Department of Transportation vs. Philippine Petroleum Sea Transport Association Digest
Department of Transportation vs. Philippine Petroleum Sea Transport Association Digest
Department of Transportation vs. Philippine Petroleum Sea Transport Association Digest
SUMMARY: The SC upheld the constitutionality of establishing the "Oil Pollution Management Fund," under
Section 22(a) of Republic Act No. (RA) 9483 and Section 1, Rule of its Implementing Rules and Regulations
(IRR), by imposing "ten centavos (10c) per liter for every delivery or transshipment of oil made by tanker barges
and tanker haulers."
DOCTRINE: In Tañada and Macapagal v. Cuenco, et al., the Court summarized the concept of political questions
in this manner: x x it refers to "those questions which, under the Constitution, are to be decided by the people in
their sovereign capacity, or in regard to which full discretionary authority has been delegated to the Legislature
or executive branch of the Government." It is concerned with issues dependent upon the wisdom, not legality, of
a particular measure.
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One of the requisites for an action for declaratory relief is that it must be filed before any breach or violation of
an obligation. Thus, there is no actual case involved in a Petition for Declaratory Relief. It cannot, therefore, be
the proper vehicle to invoke the judicial review powers to declare a statute unconstitutional. It is elementary that
before this Court can rule on a constitutional issue, there must first be a justiciable controversy. A justiciable
controversy refers to an existing case or controversy that is appropriate or ripe for judicial determination, not one
that is conjectural or merely anticipatory.
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To determine whether there has been compliance with the constitutional requirement that the subject of an act
shall be expressed in its title, the Court has repeatedly laid down the rule that - Constitutional provisions relating
to the subject matter and titles of statutes should not be so narrowly construed as to cripple or impede the power
of legislation. The requirement that the subject of an act shall be expressed in its title should receive reasonable
and not a technical construction. It is sufficient if the title be comprehensive enough reasonably to include the
general object which a statute seeks to effect, without expressing each and every end and means necessary or
convenient for the accomplishing of that object. Mere details need not be set forth. The title need not be an
abstract or index of the act. Also, in Sumulong v. Comelec, the Court held that all that can reasonably be required
is that the title shall not be made to cover legislation incongruous in itself, and which by no fair intendment can
be considered as having necessary or proper connection.
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All that is required of a valid classification is that it be reasonable, which means that the classification should be
based on substantial distinctions which make for real differences, that it must be germane to the purpose of the
law; that it must not be limited to existing conditions only; and that it must apply equally to each member of the
class. This Court has held that the standard is satisfied if the classification or distinction is based on a reasonable
foundation or rational basis and is not palpably arbitrary.
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For valid delegation of power, it is essential that the law delegating the power must be (1) complete in itself, that
it must set forth the policy to be executed by the delegate and (2) it must fix standard - limits of which are
sufficiently determinate or determinable - to which the delegate must conform. On the second requirement,
Osmeña v. Orbos explained that a sufficient standard need not be spelled out and could be implied from the
policy of the law.
As aptly stated in People v. Vera, the true distinction "is between the delegation of power to make the law, which
necessarily involves discretion as to what it shall be, and conferring an authority or discretion as to its execution,
to be exercised under and in pursuance of the law. The first cannot be done; to the latter no valid objection can
be made." In other words, the policy must be determined by the legislature and the executive's authority is limited
only to the furtherance of this identified policy. The executive cannot add, modify, or delete such.
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A profession, trade or calling is property right within the meaning of our constitutional guarantees. One cannot
be deprived of the right to work and the right to make living because these rights are property rights, the arbitrary
and unwarranted deprivation of which normally constitutes an actionable wrong. Nonetheless, equally well-
settled is the rule that "where the due process and equal protection clauses are invoked, considering that they
are not fixed rules but rather broad standards, there is a need for proof of such persuasive character as would
lead to such a conclusion. Absent such a showing, the presumption of validity must prevail."
It would be improper to declare an imposition as unlawful or unconstitutional on the basis of purely hypothetical
and unsubstantiated computations. In refusing to declare a provision of law as unconstitutional based on
theoretical assumptions, this Court, in Abakada Guro Party List v. Ermita, emphatically stated that "[t]he Court
will not engage in a legal joust where premises are what ifs, arguments, theoretical and facts, uncertain. Any
disquisition by the Court on this point will only be, as Shakespeare describes life in Macbeth, 'full of sound and
fury, signifying nothing.'"
