Executive Secretary vs. CA
Executive Secretary vs. CA
Executive Secretary vs. CA
SECOND DIVISION
G.R. No. 131719
In a supplement to its petition, the ARCO-Phil. alleged that Rep. Act No. 8042 was selfexecutory and that no implementing rules were needed. It prayed that the court issue a
temporary restraining order to enjoin the enforcement of Section 6, paragraphs (a) to
(m) on illegal recruitment, Section 7 on penalties for illegal recruitment, and Section 9
on venue of criminal actions for illegal recruitments, viz:
Viewed in the light of the foregoing discussions, there appears to be urgent an
imperative need for this Honorable Court to maintain the status quo by enjoining the
implementation or effectivity of the questioned provisions of RA 8042, by way of a
restraining order otherwise, the member recruitment agencies of the petitioner will
suffer grave or irreparable damage or injury. With the effectivity of RA 8042, a great
majority of the duly licensed recruitment agencies have stopped or suspended their
operations for fear of being prosecuted under the provisions of a law that are unjust
and unconstitutional. This Honorable Court may take judicial notice of the fact that
processing of deployment papers of overseas workers for the past weeks have come
to a standstill at the POEA and this has affected thousands of workers everyday just
because of the enactment of RA 8042. Indeed, this has far reaching effects not only to
survival of the overseas manpower supply industry and the active participating
recruitment agencies, the countrys economy which has survived mainly due to the
dollar remittances of the overseas workers but more importantly, to the poor and the
needy who are in dire need of income-generating jobs which can only be obtained from
abroad. The loss or injury that the recruitment agencies will suffer will then be
immeasurable and irreparable. As of now, even foreign employers have already
reduced their manpower requirements from the Philippines due to their knowledge that
RA 8042 prejudiced and adversely affected the local recruitment agencies.3
On August 1, 1995, the trial court issued a temporary restraining order effective for a
period of only twenty (20) days therefrom.
After the petitioners filed their comment on the petition, the ARCO-Phil. filed an
amended petition, the amendments consisting in the inclusion in the caption thereof
eleven (11) other corporations which it alleged were its members and which it
represented in the suit, and a plea for a temporary restraining order enjoining the
respondents from enforcing Section 6 subsection (i), Section 6 subsection (k) and
paragraphs 15 and 16 thereof, Section 8, Section 10, paragraphs 1 and 2, and
Sections 11 and 40 of Rep. Act No. 8042.
The respondent ARCO-Phil. assailed Section 2(g) and (i), Section 6 subsection (a) to
(m), Section 7(a) to (b), and Section 10 paragraphs (1) and (2), quoted as follows:
(g) THE STATE RECOGNIZES THAT THE ULTIMATE PROTECTION TO ALL
MIGRANT WORKERS IS THE POSSESSION OF SKILLS. PURSUANT TO THIS AND
AS SOON AS PRACTICABLE, THE GOVERNMENT SHALL DEPLOY AND/OR
ALLOW THE DEPLOYMENT ONLY OF SKILLED FILIPINO WORKERS.4
SEC. 7. Penalties.
(a) Any person found guilty of illegal recruitment shall suffer the penalty of
imprisonment of not less than six (6) years and one (1) day but not more than twelve
(12) years and a fine of not less than two hundred thousand pesos (P200,000.00) nor
more than five hundred thousand pesos (P500,000.00).
(b) The penalty of life imprisonment and a fine of not less than five hundred thousand
pesos (P500,000.00) nor more than one million pesos (P1,000,000.00) shall be
imposed if illegal recruitment constitutes economic sabotage as defined herein.
Provided, however, That the maximum penalty shall be imposed if the person illegally
recruited is less than eighteen (18) years of age or committed by a non-licensee or
non-holder of authority.
Sec. 8.
