. Nos. 179431-32 G.R. No. 180443 |
The dispute arose during the May 14, 2007 synchronized national and local elections under the party-list system. Citizens' Battle Against Corruption (CIBAC), a registered party-list organization, initially submitted its list of nominees but later attempted to change the list after the elections had concluded, triggering questions about the extent of the COMELEC's rule-making power under the Party-List System Act. |
Administrative agencies, including the COMELEC, possess no authority to issue implementing rules and regulations that expand, modify, or add to the statutory grounds for substitution of party-list nominees; the grounds enumerated in Section 8 of R.A. No. 7941—death, withdrawal in writing by the nominee, or incapacity—are exclusive, and any substitution based on grounds not expressly provided in the statute is void. |
Statutory Construction |
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Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. Kudos Metal Corporation (5th May 2010) |
AK209769 620 SCRA 232 634 Phil. 314 G.R. No. 178087 |
The case involves the assessment of internal revenue taxes for taxable year 1998. The BIR initiated audit proceedings after the taxpayer failed to comply with notices to present records. To extend the prescriptive period for assessment, the BIR obtained waivers from the taxpayer's accountant, which were later challenged as defective. |
Waivers of the statute of limitations on tax assessments must strictly comply with the procedural requirements under RMO 20-90 and RDAO 05-01; non-compliance renders the waiver invalid and does not toll the prescriptive period. Furthermore, the doctrine of estoppel cannot be invoked to validate a waiver that is defective or prohibited by law, nor to excuse the BIR's failure to follow its own mandatory procedures. |
Basic Taxation Law Statutory Construction |
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Intestate Estate of Manolita Gonzales Vda. De Carungcong vs. People, et al. (11th February 2010) |
AK055613 612 SCRA 272 626 Phil. 177 G.R. No. 181409 |
Family property dispute involving a widowed son-in-law who allegedly defrauded his deceased wife's mother (his mother-in-law) of valuable real estate through falsified documents, raising the novel question of whether affinity survives the death of the connecting spouse for purposes of criminal exemption. |
The absolutory cause under Article 332 of the Revised Penal Code applies only to the simple crimes of theft, swindling (estafa), and malicious mischief, and does not extend to complex crimes such as estafa through falsification of public documents where the violation of property rights is achieved through a breach of public interest in the integrity of public documents. |
Statutory Construction |
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In Re: Petition for Adoption of Michelle P. Lim, et al. (21st May 2009) |
AK982276 588 SCRA 98 606 Phil. 82 G.R. Nos. 168992-93 |
Petitioner and her first husband, Primo Lim, who were childless, registered two foundlings as their biological children to simulate their births. After Primo Lim's death, petitioner remarried. She then sought to rectify the simulated births and legally adopt the children under the amnesty provision of the Domestic Adoption Act of 1998. |
Joint adoption by husband and wife is mandatory under Section 7 of RA 8552 when the adopter is married at the time of filing, unless the adoption falls under one of three specific exceptions: (1) one spouse seeks to adopt the legitimate son/daughter of the other; (2) one spouse seeks to adopt his/her own illegitimate son/daughter with the other spouse's consent; or (3) the spouses are legally separated from each other. |
Statutory Construction |
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Geologistic, Inc. vs. Gateway Electronics Corporation (25th March 2009) |
AK146267 582 SCRA 434 G.R. Nos. 174256-57 |
Petitioner Geologistics, a freight forwarding and customs brokerage company, sued respondent Gateway Electronics Corporation for unpaid fees. Following the RTC's judgment in favor of Geologistics, Gateway appealed while Geologistics sought immediate execution, claiming Gateway was insolvent and had admitted liability. The RTC granted the execution against the counterbond posted by First Lepanto-Taisho Insurance Corporation to discharge a preliminary attachment. |
Discretionary execution under Rule 39, Section 2 of the Rules of Court is strictly construed as an exception to the general rule that execution requires finality of judgment; "good reasons" must consist of exceptional circumstances of such urgency as to outweigh the injury the losing party may suffer if the judgment is reversed, and the mere fact that the case has been pending for a long time or that the defendant admitted liability for a different amount does not qualify as such good reasons. |
Statutory Construction |
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Abakada Guro Party List vs. Purisima (14th August 2008) |
AK884230 562 SCRA 251 584 Phil. 246 G.R. No. 166715 |
RA 9335 was enacted to enhance revenue generation by the BIR and BOC through a system of financial rewards for exceeding targets and sanctions, including removal, for failing to meet targets by at least 7.5%. |
Legislative veto provisions that allow Congress or its committees to approve or disapprove implementing rules and regulations after a law has taken effect are unconstitutional because they encroach upon the executive power to implement laws and violate the constitutional requirements of bicameralism and presentment. |
Constitutional Law I Statutory Construction |
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Garcia vs. Social Security Commission Legal and Collection (17th December 2007) |
AK000744 540 SCRA 456 565 Phil. 193 G.R. No. 170735 |
Impact Corporation was engaged in manufacturing aluminum tube containers with factories in Nueva Ecija and Cainta. Beginning in 1978, it encountered financial difficulties and labor unrest. In 1983, it filed a Petition for Suspension of Payments with the SEC, which was dismissed in 1985. The corporation eventually dissolved, its assets sold to scrap dealers to pay for rental arrears. During its operation, the corporation deducted SSS contributions from employee salaries but failed to remit them to the SSS. |
Section 28(f) of the Social Security Law subjects corporate directors to personal liability for the employer corporation's unremitted SSS premium contributions (the principal obligation) in addition to penalties, and this liability attaches by direct provision of law independent of the requirements under Section 31 of the Corporation Code. |
Statutory Construction |
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Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. Primetown Property Group, Inc. (28th August 2007) |
AK150634 531 SCRA 436 G.R. No. 162155 |
During the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis, Primetown suffered substantial losses in its real estate business. Despite these losses, it paid quarterly corporate income taxes and creditable withholding taxes totaling P26,318,398.32 for taxable year 1997. Primetown sought to recover these payments, contending that losses rendered it not liable for income tax. |
Under Section 31, Chapter VIII, Book I of the Administrative Code of 1987 (EO 292), a "year" for purposes of computing legal periods consists of 12 calendar months, not 365 days; therefore, the two-year prescriptive period for tax refunds under Section 229 of the NIRC is properly computed as 24 calendar months reckoned from the filing of the final adjusted return, rendering irrelevant whether the period includes a leap year. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Persons and Family Law Statutory Construction Article 13, Civil Code |
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Cemco Holdings, Inc. vs. National Life Insurance Company of the Philippines, Inc. (7th August 2007) |
AK555743 529 SCRA 355 556 Phil. 198 G.R. NO. 171815 |
The case involves the interpretation of the Mandatory Tender Offer Rule under the Securities Regulation Code (SRC), specifically whether the rule applies only to direct purchases of shares in a listed company or extends to indirect acquisitions through the purchase of a non-listed holding company's shares. The dispute arose from Cemco's acquisition of control over UCHC, which effectively transferred control of UCC to Cemco, raising concerns about the protection of minority shareholders of UCC. |
The Mandatory Tender Offer Rule under Section 19 of RA 8799 applies to any acquisition of control over a publicly-listed company, whether direct or indirect, and the SEC has the implied adjudicative authority under Section 5.1(n) of the same Code to nullify acquisitions made in violation thereof and direct the holding of a tender offer. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Statutory Construction |
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Adasa vs. Abalos (19th February 2007) |
AK799445 516 SCRA 261 545 Phil. 168 G.R. No. 168617 |
The case involves two complaints for estafa filed by respondent against petitioner for allegedly encashing two checks issued in respondent's name without her knowledge or consent. After the City Prosecutor found probable cause and filed informations, petitioner sought reinvestigation. Following the reinvestigation, the City Prosecutor affirmed the finding of probable cause. Petitioner was subsequently arraigned, but thereafter filed a petition for review with the DOJ, which reversed the prosecutor's resolution and ordered the withdrawal of the information. |
Once an accused has been arraigned, the Secretary of Justice is mandatorily barred from giving due course to a petition for review filed under DOJ Circular No. 70, because arraignment constitutes a waiver of the right to preliminary investigation (or reinvestigation) and the right to question any irregularity surrounding it, including the right to appeal the prosecutor's resolution. |
Statutory Construction |
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Balagtas Multi-Purpose Cooperative, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals (27th October 2006) |
AK270160 505 SCRA 654 536 Phil 511 G.R. No. 159268 |
