Orencia Vs Enrile
Orencia Vs Enrile
Orencia Vs Enrile
L-28997
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SECOND DIVISION
Office of the Solicitor General Felix V. Makasiar for respondent-appellees Juan Ponce Enrile, etc., et al.
FERNANDO, J.:p
Petitioner, in his appeal against a lower court decision, dismissing his suit for mandamus to compel respondent
officials, the then Secretary of Justice, the then Commissioner of Land Registration and the then Commissioner of
Civil Service, 1 to recognize his alleged right as Assistant Chief, Clerks of Court Division, Land Registration
Commission is confronted with obstacles not only formidable but insurmountable in character. For all the skill
evident in his brief as appellant, submitted by his counsel, former Delegate Ramon Gonzales, he was not able to
demonstrate his clear legal right to such a position. Nor is the procedural hurdle the only one that stands in the
way. There are barriers substantive in character that refuse to yield even under the most vigorous and insistent
attack. For the crucial issue, a public office being involved and public interest being the prime consideration, is
whether the choice for the position of Assistant Chief of the Clerks of Court Division of the Land Registration
Commission should fall on respondent Guillermina M. Gener, a member of the Bar, rather than on petitioner,
whose educational attainment was that of a high school graduate. For respondent officials, the answer was not in
doubt. Since there was a new legal provision to be construed, one which admittedly, to follow the approach of
counsel for petitioner, has an ambiguous aspect, they chose to follow the principle that a public office is a public
trust. Certainly, such a contemporaneous construction, one moreover dictated by the soundest constitutional
postulate, is entitled to the highest respect from the judiciary. In manifesting such an attitude, the lower court could
not have been in error. We affirm.
What did transpire in this suit? From petitioner's statement of the case: "On June 20, 1967, petitioner-appellant
filed the said petition for mandamus with preliminary injunction before the Manila Court of First Instance against
respondents docketed as Civil Case No. 69840, alleging substantially that he is the deputy clerk of court of the
Clerks of Court Division of the Land Registration Commission, an he has been performing functions of Assistant
Chief of said division and has been considered and recognized as such until Rep. Act 4040, enacted June 18,
1964 increasing the salaries of Assistant Chiefs of Divisions, among others, implemented where he was left out
while co-assistant chief of the nine (9) other divisions of the Land Registration Commission were so recognized
and extended increased compensation, in spite of his protest to respondents Secretary of Justice, Land
Registration Commissioner, and Commissioner of Civil Service; and to add insult to injury, respondent Guillermina
M. Gener, was appointed assistant of the Clerks of Court Division, when there was no vacancy to said position and
given an increased compensation of P9,600.00 for the said position, while petitioner continued to receive the old
rate of P3,070.08 per annum, and praying that he be extended similar recognition as assistant chief of the Clerks
of Court Division of the Land Registration Commission, and paid the corresponding salary under Rep. Act 4040
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of Court Division of the Land Registration Commission, and paid the corresponding salary under Rep. Act 4040
and that the appointment of respondent Guillermina M. Gener be declared null and void, with damages and
attorney's fees. On July 17, 1967, respondents filed their answer, and after usual admissions and denials,
interposed a defense that petitioner is unqualified for the position of Assistant Chief, Clerks of Court Division, and
being a new position created under Republic Act 4040, the same can only be filed by a qualified person; that
respondent [Gener], being a lawyer, is more qualified than petitioner who is only a high school graduate with
second grade civil service eligibility, and praying that the petition be dismissed." 2
Then from his statement of facts: "Petitioner is a deputy clerk of court of the Clerks of Court Division, Land
Registration Commission, having been appointed as such on July 16, 1962 after having [risen] from the ranks for
the last 23 years in said office ... with compensation of P3,070.08 per annum ... . The Clerks of Court Division is
one of the ten (10) divisions in the Land Registration Commission, all of which prior to Rep. Act 4040 are headed,
each by a Chief and Assistant Chief, but none of them carries an appointment of Division Chief and Assistant
Chief, although they are considered and recognized as such, ... ." 3 Then on the very next page of his brief,
petitioner made clear that his position was not Assistant Chief of the Clerks of Court Division, for there was none
as yet existing, but Deputy Clerk of Court. 4
The rest of his statement of facts follows: "On July 6, 1964, petitioner formally requested respondent commissioner
of Land Registration commission for recommendation and payment of his differential salary, which request was,
however, denied on July 10, 1964. ... On September 1, 1964, petitioner appealed to the Secretary of Justice, but
his appeal was likewise denied ... . From the ruling of the Secretary of Justice, he appealed to respondent
Commissioner of Civil Service on June 3, 1965, and, again, he was rebuffed on February 21, 1966 ... . On July 29,
1966, said respondent Gener was appointed Assistant Chief of the Clerks of Court Division effective July 1, 1966,
by the respondent Secretary of Justice, upon recommendation of respondent Land Registration Commission, and
duly attested to by the Commissioner of Civil Service ... . Aggrieved, petitioner has brought the present suit." 5
Petitioner's own summation of the matter thus renders clear that until the passage of Republic Act No. 4040, there
was no such position as Assistant Chief of the Clerks of Court Division. It would be only through the utmost
straining of words that an assertion may be made as to his right thereto, specially so as his designation was
specifically of Deputy Clerk of Court. Where, then, is that clear legal right so indispensable for a suit of mandamus
to prosper? His claim being far-fetched and untenable, it is not for him to dispute the appointment of respondent
Gener, possessed of the very qualification of membership in the Bar which petitioner sadly lacks. That is to accord
the principle of public office being a public trust. Moreover, in a case where such appointment was sustained by
respondent Secretary of Justice and found favor with respondent Commissioner Civil Service, the
contemporaneous construction thus placed on the legal provision in Republic Act No. 4040, admitting its
ambiguity, is for this court to uphold. Hence, as noted at the outset, the appealed decision must be affirmed.