Prohibition on Officials and Employees. It shall be unlawful for any official or
employee of the Department of Labor and Employment, the Philippine Overseas
Employment Administration (POEA), or the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration
(OWWA), or the Department of Foreign Affairs, or other government agencies involved
in the implementation of this Act, or their relatives within the fourth civil degree of
consanguinity or affinity, to engage, directly or indirectly, in the business of recruiting
migrant workers as defined in this Act. The penalties provided in the immediate
preceding paragraph shall be imposed upon them. (underscoring supplied)
SEC. 11. Mandatory Periods for Resolution of Illegal Recruitment Cases. The
preliminary investigations of cases under this Act shall be terminated within a period of
thirty (30) calendar days from the date of their filing. Where the preliminary
investigation is conducted by a prosecution officer and a prima facie case is
established, the corresponding information shall be filed in court within twenty-four (24)
hours from the termination of the investigation. If the preliminary investigation is
conducted by a judge and a prima facie case is found to exist, the corresponding
information shall be filed by the proper prosecution officer within forty-eight (48) hours
from the date of receipt of the records of the case.
The respondent averred that the aforequoted provisions of Rep. Act No. 8042 violate
Section 1, Article III of the Constitution.5 According to the respondent, Section 6(g) and
(i) discriminated against unskilled workers and their families and, as such, violated the
equal protection clause, as well as Article II, Section 126 and Article XV, Sections 17
and 3(3) of the Constitution.8 As the law encouraged the deployment of skilled Filipino
workers, only overseas skilled workers are granted rights. The respondent stressed
that unskilled workers also have the right to seek employment abroad. According to the
respondent, the right of unskilled workers to due process is violated because they are
prevented from finding employment and earning a living abroad. It cannot be argued
that skilled workers are immune from abuses by employers, while unskilled workers
are merely prone to such abuses. It was pointed out that both skilled and unskilled
workers are subjected to abuses by foreign employers. Furthermore, the prohibition of
the deployment of unskilled workers abroad would only encourage fly-by-night illegal
recruiters.
According to the respondent, the grant of incentives to service contractors and
manning agencies to the exclusion of all other licensed and authorized recruiters is an
invalid classification. Licensed and authorized recruiters are thus deprived of their right
to property and due process and to the "equality of the person." It is understandable for
the law to prohibit illegal recruiters, but to discriminate against licensed and registered
recruiters is unconstitutional.
The respondent, likewise, alleged that Section 6, subsections (a) to (m) is
unconstitutional because licensed and authorized recruitment agencies are placed on
equal footing with illegal recruiters. It contended that while the Labor Code
distinguished between recruiters who are holders of licenses and non-holders thereof
in the imposition of penalties, Rep. Act No. 8042 does not make any distinction. The
penalties in Section 7(a) and (b) being based on an invalid classification are, therefore,
repugnant to the equal protection clause, besides being excessive; hence, such
penalties are violative of Section 19(1), Article III of the Constitution.9 It was also
pointed out that the penalty for officers/officials/employees of recruitment agencies who
are found guilty of economic sabotage or large-scale illegal recruitment under Rep. Act
No. 8042 is life imprisonment. Since recruitment agencies usually operate with a
manpower of more than three persons, such agencies are forced to shut down, lest
their officers and/or employees be charged with large scale illegal recruitment or
economic sabotage and sentenced to life imprisonment. Thus, the penalty imposed by
law, being disproportionate to the prohibited acts, discourages the business of licensed
and registered recruitment agencies.
The respondent also posited that Section 6(m) and paragraphs (15) and (16), Sections
8, 9 and 10, paragraph 2 of the law violate Section 22, Article III of the Constitution10
prohibiting ex-post facto laws and bills of attainder. This is because the provisions
presume that a licensed and registered recruitment agency is guilty of illegal
recruitment involving economic sabotage, upon a finding that it committed any of the
prohibited acts under the law. Furthermore, officials, employees and their relatives are
presumed guilty of illegal recruitment involving economic sabotage upon such finding
that they committed any of the said prohibited acts.
The respondent further argued that the 90-day period in Section 10, paragraph (1)
within which a labor arbiter should decide a money claim is relatively short, and could
deprive licensed and registered recruiters of their right to due process. The period
within which the summons and the complaint would be served on foreign employees
and, thereafter, the filing of the answer to the complaint would take more than 90 days.