The case involves the intersection of the Cooperative Code of the Philippines (RA 6938), which grants fiscal and procedural privileges to cooperatives to promote self-reliance and economic development, and the Labor Code (PD 442), which imposes an appeal bond requirement on employers appealing monetary awards in illegal dismissal cases to prevent dilution of employee recovery during the appellate period. |
Cooperatives are not exempt from posting an appeal bond under Article 223 of the Labor Code when appealing monetary awards to the NLRC, because Article 62(7) of RA 6938 strictly refers to regular trial courts (MTC, RTC) and does not encompass quasi-judicial bodies. |
Statutory Construction |
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Aquino vs. Quezon City (3rd August 2006) |
AK382783 497 SCRA 497 529 Phil. 486 G.R. No. 137534 G.R. No. 138624 |
The disputes arose under PD 464, the Real Property Tax Code in force prior to the Local Government Code of 1991. Both cases involved long-delinquent properties in Quezon City auctioned by the local government to satisfy unpaid real property taxes, with original owners challenging the sales based on alleged non-compliance with notice requirements. |
In tax delinquency sales under PD 464, the local government must issue both a Notice of Delinquency (Section 65) and a Notice of Sale (Section 73), but constructive notice sent to the address appearing in tax records satisfies statutory requirements; actual receipt by the taxpayer is not required, and the taxpayer's failure to update his address in official records does not invalidate the sale. |
Statutory Construction |
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Senate of the Philippines vs. Ermita (20th April 2006) |
AK395231 488 SCRA 1 522 Phil. 1 G.R. No. 169777 G.R. No. 169659 G.R. No. 169660 G.R. No. 169667 G.R. No. 169834 G.R. No. 171246 |
The Senate, through its various committees, conducted inquiries in aid of legislation regarding the NorthRail project and alleged military involvement in wiretapping ("Gloriagate"). President Arroyo issued EO 464 on September 28, 2005, purportedly to ensure observance of separation of powers and executive privilege, but which operated to bar executive officials from attending scheduled Senate hearings. |
Executive privilege must be specifically asserted with precise and certain reasons; it cannot be invoked through a blanket authorization or implied refusal that fails to state the specific basis for withholding information from Congress. Sections 2(b) and 3 of EO 464 are unconstitutional because they allow executive officials to avoid legislative inquiries by merely invoking the EO without a formal claim of privilege, and improperly delegate the authority to determine privilege coverage to department heads rather than the President. |
Constitutional Law I Philosophy of Law Statutory Construction |
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Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. PLDT (15th December 2005) |
AK383011 478 SCRA 61 514 Phil. 255 G.R. No. 140230 |
PLDT operates under a legislative franchise (R.A. No. 7082) imposing a 3% franchise tax on gross receipts. The dispute centers on whether this franchise exempts PLDT from indirect taxes on importations of equipment and spare parts. |
The "in lieu of all taxes" clause in a franchise grant exempts the franchise holder only from direct taxes imposed on its franchise or earnings, not from indirect taxes (such as VAT, compensating tax, and advance sales tax), unless the exempting statute expressly and unmistakably includes indirect taxes. |
Basic Taxation Law Statutory Construction |
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Abakada Guro Party List vs. Ermita (1st September 2005) |
AK134713 469 SCRA 14 506 Phil. 1 G.R. No. 168056 G.R. No. 168207 G.R. No. 168461 G.R. No. 168463 G.R. No. 168730 |
The Philippines faced a severe fiscal crisis characterized by mounting budget deficits, inadequate revenue collection, and high debt service ratios. To generate additional revenue, Congress enacted R.A. No. 9337, amending the National Internal Revenue Code (NIRC) to expand the VAT base and introduce a mechanism allowing the President to increase the VAT rate from 10% to 12% upon the occurrence of specific economic conditions (VAT collection exceeding 2.8% of GDP or national government deficit exceeding 1.5% of GDP). The law also introduced limitations on input tax credits (70% cap), amortization of input tax on capital goods over 60 months, and a 5% final withholding tax on government transactions. |
The power to tax is purely legislative and non-delegable, but Congress may delegate the ascertainment of facts or conditions upon which the operation of a statute depends, provided the law is complete in itself and fixes a sufficient standard; the “standby authority” in R.A. No. 9337 is a valid delegation of fact-finding, not law-making. |
Basic Taxation Law Constitutional Law I Philosophy of Law Statutory Construction |
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Coconut Oil Refiners Association, Inc. vs. Torres (29th July 2005) |
AK371894 465 SCRA 47 503 Phil. 42 G.R. No. 132527 |
Following the withdrawal of US military forces from Clark and Subic military reservations, Congress enacted RA 7227 (Bases Conversion and Development Act of 1992) to convert these areas into special economic zones to generate employment and attract investment. The law expressly granted tax and duty-free incentives to Subic but authorized the President to create Clark SEZ subject to different policies. The Executive subsequently issued orders extending similar incentives to Clark and allowing limited removal of duty-free goods from Subic to Philippine territory, prompting domestic manufacturers and retailers to challenge these as unconstitutional. |
Tax exemptions being in the nature of a legislative grant, the President cannot extend tax and duty-free incentives expressly granted only to the Subic Special Economic Zone under RA 7227 to the Clark Special Economic Zone without express legislative authority; such extension constitutes invalid executive legislation violating the constitutional mandate that no law granting tax exemption shall be passed without the concurrence of a majority of all Members of Congress. |
Statutory Construction |
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City of Manila vs. Laguio, Jr. (12th April 2005) |
AK416215 455 SCRA 308 495 Phil. 289 G.R. No. 118127 |
The dispute arose from a will purportedly executed by Vicente Lee, Sr. in 1965, which bequeathed his entire estate to his wife Lim Hock Lee and a parcel of land to two other children, allegedly to the exclusion of complainant Manuel L. Lee. Complainant contested the will’s authenticity, alleging his father never executed it and that the signatures of the testator and witnesses were forged. |
A notary public, especially a lawyer, is bound to strictly observe the mandatory formalities of the Notarial Law and the Civil Code regarding the execution of wills, including the requirement of three credible witnesses, the exhibition of current residence certificates, and proper entries in the notarial register; gross negligence in these duties constitutes professional misconduct warranting suspension and revocation of commission. |
Constitutional Law II Statutory Construction Police Power |
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Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. Michel J. Lhuillier Pawnshop, Inc (15th July 2003) |
AK922816 406 SCRA 178 453 Phil. 1043 G.R. No. 150947 |
The case involves the BIR's attempt to impose a 5% percentage tax on pawnshops through administrative issuances (RMO No. 15-91 and RMC No. 43-91) by reclassifying them as lending investors. Prior to these issuances, the BIR had consistently ruled that pawnshops were not lending investors and were subject only to fixed annual taxes, not percentage taxes on gross income. |
Pawnshops are not "lending investors" subject to the 5% percentage tax under Section 116 of the National Internal Revenue Code of 1977, as amended. Administrative issuances that substantially increase tax burdens constitute legislative rules requiring prior publication and hearing to be valid, and cannot modify or amend the law. |
Statutory Construction |
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Buena Obra vs. Social Security System (9th April 2003) |
AK528677 401 SCRA206 449 Phil. 200 G.R. No. 147745 |
The case involves a claim for death benefits under Presidential Decree No. 626, as amended (the Employees’ Compensation Law), which provides compensation for work-connected disability or death. The central dispute was whether the claim had prescribed and whether the deceased’s myocardial infarction was causally linked to his employment as a truck driver. |
The SC held that a claim for Employees’ Compensation benefits is deemed filed when a claim for SSS death benefits is filed with the same agency within the prescriptive period, and that a heart attack suffered during the performance of strenuous work duties is compensable. |
Statutory Construction |
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Commission on Audit of the Province of Cebu vs. Province of Cebu (29th November 2001) |
AK875038 371 SCRA 196 422 Phil. 519 G.R. No. 141386 |
The dispute centers on the interpretation of the Special Education Fund (SEF) created under R.A. No. 5447 (1969) and its interplay with the Local Government Code of 1991 (R.A. No. 7160). The SEF is constituted from an additional 1% real property tax and portions of taxes on Virginia-type cigarettes. The issue arose when the COA questioned the Province of Cebu's disbursement of SEF funds for teacher salaries and scholarships, leading to a test of whether the LGC fully repealed R.A. No. 5447 and what expenditures remain valid under the new statutory framework. |
Salaries and personnel-related benefits of teachers appointed by local school boards for extension classes are chargeable against the Special Education Fund (SEF) under the doctrine of necessary implication and the surviving provisions of R.A. No. 5447; however, college scholarship grants are not chargeable to the SEF where the Local Government Code of 1991 intentionally omitted the specific authorization found in R.A. No. 5447. |
Statutory Construction |
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Estrada vs. Sandiganbayan (19th November 2001) |
