Acop V Ombudsman

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Republic of the Philippines

SUPREME COURT
Manila
FIRST DIVISION

G.R. No. 120422 September 27, 1995


CHIEF SUPT. ROMEO ACOP and SENIOR SUPT. FRANCISCO G. ZUBIA, petitioners,
vs.
THE OFFICE OF THE OMBUDSMAN and HON. MANUEL B. CASACLANG, in his capacity as the
Deputy Ombudsman for the Military, respondents.
G.R. No. 120428 September 27, 1995
P/CHIEF SUPT. PANFILO M. LACSON, P/CHIEF INSP. MICHAEL RAY B. AQUINO, P/SR. INSP.
BASILIO LUCERO, JR., P/SR. INSP. ROLANDO B. MENDOZA, P/INSP. GIL B. LAGMAN, P/INSP.
MANUEL BUKARNO B. ALVAREZ, and OTHER TASK FORCE HABAGAT PERSONNEL
CHARGED BEFORE THE OMBUDSMAN IN OMB-AFP-CRIM-95-0084, petitioners,
vs.
BGEN. MANUEL B. CASACLANG, in his capacity as the Deputy Ombudsman for the Military,
P/CHIEF SUPT. JOB A. MAYO, JR., MYRNA ABALORA, NENITA G. ALAP-AP, and IMELDA
PANCHO MONTERO, respondents.

DAVIDE, JR., J.:


These cases, both filed under Rule 65 of the Rules of Court, were consolidated as they arose from
the same factual milieu. At the oral arguments on 5 July 1995, the Court defined the common issues
within which the parties agreed to limit their arguments:
1. Whether it is the Office of the Ombudsman or the Office of the Special Prosecutor
which has jurisdiction over the complaint in question; and
2. Whether or not public respondent Deputy Ombudsman for Military Manuel
Casaclang committed grave abuse of discretion when he set the case for preliminary
investigation and required the petitioners to submit their counter-affidavits before any
preliminary evaluation of the complaint as required by Section 2, Rule II of
Administrative Order No. 07 of the Office of the Ombudsman.
The first is the kernel issue raised in G.R. No. 120422 and the petitioners therein pray that this Court
1
re-examine the holding in Zaldivar vs. Sandiganbayan. Provoked during oral arguments was the
corollary issue of whether the Deputy Ombudsman for the Military can conduct investigations
involving civilian personnel of the Government.
The undisputed facts which gave rise to this controversy are summarized in the Consolidated
Comment of the Office of the Solicitor General as follows:
On May 18, 1995, eleven (11) suspected members of the notorious robbery gang,
"Kuratong Baleleng," were killed in an alleged shootout with composite teams of the
National Capital Regional Command (NCRC), Traffic Management Command (TMC),
Presidential Anti-Crime Commission (PACC), Central Police District Command
(CPDC) and Criminal Investigation Command (CIC).

On May 22, 1995, Senior Police Officer (SPO) 2 Eduardo de los Reyes of the Central
Intelligence Command (CIC) made an expose', stating that there was no shootout. De
los Reyes stated that the eleven (11) suspected members of the "Kuratong Baleleng"
gang were victims of summary execution. The following day, he executed a sworn
statement to this effect. . . .
On May 24, 1995, the Commission on Human Rights (CHR) received the separate
sworn statements of Myrna Abalora, Nenita G.
Alap-ap and Imelda Pancho Montero are relatives of the slain suspected gang
members, accusing the PACC, NCRC, TMC, CIC and CPDC of murder.
On May 26, 1995, Acting Ombudsman Francisco A. Villa, in a handwritten note,
directed public respondent Deputy Ombudsman Casaclang to monitor the
investigations being conducted by the Commission on Human Rights, the Senate
Committee on Justice and Human Rights, and the Philippine National Police (PNP)
Director for Investigation regarding the alleged shootout. . . .
In response to the above directive, public respondent Casaclang issued on the same
date Office Order No. 95-17, Series of 1995, directing Ombudsman Investigator
Bienvenido C. Blancaflor and Associate Graft Investigation Officers Richard U.
Correos and Ricardo A. Sullano to monitor the investigations being conducted by the
above-mentioned agencies. . . . .
On May 29, 1995, public respondent Casaclang sent written requests to Senator Raul
Roco, Chairman of the Senate Committee on Justice and Human Rights, and Hon.
Sedfrey Ordoez, Chairman of the Commission on Human Rights, for documents
relative to the May 18, 1995, alleged shootout incident. . . .
On May 30, 1995, the CHR, through Commissioner Narciso Monteiro, furnished
public respondent Casaclang with copies of the
sworn statements of the relatives of the slain suspected "Kuratong Baleleng" gang. . .
.
On May 30, 1995, SPO2 Corazon de la Cruz appeared and testified before the Joint
Senate Committee conducting a legislative inquiry into the May 18, 1995 incident.
SPO2 De la Cruz corroborated the statements of SPO2 De los Reyes stating that no
shootout had taken place and that the eleven (11) slain suspected "Kuratong
Baleleng" gang members were summarily executed by the composite teams. . . .
On June 1, 1995, public respondent Casaclang issued Office Order No. 95-18,
creating a panel of investigators with Ombudsman Investigator Bienvenido Blancaflor
as head of the panel and Investigators Avelino C. Macamus, Jr. and Domingo Doctor
Jr. as members. . . .
On the same date, respondent P/Chief Supt. Job A. Mayo, Jr., in a letter-complaint
addressed to the Ombudsman, charged petitioners and several others with murder in
connection with the killing of the eleven (11) suspected "Kuratong Baleleng" gang
members. He attached to his letter-complaint the Investigation Report dated May 31,
1995, signed by him in his capacity as Chairman of the Special Investigating
Committee, PNP. . . .
The letter-complaint was docketed at the Office of the Ombudsman as case OMBAFP-CRIM-95-0084.
On June 2, 1995, respondent Casaclang directed the Panel of Investigator[s] to
terminate the investigation and submit its resolution within 60 days from receipt of his
order. . . .