This would thereby shift on local licensed and authorized recruiters the burden of
proving the defense of foreign employers. Furthermore, the respondent asserted,
Section 10, paragraph 2 of the law, which provides for the joint and several liability of
the officers and employees, is a bill of attainder and a violation of the right of the said
corporate officers and employees to due process. Considering that such corporate
officers and employees act with prior approval of the board of directors of such
corporation, they should not be liable, jointly and severally, for such corporate acts.
The respondent asserted that the following provisions of the law are unconstitutional:
SEC. 9. Venue. A criminal action arising from illegal recruitment as defined herein
shall be filed with the Regional Trial Court of the province or city where the offense was
committed or where the offended party actually resides at the time of the commission
of the offense: Provided, That the court where the criminal action is first filed shall
acquire jurisdiction to the exclusion of other courts: Provided, however, That the
aforestated provisions shall also apply to those criminal actions that have already been
filed in court at the time of the effectivity of this Act.
SEC. 10. Money Claims. Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, the
Labor Arbiters of the National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC) shall have the
original and exclusive jurisdiction to hear and decide, within ninety (90) calendar days
after the filing of the complaint, the claims arising out of an employer-employee
relationship or by virtue of any law or contract involving Filipino workers for overseas
deployment including claims for actual, moral, exemplary and other forms of damages.
Sec. 40.
The departments and agencies charged with carrying out the provisions of this Act
shall, within ninety (90) days after the effectiviy of this Act, formulate the necessary
appellate court erred in affirming the trial courts order and the writ of preliminary
injunction issued by it.
The petitioners contend that the respondent has no locus standi. It is a non-stock, nonprofit organization; hence, not the real party-in-interest as petitioner in the action.
Although the respondent filed the petition in the Regional Trial Court in behalf of
licensed and registered recruitment agencies, it failed to adduce in evidence a certified
copy of its Articles of Incorporation and the resolutions of the said members authorizing
it to represent the said agencies in the proceedings. Neither is the suit of the
respondent a class suit so as to vest in it a personality to assail Rep. Act No. 8042; the
respondent is service-oriented while the recruitment agencies it purports to represent
are profit-oriented. The petitioners assert that the law is presumed constitutional and,
as such, the respondent was burdened to make a case strong enough to overcome
such presumption and establish a clear right to injunctive relief.
The petitioners bewail the P50,000 bond fixed by the trial court for the issuance of a
writ of preliminary injunction and affirmed by the appellate court. They assert that the
amount is grossly inadequate to answer for any damages that the general public may
suffer by reason of the non-enforcement of the assailed provisions of the law. The trial
court committed a grave abuse of its discretion in granting the respondents plea for
injunctive relief, and the appellate court erred in affirming the order and the writ of
preliminary injunction issued by the trial court.
The respondent, for its part, asserts that it has duly established its locus standi and its
right to injunctive relief as gleaned from its pleadings and the appendages thereto.
Under Section 5, Rule 58 of the Rules of Court, it was incumbent on the petitioners, as
respondents in the RTC, to show cause why no injunction should issue. It avers that
the injunction bond posted by the respondent was more than adequate to answer for
any injury or damage the petitioners may suffer, if any, by reason of the writ of
preliminary injunction issued by the RTC. In any event, the assailed provisions of Rep.
Act No. 8042 exposed its members to the immediate and irreparable damage of being
deprived of their right to a livelihood without due process, a property right protected
under the Constitution.
The respondent contends that the commendable purpose of the law to eradicate illegal
recruiters should not be done at the expense and to the prejudice of licensed and
authorized recruitment agencies. The writ of preliminary injunction was necessitated by
the great number of duly licensed recruitment agencies that had stopped or suspended
their business operations for fear that their officers and employees would be indicted
and prosecuted under the assailed oppressive penal provisions of the law, and meted
excessive penalties. The respondent, likewise, urges that the Court should take judicial
notice that the processing of deployment papers of overseas workers have come to a
virtual standstill at the POEA.