AK529893 369 SCRA 394 421 Phil. 290 G.R. No. 148560 |
The case arises from the prosecution of the highest-ranking official to be charged under the Plunder Law. Following the events of EDSA II and the assumption of the presidency by Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, the Office of the Ombudsman filed multiple informations against former President Estrada, including one for plunder involving an aggregate amount of P4,097,804,173.17 allegedly acquired through a combination or series of overt criminal acts (jueteng money, tobacco excise tax diversion, GSIS/SSS stock manipulation, and unexplained wealth). |
R.A. No. 7080 (The Plunder Law), as amended by R.A. No. 7659, is constitutional. It is not void for vagueness; it contains ascertainable standards and well-defined parameters. Section 4 is a procedural rule of evidence, not a substantive element that eliminates the requirement of proving each component act beyond reasonable doubt. Plunder is a malum in se crime requiring mens rea, and the statute maintains the presumption of innocence and the reasonable doubt standard. |
Constitutional Law II Philosophy of Law Statutory Construction Freedom of Expression |
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Benedicto vs. Court of Appeals (4th September 2001) |
AK713363 364 SCRA 334 416 Phil. 722 G.R. No. 125359 |
The case involves the prosecution of close associates of former President Ferdinand Marcos for maintaining undeclared foreign exchange accounts abroad ("dollar-salting") in violation of Central Bank regulations requiring registration and reporting of foreign exchange earnings. |
The repeal of a penal statute does not extinguish criminal liability for violations committed prior to the repeal where the repealing law contains a saving clause preserving pending actions, or where the repealing statute simultaneously reenacts the penal provision of the former law. |
Statutory Construction |
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Del Mar vs. Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corporation (29th November 2000) |
AK276548 346 SCRA 485 400 Phil. 307 G.R. No. 138298 G.R. No. 138982 |
PAGCOR was created under P.D. No. 1869 to centralize government regulation of games of chance. In 1996, the Secretary of Justice opined that PAGCOR’s authority extended to jai-alai. Acting on this, PAGCOR entered into a joint venture with private corporations to resume jai-alai operations using private infrastructure but under PAGCOR’s management. Members of the House of Representatives challenged this as an unconstitutional usurpation of the legislative power to grant franchises. |
A legislative franchise must be strictly construed against the grantee; PAGCOR’s franchise under P.D. No. 1869 authorizes only the operation of gambling casinos and does not include jai-alai frontons, which require a separate and specific legislative franchise obtained through plenary legislative power. |
Statutory Construction |
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Heirs of Alberto Suguitan vs. City of Mandaluyong (14th March 2000) |
AK255645 328 SCRA 137 384 Phil. 676 G.R. No. 135087 |
The City of Mandaluyong sought to expand the Mandaluyong Medical Center to accommodate increasing patient volume. The Sangguniang Panlungsod issued Resolution No. 396, S-1994 authorizing the Mayor to initiate expropriation proceedings over a private parcel of land (TCT No. 56264) owned by Alberto Suguitan after the owner refused to sell. |
A local government unit must enact an ordinance, not a resolution, to validly authorize the exercise of the power of eminent domain under Section 19 of RA 7160; the requirement applies at the initiation of expropriation proceedings, not merely at the appropriation stage. |
Statutory Construction |
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Liang vs. People (28th January 2000) |
AK383066 323 SCRA 692 G.R. No. 125865 |
Petitioner was employed as an economist with the Asian Development Bank (ADB), an international financial institution headquartered in Mandaluyong City. In 1994, he allegedly uttered defamatory words against Joyce Cabal, a fellow ADB worker, including an imputation of theft. |
Immunity from legal process granted to international organization officials under the ADB Headquarters Agreement is restricted to acts performed in their official capacity; courts must conduct an independent factual inquiry to determine whether the alleged criminal act was committed in the discharge of official duties, and the DFA's determination of immunity is merely preliminary and has no binding effect on courts. |
Statutory Construction |
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Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. Court of Appeals (23rd February 1999) |
AK854014 303 SCRA 508 363 Phil. 130 G.R. No. 107135 |
Interpretation of Section 168 of the old National Internal Revenue Code regarding the scope of prohibited tax credits against the 3% miller's tax imposed on coconut oil manufacturers. The dispute centered on whether the statutory prohibition against crediting taxes paid on "raw materials used in the milling process" extends to packaging materials that merely contain the finished product. |
Sales taxes paid on containers and packaging materials may be credited against the miller's tax due, as they do not constitute "raw materials or supplies used in the milling process" within the meaning of Section 168's final proviso. |
Statutory Construction |
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Municipality of Parañaque vs. V.M. Realty Corporation (20th July 1998) |
AK525057 292 SCRA 678 354 Phil. 684 G.R. No. 127820 |
The case involves the Municipality of Parañaque's attempt to expropriate private property for a socialized housing project intended to benefit the underprivileged and homeless. The dispute arose from the procedural mechanism used to authorize the expropriation and the effect of a prior dismissed expropriation case involving the same property. |
A local government unit may exercise the power of eminent domain only when authorized by a valid ordinance enacted by its legislative council, not merely by a resolution; however, the principle of res judicata does not permanently bar the State or its authorized agents from subsequently exercising eminent domain over the same property once all statutory and constitutional requisites are properly complied with. |
Statutory Construction |
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Arroyo vs. De Venecia (14th August 1997) |
AK140457 277 SCRA 268 343 Phil. 42 G.R. No. 127255 |
The case arose from the legislative proceedings for R.A. No. 8240 (the sin tax law). On November 21, 1996, during the session to approve the conference committee report, an incident occurred wherein Rep. Arroyo attempted to interject while the Chair was calling for objections. Petitioners filed suit alleging grave abuse of discretion in the legislative process. The SC initially dismissed the petition; this Resolution addresses the motion for reconsideration. |
Violations of internal rules of procedure of the House of Representatives do not affect the validity of enacted laws, as these rules are merely procedural and not constitutional requirements for the enactment of legislation. |
Statutory Construction |
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Santiago vs. Commission on Elections (19th March 1997) |
AK585438 270 SCRA 106 336 Phil. 848 G.R. No. 127325 |
The 1987 Constitution introduced a third mode of proposing amendments—people’s initiative—in addition to Congress acting as a constituent assembly and a constitutional convention. This system, characterized by the 1986 Constitutional Commission as “innovative,” allows amendments to be directly proposed by the people upon a petition of at least 12% of the total number of registered voters, with every legislative district represented by at least 3% of the registered voters therein. Unlike the 1935 and 1973 Constitutions which recognized only two methods, the 1987 Constitution institutionalized direct people power in the amendment process. |
R.A. No. 6735 is incomplete, inadequate, and insufficient to implement the system of initiative on amendments to the Constitution, and therefore cannot serve as the enabling law required by Article XVII, Section 2 of the 1987 Constitution. |
Statutory Construction |
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Manila Prince Hotel vs. GSIS (3rd February 1997) |
AK613501 267 SCRA 408 G.R. No. 122156 |
The controversy arose from the government’s privatization program under Proclamation No. 50, involving the sale of government assets to private entities. The Manila Hotel, operational since 1912 and host to significant historical events, was targeted for privatization through the sale of majority shares of its holding company, MHC. |
Section 10, second paragraph, Article XII of the 1987 Constitution is a self-executing provision that mandates the State to give preference to qualified Filipinos in the grant of rights, privileges, and concessions covering the national economy and patrimony, which includes allowing a qualified Filipino bidder to match the highest bid of a foreigner and be awarded the contract. |
Constitutional Law I Statutory Construction |
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Filoteo, Jr. vs. Sandiganbayan (16th October 1996) |
AK361388 G.R. No. 79543 |
The case involves the armed hijacking of a Bureau of Posts delivery van on May 3, 1982 along MacArthur Highway in Meycauayan, Bulacan. The hijacking was perpetrated by a group of armed men including police and military personnel who used a borrowed Mercedes Benz to intercept the van, forcibly take its contents (checks, warrants, and mail matters valued at P253,728.29), and detain the postal employees. The petitioner, a police investigator assigned to the Western Police District, was implicated as the mastermind who provided the vehicle used in the crime. |
The 1987 Constitution's provision that the right to counsel "cannot be waived except in writing and in the presence of counsel" does not apply retroactively to custodial investigations conducted prior to its effectivity; consequently, extrajudicial confessions executed during the effectivity of the 1973 Constitution without counsel but with a voluntary, intelligent, categorical, and definitive waiver remain admissible in evidence. |