Police power is the plenary power vested in the legislature to make, ordain, and establish wholesome and
reasonable laws, statutes and ordinances, not repugnant to the Constitution, for the good and welfare of the
people. This power to prescribe regulations to promote the health, morals, education, good order or safety, and
general welfare of the people flows from the recognition that salus populi est suprema lex-the welfare of the
people is the supreme law.
FACTS: Recognizing the gravity and extent of the Guimaras oil spill, the lack of proper response strategy, the
absence of the necessary equipment for containing, cleaning up, and removing spilled oil, and the difficulty in
pinning the liability on oil companies, Congress was prompted to pass law implementing the International
Convention on Civil Liability for Oil Pollution Damage (1969 Civil Liability Convention) and the International
Convention on the Establishment of an International Fund for Compensation for Oil Pollution Damage (1992
Fund Convention). The 1969 Civil Liability Convention was later amended by the 1992 Protocol (1992 Civil
Liability Convention).
On June 2, 2007, RA 9483, entitled "An Act Providing For The Implementation of the Provisions of the 1992
International Convention on Civil Liability for Oil Pollution Damage and the 1992 International Convention on the
Establishment of an International Fund for Compensation for Oil Pollution Damage, Providing Penalties for
Violations thereof, and for Other Purposes" or simply the "Oil Pollution Compensation Act of 2007," was signed
into law. The provision relevant to this case, Section 22 of RA 9483, provides for the establishment of an "Oil
Pollution Management Fund" (OPMF).
Nine years later, or on April 12, 2016, the IRR of RA 9483 was promulgated, with Section 1, Rule thereof
implementing the questioned Section 22 of RA 9483.
A month after the promulgation of the IRR, they filed a Petition for Declaratory Relief (with Prayer for the Issuance
of a Temporary Restraining Order and/or a Writ of Preliminary Injunction) under Rule 63, contesting Section 22
(a) of RA 9483, as well as Section 1, Rule of its IRR. The petition was raffled off and heard by the Regional Trial
Court, Branch 216, Quezon City (RTC). There, they argued that the obligation to contribute to the OPMF solely
imposed upon the owners and operators of oil/petroleum tankers and barges violates their right to equal
protection of the law; that the ten-centavo (10c) impost is confiscatory and, thus, violates their right to due
process; Section 22 (a) is a prohibited rider; and, finally, the provision provides an undue delegation of legislative
power.
On February 22, 2017, the RTC rendered the questioned Decision granting the petition for declaratory relief and
ruling in favor of respondents.
Petitioners went directly to the SC via the present petition for review on certiorari assailing the February 22, 2017
Decision of the RTC. Petitioners argue that the RTC erred in declaring Section 22(a) of RA 9483 and its
implementing rule unconstitutional, given that respondents' petition for declaratory relief questioned the wisdom
behind them and was, thus, beyond the lower court's jurisdiction. Petitioners further add that the classification in
Section 22 of RA 9483 and its IRR is reasonable and just, and does not violate the equal protection clause.
Likewise, petitioners maintain that public interest in protecting the marine wealth of the country warrants the
imposition of the 10-centavo impost. Finally, the petitioners insist that the creation of the OPMF is relevant to the
subject matter of RA 9483.
ISSUES:
WoN the creation of the OPMF can be the subject of judicial inquiry
o YES. While it may appear that contesting the creation of the OPMF amounts to questioning the
wisdom behind the measure, such is not the case. As correctly argued by respondents, the Court
may take judicial action on said question since it is not contesting the creation of the OPMF per
se, but rather its inclusion in RA 9483, and the specific parameters incorporated by the legislature
in the implementation of the contested provision. More importantly, violations of the due process
and the equal protection clauses of the 1987 Constitution alleged by the respondents are well-
recognized grounds for a judicial inquiry into a legislative measure.
WoN the Petition for Declaratory Relief is the proper remedy
o NO. To question the constitutionality of the subject issuances, respondents should have invoked
the expanded certiorari jurisdiction under Section of Article VIII of the 1987 Constitution. The
adverted section defines judicial power as the power not only "to settle actual controversies
involving rights which are legally demandable and enforceable," but also "to determine whether
or not there has been a grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction on
the part of any branch or instrumentality of the Government."
o In any case, even if the petition for declaratory relief is not the proper remedy, the need to finally
resolve the issues involved in this case far outweighs the rigid application of the rules. The Court,
thus, treats the petition filed by the respondents before the court a quo as a petition for certiorari
and prohibition.
