Mitra vs. Subido Case Digest
Mitra vs. Subido Case Digest
Mitra vs. Subido Case Digest
MITRA, petitioner-appellee, vs. ABELARDO SUBIDO, in his capacity as Acting Commissioner of Civil Service, ET AL., respondents-appellants. G.R. No. L-21691 September 15, 1967 Ponente: Justice Angeles; En Banc
Facts: Effective July 1, 1962, Mayor Antonio J. Villegas, of the City of Manila, appointed the petitioner as Senior Technology Assistant in his office, with compensation at the rate of P8,400 per annum. This appointment was forwarded to the Civil Service Commission for approval which was approved subject to the usual physical and medical examination. The appointee Ramon V. Mitra qualified for and assumed the position of Senior Technical Assistant in the Office of the Mayor of Manila. Since then, he discharged the duties of the position and was paid the corresponding salary for his services, until January 15, 1963. On January 11, 1963, the Acting Commissioner of Civil Service, Abelardo Subido, wrote to the City Mayor informing him that the appointment extended to the petitioner was in violation of the certification requirement prescribed by the Civil Service Law and was incomplete, because the approval thereof by Epi Rey Pangramuyen, Chief, Personnel Transactions Division, was "ultra vires," the latter having acted beyond the scope of his delegated authority. In the same communication, the acting Commissioner of Civil Service ordered the termination of the services of Ramon V. Mitra, upon receipt of said letter by the City Mayor, who was "requested to notify accordingly the employee affected and to advise" the Civil Service Commission of the date of said notice. Consequently, Ramon V. Mitra filed with the Court of First Instance of Manila praying for the issuance of a writ of preliminary mandatory injunction to restrain the Acting Commisisoner of Civil Service from enforcing his order terminating his services as Senior Technical Assistant in the Office of the Mayor, and to order the City Auditor and City Treasurer to authorize and pay, respectively, his salary corresponding to the period from January 16 to 31, 1963, and those which may thereafter become due and payable. The court a quo then rendered the decision holding that the appointment of petitioner Ramon V. Mitra as Senior Technical Assistant in the Office of the Mayor at P8,400.00 per annum effective July 1, 1962, bears, among others, the valid approval of the Civil Service Commission and is complete and that the certification requirement of the law is not necessary in the appointment. Issue: Whether or not the appointment of petitioner Ramon Mitra as Senior Technical Assistant is valid and complete. Held: Yes, the appointment of petitioner Ramon Mitra is valid and complete. It is apparent from the provisions of the Civil Service Law that prior certification of eligibles is required only if a position is not filled by promotion, by transfer of persons already in the government service, and by reinstatement or reemployment of persons separated from the service through reduction in force. In the case at bar, it was shown during the trial that the appointee was formerly employed in the Department of Foreign Affairs and the Central Bank of the Philippines. Obviously, therefore, the appointment was a reinstatement, and there was no necessity of obtaining prior certification of eligibles from the Civil Service Commission. Moreover, it may be stated as a general rule that an appointment once made is irrevocable and not subject to reconsideration. The rule is qualified, however, where the assent, confirmation or approval of some other officer or body is needed before the appointment may issue and be deemed complete. Necessarily, this calls for a determination in any given situation whether or not all the acts necessary to make an appointment complete have been performed. Where the power of appointment is absolute, and the appointee has been determined upon, no further consent or approval is necessary, and the formal evidence of the appointment, the commission, may issue at once. Where, however, the assent or confirmation of some other officer or body is required, the commission can issue or the appointment be complete only when such assent or confirmation is obtained.
Under our Civil Service Law and the rules promulgated thereunder, an appointment to a position in the civil service must be submitted to the Commissioner of Civil Service for approval, i.e., for determination whether the proposed appointee is qualified to hold the position, and whether or not the pertinent rules had been followed in making the appointment. We have said in this connection that the appointment made by an officer duly empowered to make it, is not final and complete until after the Commissioner of Civil Service has certified that such appointment may be made The acts of the head of Department or Office making the appointment and the Commissioner of Civil Service acting together, though not concurrently, but consecutively, are necessary to make an appointment complete. And there should be no question that for an appointee in the classified position in the civil service to be entitled to the protection of the law against unjust removal, his appointment must receive the approval of the Commissioner of Civil Service. Applying the rules above-explained, it was held that the appointment of the appellee had become complete when the appellant Commissioner of Civil Service issued his order terminating the services of the former. The appointment in question was extended to the appellee on July 1, 1962, by virtue of which the appointee assumed the duties of his position. Under the same appointment as approved by the Chief, Personnel Transactions Division in the name of the Commissioner of Civil Service, the City Auditor and City Treasurer allowed and paid, respectively, the salary of the appellee for the period from July 1, 1962 to January 15, 1963, a period of six and a half months. In the case of appointments made by local officials and attested to by Provincial Treasurers and City Treasurers under Section 20 of the Civil Service Law, the appointments are deemed to have been properly made if within a period of one hundred eighty days the Commissioner of Civil Service fails to make any correction or revision thereof. After the lapse of the period therein allowed, corrections of mistakes may no longer be had, considering that after the lapse of that time the probationary period of an employee under his appointment also ends, and his appointment automatically becomes permanent. A removal from office takes place after title to the office has become vested in the appointee, whereas revocation of an appointment is had, if it is to be successful, before the appointment is complete. The moment the appointee assumes a position in the civil service under a completed appointment, he acquires a legal, not merely equitable right, which is protected not only by statute, but also by the Constitution, and it cannot be taken away from him, either by revocation of the appointment or by removal, except for cause, and with previous notice and hearing, consistent with Section 4 of Article XII of our fundamental law, and with the constitutional requirement of due process. And when, as in this case, the appointee has been regularly performing the duties of his office and been paid the corresponding salary for more than six months already under a known appointment that was never questioned by either the City Treasurer or the City Auditor of Manila before granting the salary of the appellee, the act of the Acting Commissioner of Civil Service in summarily terminating the services of the appointee may not be said to be a reconsideration of the appointment, but is in fact a removal from office. Like a judgment that is not void upon its face, the appointment in question is not "the serpent that may be attacked or slain at sight." The power to remove from office cannot lightly be inferred from the duty of the Commissioner of Civil Service to make investigations and take corrective measures when unsatisfactory situations are found to exist. Under the circumstances of this case, that duty should be exercised, if it is to be exercise at all, with the end in view of ratifying the appointment in question should he believe that the act of his subordinate in approving the appointment is not sufficient, considering that the appellee has been found qualified for the position to which he was appointed.