Statutory Construction |
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Mustang Lumber, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals (18th June 1996) |
AK227007 257 SCRA 430 327 Phil. 214 G.R. No. 104988 G.R. No. 106424 G.R. No. 123784 |
Mustang Lumber, Inc., a registered lumber dealer, had its stockpile of lumber seized by the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) on multiple occasions in 1990 after it failed to produce the required certificates of origin and transport documents. The DENR subsequently suspended and later ordered the confiscation of the lumber. A criminal information was filed against the company's president, Ri Chuy Po, for illegal possession of lumber and forest products. Mustang Lumber filed civil actions questioning the legality of the seizures, while Ri Chuy Po moved to quash the criminal information, arguing that mere possession of "lumber" is not a crime under the statute. |
Possession of "lumber" without the legal documents required under existing forest laws is a crime under Section 68 of P.D. No. 705, as amended, because "lumber" is included within the term "timber." The Revised Forestry Code makes no distinction between raw and processed timber, and to exclude lumber would defeat the law's purpose of preventing illegal logging and forest denudation. |
Statutory Construction |
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Fariñas vs. Barba (19th April 1996) |
AK562962 256 SCRA 396 326 Phil. 416 G.R. No. 116763 |
A member of the Sangguniang Bayan of San Nicolas, Ilocos Norte, who did not belong to any political party, resigned. The municipal mayor recommended a replacement to the provincial governor. The Sangguniang Bayan also passed a resolution recommending the same person but addressed to the mayor. The Sangguniang Panlalawigan disapproved this resolution, asserting the appointing power belonged to the governor, and instead recommended a different candidate to the governor. Both the governor and the mayor subsequently issued separate appointments for their respective nominees on the same day, leading to a quo warranto and prohibition petition filed by the governor and his appointee. |
In case of a permanent vacancy in the Sangguniang Bayan caused by a member who does not belong to any political party, the provincial governor is the proper appointing authority, and a prior recommendation from the Sangguniang Bayan concerned is a condition sine qua non for a valid appointment. |
Statutory Construction |
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Fernandez vs. National Labor Relations Commission (28th February 1994) |
AK756155 230 SCRA 460 300 Phil. 486 G.R. No. 106090 |
Ricardo Fernandez was hired as a laborer (later a welder) by D.M. Consunji, Inc., a construction firm, on November 5, 1974. His employment was terminated on March 23, 1986, on the ground that the project he was assigned to had been completed. He filed a complaint for illegal dismissal, which was consolidated with three other similar complaints against the same employer. |
A worker in the construction industry hired for specific projects, with gaps in employment and whose termination reports are filed with the labor department upon each project completion, is a project employee whose services are automatically terminated upon the project's end, and does not attain regular employee status under the second paragraph of Article 280 of the Labor Code regardless of the length of service. |
Statutory Construction |
Ang Nars Party-List v. Executive Secretary
8th October 2019
AK585185Only bills, and not joint resolutions, can be enacted into law under the 1987 Constitution, even if the joint resolution undergoes the same legislative process (three readings, bicameral approval, presidential signature) as a bill; consequently, a joint resolution cannot amend or repeal a prior substantive law.
Republic Act No. 9173 (Philippine Nursing Act of 2002) was enacted to enhance the welfare of nurses by mandating a minimum base pay of Salary Grade 15 for those in public health institutions. In 2009, Congress passed Joint Resolution No. 4, authorizing the President to modify the government compensation and position classification system. President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo issued EO 811 pursuant to this resolution, setting the entry-level salary for Nurse I at Salary Grade 11 instead of 15, effectively disregarding the mandate of RA 9173 based on concerns over wage distortion and budget constraints.
Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) vs. United Planners Consultants, Inc
23rd February 2015
AK719310The Special ADR Rules exclusively govern the procedure for executing a confirmed domestic arbitral award, and the 15-day period under Rule 19.28 applies to certiorari petitions assailing RTC orders in ADR proceedings; the Rules of Court have no suppletory application. Furthermore, execution of money judgments against government agencies requires prior approval by the Commission on Audit (COA) under Section 26 of PD 1445, which jurisdiction is not ousted by the finality of an arbitral award confirmed under the Special ADR Rules.
In 1993, DENR contracted UPCI for consultancy services regarding the Land Resource Management Master Plan Project. Despite UPCI's completion of the work in December 1994, DENR paid only 47% of the contract price. In 1994, COA issued a report finding the contract price excessive, but DENR nonetheless acknowledged its liability in 1998. UPCI subsequently filed a collection suit, which was referred to arbitration under the CIAC Rules. The Arbitral Tribunal rendered an award in favor of UPCI, which DENR sought to challenge through prohibited pleadings and delayed filings.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. BASF Coating + Inks Phil., Inc
26th November 2014
AK919594The running of the statute of limitations on tax assessments under Section 223 of the NIRC is suspended only when the BIR Commissioner is actually unaware of the taxpayer’s whereabouts; mere failure to file a formal written notice of change of address does not suspend the period if the BIR has actual knowledge of the new address through its records and prior dealings with the taxpayer. Furthermore, an assessment notice sent to an address known by the BIR to be incorrect is invalid and does not become final and executory.
The case involves the dissolution of a corporation and the subsequent attempt by the BIR to assess deficiency taxes after the corporation had moved its operations and registered office. The dispute centers on whether the BIR’s knowledge of the taxpayer’s new address, absent a formal written notice of change of address, is sufficient to prevent the suspension of the prescriptive period for assessment.
Araullo vs. Aquino
1st July 2014
AK306263The following acts and practices under the Disbursement Acceleration Program (DAP), National Budget Circular No. 541, and related executive issuances are unconstitutional and void:
- The withdrawal of unobligated allotments from implementing agencies and the declaration of withdrawn unobligated allotments and unreleased appropriations as "savings" prior to the end of the fiscal year and without complying with the statutory definition of savings contained in the GAAs;
- Cross-border transfers of the savings of the Executive to augment the appropriations of other offices outside the Executive (e.g., the Legislature, the Commission on Audit, and the Commission on Elections); and
- The funding of projects, activities, and programs that were not covered by any appropriation in the GAA.
Additionally, the use of unprogrammed funds is declared void where there is no certification by the National Treasurer that revenue collections exceeded the revenue targets for non-compliance with the conditions provided in the relevant GAAs.
The controversy arose after Senator Jinggoy Estrada delivered a privilege speech on September 25, 2013, revealing that certain senators received additional funds from the DAP as an "incentive" for voting to convict Chief Justice Renato Corona. This exposed the existence of the DAP, a program implemented by the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) since 2011 to address economic slowdown caused by government underspending. The DAP involved pooling funds from various sources—including unreleased appropriations, unobligated allotments from "slow-moving" projects, and unprogrammed funds—to finance priority projects and augment existing items in the budget. The revelation sparked public outrage, leading various petitioners to challenge the program's constitutionality before the SC.
Disini vs. Secretary of Justice
11th February 2014
AK238408Cyberlibel is constitutional only with respect to the original author of the post; those who merely receive and react to it (e.g., by liking, sharing, or commenting) are not liable. Additionally, the State cannot criminalize mere unsolicited commercial communications (spam), authorize warrantless real-time collection of traffic data, or allow executive agencies to block access to computer data without judicial intervention, as these constitute unconstitutional prior restraints, unreasonable searches, or abridgments of free speech.
R.A. 10175 was enacted to address cybercrimes such as hacking, identity theft, cybersex, child pornography, and online libel. It granted law enforcement expansive powers, including real-time data collection and executive authority to block access to data. Petitioners—lawyers, journalists, academics, and civil society groups—filed facial challenges arguing the law was overbroad, vague, and created a chilling effect on free speech and privacy.
Belgica vs. Ochoa
19th November 2013
AK249819The 2013 PDAF Article and all other Congressional Pork Barrel Laws containing post-enactment measures that authorize legislators to intervene in project identification, fund release, or realignment are unconstitutional for violating the principle of separation of powers and the non-delegability of legislative power. Furthermore, the phrases “and for such other purposes as may be hereafter directed by the President” (Section 8, PD 910) and “to finance the priority infrastructure development projects” (Section 12, PD 1869, as amended) are unconstitutional for constituting undue delegation of legislative power without sufficient standards.