On June 5, 1995, public respondent Casaclang was furnished by the Senate


Committee on Justice and Human Rights with copies of various documents, as well
as transcripts of its proceedings, relative to its investigation of the May 18, 1995
incident. Respondents undertake to submit the documents and transcripts if this
Honorable Court so requires as they are voluminous and reproduction and sorting
thereof will take time.
On June 7, 1995, respondent Casaclang issued a subpoena duces tecum/ad
testificandum addressed to PNP Director General Recaredo Sarmiento, directing him
or his duly authorized representative to appear before the Panel of Investigators and
to submit the "After Operations Report" of the PNP relative to the operations which
resulted in the May 18, 1995, incident. . . .
On June 8, 1995, the Panel of Investigators submitted their Evaluation Report in
OMB-AFP-CRIM-95-0084 to public respondent Casaclang. The report recommended
that a preliminary investigation be conducted against herein petitioners and all the
participating personnel of the NCRC, PACC, CIC, TMC and CPDC listed in the After
Operations Report of the PNP. . . .
On June 13, 1995, respondent Mayo, in behalf of the PNP Director General,
submitted to the, Ombudsman the required After Operations Report of the PNP. The
report contained the list of personnel and officers involved in the May 18, 1995,
operations against the "Kuratong Baleleng" gang. . . .
On June 14, 1995, public respondent Casaclang issued the questioned order
directing petitioner[s] and nine others to submit their counter-affidavits and
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controverting evidence within ten days from receipt thereof. . . .
The petitioners did not comply with the 14 June 1995 order, neither did they move for reconsideration.
Instead, the petitioners questioned the conduct of the preliminary investigation without the required
preliminary evaluation in their respective petitions filed with this Court on: 19 June 1995 in G.R. No.
120422; 20 June 1995 in G.R. No. 120428; and on 3 July 1995, a supplemental petition in G.R. No.
120428.
After the oral arguments on 5 July 1995, we ordered the parties to submit their respective
memoranda. The petitioners in G.R. No. 120422 complied on 17 July 1995, while the petitioners in
G.R. No. 120428 and the public respondents on 19 July 1995. On 17 July 1995, we required the
respondents in G.R. No. 120428 to comment on the supplemental petition filed therein.
Further developments in G.R. No. 120428 which lead to the status quo are as follows: On 26 July
1995, Acting Ombudsman Francisco Villa ordered the petitioners in G.R. No. 120428 to file their
counter-affidavits to the complaint within ten days from notice. Consequently, on 27 July 1995, the
petitioners filed a motion with this Court to cite Acting Ombudsman Villa in contempt of court. The
petitioners contended that the 26 July 1995, order preempted this Court from ruling on the issue
regarding the Ombudsman's jurisdiction to conduct a preliminary investigation on the complaint filed
against the petitioners. Thus, the petitioners concluded, the order contravened Section 3 (a), (c), and
(d), Rule 71 of the Rules of Court and prayed that Villa be cited in contempt and a temporary
restraining order be issued to enjoin him from implementing his order.
Anent the turn of events in G.R. No. 120422, the progress of the case may be traced in this wise: On
23 June 1995, the petitioners filed a motion with respondent Casaclang to suspend the preliminary
investigation against them pending resolution of the petition for certiorari filed with the Supreme Court.
On 28 June 1995, respondent Casaclang granted the motion, only to be reversed by Acting
Ombudsman Villa. In a memorandum dated 21 July 1995, Acting Ombudsman Villa took over "the
direct supervision and control of the preliminary investigation" and subsequently issued the
questioned 26 July 1995 order.