The Courts Ruling
to their separate and distinct prohibitions, are not to be granted as a matter of course,
even if such statutes are unconstitutional. No citizen or member of the community is
immune from prosecution, in good faith, for his alleged criminal acts. The imminence of
such a prosecution even though alleged to be unauthorized and, hence, unlawful is not
alone ground for relief in equity which exerts its extraordinary powers only to prevent
irreparable injury to the plaintiff who seeks its aid. 752 Beal v. Missouri Pacific Railroad
Corp., 312 U.S. 45, 49, 61 S.Ct. 418, 420, 85 L.Ed. 577.
And similarly, in Douglas, supra, we made clear, after reaffirming this rule, that:
"It does not appear from the record that petitioners have been threatened with any
injury other than that incidental to every criminal proceeding brought lawfully and in
good faith " 319 U.S., at 164, 63 S.Ct., at 881.31
The possible unconstitutionality of a statute, on its face, does not of itself justify an
injunction against good faith attempts to enforce it, unless there is a showing of bad
faith, harassment, or any other unusual circumstance that would call for equitable
relief.32 The "on its face" invalidation of statutes has been described as "manifestly
strong medicine," to be employed "sparingly and only as a last resort," and is generally
disfavored.33
To be entitled to a preliminary injunction to enjoin the enforcement of a law assailed to
be unconstitutional, the party must establish that it will suffer irreparable harm in the
absence of injunctive relief and must demonstrate that it is likely to succeed on the
merits, or that there are sufficiently serious questions going to the merits and the
balance of hardships tips decidedly in its favor.34 The higher standard reflects judicial
deference toward "legislation or regulations developed through presumptively
reasoned democratic processes." Moreover, an injunction will alter, rather than
maintain, the status quo, or will provide the movant with substantially all the relief
sought and that relief cannot be undone even if the defendant prevails at a trial on the
merits.35 Considering that injunction is an exercise of equitable relief and authority, in
assessing whether to issue a preliminary injunction, the courts must sensitively assess
all the equities of the situation, including the public interest.36 In litigations between
governmental and private parties, courts go much further both to give and withhold
relief in furtherance of public interest than they are accustomed to go when only private
interests are involved.37 Before the plaintiff may be entitled to injunction against future
enforcement, he is burdened to show some substantial hardship.38
The fear or chilling-effect of the assailed penal provisions of the law on the members of
the respondent does not by itself justify prohibiting the State from enforcing them
against those whom the State believes in good faith to be punishable under the laws:
Just as the incidental "chilling effect" of such statutes does not automatically render
them unconstitutional, so the chilling effect that admittedly can result from the very
existence of certain laws on the statute books does not in itself justify prohibiting the
State from carrying out the important and necessary task of enforcing these laws
against socially harmful conduct that the State believes in good faith to be punishable
under its laws and the Constitution.39
It must be borne in mind that subject to constitutional limitations, Congress is
empowered to define what acts or omissions shall constitute a crime and to prescribe
punishments therefor.40 The power is inherent in Congress and is part of the sovereign
power of the State to maintain peace and order. Whatever views may be entertained
regarding the severity of punishment, whether one believes in its efficiency or its futility,
these are peculiarly questions of legislative policy.41 The comparative gravity of crimes
and whether their consequences are more or less injurious are matters for the State
and Congress itself to determine.42 Specification of penalties involves questions of
legislative policy.43
Due process prohibits criminal stability from shifting the burden of proof to the accused,
punishing wholly passive conduct, defining crimes in vague or overbroad language and
failing to grant fair warning of illegal conduct.44 Class legislation is such legislation
which denies rights to one which are accorded to others, or inflicts upon one individual
a more severe penalty than is imposed upon another in like case offending.45 Bills of
attainder are legislative acts which inflict punishment on individuals or members of a
particular group without a judicial trial. Essential to a bill of attainder are a specification
