Enrique Vs CA
Enrique Vs CA
QUIASON, J.:
This is a petition for review on certiorari of the Decision of the Court of Appeals in CAG.R. SP No. 05132, entitled "CORAZON PACHECO, et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants, versus
"CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION, Defendant-Appellee, affirming the CSC Resolution No.
84-411 which ordered the dismissal of petitioners, Rodolfo Enrique and Jesus Basilio.
The facts as found by the Court of Appeals are as follows:
. . . Corazon Pacheco, Jesus Basilio (petitioner herein), Virgilio Valencia
and Rodolfo Enrique (petitioner herein), all employees of the Civil Service
Regional Office No. 3, San Fernando, Pampanga, together with Rogelio
Maglagui, Eduardo Garcia and Lilia Cunanan, were charged by the
CSC motu propio (sic) for DISHONESTY, GRAVE MISCONDUCT, BEING
NOTORIOUSLY UNDESIRABLE, RECEIVING FOR PERSONAL USE
FOR A FEE, GIFT OR OTHER VALUABLE THINGS IN THE COURSE OF
OFFICIAL DUTIES, AND CONDUCT PREJUDICIAL TO THE BEST
INTEREST OF THE SERVICE, allegedly committed, as follows:
"That sometime before or during November 1983 and
thereafter, the above-named persons, who are employees of
the Civil Service Commission, particularly of Recruitment
and Examination Division, Region 3, San Fernando,
Pampanga and in charge of processing application and
assignment of rooms to the 1993 PBET examinees,
conspired and confederated with one another in the following
manner:
For and in consideration of P500.00 to
P1,000.00 these employees helped and/or
Rodolfo Enrique, Jesus Basilio, Corazon Pacheco and Virgilio Valencia appealed to the
then Intermediate Appellate Court (Records, pp. 1-2).
On April 9, 1987, the IAC rendered its Decision, the dispositive portion of which reads
as follows:
WHEREFORE, the resolution of the Civil Service Commission dismissing
the respondent-appellants RODOLFO ENRIQUE and JESUS BASILIO is
hereby AFFIRMED and is hereby REVERSED and SET ASIDE with
respect to respondents CORAZON PACHECO and VIRGILIO VALENCIA
who are hereby ordered to be reinstated (Rollo, p. 37).
On July 3, 1987, the motion for reconsideration of Rodolfo Enrique and Jesus Basilio
was denied for lack of merit (Rollo, p. 38).
Hence, this petition.
The issues raised in the petition are:
1. Whether the CSC had original jurisdiction over CSC Case No. 138 against
petitioners;
2. Whether petitioners were denied due process of law; and,
3. Whether the dismissal of petitioners from the service through a summary proceeding
by the CSC was proper.
Petitioners contend that the CSC, its jurisdiction being merely appellate, has no original
jurisdiction to hear and to decide disciplinary cases involving officers and employees of
the Civil Service. They urge that it is the Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB), which
has the power to hear and to decide administrative cases involving officers and
employees of the civil service as provided in Section 5 of P.D. No. 1409 (Rollo, p. 21).
The petition is devoid of merit.
Section 37 of the Civil Service Decree, P.D. No. 807, provides:
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(b) The heads of departments, agencies and instrumentalities, provinces,
cities and municipalities shall have jurisdiction to investigate and decide
Petitioners claim that Section 37 (b) of P.D. No. 807 has been impliedly repealed by P.D.
No. 1409 (Rollo, p. 21).
Repeals by implication are not favored. The first duty of the Court must always be to
reconcile the conflicting provisions of the statutes and it is only when the repugnancy is
irreconcilable that we can say that the earlier law has been impliedly repealed by the
later law (Maceda vs. Macaraig, Jr., 197 SCRA 771 [1991]).
A cursory reading of the provisions under Section 37 (b) of P.D. No. 807 shows that the
disciplinary jurisdiction given to heads of departments, agencies and instrumentalities,
provinces, cities and municipalities is limited to officers and employees of the Civil
Service under their jurisdiction or who are employed in their respective offices. In the
instant case, the petitioners are CSC employees. Hence, disciplinary jurisdiction over
them is vested with the head of the CSC, the agency having jurisdiction over them.
We held in Government Service Insurance System v. Civil Service Commission, 204
SCRA 826 (1991) that "when the law bestows upon a government body the jurisdiction
to hear and decide cases involving specific matters, it is to be presumed that such
jurisdiction is exclusive unless it be proved that another body is likewise vested with the
same jurisdiction, in which case, both bodies have concurrent jurisdiction over the
matter."
P.D. Nos. 807 and 1409 therefore vest concurrent original jurisdiction over disciplinary
matters to both the CSC and the Merit Systems Protection Board with respect to
officials and employees connected with the CSC.
This concurrent jurisdiction over disciplinary cases is further stressed in Memorandum
Circular No. 6, Series of 1978 of the Civil Service Commission, which in pertinent part
states:
As provided in Presidential Decree No. 1409, which amended Presidential
Decree No. 807, the heads of ministries and agencies, on one hand, and
the Merit Systems Board on the other, have concurrent original jurisdiction
over disciplinary and non-disciplinary cases, and where the heads of
ministries and agencies assume jurisdiction first, their decisions and
determinations are appealable to Merit Systems Board. The Civil Service
Commission, however, remains the final administrative body in these
matters, as provided in Section 8 of Presidential Decree
No. 1409 . . . .
Fortunately, the question has been rendered moot and academic by the
Congress of the Philippines, which has itself seen fit to remove it from our
statute books. The Court [notes that] . . . Section 40 was repealed by
Republic Act No. 6654, which was approved on May 20, 1988, and
published in the Official Gazette on May 30, 1988. (Emphasis Supplied)
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The commission of the acts imputed to petitioners took place on or before November
1983 or long before the repeal of Section 40 of P.D. No. 807. Hence, the operative law
is still said Section 40.
In Government Service Insurance System v. Court of Appeals, 201 SCRA 661 (1991),
we sustained the validity of Section 40 so long as the respondents in the administrative
case are duly informed of the charges against them and are given the opportunity to
present their side.
In the case at bench, petitioners were informed of the charges levelled against them
and were given reasonable opportunity to present their defenses. As a matter of fact,
petitioners admitted that they filed their answer to the formal charges against them and
submitted additional evidence when asked to do so. Petitioners even moved for a
reconsideration of the adverse CSC decision. After the denial of their motion, petitioners
appealed to the Intermediate Appellate Court, which, in turn, considered said appeal.
Hence, the supposed denial of administrative due process has been cured.
WHEREFORE, the decision of the Intermediate Appellate Court dated April 9, 1987 is
AFFIRMED.
SO ORDERED.