In a Manifestation and Omnibus Motion filed with this Court on 28 July 1995, the petitioners in G.R.
No. 120422 challenged the take-over, asserting: First, that it violated Section 3, Rule II of
Administrative Order No. 07 issued by the Ombudsman. The petitioners emphasized that the
enumeration in the said Section does not include the Ombudsman himself nor the Acting
Ombudsman among those authorized to conduct preliminary investigations. Second, that in so doing,
Villa effectively denied the petitioners the different appellate levels within the Office of the
Ombudsman. And third, that Villa's take-over and order in question prejudged the very issues pending
before the Supreme Court and was, therefore, contemptuous. Hence, the petitioners in G.R. No.
120422 joined cause with the prayer of the petitioners in G.R. No. 120428.
On 31 July 1995, we required the respondents to comment on the motions for contempt, and in
compliance, Acting Ombudsman Villa filed his comment on 7 August 1995. He asserted that pursuant
3
to Peza vs. Alikpala, the mere pendency of a special civil action for certiorari before this Court,
commenced in relation to a case pending before a lower court, does not interrupt the latter's course
when no writ of injunction restraining it has been issued as in the present case. The public
respondents filed their Comment on 15 August 1995.
I
As to the first issue, the petitioners in G.R. No. 120422 concede that in the light of this Court's
4
decision in Zaldivar, it is the Ombudsman, and not the Office of the Special Prosecutor, which has
jurisdiction to conduct the preliminary investigation on the complaint filed against them. The
petitioners plead, however, for this Court re-examine the conclusion reached in Zaldivar, i.e., that
under the 1987 Constitution, the Tanodbayan no longer has the authority to conduct preliminary
investigations except upon order of the Ombudsman. Said conclusion, the petitioners assert, "is
based on a wrong premise."
In substance, the petitioners forward two propositions in support of their plea: First, the petitioners
5
posit that the Ombudsman's "duty to investigate on its own or on complaint of any person" is
6
separate and distinct from "the power to conduct preliminary investigations," and maintain that the
latter "remains with the Tanodbayan, now the Special Prosecutor"; and second, that based on the
pertinent provisions of the 1987 Constitution, it is erroneous to conclude that the Special Prosecutor is
7
a subordinate of or may be subsumed by the Ombudsman under the Constitution.
As to the first proposition, the petitioners refer to the Record of the Constitutional Commission of 1986
(hereinafter Commission) on the debates relative to the powers of the Ombudsman proposed by the
Committee on Accountability of Public Officers. The petitioners extensively quote the admissions of
Commissioners Christian S. Monsod and Jose S. Colayco (Chairman and Vice-Chairman,
respectively, of the Committee) during the interpellations to the effect that it was the intention of the
Committee not to grant to the proposed Ombudsman prosecutorial powers which would, instead, be
left to the proposed Office of the Special Prosecutor. Thus:
MR. MONSOD: (sponsorship speech)
xxx xxx xxx
With respect to the Sandiganbayan and the Tanodbayan, the
Committee decided to make a distinction between the purely
prosecutory function of the Tanodbayan and the function of a pure
Ombudsman who will use the prestige and persuasive powers of his
office. To call the attention of government officials to any impropriety,
misconduct or injustice, we conceive the Ombudsman as a champion
of the citizens. . . The concept of the Ombudsman here is admittedly
8
a little bit different from the 1973 concept. . .
xxx xxx xxx
MR. RODRIGO:

I noticed that the proposed provisions of the Ombudsman retain the


Tanodbayan, and there seems to be an overlapping in the functions
of the Tanodbayan and the Ombudsman. What is the clear-cut
dividing line between the functions of the Ombudsman and the
Tanodbayan, so that our people will know when to go to the
Tanodbayan and when to go to the Ombudsman?
MR. MONSOD:
Madam President, essentially, the difference lies in one being a
prosecutory arm and the other a champion of the citizen who is not
bound by legal technicalities of legal forms, but I would like to ask
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Commissioner Nolledo to explain this in detail.
MR. RODRIGO:
So, the Ombudsman does not have a prosecutory function nor
punitive powers.
MR. COLAYCO:
None.
MR. RODRIGO:
All that he relies upon is his persuasive power.
MR. COLAYCO:
Yes. Persuasive power plus the ability to require that the proper legal
steps be taken to compel the officer to comply.
MR. RODRIGO:
Yes, but what is meant by "required" is that the Ombudsman cannot
10
compel.
Then Commissioner, now a highly respected Member of the Court, Florenz D. Regalado, also
remarked:
MR. REGALADO:
In connection also with that concern of Commissioner Rodrigo
regarding the Ombudsman being merely a duplication, I have here
the records of the former Ombudsman to show that one of the
reasons he could not function in his administrative or
recommendatory capacity was the number of cases for prosecution
which took almost all his time. So I believe that there should really be
an Ombudsman to take care of the recommendatory, policydetermining, policy-suggesting or administrative aspect of his
position. The whole task of prosecution should be left to a regular
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Tanodbayan.
The petitioners hardly persuade us on this matter. While the intention to withhold prosecutorial powers
12
from the Ombudsman was indeed present, the Commission did not hesitate to recommend that the
Legislature could, through statute, prescribe such other powers, functions, and duties to the