of certain individuals or a group of individuals, the imposition of a punishment, penal or
otherwise, and the lack of judicial trial.46
Penalizing unlicensed and licensed recruitment agencies and their officers and
employees and their relatives employed in government agencies charged with the
enforcement of the law for illegal recruitment and imposing life imprisonment for those
who commit large scale illegal recruitment is not offensive to the Constitution. The
accused may be convicted of illegal recruitment and large scale illegal recruitment only
if, after trial, the prosecution is able to prove all the elements of the crime charged.47
The possibility that the officers and employees of the recruitment agencies, which are
members of the respondent, and their relatives who are employed in the government
agencies charged in the enforcement of the law, would be indicted for illegal
recruitment and, if convicted sentenced to life imprisonment for large scale illegal
recruitment, absent proof of irreparable injury, is not sufficient on which to base the
issuance of a writ of preliminary injunction to suspend the enforcement of the penal
provisions of Rep. Act No. 8042 and avert any indictments under the law.48 The normal
course of criminal prosecutions cannot be blocked on the basis of allegations which
amount to speculations about the future.49
There is no allegation in the amended petition or evidence adduced by the respondent
that the officers and/or employees of its members had been threatened with any
indictments for violations of the penal provisions of Rep. Act No. 8042. Neither is there
any allegation therein that any of its members and/or their officers and employees
committed any of the acts enumerated in Section 6(a) to (m) of the law for which they
could be indicted. Neither did the respondent adduce any evidence in the RTC that any
or all of its members or a great number of other duly licensed and registered
recruitment agencies had to stop their business operations because of fear of
indictments under Sections 6 and 7 of Rep. Act No. 8042. The respondent merely
speculated and surmised that licensed and registered recruitment agencies would
close shop and stop business operations because of the assailed penal provisions of
the law. A writ of preliminary injunction to enjoin the enforcement of penal laws cannot
be based on such conjectures or speculations. The Court cannot take judicial notice
that the processing of deployment papers of overseas workers have come to a virtual
standstill at the POEA because of the assailed provisions of Rep. Act No. 8042. The
respondent must adduce evidence to prove its allegation, and the petitioners accorded
a chance to adduce controverting evidence.
The respondent even failed to adduce any evidence to prove irreparable injury
because of the enforcement of Section 10(1)(2) of Rep. Act No. 8042. Its fear or
apprehension that, because of time constraints, its members would have to defend
foreign employees in cases before the Labor Arbiter is based on speculations. Even if
true, such inconvenience or difficulty is hardly irreparable injury.
The trial court even ignored the public interest involved in suspending the enforcement
of Rep. Act No. 8042 vis--vis the eleven licensed and registered recruitment agencies
represented by the respondent. In People v. Gamboa,50 we emphasized the primary
aim of Rep. Act No. 8042:
Preliminarily, the proliferation of illegal job recruiters and syndicates preying on
innocent people anxious to obtain employment abroad is one of the primary
considerations that led to the enactment of The Migrant Workers and Overseas
Filipinos Act of 1995. Aimed at affording greater protection to overseas Filipino
workers, it is a significant improvement on existing laws in the recruitment and
placement of workers for overseas employment. Otherwise known as the Magna Carta
of OFWs, it broadened the concept of illegal recruitment under the Labor Code and
provided stiffer penalties thereto, especially those that constitute economic sabotage,
i.e., Illegal Recruitment in Large Scale and Illegal Recruitment Committed by a
Syndicate.51
By issuing the writ of preliminary injunction against the petitioners sans any evidence,
the trial court frustrated, albeit temporarily, the prosecution of illegal recruiters and
allowed them to continue victimizing hapless and innocent people desiring to obtain
employment abroad as overseas workers, and blocked the attainment of the salutary
policies52 embedded in Rep. Act No. 8042. It bears stressing that overseas workers,
land-based and sea-based, had been remitting to the Philippines billions of dollars
which over the years had propped the economy.
In issuing the writ of preliminary injunction, the trial court considered paramount the