Liban
Liban
Liban
VIARI, Petitioners,
vs.
RICHARD J. GORDON, Respondent.
PHILIPPINE NATIONAL RED CROSS, Intervenor.
FACTS:
ISSUE:
HELD:
1.) No, the constitutional provision does not apply to the respondent.
The President does not appoint the Chairman of the PNRC. Neither
does the head of any department, agency, commission or board appoint
the PNRC Chairman. Thus, the PNRC Chairman is not an official or
employee of the Executive branch since his appointment does not fall
under Section 16, Article VII of the Constitution. Certainly, the PNRC
Chairman is not an official or employee of the Judiciary or Legislature. This
leads us to the obvious conclusion that the PNRC Chairman is not an
official or employee of the Philippine Government. Not being a government
official or employee, the PNRC Chairman, as such, does not hold a
government office or employment.
The PNRC Board exercises all corporate powers of the PNRC. The
PNRC is controlled by private sector individuals. Decisions or actions of the
PNRC Board are not reviewable by the President. The President cannot
reverse or modify the decisions or actions of the PNRC Board. Neither can
the President reverse or modify the decisions or actions of the PNRC
Chairman. It is the PNRC Board that can review, reverse or modify the
decisions or actions of the PNRC Chairman. This proves again that the
office of the PNRC Chairman is a private office, not a government office.
ISSUE:
HELD:
The PNRC Charter and its amendatory laws have not been
questioned or challenged on constitutional grounds, not even in this case
before the Court now.