1. "Mandamus," as held in JRS Business Corporation v. Montesa, 6 a 1968 decision, "is the proper remedy if it
could be shown that there was neglect on the part of a tribunal in the performance of an act, which specifically the
law enjoins as a duty or an unlawful exclusion of a party from the use and enjoyment of a right to which he is
entitled. ... According to former Chief Justice Moran, only specific legal rights may be enforced by mandamus if
they are clear and certain. If the legal rights of the petition are not well-defined, clear, and certain, the petition
must be dismissed.' In support of the above view, Viuda e Hijos de Crispulo Zamora v. Wright was cited. As was
there categorically stated: 'This court has held that it is fundamental that the duties to be enforced by mandamus
must be those which are clear and enjoined by law or by reason of official station, and that petitioner must have a
clear, legal right to the thing demanded and that it must be the legal duty of the defendant to perform the required
act.' As expressed by the then Justice Recto in a subsequent opinion: 'It is well established that only specific legal
rights are enforceable by mandamus, that the right sought to be enforced must be certain and clear, and that the
writ not issue in cases where the right is doubtful.' To the same effect is the formulation of such doctrine by former
Justice Barrera: 'Stated otherwise, the writ never issues in doubtful cases. It neither confers powers nor imposes
duties. It is simply a command to exercise a power already possessed and to perform a duty already imposed.'" 7 A
month after the JRS Business Corporation v. Montesa decision, Justice J.B.L. Reyes, in Valdez v. Gutierrez, 8
categorically affirmed: "It is a rule well-entrenched in this jurisdiction that mandamus requires a showing of clear
and certain right, and never issues in doubtful cases." 9
2. This is not the worst of it. It is not merely that petitioner does not have a clear legal right. The more accurate
way of putting it is that he has no right at all to the position of Assistant Chief to the Clerks of Court Division. The
ingenuity displayed by counsel, worthy of a better cause, it might be added, cannot obscure the undeniable fact
that without Republic Act No. 4040, there would be no such position that is now the subject of dispute between him
and respondent Gener. His position left untouched, it is to be assumed, is that of deputy clerk. As was made
mention of, he did so admit, for that was something he could not very well deny. He would argue however that he
might as well "be considered as Assistant Chief, Clerks of Court Division." 10 This is not the language of
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might as well "be considered as Assistant Chief, Clerks of Court Division." 10 This is not the language of
affirmation but of surmise. It does credit to petitioner's respect for the truth, but it certainly leaves his contention
legally without support. Nothing daunted, petitioner would argue that to view the matter in a way opposed to his
would in effect "sanction removal of petitioner from such position, without cause in violation of the constitution ... ."
11 Here, he seeks shelter within the provision of Section 4 of the 1935 Constitution. 12 There is here a glaring
misapprehension. To so construe such provision by way merely of assurance of term to a government functionary
and to lose sight of the paramount public interest involved is to ignore and disregard the fundamental postulate
that a public office is a public trust. That accounts for the rather qualified and limited sense it possesses as
property safeguarded by the due process clause. 13 The essential requirement then for a place in the government
service is the possession of the requisite ability and competence. Only thus may there be fulfillment of a trust.
Evidently, that was in the mind of respondent dignitaries. A member of the bar, respondent Gener met the
prescribed standard. The position in question is that of Assistant Chief, precisely of the Division for the Clerks of
Court.
