Carandang Vs Desierto
Carandang Vs Desierto
Carandang Vs Desierto
Issue:
Whether or not the Office of the Ombudsman has jurisdiction over the herein petitioner.
Held:
A public office "is the right, authority and duty, created and conferred by law, by which for a given
period, either fixed by law or enduring at the pleasure of the creating power, an individual is invested
with some portion of the sovereign functions of the state to be exercised by him for the benefit of the
public." Also it includes elective and appointive officials and employees, permanent or temporary,
whether in the classified or unclassified or exemption service receiving compensation, even nominal,
from the government as defined in Sec. 2 (b) of Republic Act No. 3019 as amended. Unless the
powers conferred are of this nature, the individual is not a public officer.
The Court was constrained to conclude that, indeed, the herein petitioner (Antonio M. Carandang) is
a public officer.
Precisely, since he (Antonio M. Carandang) was appointed by then President Joseph Ejercito
Estrada as general manager and chief operating officer of RPN-9 (page 127 of the Rollo). As a
presidential appointee, the petitioner derives his authority from the Philippine Government. It is luce
clarius that the function of the herein petitioner (as a presidential appointee), relates to public duty,
i.e., to represent the interest of the Philippine Government in RPN-9 and not purely personal matter,
thus, the matter transcends the petitioners personal pique or pride.
On March 2, 1986, when RPN-9 was sequestered by the Government on ground that the same was
considered as an illegally obtained property, RPN-9 has shed-off its private status. In other words,
there can be no gainsaying that as of the date of its sequestration by the Government, RPN-9, while
retaining its own corporate existence, became a government-owned or controlled corporation within
the Constitutional precept.
Government-owned or controlled corporation "refers to any agency organized as a stock or nonstock corporation, vested with functions relating to public needs whether government or proprietary
in nature, and owned by the Government directly or through its instrumentalities either wholly, or,
where applicable as in the case of stock corporations, to the extent of at least fifty-one (51) percent
of its capital stock; Provided, That government-owned or controlled corporations may be further
categorized by the department of Budget, the Civil Service, and the Commission on Audit for
purposes of the exercise and discharge of their respective powers, functions and responsibilities with
respect to such corporations."
The Court is of the view and so holds that RPN-9 perfectly falls under the foregoing definition. For
one, "the governments interest to RPN-9 amounts to 72.4% of RPNs capital stock with an
uncontested portion of 32.4% and a contested or litigated portion of 40%."