WoN Section 22(a)of RA 9483 creating the Oil Pollution Management Fund is a proscribed rider
o NO. As argued by respondents, the thrust of the 1992 Civil Liability and the 1992 Fund
Conventions is to impose upon covered ship owners strict liability for pollution damage arising
from oil spills and to provide [28] compensation for the victims thereof. On the other hand, the
questioned OPMF governs the immediate containment, removal, and clean -up operations in oil
pollution cases and provides for the conduct of research, enforcement, and monitoring activities
of relevant agencies. On the basis thereof, it would appear that the Conventions and the OPMF
cover two different subject mattersthat is, providing compensation versus pollution containment
and clean-up-as asserted by respondents. Thus, prima facie, one would easily agree with
respondents' contention. Such simplistic, if not myopic, view is not the proper measure to
determine whether a provision of law should be declared as unconstitutional.
o It would undoubtedly be improper for this Court to make a superficial reading of the texts of the
conventions in order to determine whether the inclusion of Section 22 in RA 9483, which was
enacted to implement these Conventions, is infirm more in-depth analysis of the conventions is
necessary.
o A review of the Conventions reveals that they do not only cover damage claims by affected
individuals but also all amounts encompassed by the term "pollution damage" which is defined
therein as:
(a) loss or damage caused outside the ship by contamination resulting from the escape or
discharge of oil from the ship, wherever such escape or discharge may occur, provided
that compensation for impairment of the environment other than loss of profit from such
impairment shall be limited to costs of reasonable measures of reinstatement actually
undertaken or to be undertaken;
(b) the costs of preventive measures and further loss or damage caused by preventive
measures.
o The Conventions, therefore, also cover damage to property, containment, clean-up, and
rehabilitation. Thus, the policy underpinning the establishment of the OPMF in Section 22(a) of
RA 9483 and its IRR is wholly consistent with the objectives of the conventions.
o Indeed, by employing preventive and/or immediate containment measures or response
techniques, the State is but affording protection to persons or all stakeholders who stand to suffer
from oil pollution incidents-the main thrust of the conventions that is now effectively translated
and implemented in Section 22 (a) of RA 9483 and its IRR. In other words, by creating the OPMF,
Congress sought to ensure that our enforcement agencies are capable of protecting our marine
wealth and preventing harm from being caused to the people and their livelihood by reason of
these unfortunate events.
WoN the classification in Section 22 of RA 9483 and its IRR violates the equal protection clause when it
singled out "owners and operators of oil or petroleum tankers and barges"
o NO. For one, bear in mind that the purpose of the subject legislation is the implementation of the
1992 Civil Liability Convention and the 1992 Fund Convention. Both Conventions only expressly
cover "sea-going vessel and seaborne craft of any type whatsoever constructed or adapted for
the carriage of oil in bulk as cargo x x x." This alone already forecloses any argument against the
validity of the alleged classification since the implementation by RA 9483 of the subject
Conventions necessarily carries with it the adoption of the coverage and limitations employed in
said texts.
o Furthermore, We cannot subscribe to respondents' proposition that since all vessels plying
Philippine waters are susceptible to accidents which may cause oil spills, all should be made to
contribute to the OPMF. While all vessels, channels, and storage facilities that carry or store oil
are capable of causing oil pollution, this does not make them "similarly situated" within the context
of the equal protection clause.
o Aside from the difference in the purposes behind their existence and navigation, it is
internationally well-recognized that oil tankers pose a greater risk to the environment and to
people. As matter of fact, these types of vessels have long been considered as separate class
and are being given a different treatment by various organizations.
o As regards respondents' contention that since RA 9483 came about because of the spate of oil
spillage at the time of its enactment, this violates the requirement that the classification must not
be limited to existing conditions only, the argument does not hold water. A statute or provision
thereof is said to be limited to existing conditions only if it cannot be applied to future conditions
as well. Here, We cannot, by any stretch of imagination, agree with respondents' proposition.
Suffice it to state that enacting a piece of legislation as a response to a problem, incident, or
occurrence does not make it "limited to existing conditions only." Assessing whether a statute or
provision meets said requirement necessitates a review of the provision or statute itself and not
the cause or trigger for its enactment. To require otherwise would be to improperly tie the hands
of our legislature in enacting laws designed to address the various matters, incidents, and
occurrences that may arise in a highly-dynamic and unpredictable society.