“Pork Barrel” refers to lump-sum, discretionary funds historically traced to American legislative practice of directing federal budgets to local districts. In the Philippines, this evolved from Act 3044 (1922) requiring post-enactment legislator approval for public works fund distribution, to the Countrywide Development Fund (CDF) in the 1990s, and eventually the Priority Development Assistance Fund (PDAF) from 2000 onward. The system allowed individual legislators to identify local projects for funding after the General Appropriations Act (GAA) was passed. In 2013, the Commission on Audit (CoA) released a report documenting massive irregularities in PDAF utilization from 2007-2009—including ghost projects, questionable NGOs, and kickbacks—sparked by the “Napoles controversy,” prompting these petitions.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. San Roque Power Corporation
8th October 2013
AK589834The 120-day period for the Commissioner to decide administrative claims for VAT refund/credit and the 30-day period for taxpayers to appeal to the CTA are mandatory and jurisdictional; however, taxpayers who relied on BIR Ruling No. DA-489-03 (December 10, 2003) are entitled to equitable estoppel under Section 246 of the NIRC, protecting their prematurely filed claims filed between December 10, 2003 and October 6, 2010.
The cases involve claims for refund or tax credit of unutilized input VAT attributable to zero-rated sales or capital goods purchases. The central controversy revolves around the interpretation of Section 112(D) of the NIRC (renumbered as Section 112(C) by RA 9337), specifically whether the 120-day waiting period for the Commissioner’s decision and the 30-day appeal period are mandatory or merely directory. Prior to this decision, conflicting doctrines existed: Atlas Consolidated Mining (2007) reckoned the 2-year prescriptive period from the date of payment, while Mirant Pagbilao (2008) reckoned it from the close of the taxable quarter. Meanwhile, BIR Ruling No. DA-489-03 (2003) and Revenue Regulations No. 7-95 allowed taxpayers to file judicial claims without waiting for the 120-day period to lapse, provided the 2-year prescriptive period was observed.
Dayao vs. Commission on Elections
29th January 2013
AK885502An opposition to a petition for party-list registration is not a condition precedent to the filing of a complaint for cancellation under Section 6 of R.A. No. 7941; the COMELEC's power to cancel registration is distinct from its power to refuse registration, and accreditation is a mere concession that never attains perpetual or irrefutable conclusiveness against the granting authority.
The case involves the party-list accreditation of LPG Marketers Association, Inc. (LPGMA), a non-stock, non-profit association of LPG consumers and small industry players. LPGMA sought accreditation to participate in the May 2010 elections, advocating for affordable LPG and fair trade practices. Competing dealers and industry groups later challenged its registration, claiming LPGMA represented big business rather than marginalized sectors.
Giron vs. Commission on Elections
22nd January 2013
AK774340The "one subject-one title" rule is satisfied when a statute's title is comprehensive enough reasonably to include the general object which the statute seeks to effect; the title need not express each and every end and means necessary for accomplishing that object, nor serve as an abstract or index of the Act. The title "Fair Election Act" is sufficiently broad to cover Sections 12 and 14 as they relate to ensuring fair election practices and leveling the playing field.
R.A. 9006 was enacted to enhance the holding of free, orderly, honest, peaceful, and credible elections through fair election practices. During bicameral deliberations, Congress deliberately selected a generic title to accommodate provisions addressing various inequities in the electoral system, including the automatic resignation of elective officials upon filing certificates of candidacy for other offices (previously governed by Section 67 of B.P. 881) and the treatment of votes cast for substituted candidates after ballot printing.
Chavez vs. Judicial and Bar Council
17th July 2012
AK960332Section 8(1), Article VIII of the 1987 Constitution mandates that Congress is entitled to only one (1) representative in the Judicial and Bar Council, and such representative must exercise one (1) full vote; the practice of having two representatives from the Senate and the House of Representatives sitting simultaneously is unconstitutional.
The controversy arose following the impeachment and departure of Chief Justice Renato C. Corona in May 2012. Petitioner Francisco I. Chavez, nominated as a candidate for Chief Justice, questioned the composition of the JBC, which at the time included eight members: two representatives from Congress (one Senator and one House Representative), each exercising one full vote. The constitutional provision was crafted to insulate judicial appointments from political pressure, creating a body representative of stakeholders in the judicial appointment process.
Liwag vs. Happy Glen Loop Homeowners Association, Inc
4th July 2012
AK931594Open spaces in subdivisions, including areas reserved for essential water facilities, are reserved for public use, beyond the commerce of man, and cannot be alienated by the developer; any such sale is void ab initio and subject to annulment by the HLURB as an unsound real estate business practice.
The controversy originates from Happy Glen Loop Subdivision in Deparo, Caloocan City. In 1978, the original developer (F.G.R. Sales) assigned its rights to Ernesto Marcelo to settle a debt. Marcelo, as successor-in-interest, represented to the NHA, HSRC, and lot buyers that adequate water facilities existed. For approximately 30 years, residents relied exclusively on a deep well and overhead tank located on Lot 11, Block 5. In 1995, Marcelo sold this specific lot to Hermogenes Liwag, who was then president of the respondent Homeowners Association. TCT No. C-350099 was issued in the spouses' names. Hermogenes died in 2003, and petitioner (his widow) subsequently demanded the tank's removal, leading to the instant dispute.
Commissioner of Customs vs. Hypermix Feeds Corporation
1st February 2012
AK490989Administrative regulations that substantially increase the burden on regulated parties by creating new legal obligations (legislative rules) must comply with the procedural requirements of notice, hearing, and publication under the Revised Administrative Code; classification schemes based on importer identity rather than commodity characteristics violate the equal protection clause; and administrative regulations cannot diminish statutory duties conferred by law upon implementing officers.
The Bureau of Customs sought to prevent misclassification of wheat imports by issuing a memorandum that created a predetermined classification system based on importer profiles rather than actual commodity inspection, effectively bypassing individual examination requirements under the Tariff and Customs Code.
Datu Michael Abas Kida vs. Senate of the Philippines
18th October 2011
AK191813RA No. 10153 is constitutional in its entirety, including the grant to the President of the power to appoint OICs for ARMM positions, as a valid interim measure to achieve the constitutional mandate of synchronizing national and local elections without violating the fixed three-year term limit for local officials or the autonomy provisions of the Constitution.
The 1987 Constitution mandates the creation of autonomous regions in Muslim Mindanao and the Cordilleras (Article X, Sections 15-22). Congress enacted RA No. 6734 (the first Organic Act) in 1989, establishing the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM). This was amended by RA No. 9054 in 2001, which provided for the first regular elections in September 2001. Over the years, Congress enacted several laws (RA Nos. 9140, 9333) resetting the ARMM election dates, resulting in a desynchronization with national elections held every second Monday of May. To align ARMM elections with the national schedule, Congress enacted RA No. 10153, resetting the elections to May 2013 and authorizing the President to appoint OICs to serve until the newly elected officials assume office.
Navarro vs. Ermita
12th April 2011
AK213242Provinces composed of one or more islands are exempt from the minimum land area requirement of 2,000 square kilometers under Section 461 of the Local Government Code, as the exemption in Article 9(2) of the LGC-IRR validly corrects a congressional oversight and reflects the true legislative intent to prioritize economic viability over territorial size in the creation of local government units.
The case concerns the creation of the Province of Dinagat Islands via RA 9355, approved in 2006 and ratified through a plebiscite. Petitioners, former political leaders of Surigao del Norte, challenged the law before the SC, arguing that Dinagat failed to meet the statutory requirements of 2,000 square kilometers in land area and 250,000 in population under the LGC. The initial SC decision declared the law unconstitutional, creating uncertainty regarding the status of elected officials and the validity of subsequent elections.
League of Cities of the Philippines (LCP) vs. Commission on Elections
12th April 2011
AK614037The Cityhood Laws are constitutional because the exemption clauses therein constitute valid amendments to the Local Government Code, exempting the respondent municipalities from the P100 million income requirement under RA 9009 in recognition of their distinct class and proven viability as centers of trade and commerce.
RA 9009 amended the Local Government Code of 1991, increasing the income requirement for conversion of municipalities to cities from P20 million to P100 million in locally generated revenue. During the 11th Congress (1998-2001), several municipalities had pending conversion bills. When RA 9009 took effect on June 30, 2001, these municipalities were caught by the new requirement. The House attempted to exempt them through Joint Resolution No. 29 (later re-adopted as Joint Resolution No. 1), but the Senate failed to act. Subsequently, during the 12th and 13th Congresses, individual Cityhood Laws were enacted for 16 municipalities, each containing an exemption clause effectively reverting to the P20 million requirement or explicitly exempting them from RA 9009. The LCP challenged these laws as unconstitutional, leading to multiple rounds of litigation and shifting majorities in the SC.