Ombudsman. Paragraph 6, Section 12 of the original draft of the proposed Article on Accountability of
Public Officers, which the Committee recommended for incorporation in the Constitution, reads:
Sec. 12. The Office of the Ombudsman shall have the following powers, functions
and duties:
xxx xxx xxx
(6) To exercise such powers and perform such functions or duties as
13
may be provided by Law.
As finally approved by the Commission after several amendments, this is now embodied in
paragraph 8, Section 13, Article XI (Accountability of Public Officers) of the Constitution,
which provides:
Sec. 13. The Office of the Ombudsman shall have the following powers, functions,
and duties:
xxx xxx xxx
(8) Promulgate its rules of procedure and exercise such other
functions or duties as may be provided by law. (emphasis supplied).
Expounding on this power of Congress to prescribe other powers, functions, and duties to the
Ombudsman, we quote Commissioners Colayco and Monsod during interpellation by Commissioner
Rodrigo:
MR. RODRIGO:
Let us go back to the division between the powers of the
Tanodbayan and the Ombudsman which says that:
The Tanodbayan. . . . shall continue to function end exercise its
powers as provided by law, except those conferred on the office of
the Ombudsman created under this Constitution.
The powers of the Ombudsman are enumerated in Section 12.
MR. COLAYCO:
They are not exclusive.
MR. RODRIGO:
So, these powers can also be exercised by the Tanodbayan?
MR. COLAYCO:
No, I was saying that the powers enumerated here for the
Ombudsman are not exclusive.
MR. RODRIGO:
Precisely, I am coming to that. The last of the enumerated functions
of the Ombudsman is:"to exercise such powers or perform such
functions or duties as may be provided by law." So, the legislature

may vest him with powers taken away from the Tanodbayan, may it
not?
MR. COLAYCO:
Yes.
MR. MONSOD:
Yes.
MR. RODRIGO:
And it is possible that pretty soon the Tanodbayan will be a useless
appendage and will lose all his powers.
MR. COLAYCO:
No. I am afraid the Gentleman has the wrong perception of the
system. We are leaving to the Tanodbayan the continuance of his
functions and the exercise of the jurisdiction given to him pursuant to.
...
MR. RODRIGO:
Law.
MR. COLAYCO:
No. Pursuant first to the Constitution and the law which mandated the
creation of the office.
MR. RODRIGO:
Madam President. Section 5 reads: "The Tanodbayan shall continue
to function and exercise its powers as provided by law."
MR. COLAYCO:
That is correct, because it is under P. D. No. 1630.
MR. RODRIGO:
So, if it is provided by law, it can be taken away by law, I suppose.
MR. COLAYCO:
That is correct.
MR. RODRIGO:
And precisely, Section 12(6) says that among the functions that can
be performed by the Ombudsman are "such functions or duties as
may be provided by law." The sponsors admitted that the legislature

later on might remove some powers from the Tanodbayan and


transfer these to the Ombudsman.
MR. COLAYCO:
Madam President, that is correct.
MR. MONSOD:
Madam President, perhaps it might be helpful if we give the spirit and
intendment of the Committee. What we wanted to avoid is the
situation where it deteriorates into a prosecution arm. We wanted to
give the idea of the Ombudsman a chance, with prestige and
persuasive powers, and also a chance to really function as a
champion of the citizen.
However, we do not want to foreclose the possibility that in the
future, the Assembly, as it may see fit may have to give additional
powers to the Ombudsman; we want to give the concept of a pure
Ombudsman a chance under the Constitution.
MR. RODRIGO:
Madam President, what I am worried about is, if we create a
constitutional body which has neither punitive nor prosecutory
powers but only persuasive powers, we might be raising the hopes of
our people too much and then disappoint them.
MR. MONSOD:
I agree with the Commissioner.
MR. RODRIGO:
Anyway, since we state that the powers of the Ombudsman can later
on be implemented by the legislature, why not leave this to the
legislature?
MR. MONSOD:
Yes, because we want to avoid what happened in 1973. I read the
committee report which recommended the approval of the 27
resolutions for the creation of the office of the Ombudsman; but
notwithstanding the explicit purpose enunciated in that report, the
implementing law the last one, P.D. No. 1630 did not follow the
14
main thrust; instead it created the Tanodbayan. (emphasis
supplied).
xxx xxx xxx
MR. MONSOD (reacting to statements of Commissioner Blas Ople):
May we just state that perhaps the honorable Commissioner has
looked at it in too much of an absolutist position. The Ombudsman is
seen as a civil advocate or a champion of the citizens against the
bureaucracy, not against the President. On one hand, we are told he
has no teeth and he lacks other things. On the other hand, there is