WoN the conferment on the OPMF Committee of the authority to determine the rate of imposition for the
second year of its implementation onwards is an undue delegation of legislative power
o NO. A review of the contested provision reveals that contrary to respondents' assertion that the
law only provides a vague standard for the exercise of the delegated authority, there are in fact a
number of set parameters included therein within which the authority to fix the amount of the
impost shall be exercised. These are:
1. the purposes for which the fund was set up;
2. the Fund shall be used to finance the following activities:
a. Immediate containment, removal and clean-up operations of the PCG in all Oil
pollution cases, whether covered by this Act or not; and
b. Research, enforcement and monitoring activities of relevant agencies such as
the PCG, MARINA and PPA, and other ports authority of the DOTC, Environmental
Management Bureau of the DENR, and the DOE;
3. Ninety percent (90%) of the Fund shall be maintained annually for the activities set forth
under item (a) of this paragraph;
4. Any amounts specifically appropriated for said Fund under the General Appropriations
Act shall be used exclusively for the activities set forth under item (a) of this paragraph;
5. In no case shall the Fund be used for personal services expenditures except for the
compensation of those involved in clean-up operations.
o These parameters-the specified inclusions and exclusions, and the share that the itemized
activities shall have in the OPMF-to Us, adequately meet the required standards that make a
delegation of legislative power valid. By being statutorily mandated to work within this identified
scope and these limitations, the OPMF Committee does not actually have free reign in the
exercise of its functions under Section 22. It has to ensure that the amount of impost that it will
set, in addition to any sum that they may receive from the GAA and from other sources such as
fines, penalties, grants, donations, and endowments, is sufficient to meet the above stated needs
and activities necessary for the promotion of the thrust of RA 9483, which is the protection of the
environment and the people from oil pollution damage.
o Another ground that favors the validity of the assailed provision is that what Section 22 vested in
them is merely the authority to fix the rate of the impost, taking into consideration the parameters
therein clearly stated. In other words, this authority is actually limited by the sufficiency of the
Fund to meet the identified items. They were not given any discretion to add to these parameters
or to disregard them. In other words, the delegates are expected to faithfully follow these
standards set by the law, lest their actions will be struck down as illegal for having exceeded the
terms of the agency.
o With respect to measuring the adequacy of the country's capability to protect our waters, shores,
and the stakeholders from the effects of oil spills as mandated under the law, Sections 4 & 6 and
of RA 9483, which reflect certain policies under the Conventions, provide the gauge therefor.
o The rate of impost should, thus, be enough to accumulate an amount that, when combined with
the funds that will be derived from the appropriations under the GAA, grants, donations, and
endowment from various sources, domestic or foreign, can sufficiently enable our agencies to
fulfill their duty of protecting the country's marine wealth and the stakeholders by ensuring that
any damage caused by oil spills is minimal and the resulting cost can be fully or adequately
covered by the Conventions. Put differently, the rate of the impost for the succeeding years must
not be so low as to be insufficient to meet the budgetary needs of the agencies for the items
identified under Section 22. This is so since the mandate of the law will not be fulfilled if the
agencies' capacity for oil spill response is inadequate, ineffective, or less than what is necessary
for the declared purpose. Conversely, it must also not be so high that the totality of the amount
accumulated from the various sources gravely exceeds the financial requirements for said items.
Simply put, the sum of the amounts to be collected or received from the various sources must not
exceed the administrative costs and expenses of implementing the activities.
o With these, We find that the evils that the sufficient standards test seeks to prevent are amply
addressed by the questioned Section 22, as well as the abovementioned provisions which provide
the guidelines therefor. By setting forth the identified parameters and the policy that the funds to
be accumulated by virtue of the impost are for the purpose of protecting the country's marine
wealth and ensuring full or adequate compensation to the victims of oil spills, the metes and
bounds of the exercise of the delegated authority have been sufficiently laid out. Consequently,
the manner by which the delegates are to exercise the conferred authority can be measured
against these parameters and checked for any evidence of arbitrariness or excessiveness.