Gutierrez vs. The House of Representatives Committee on Justice, Hontiveros-Baraquel, et al.
15th February 2011
AK949647The term "initiate" in Section 3(5), Article XI of the Constitution refers to the filing of an impeachment complaint coupled with Congress’ taking initial action on it, which is the referral of the complaint to the Committee on Justice. Simultaneous referral of multiple complaints to the Committee constitutes a single initiation of impeachment proceedings, not a prohibited second initiation.
The case arose during the opening of the 15th Congress, when two separate groups filed verified impeachment complaints against Ombudsman Gutierrez for betrayal of public trust and culpable violation of the Constitution. The complaints alleged various failures in her official duties, including low conviction rates, inaction on high-profile cases (NBN-ZTE, Fertilizer Fund Scam), and refusal to grant access to public records. The House provisionally adopted the Impeachment Rules of the 14th Congress and simultaneously referred both complaints to the Committee on Justice, which found them sufficient in form and substance despite Gutierrez’s objections.
Lokin, Jr. vs. Commission on Elections
22nd June 2010
AK434539Administrative agencies, including the COMELEC, possess no authority to issue implementing rules and regulations that expand, modify, or add to the statutory grounds for substitution of party-list nominees; the grounds enumerated in Section 8 of R.A. No. 7941—death, withdrawal in writing by the nominee, or incapacity—are exclusive, and any substitution based on grounds not expressly provided in the statute is void.
The dispute arose during the May 14, 2007 synchronized national and local elections under the party-list system. Citizens' Battle Against Corruption (CIBAC), a registered party-list organization, initially submitted its list of nominees but later attempted to change the list after the elections had concluded, triggering questions about the extent of the COMELEC's rule-making power under the Party-List System Act.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. Kudos Metal Corporation
5th May 2010
AK209769Waivers of the statute of limitations on tax assessments must strictly comply with the procedural requirements under RMO 20-90 and RDAO 05-01; non-compliance renders the waiver invalid and does not toll the prescriptive period. Furthermore, the doctrine of estoppel cannot be invoked to validate a waiver that is defective or prohibited by law, nor to excuse the BIR's failure to follow its own mandatory procedures.
The case involves the assessment of internal revenue taxes for taxable year 1998. The BIR initiated audit proceedings after the taxpayer failed to comply with notices to present records. To extend the prescriptive period for assessment, the BIR obtained waivers from the taxpayer's accountant, which were later challenged as defective.
Intestate Estate of Manolita Gonzales Vda. De Carungcong vs. People, et al.
11th February 2010
AK055613The absolutory cause under Article 332 of the Revised Penal Code applies only to the simple crimes of theft, swindling (estafa), and malicious mischief, and does not extend to complex crimes such as estafa through falsification of public documents where the violation of property rights is achieved through a breach of public interest in the integrity of public documents.
Family property dispute involving a widowed son-in-law who allegedly defrauded his deceased wife's mother (his mother-in-law) of valuable real estate through falsified documents, raising the novel question of whether affinity survives the death of the connecting spouse for purposes of criminal exemption.
In Re: Petition for Adoption of Michelle P. Lim, et al.
21st May 2009
AK982276Joint adoption by husband and wife is mandatory under Section 7 of RA 8552 when the adopter is married at the time of filing, unless the adoption falls under one of three specific exceptions: (1) one spouse seeks to adopt the legitimate son/daughter of the other; (2) one spouse seeks to adopt his/her own illegitimate son/daughter with the other spouse's consent; or (3) the spouses are legally separated from each other.
Petitioner and her first husband, Primo Lim, who were childless, registered two foundlings as their biological children to simulate their births. After Primo Lim's death, petitioner remarried. She then sought to rectify the simulated births and legally adopt the children under the amnesty provision of the Domestic Adoption Act of 1998.
Geologistic, Inc. vs. Gateway Electronics Corporation
25th March 2009
AK146267Discretionary execution under Rule 39, Section 2 of the Rules of Court is strictly construed as an exception to the general rule that execution requires finality of judgment; "good reasons" must consist of exceptional circumstances of such urgency as to outweigh the injury the losing party may suffer if the judgment is reversed, and the mere fact that the case has been pending for a long time or that the defendant admitted liability for a different amount does not qualify as such good reasons.
Petitioner Geologistics, a freight forwarding and customs brokerage company, sued respondent Gateway Electronics Corporation for unpaid fees. Following the RTC's judgment in favor of Geologistics, Gateway appealed while Geologistics sought immediate execution, claiming Gateway was insolvent and had admitted liability. The RTC granted the execution against the counterbond posted by First Lepanto-Taisho Insurance Corporation to discharge a preliminary attachment.
Abakada Guro Party List vs. Purisima
14th August 2008
AK884230Legislative veto provisions that allow Congress or its committees to approve or disapprove implementing rules and regulations after a law has taken effect are unconstitutional because they encroach upon the executive power to implement laws and violate the constitutional requirements of bicameralism and presentment.
RA 9335 was enacted to enhance revenue generation by the BIR and BOC through a system of financial rewards for exceeding targets and sanctions, including removal, for failing to meet targets by at least 7.5%.
Garcia vs. Social Security Commission Legal and Collection
17th December 2007
AK000744Section 28(f) of the Social Security Law subjects corporate directors to personal liability for the employer corporation's unremitted SSS premium contributions (the principal obligation) in addition to penalties, and this liability attaches by direct provision of law independent of the requirements under Section 31 of the Corporation Code.
Impact Corporation was engaged in manufacturing aluminum tube containers with factories in Nueva Ecija and Cainta. Beginning in 1978, it encountered financial difficulties and labor unrest. In 1983, it filed a Petition for Suspension of Payments with the SEC, which was dismissed in 1985. The corporation eventually dissolved, its assets sold to scrap dealers to pay for rental arrears. During its operation, the corporation deducted SSS contributions from employee salaries but failed to remit them to the SSS.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. Primetown Property Group, Inc.
28th August 2007
AK150634Under Section 31, Chapter VIII, Book I of the Administrative Code of 1987 (EO 292), a "year" for purposes of computing legal periods consists of 12 calendar months, not 365 days; therefore, the two-year prescriptive period for tax refunds under Section 229 of the NIRC is properly computed as 24 calendar months reckoned from the filing of the final adjusted return, rendering irrelevant whether the period includes a leap year.
During the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis, Primetown suffered substantial losses in its real estate business. Despite these losses, it paid quarterly corporate income taxes and creditable withholding taxes totaling P26,318,398.32 for taxable year 1997. Primetown sought to recover these payments, contending that losses rendered it not liable for income tax.
Cemco Holdings, Inc. vs. National Life Insurance Company of the Philippines, Inc.
7th August 2007
AK555743The Mandatory Tender Offer Rule under Section 19 of RA 8799 applies to any acquisition of control over a publicly-listed company, whether direct or indirect, and the SEC has the implied adjudicative authority under Section 5.1(n) of the same Code to nullify acquisitions made in violation thereof and direct the holding of a tender offer.
The case involves the interpretation of the Mandatory Tender Offer Rule under the Securities Regulation Code (SRC), specifically whether the rule applies only to direct purchases of shares in a listed company or extends to indirect acquisitions through the purchase of a non-listed holding company's shares. The dispute arose from Cemco's acquisition of control over UCHC, which effectively transferred control of UCC to Cemco, raising concerns about the protection of minority shareholders of UCC.
Adasa vs. Abalos
19th February 2007
AK799445Once an accused has been arraigned, the Secretary of Justice is mandatorily barred from giving due course to a petition for review filed under DOJ Circular No. 70, because arraignment constitutes a waiver of the right to preliminary investigation (or reinvestigation) and the right to question any irregularity surrounding it, including the right to appeal the prosecutor's resolution.
The case involves two complaints for estafa filed by respondent against petitioner for allegedly encashing two checks issued in respondent's name without her knowledge or consent. After the City Prosecutor found probable cause and filed informations, petitioner sought reinvestigation. Following the reinvestigation, the City Prosecutor affirmed the finding of probable cause. Petitioner was subsequently arraigned, but thereafter filed a petition for review with the DOJ, which reversed the prosecutor's resolution and ordered the withdrawal of the information.