the interpretation that he is a competitor to the President, as if he is


being brought up to the same level as the President.
With respect to the argument that he is a toothless animal, we would
like to say that we are promoting the concept in its form at the
present, but we are also saying that he can exercise such powers
and functions as may be provided by law in accordance with the
direction of the thinking of Commissioner Rodrigo. We do not think
that at this time we should prescribe this, but we leave it up to
Congress at some future time if it feels that it may need to designate
what powers the Ombudsman need in order that he be more
effective. This is not foreclosed.
So, this is a reversible disability, unlike that of a eunuch; it is not an
15
irreversible disability. (emphasis supplied)
In view of the foregoing, it is evident that the petitioners have not borne out any distinction between
"the duty to investigate" and "the power to conduct preliminary investigations"; neither have the
petitioners established that the latter remains with the Tanodbayan, now the Special Prosecutor.
Thus, this Court can only reject the petitioners' first proposition.
At bottom, the second proposition raised by the petitioners in G.R. No. 120422 is that the Office of the
Special Prosecutor is not a subordinate agency to the Ombudsman and is, in fact, separate and
distinct from the Ombudsman. The petitioners call this Court's attention to the fact that, on one hand,
the former is not at all mentioned in Section 5, Article XI of the Constitution, while Sections 6, 8, 9, 10,
11, and 12 thereof only speak of the Ombudsman and his deputies (with the composition of the Office
of the Ombudsman enumerated in Section 5). On the other hand, the petitioners note, Section 7
recognizes the continued existence of the Tanodbayan, thereafter known as the Office of the Special
Prosecutor. Thus, the petitioners deduce that Section 7 does not imply that the Office of the Special
16
Prosecutor is absorbed by subsumed under the Office of the Ombudsman.
By way of elaboration, the petitioners contend further that the intent of the framers of the 1987
Constitution was to place the Office of the Special Prosecutor under the Office of the President, as
shown by the following excerpts of the proceedings of the Commission:
THE PRESIDENT:
May the Chair inquire from the Chairman of the Committee what
office would have administrative supervision now over the
Tanodbayan? Is there any office that would have administrative
supervision over the Tanodbayan, as described in Section 5?
MR. ROMULO:
Madam President, as the decree now reads, no one has jurisdiction
over the Tanodbayan. He may be removed by the President for a
cause.
THE PRESIDENT:
So he is directly under the Office of the President?
MR. ROMULO:
Yes, because it is the President who may remove him for a cause. In
17
effect, he comes under the Office of the President.