WoN the imposition of the 10-centavo impost violates the due process clause
o NO. In asserting that the 10-centavo per liter impost is unconstitutional, respondents have the
burden of proof to convince this Court that indeed said imposition is arbitrary, oppressive,
excessive, and confiscatory, thereby violating the constitutional proscription against deprivation
of property without due process of law.
o Respondents, however, by providing nothing more than hypothetical computations of their losses,
failed to discharge this burden. Indeed, persuading this Court that their businesses would suffer
to large extent if they will be made to shoulder the 10-centavo/liter impost cannot be satisfactorily
discharged, as to overcome a strong presumption of constitutionality, by the mere expedient of
presenting sample scenario, the truthfulness or accuracy of which has not even been proven.
o The hypothetical computations provided by the respondents do not equate to a material and
actual impact that the questioned impost will have on their businesses. In other words, these are
mere mock-up situations which discount several factors, including any adjustments that a
business may undertake to secure profits despite the impost.
o What further prevents Us from relying on said computations is that it would be imprudent for this
Court to take these computations without grain of salt. While it is possible that these income
statements are truthful, it is also possible that they are not. The Court is allowed some degree of
skepticism and is not expected to take these "evidence" hook, line and sinker especially when
what is in question is the constitutionality and validity of a legislative enactment.
o Additionally, the error in said computations lies in the fact that it failed to consider the operation
of Section 22 which dictates that the impost shall be 10 centavos per liter only on the first year.
This allows for a retention, increase, or reduction in the succeeding years, whichever is
determined to be necessary. This scenario was obviously not taken into account when
respondents made said computations.
o But respondents, adamant in having the impost invalidated, draw Our attention to their
computation of the amount that would be collected if said imposition would be enforced.
Respondents contend that the imposition of the 10-centavo charge for the years 2007-2012 would
have yielded approximately Two Billion Pesos (Php2,000,000,000.00) annually. They then
compare this with the cost of the clean-up for the Guimaras Oil Spill, by far the worst oil spill in
Philippine history. According to them, it only amounted to Php775,594,885.00, which amount is
significantly lower than the amount that the imposition would yield.
o The arguments fail to persuade. The determination of whether a measure or charge is
confiscatory or not, within the purview of the due process clause, will not solely depend on the
amount that will be accumulated therefrom. Such a gauge is downright erroneous. Other factors
must likewise be considered such as the purposes for which the fund will be used and the costs
which said purposes entail, among others. Viewed from the context of oil spills and the current
incapacity of our enforcement agencies to timely and adequately respond to oil spill incidents,
plus the aforementioned characteristics of our natural resources and the environment, We cannot
safely conclude that any amount, even millions or billions, is actually exorbitant or excessive in
the furtherance of RA 9483's objectives. And these computations fail to take into account the fact
that, guilty of reiteration, the impost is not perpetually fixed at 10 centavos per liter. Thus, if the
laudable purposes of RA 9483 can be sufficiently met and financed by a lesser impost, then there
is nothing to prevent the proper reduction of the rate. Another flaw in the arguments is that they
are incomplete in the sense that without any data as to the costs of the necessary tools,
equipment, inventories, trainings, research, among others, needed for the furtherance of RA
9483, there is no way to determine whether the initial amount that will be collected from the 10-
centavo impost during the first year of operation of Section 22 is already unjustifiably massive,
making the 10-centavo rate exorbitant and confiscatory. We cannot simply rely on the cost of the
Guimaras oil spill clean-up because as repeatedly intimated, oil spills are unpredictable and their
extent is almost entirely uncontrollable. One incident cannot serve as the basis for estimating the
costs needed for oil spill response, among others. Furthermore, the OPMF does not only cover
the conduct of the clean-up itself. The OPMF, as previously explained, was primarily created for
capacity-building, that is, to give our local agencies the capability to render emergency response
measures and not rely heavily, if not entirely, on foreign assistance. Thus, to use the cost of the
clean-up in the Guimaras incident as the benchmark for determining whether the impost is
reasonable or not will definitely lead to misguided conclusions. Most importantly, it must be borne
in mind that the impost provided in Section 22 is not revenue-raising tax intended to supplement
the government's treasury. What Section 22 does is to regulate the conduct of the business of
owners and operators of oil tankers and barges by imposing upon them the duty to contribute to
the protection of Philippine waters which they directly use in the conduct of their trade, and which
they expose to risk of possibly irreparable destruction brought about by the spillage or leakage of
the product that they carry and profit from.
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