Balagtas Multi-Purpose Cooperative, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
27th October 2006
AK270160Cooperatives are not exempt from posting an appeal bond under Article 223 of the Labor Code when appealing monetary awards to the NLRC, because Article 62(7) of RA 6938 strictly refers to regular trial courts (MTC, RTC) and does not encompass quasi-judicial bodies.
The case involves the intersection of the Cooperative Code of the Philippines (RA 6938), which grants fiscal and procedural privileges to cooperatives to promote self-reliance and economic development, and the Labor Code (PD 442), which imposes an appeal bond requirement on employers appealing monetary awards in illegal dismissal cases to prevent dilution of employee recovery during the appellate period.
Aquino vs. Quezon City
3rd August 2006
AK382783In tax delinquency sales under PD 464, the local government must issue both a Notice of Delinquency (Section 65) and a Notice of Sale (Section 73), but constructive notice sent to the address appearing in tax records satisfies statutory requirements; actual receipt by the taxpayer is not required, and the taxpayer's failure to update his address in official records does not invalidate the sale.
The disputes arose under PD 464, the Real Property Tax Code in force prior to the Local Government Code of 1991. Both cases involved long-delinquent properties in Quezon City auctioned by the local government to satisfy unpaid real property taxes, with original owners challenging the sales based on alleged non-compliance with notice requirements.
Senate of the Philippines vs. Ermita
20th April 2006
AK395231Executive privilege must be specifically asserted with precise and certain reasons; it cannot be invoked through a blanket authorization or implied refusal that fails to state the specific basis for withholding information from Congress. Sections 2(b) and 3 of EO 464 are unconstitutional because they allow executive officials to avoid legislative inquiries by merely invoking the EO without a formal claim of privilege, and improperly delegate the authority to determine privilege coverage to department heads rather than the President.
The Senate, through its various committees, conducted inquiries in aid of legislation regarding the NorthRail project and alleged military involvement in wiretapping ("Gloriagate"). President Arroyo issued EO 464 on September 28, 2005, purportedly to ensure observance of separation of powers and executive privilege, but which operated to bar executive officials from attending scheduled Senate hearings.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. PLDT
15th December 2005
AK383011The "in lieu of all taxes" clause in a franchise grant exempts the franchise holder only from direct taxes imposed on its franchise or earnings, not from indirect taxes (such as VAT, compensating tax, and advance sales tax), unless the exempting statute expressly and unmistakably includes indirect taxes.
PLDT operates under a legislative franchise (R.A. No. 7082) imposing a 3% franchise tax on gross receipts. The dispute centers on whether this franchise exempts PLDT from indirect taxes on importations of equipment and spare parts.
Abakada Guro Party List vs. Ermita
1st September 2005
AK134713The power to tax is purely legislative and non-delegable, but Congress may delegate the ascertainment of facts or conditions upon which the operation of a statute depends, provided the law is complete in itself and fixes a sufficient standard; the “standby authority” in R.A. No. 9337 is a valid delegation of fact-finding, not law-making.
The Philippines faced a severe fiscal crisis characterized by mounting budget deficits, inadequate revenue collection, and high debt service ratios. To generate additional revenue, Congress enacted R.A. No. 9337, amending the National Internal Revenue Code (NIRC) to expand the VAT base and introduce a mechanism allowing the President to increase the VAT rate from 10% to 12% upon the occurrence of specific economic conditions (VAT collection exceeding 2.8% of GDP or national government deficit exceeding 1.5% of GDP). The law also introduced limitations on input tax credits (70% cap), amortization of input tax on capital goods over 60 months, and a 5% final withholding tax on government transactions.
Coconut Oil Refiners Association, Inc. vs. Torres
29th July 2005
AK371894Tax exemptions being in the nature of a legislative grant, the President cannot extend tax and duty-free incentives expressly granted only to the Subic Special Economic Zone under RA 7227 to the Clark Special Economic Zone without express legislative authority; such extension constitutes invalid executive legislation violating the constitutional mandate that no law granting tax exemption shall be passed without the concurrence of a majority of all Members of Congress.
Following the withdrawal of US military forces from Clark and Subic military reservations, Congress enacted RA 7227 (Bases Conversion and Development Act of 1992) to convert these areas into special economic zones to generate employment and attract investment. The law expressly granted tax and duty-free incentives to Subic but authorized the President to create Clark SEZ subject to different policies. The Executive subsequently issued orders extending similar incentives to Clark and allowing limited removal of duty-free goods from Subic to Philippine territory, prompting domestic manufacturers and retailers to challenge these as unconstitutional.
City of Manila vs. Laguio, Jr.
12th April 2005
AK416215A notary public, especially a lawyer, is bound to strictly observe the mandatory formalities of the Notarial Law and the Civil Code regarding the execution of wills, including the requirement of three credible witnesses, the exhibition of current residence certificates, and proper entries in the notarial register; gross negligence in these duties constitutes professional misconduct warranting suspension and revocation of commission.
The dispute arose from a will purportedly executed by Vicente Lee, Sr. in 1965, which bequeathed his entire estate to his wife Lim Hock Lee and a parcel of land to two other children, allegedly to the exclusion of complainant Manuel L. Lee. Complainant contested the will’s authenticity, alleging his father never executed it and that the signatures of the testator and witnesses were forged.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. Michel J. Lhuillier Pawnshop, Inc
15th July 2003
AK922816Pawnshops are not "lending investors" subject to the 5% percentage tax under Section 116 of the National Internal Revenue Code of 1977, as amended. Administrative issuances that substantially increase tax burdens constitute legislative rules requiring prior publication and hearing to be valid, and cannot modify or amend the law.
The case involves the BIR's attempt to impose a 5% percentage tax on pawnshops through administrative issuances (RMO No. 15-91 and RMC No. 43-91) by reclassifying them as lending investors. Prior to these issuances, the BIR had consistently ruled that pawnshops were not lending investors and were subject only to fixed annual taxes, not percentage taxes on gross income.
Buena Obra vs. Social Security System
9th April 2003
AK528677The SC held that a claim for Employees’ Compensation benefits is deemed filed when a claim for SSS death benefits is filed with the same agency within the prescriptive period, and that a heart attack suffered during the performance of strenuous work duties is compensable.
The case involves a claim for death benefits under Presidential Decree No. 626, as amended (the Employees’ Compensation Law), which provides compensation for work-connected disability or death. The central dispute was whether the claim had prescribed and whether the deceased’s myocardial infarction was causally linked to his employment as a truck driver.
Commission on Audit of the Province of Cebu vs. Province of Cebu
29th November 2001
AK875038Salaries and personnel-related benefits of teachers appointed by local school boards for extension classes are chargeable against the Special Education Fund (SEF) under the doctrine of necessary implication and the surviving provisions of R.A. No. 5447; however, college scholarship grants are not chargeable to the SEF where the Local Government Code of 1991 intentionally omitted the specific authorization found in R.A. No. 5447.
The dispute centers on the interpretation of the Special Education Fund (SEF) created under R.A. No. 5447 (1969) and its interplay with the Local Government Code of 1991 (R.A. No. 7160). The SEF is constituted from an additional 1% real property tax and portions of taxes on Virginia-type cigarettes. The issue arose when the COA questioned the Province of Cebu's disbursement of SEF funds for teacher salaries and scholarships, leading to a test of whether the LGC fully repealed R.A. No. 5447 and what expenditures remain valid under the new statutory framework.
Estrada vs. Sandiganbayan
19th November 2001
AK529893R.A. No. 7080 (The Plunder Law), as amended by R.A. No. 7659, is constitutional. It is not void for vagueness; it contains ascertainable standards and well-defined parameters. Section 4 is a procedural rule of evidence, not a substantive element that eliminates the requirement of proving each component act beyond reasonable doubt. Plunder is a malum in se crime requiring mens rea, and the statute maintains the presumption of innocence and the reasonable doubt standard.
The case arises from the prosecution of the highest-ranking official to be charged under the Plunder Law. Following the events of EDSA II and the assumption of the presidency by Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, the Office of the Ombudsman filed multiple informations against former President Estrada, including one for plunder involving an aggregate amount of P4,097,804,173.17 allegedly acquired through a combination or series of overt criminal acts (jueteng money, tobacco excise tax diversion, GSIS/SSS stock manipulation, and unexplained wealth).
Benedicto vs. Court of Appeals
4th September 2001
AK713363The repeal of a penal statute does not extinguish criminal liability for violations committed prior to the repeal where the repealing law contains a saving clause preserving pending actions, or where the repealing statute simultaneously reenacts the penal provision of the former law.