For these reasons, the petitioners conclude that the inclusion of the Office of the Special
18
Prosecutor as among the offices under the Office of the Ombudsman in Section 3 of R.A.
No. 6770 ("An Act Providing for the Functional and Structural Organization of the Office of the
Ombudsman and for Other Purposes") is unconstitutional and void.
The contention is not impressed with merit. Firstly, the petitioners misconstrue Commissioner
Romulo's statement as authority to advocate that the intent of the framers of the 1987 Constitution
was to place the Office of the Special Prosecutor under the Office of the President. The said
statement obviously referred to the Tanodbayan under P.D. No. 1630 note how specific the
erstwhile Commissioner was in stating: ". . . as the decree now reads . . . ." Further, in complete
contrast to the petitioners' stand, one of the principal reasons for the proposal to withhold
prosecutorial powers from the Ombudsman was precisely to remove the office from presidential
control. This was explained by then Commissioner Florenz D. Regalado as follows:
MR. REGALADO:
xxx xxx xxx
In other words, Madam President, what actually spawned or caused
the failure of the justices of the Tanodbayan insofar as monitoring
and fiscalizing the government offices are concerned was due to two
reasons: First, almost all their time was taken up by criminal cases;
and second, since they were under the Office of the President, their
funds came from that office. I have a sneaking suspicion that they
were prevented from making administrative monitoring because of
the sensitivity of the then head of that office, because if the
Tanodbayan would make the corresponding reports about failures,
malfunctions or omissions of the different ministries, then that would
reflect upon the President who wanted to claim the alleged
confidence of the people.
xxx xxx xxx
It is said here that the Tanodbayan or the Ombudsman would be a
toothless or a paper tiger. That is not necessarily so. If he is
toothless, then let us give him a little more teeth by making him
independent of the Office of the President because it is now a
constitutional creation, so that the insidious tentacles of politics, as
has always been our problem, even with PARGO, PCAPE and so
forth, will not deprive him of the opportunity to render service to Juan
19
dela Cruz. . . . . (emphasis supplied).
In the second place, Section 7 of Article XI expressly provides that the then existing Tanodbayan, to
be henceforth known as the Office of the Special Prosecutor, "shall continue to function and
exercise its powers as now or hereafter may be provided by law, except those conferred on the Office
of the Ombudsman created under this Constitution." The underscored phrase evidently refers to the
Tanodbayan's powers under P.D. No. 1630 orsubsequent amendatory legislation. It follows then that
Congress may remove any of the Tanodbayan's/Special Prosecutor's powers under P.D. N0. 1630 or
grant it other powers, except those powers conferred by the Constitution on the Office of the
Ombudsman.
Pursuing the present line of reasoning, when one considers that by express mandate of paragraph 8,
Section 13, Article XI of the Constitution, the Ombudsman may "exercise such other powers or
perform functions or duties as may be provided by law," it is indubitable then that Congress has the
power to place the Office of the Special Prosecutor under the Office of the Ombudsman. In the same
vein, Congress may remove some of the powers granted to the Tanodbayan by P.D. No. 1630 and
transfer them to the Ombudsman; or grant the Office of the Special Prosecutor such other powers and

functions and duties as Congress may deem fit and wise. This Congress did through the passage of
R.A. No. 6770.
Through the said law, the Office of the Special Prosecutor was made an organic component of the
20
21
Office of the Ombudsman, while the Ombudsman was granted the following powers, among
others:
(1) Investigate and prosecute on its own or on complaint by any person, any act or
omission of any public officer or employee, office or agency, when such act or
omission appears to be illegal, unjust, improper or inefficient. It has primary
jurisdiction over cases cognizable by the Sandiganbayan and, in the exercise of its
primary jurisdiction, it may take over, at any stage, from any investigatory agency of
Government, the investigation of such cases;
xxx xxx xxx
(10) Delegate to the Deputies, or its investigators or representatives such authority or
duty as shall ensure the effective exercise or performance of the powers, functions,
and duties herein or herein after provided.
Likewise, R.A. No. 6770 authorized the office of the Special Prosecutor, under the supervision
and control and upon the authority of the Ombudsman, to:
(a) [C]onduct preliminary investigation and prosecute criminal cases within the
jurisdiction of the Sandiganbayan;
(b) [E]nter into plea bargaining agreements; and
(c) [P]erform such other duties assigned to it by the Ombudsman.
supplied)

22

(emphasis

In fine, this Court holds that the plea to re-examine Zaldivar vs. Sandiganbayan is bereft of merit and
deserves no further consideration.
II.
Before we enter into a discussion of the second principal issue raised in these cases, the corollary
issue of whether respondent Casaclang as Deputy Ombudsman for Military Affairs has the authority
to conduct a preliminary investigation involving civilian personnel of the Government must first be
resolved.
23

In view of Section 6, Article XVI of the Constitution and the law implementing it, R.A. No.
24
6975, the petitioners, who are officers of the Philippine National Police (PNP), are civilian personnel
25
of the Government. It is thus suggested that the Deputy Ombudsman for Military Affairs does not
have jurisdiction over them, for by the description of his office, his authority is or must be confined to
the military. At first blush, the suggestion seems logical.
The proposal to have a separate Deputy Ombudsman for the military establishment came by way of
an amendment by Commissioner Blas Ople. This was introduced during the period of individual
amendments at the time the Commission deliberated on the proposed Article on Accountability of
Public Officers Commissioner Ople's original idea was to authorize the Ombudsman to designate the
said deputy; however, the amendment to the amendment introduced by this writer, who was then a
member of the Commission, was to authorize the President to appoint the said deputy. Thus:
MR. OPLE:

With the indulgence of Commissioner Rodrigo and of the Committee,


may I proceed to read the amendment which is to add a last
sentence to Section 11, line 21: THE OMBUDSMAN MAY
DESIGNATE A SEPARATE DEPUTY FOR THE MILITARY
ESTABLISHMENT, so that the entire Section 11 will now read as
follows: "The Ombudsman and his Deputies, as champions of the
people, shall act promptly on the complaints filed, in any form or
manner, against public officials or employees of the government,
including government-owned corporations, agencies or
instrumentalities, and shall notify the complainants of the action
taken and the results thereof. THE OMBUDSMAN MAY DESIGNATE
A SEPARATE DEPUTY FOR THE MILITARY ESTABLISHMENT.
May I state a brief reason for this amendment, Madam President.
THE PRESIDENT:
The Commissioner has five minutes to explain his proposed
amendment.
MR. OPLE:
Thank you.
The original Ombudsman was created in Sweden in 1810 and has
survived practically unchanged for over 170 years. The military
Ombudsman appeared for the first time in history in Norway in 1952
and in West Germany in 1956. In Norway, the military Ombudsman,
known as Ombudsmannen for forsvaret, was superimposed on an
existing structure of enlisted spokesmen chosen by each unit of the
Norwegian Armed Forces.
In our own Philippine Armed Forces, there has arisen in recent years
a type of fraternal association outside the chain of command
proposing reformist objectives. They constitute, in fact, an informal
grievance machinery against injustices to the rank and file soldiery
and perceive graft in higher rank[s] and neglect of the needs of
troops in combat zones. The Reform the Armed Forces Movement or
RAM has kept precincts for pushing logistics to the field, the implied
accusation being that most of the resources are used up in Manila
instead of sent to soldiers in the field. The Guardians, the El Diablo
and other organizations dominated by enlisted men function, more or
less, as grievance collectors and as mutual aid societies.
This proposed amendment merely seeks to extend the office of the
Ombudsman to the military establishment, just as it champions the
common people against bureaucratic indifference. The Ombudsman
can designate a deputy to help the ordinary foot soldier get through
with his grievance to higher authorities. This deputy will, of course,
work in close cooperation with the Minister of National Defense and
the Armed Forces of the Philippines' Chief of Staff because of the
necessity to maintain the integrity of the chain of command. Ordinary
soldiers, when they know they can turn to a military Ombudsman for
their complaints, may not have to fall back on their own informal
devices to obtain redress for their grievances. The Ombudsman will
help raise troop morale in accordance with a major professed goal of
the President and the military authorities themselves. I seek the
Committee's kind concurrence to this proposal.

xxx xxx xxx


THE PRESIDENT:
Commissioner Davide is recognized.
MR. DAVIDE:
I would have no objection to the proposed amendment, but it should
not be on Section 11. It should be placed on Section 6 because if we
put it here, the appointing authority will no longer be the President
but the Ombudsman, and that is not, I think, the philosophy of the
provision.
So it should also be covered by the manner by which an appointment
may be extended to it. So I would propose that it be transferred
principally to Section 6.
MR. OPLE:
The Committee has no jurisdiction; personally, I have no objection,
Madam President.
MR. DAVIDE:
But I would propose that the wording would be: A SEPARATE
DEPUTY FOR THE MILITARY ESTABLISHMENT MAY BE
APPOINTED, after "Mindanao" on Section 6, line 16, page 3.
MR. OPLE:
I accept the amendment, Madam President.
THE PRESIDENT:
Commissioner Ople has accepted the amendment. How about the
Committee?
MR. MONSOD:
We accept, Madam President.
xxx xxx xxx
THE PRESIDENT:
May we have the amendment now as phrased by the Committee.
MR. MONSOD:
May we ask Commissioner Davide to restate the amendment, as
amended.
THE PRESIDENT:

Commissioner Davide is recognized.


MR. DAVIDE:
Madam President, on line 61 page 3, add a new sentence after the period (.)
following "Mindanao" to read as follows: A SEPARATE DEPUTY FOR THE
MILITARY ESTABLISHMENT MAY LIKEWISE BE APPOINTED.
VOTING
THE PRESIDENT:
Those in favor of this particular amendment, as amended, please
raise their hand. (Several Members raised their hand.)
xxx xxx xxx
The results show 22 votes in favor and 11 against; the proposed
amendment, jointly submitted by Commissioners Ople and Davide
26
and accepted by the Committee, is approved.
The approved amendment is now found in Section 5, Article XI of the Constitution, which
reads:
Sec. 5. There is hereby created the independent Office of the Ombudsman to be
known as Tanodbayan, one overall Deputy and at least one Deputy each for Luzon,
Visayas, and Mindanao. A separate Deputy for the military establishment may
likewise be appointed. (emphasis supplied).
The deliberations on the Deputy for the military establishment do not yield conclusive evidence that
such deputy is prohibited from performing other functions or duties affecting non-military personnel.
On the contrary, a review of the relevant Constitutional provisions reveals otherwise.
As previously established, the Ombudsman "may exercise such other powers or perform such
27
functions or duties" as Congress may prescribe through legislation. Therefore, nothing can prevent
Congress from giving the Ombudsman supervision and control over the Ombudsman's deputies, one
28
being the deputy for the military establishment. In this light, Section 11 of R.A. No. 6770 provides:
Sec. 11. Structural Organization. The authority and responsibility for the exercise
of the mandate of the Office of the Ombudsman and for the discharge of its powers
and functions shall be vested in the Ombudsman, who shall have supervision and
control of the said Office.
While Section 31 thereof declares:
Sec. 31. Designation of Investigators and Prosecutors. The Ombudsman may
utilize the personnel of his office and/or designate or deputize any fiscal, state
prosecutor or lawyer in the government service to act as special investigator or
prosecutor to assist in the investigation and prosecution of certain cases. Those
designated or deputized to assist him herein provided shall be under his supervision
and control.
Accordingly, the Ombudsman may refer cases involving non-military personnel for
investigation by the Deputy for Military Affairs. In these cases at bench, therefore, no
irregularity attended the referral by the Acting Ombudsman of the Kuratong Baleleng case to
respondent Casaclang who, in turn, created a panel of investigators.

