17 BSP and Chuchi Fonacier Vs Hon. Valenzuela (LORENZO)
17 BSP and Chuchi Fonacier Vs Hon. Valenzuela (LORENZO)
17 BSP and Chuchi Fonacier Vs Hon. Valenzuela (LORENZO)
EMERGENCY RECIT: Deficiencies were discovered during an examination of the books of banks, mainly Rural Banks. These banks
were required to provide additional capital as a remedy. RBPI prayed that Fonacier, her subordinates, agents, or any other person
acting in her behalf be enjoined from submitting the Report of Examination (ROE) or any similar report to the Monetary Board (MB),
or if the ROE had already been submitted, the MB be enjoined from acting on the basis of said ROE, on the allegation that the failure to
furnish the bank with a copy of the ROE violated its right to due process. SC ruled against banks because no provision of law nor section
in the procedures of the BSP that shows that the BSP is required to give them copies of the ROEs.
FACTS:
1. The Supervision and Examination Department (SED) of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) conducted examinations of the
books of some banks, mainly Rural Banks. After the examinations, exit conferences were held with the officers or
representatives of the banks wherein the SED examiners provided them with copies of Lists of Findings/Exceptions containing
the deficiencies discovered during the examinations.
2. These banks were then required to comment and to undertake the remedial measures stated in these lists within 30 days from
their receipt of the lists, which remedial measures included the infusion of additional capital.
3. Though the banks claimed that they made the additional capital infusions, petitioner Chuchi Fonacier, officerin-charge of the
SED, sent separate letters to the Board of Directors of each bank, informing them that the SED found that the banks failed to
carry out the required remedial measures. In response, the banks requested that they be given time to obtain BSP approval to
amend their Articles of Incorporation, that they have an opportunity to seek investors. They requested as well that the basis for
the capital infusion figures be disclosed, and noted that none of them had received the Report of Examination (ROE) which
finalizes the audit findings.
4. The Rural Bank of Paranaque, Inc. filed a complaint for nullification of the BSP ROE with application for TRO. RBPI prayed
that Fonacier, her subordinates, agents, or any other person acting in her behalf be enjoined from submitting the ROE or any
similar report to the Monetary Board (MB), or if the ROE had already been submitted, the MB be enjoined from acting on the
basis of said ROE, on the allegation that the failure to furnish the bank with a copy of the ROE violated its right to due process.
5. The other banks subjected to examination also joined. RTC ruled in favor of the banks, they then issued the writs of
preliminary injunction prayed for. It held that it had been the practice of the SED to provide the ROEs to the banks before
submission to the MB. It further held that as the banks are the subjects of examinations, they are entitled to copies of the
ROEs. The denial by petitioners of the banks’ requests for copies of the ROEs was held to be a denial of the banks’ right to due
process.
6. CA affirmed decision of RTC. BSP went to the SC.
ISSUE(S): Whether or not the banks are entitled to copies of the ROEs? NO.
RATIO:
The respondent banks have failed to show that they are entitled to copies of the ROEs. They can point to no provision of law, no
section in the procedures of the BSP that shows that the BSP is required to give them copies of the ROEs. Sec. 28 of RA 7653, or the New
Central Bank Act, which governs examinations of banking institutions, provides that the ROE shall be submitted to the MB; the bank
examined is not mentioned as a recipient of the ROE.
The respondent banks cannot claim a violation of their right to due process if they are not provided with copies of the ROEs. The
same ROEs are based on the lists of findings/ exceptions containing the deficiencies found by the SED examiners when they examined
the books of the respondent banks. As found by the RTC, these lists of findings/exceptions were furnished to the officers or
representatives of the respondent banks, and the respondent banks were required to comment and to undertake remedial measures
stated in said lists. Despite these instructions, respondent banks failed to comply with the SED’s directive.
Respondent banks are already aware of what is required of them by the BSP, and cannot claim violation of their right to due process
simply because they are not furnished with copies of the ROEs.
Further, the CA held that if the contents of the ROEs are essentially the same as those of the lists of findings or exceptions provided
to said banks, there is no reason not to give copies of the ROEs to the banks. This is a flawed conclusion, since if the banks are already
aware of the contents of the ROEs, they cannot say that fairness and transparency are not present. If sanctions are to be imposed upon
the respondent banks, they are already well aware of the reasons for the sanctions, having been informed via the lists of
findings/exceptions, demolishing that particular argument. The ROEs would then be superfluities to the respondent banks, and should
not be the basis for a writ of preliminary injunction.
*Other discussions* The issuance by the RTC of writs of preliminary injunction is an unwarranted interference with the powers of the
MB. Secs. 29 and 30 of RA 765310 refer to the appointment of a conservator or a receiver for a bank, which is a power of the MB for
which they need the ROEs done by the supervising or examining department. The writs of preliminary injunction issued by the trial
court hinder the MB from fulfilling its function under the law. The actions of the MB under Secs. 29 and 30 of RA 7653 "may not be
restrained or set aside by the court except on petition for certiorari on the ground that the action taken was in excess of jurisdiction or
with such grave abuse of discretion as to amount to lack or excess of jurisdiction." The writs of preliminary injunction order are
precisely what cannot be done under the law by preventing the MB from taking action under either Sec. 29 or Sec. 30 of RA 7653.