The case involves the prosecution of close associates of former President Ferdinand Marcos for maintaining undeclared foreign exchange accounts abroad ("dollar-salting") in violation of Central Bank regulations requiring registration and reporting of foreign exchange earnings.
Del Mar vs. Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corporation
29th November 2000
AK276548A legislative franchise must be strictly construed against the grantee; PAGCOR’s franchise under P.D. No. 1869 authorizes only the operation of gambling casinos and does not include jai-alai frontons, which require a separate and specific legislative franchise obtained through plenary legislative power.
PAGCOR was created under P.D. No. 1869 to centralize government regulation of games of chance. In 1996, the Secretary of Justice opined that PAGCOR’s authority extended to jai-alai. Acting on this, PAGCOR entered into a joint venture with private corporations to resume jai-alai operations using private infrastructure but under PAGCOR’s management. Members of the House of Representatives challenged this as an unconstitutional usurpation of the legislative power to grant franchises.
Heirs of Alberto Suguitan vs. City of Mandaluyong
14th March 2000
AK255645A local government unit must enact an ordinance, not a resolution, to validly authorize the exercise of the power of eminent domain under Section 19 of RA 7160; the requirement applies at the initiation of expropriation proceedings, not merely at the appropriation stage.
The City of Mandaluyong sought to expand the Mandaluyong Medical Center to accommodate increasing patient volume. The Sangguniang Panlungsod issued Resolution No. 396, S-1994 authorizing the Mayor to initiate expropriation proceedings over a private parcel of land (TCT No. 56264) owned by Alberto Suguitan after the owner refused to sell.
Liang vs. People
28th January 2000
AK383066Immunity from legal process granted to international organization officials under the ADB Headquarters Agreement is restricted to acts performed in their official capacity; courts must conduct an independent factual inquiry to determine whether the alleged criminal act was committed in the discharge of official duties, and the DFA's determination of immunity is merely preliminary and has no binding effect on courts.
Petitioner was employed as an economist with the Asian Development Bank (ADB), an international financial institution headquartered in Mandaluyong City. In 1994, he allegedly uttered defamatory words against Joyce Cabal, a fellow ADB worker, including an imputation of theft.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. Court of Appeals
23rd February 1999
AK854014Sales taxes paid on containers and packaging materials may be credited against the miller's tax due, as they do not constitute "raw materials or supplies used in the milling process" within the meaning of Section 168's final proviso.
Interpretation of Section 168 of the old National Internal Revenue Code regarding the scope of prohibited tax credits against the 3% miller's tax imposed on coconut oil manufacturers. The dispute centered on whether the statutory prohibition against crediting taxes paid on "raw materials used in the milling process" extends to packaging materials that merely contain the finished product.
Municipality of Parañaque vs. V.M. Realty Corporation
20th July 1998
AK525057A local government unit may exercise the power of eminent domain only when authorized by a valid ordinance enacted by its legislative council, not merely by a resolution; however, the principle of res judicata does not permanently bar the State or its authorized agents from subsequently exercising eminent domain over the same property once all statutory and constitutional requisites are properly complied with.
The case involves the Municipality of Parañaque's attempt to expropriate private property for a socialized housing project intended to benefit the underprivileged and homeless. The dispute arose from the procedural mechanism used to authorize the expropriation and the effect of a prior dismissed expropriation case involving the same property.
Arroyo vs. De Venecia
14th August 1997
AK140457Violations of internal rules of procedure of the House of Representatives do not affect the validity of enacted laws, as these rules are merely procedural and not constitutional requirements for the enactment of legislation.
The case arose from the legislative proceedings for R.A. No. 8240 (the sin tax law). On November 21, 1996, during the session to approve the conference committee report, an incident occurred wherein Rep. Arroyo attempted to interject while the Chair was calling for objections. Petitioners filed suit alleging grave abuse of discretion in the legislative process. The SC initially dismissed the petition; this Resolution addresses the motion for reconsideration.
Santiago vs. Commission on Elections
19th March 1997
AK585438R.A. No. 6735 is incomplete, inadequate, and insufficient to implement the system of initiative on amendments to the Constitution, and therefore cannot serve as the enabling law required by Article XVII, Section 2 of the 1987 Constitution.
The 1987 Constitution introduced a third mode of proposing amendments—people’s initiative—in addition to Congress acting as a constituent assembly and a constitutional convention. This system, characterized by the 1986 Constitutional Commission as “innovative,” allows amendments to be directly proposed by the people upon a petition of at least 12% of the total number of registered voters, with every legislative district represented by at least 3% of the registered voters therein. Unlike the 1935 and 1973 Constitutions which recognized only two methods, the 1987 Constitution institutionalized direct people power in the amendment process.
Manila Prince Hotel vs. GSIS
3rd February 1997
AK613501Section 10, second paragraph, Article XII of the 1987 Constitution is a self-executing provision that mandates the State to give preference to qualified Filipinos in the grant of rights, privileges, and concessions covering the national economy and patrimony, which includes allowing a qualified Filipino bidder to match the highest bid of a foreigner and be awarded the contract.
The controversy arose from the government’s privatization program under Proclamation No. 50, involving the sale of government assets to private entities. The Manila Hotel, operational since 1912 and host to significant historical events, was targeted for privatization through the sale of majority shares of its holding company, MHC.
Filoteo, Jr. vs. Sandiganbayan
16th October 1996
AK361388The 1987 Constitution's provision that the right to counsel "cannot be waived except in writing and in the presence of counsel" does not apply retroactively to custodial investigations conducted prior to its effectivity; consequently, extrajudicial confessions executed during the effectivity of the 1973 Constitution without counsel but with a voluntary, intelligent, categorical, and definitive waiver remain admissible in evidence.
The case involves the armed hijacking of a Bureau of Posts delivery van on May 3, 1982 along MacArthur Highway in Meycauayan, Bulacan. The hijacking was perpetrated by a group of armed men including police and military personnel who used a borrowed Mercedes Benz to intercept the van, forcibly take its contents (checks, warrants, and mail matters valued at P253,728.29), and detain the postal employees. The petitioner, a police investigator assigned to the Western Police District, was implicated as the mastermind who provided the vehicle used in the crime.
Mustang Lumber, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals
18th June 1996
AK227007Possession of "lumber" without the legal documents required under existing forest laws is a crime under Section 68 of P.D. No. 705, as amended, because "lumber" is included within the term "timber." The Revised Forestry Code makes no distinction between raw and processed timber, and to exclude lumber would defeat the law's purpose of preventing illegal logging and forest denudation.
Mustang Lumber, Inc., a registered lumber dealer, had its stockpile of lumber seized by the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) on multiple occasions in 1990 after it failed to produce the required certificates of origin and transport documents. The DENR subsequently suspended and later ordered the confiscation of the lumber. A criminal information was filed against the company's president, Ri Chuy Po, for illegal possession of lumber and forest products. Mustang Lumber filed civil actions questioning the legality of the seizures, while Ri Chuy Po moved to quash the criminal information, arguing that mere possession of "lumber" is not a crime under the statute.
Fariñas vs. Barba
19th April 1996
AK562962In case of a permanent vacancy in the Sangguniang Bayan caused by a member who does not belong to any political party, the provincial governor is the proper appointing authority, and a prior recommendation from the Sangguniang Bayan concerned is a condition sine qua non for a valid appointment.
A member of the Sangguniang Bayan of San Nicolas, Ilocos Norte, who did not belong to any political party, resigned. The municipal mayor recommended a replacement to the provincial governor. The Sangguniang Bayan also passed a resolution recommending the same person but addressed to the mayor. The Sangguniang Panlalawigan disapproved this resolution, asserting the appointing power belonged to the governor, and instead recommended a different candidate to the governor. Both the governor and the mayor subsequently issued separate appointments for their respective nominees on the same day, leading to a quo warranto and prohibition petition filed by the governor and his appointee.
Fernandez vs. National Labor Relations Commission
28th February 1994
AK756155A worker in the construction industry hired for specific projects, with gaps in employment and whose termination reports are filed with the labor department upon each project completion, is a project employee whose services are automatically terminated upon the project's end, and does not attain regular employee status under the second paragraph of Article 280 of the Labor Code regardless of the length of service.
Ricardo Fernandez was hired as a laborer (later a welder) by D.M. Consunji, Inc., a construction firm, on November 5, 1974. His employment was terminated on March 23, 1986, on the ground that the project he was assigned to had been completed. He filed a complaint for illegal dismissal, which was consolidated with three other similar complaints against the same employer.