III
We will now address the second principal issue.
We do not share the petitioners' view that respondent Casaclang set the case for preliminary
investigation and required the petitioners to file their counter-affidavits without the conduct of a
preliminary evaluation of the complaint as required by the Rules, of the Office of the Ombudsman. In
the case before us, no evidence to that effect was adduced. On the contrary, as shown by the
summary of antecedent facts earlier quoted, the Panel of Investigators submitted its evaluation report
on 8 June 1995, and it was only on 14 June 1995 that respondent Casaclang issued the questioned
order. Section 2, Rule II of Administrative Order No. 07 of the Office of the Ombudsman (Rules of
Procedure of the Office of the Ombudsman), on the process and nature of the evaluation required,
reads as follows:
Sec. 2. Evaluation. Upon evaluating the complaint, the investigating officer shall
recommend whether it may be
(a) dismissed outright for want of palpable merit;
(b) referred to respondent for comment;
(c) indorsed to the proper government office or agency which has jurisdiction over the
case;
(d) forward to the appropriate office or official for fact-finding investigation;
(e) referred for administrative adjudication; or
(f) subjected to a preliminary investigation.
It cannot be denied that the evaluation required is merely preliminary in nature and scope, not
a detailed inquiry. Likewise, the conduct of such evaluation involves the exercise of discretion
which has not been shown to be abused in the instant case.
IN VIEW OF THE FOREGOING, these two petitions and the motion to cite Acting Ombudsman
Francisco Villa in contempt of court are DENIED for want of merit. This decision is immediately
executory.
Costs against the petitioners.
SO ORDERED.
Padilla, Bellosillo and Kapunan, JJ., concur.
Hermosisima, Jr., is on leave.
Footnotes
1 160 SCRA 843 [1988].
2 Rollo, 265-271.
3 160 SCRA 31 [1988].
4 Supra note 1.

5 Paragraph 1, Section 13, Article XI, 1987 Constitution.


6 Sections 10(e) and 17, P.D. No. 1630.
7 Rollo, 402-403.
8 Record of the Constitutional Commission, vol. 2, 265 (hereinafter 2
Record).
9 Id., 268.
10 2 Record, 270.
11 Id., 274. See also, 295-297 for a Longer disquisition on his thesis.
12 Id., 266, 268, 284, 295, and 317, wherein the Commission originally
envisioned the adoption of the traditional Ombudsman as known in Europe.
13 2 Record, 264.
14 2 Record, 270-271.
15 Id., 295.
16 Rollo, 17-18.
17 2 Record, 336.
18 It provides:
Sec. 3. Office of the Ombudsman. The Office of the Ombudsman shall
include the Office of the overall Deputy, the Office of the Deputy for Luzon,
the Office of the Deputy for Visayas, the Office of the Deputy for Mindanao,
the office of the Deputy for the Armed Forces, and the Office of the Special
Prosecutor. The President may appoint the Deputies as the necessity for it
may arise, as recommended by the Ombudsman.
19 2 Record, 295-296.
20 Section 3.
21 Section 15.
22 Section 11(4).
23 The Provision reads, in part:
Sec. 6. The State shall establish and maintain one police force, which shall
be national in scope and civilian in character. . . . (emphasis supplied)
24 Entitled, "An Act Establishing the Philippine National Police Under a
Reorganized Department of the Interior and Local Government and For Other
Purposes," otherwise know as the Department of the Interior and Local
Government Act of 1990.

25 See Republic vs. Asuncion, 231 SCRA 211 [1994].


26 2 Record, 317-320.
27 Paragraph 8, Section 13, Article XI, 1987 Constitution.
28 Section 5, Id., Id.

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