On the other hand, it is not disputed that petitioner's scholastic background is much more limited, he being merely
a high school graduate. 14 Under such circumstances, his previous experience in his capacity as Deputy Clerk of
Court attesting to his years of service could not avail. As this Court had occasion to observe in Aguilar vs. Nieva,
Jr.: 15 "Whatever sympathy might be elicited for public officials who had stayed long in the public service and who,
for some reason or another, did not receive the promotion to which they felt they should be entitled, cannot
obscure the discretion that the law leaves in the hands of the appointing official. ... The basic intent of the law itself
is to foster a more efficient public service. It is ever timely to keep in mind the public trust character of any
governmental office. Its creation is justifiable only if it serves to assure that the functions of government, whether
through the traditional public offices or government-owned or controlled corporations, be attended to with dispatch
and competence. Necessarily then, the appointing official, especially so where his position is a constitutional
creation, as in this case, must be left that necessary latitude of choice as to who can best discharge the
responsibilities of the office where the vacancy occurs. This is what happened here, and no legal infirmity can
validly be said to have vitiated such an appointment. The impassioned plea of counsel for petitioner, while not
without its plausibility, if the individual welfare of those in the ranks of government personnel were considered,
certainly cannot merit our approval in the light of the greater and more exigent public interest which has to be
served." 16
3. Presumably not unaware of the inherent weakness of his stand, petitioner would discern an alleged legislative
intent in Republic Act No. 4040 to accord him the recognition his heart is set on. What he sees is a mirage.
Assuming ambiguity in the applicable statute, it must receive a construction in accordance with and not in
disregard of the cardinal postulate of a public office being a public trust. Moreover, if there is any other principle of
legal hermeneutics that can be invoked, it is that of contemporaneous construction. Petitioner, after the unanimity
shown by the Commissioner of Land Registration, the Secretary of Justice, and the Commissioner of Civil Service
on the precise point at issue, certainly is not in a position to do so. All three find his pretension bereft of any merit.
They are for respondent Gener. It is not inappropriate to note that such a principle was given expression by
Justice Malcolm in Molina v. Rafferty 17 in these words: "Courts will should respect the contemporaneous
construction placed upon a statute by the executive officers whose duty it is to enforce it, and unless such
interpretation is clearly erroneous will ordinarily be controlled thereby." 18 Later that same year in 1918, in
Madrigal v. Rafferty, 19 there was a reiteration of the same doctrine by the same jurist. So it has been ever since.
20
WHEREFORE, the lower court decision of March 26, 1968, dismissing the petition for mandamus, is affirmed. No
costs.
Zaldivar (Chairman), Barredo, Antonio, Fernandez and Muñoz Palma, * JJ., concur.
Footnotes
1 Thus it was former Secretary Juan Ponce Enrile former Commissioner of Land Registration Antonio
Noblejas and former Commissioner of Civil Service Abelardo Subido who were named as
respondents. In the course of litigation, their successors were substituted in their place.
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3 Ibid, 5.
4 Ibid, 6.
5 Ibid, 8.
7 Ibid, 197-198. 3 Moran, Comments on the Rules of Court, 1963 Edition, 172, supplies the citation.
The Viuda e Hijos de Zamora v. Wright decision is reported in 53 Phil. 613 (1929). The excerpt from
Justice Recto comes from Sanson v. Barrios, 63 Phil. 198, 202 (1936), and that from Justice Barrera
is found in Alzate v. Aldana, L-18085, May 31, 1963, 8 SCRA 219.
9 Ibid, 664. Cf. Lemi v. Valencia, L-20768, November 29, 1968, 26 SCRA 203; Commissioner of
Immigration v. Go Tieng, L-22581, May 21, 1969, 28 SCRA 237; Vda. de Serra v. Salas, L-27150,
November 28, 1969, 30 SCRA 541; Del Rosario v. Subido, L-30091, January 30, 1970, 31 SCRA 382;
Yuvienco v. Canonoy, L-23352, June 30, 1971, 39 SCRA 597; Enriquez, Jr. v. Bidin, L-29620,
October 12, 1972, 47 SCRA 183.
11 Ibid, 23.
12 According to Article XII, Sec. 4 of the 1935 Constitution: "No officer or employee in the Civil Service
shall be removed or suspended except for cause as provided by law." Such a provision in identical
language is reproduced as Article XII, B, Sec. 3 of the present Constitution.
16 Ibid, 121-122.
18 Ibid, 555. Cf. In re Allen, 2 Phil. 630 (1903) and Government v. Municipality of Binangonan, 34
Phil. 518 (1916).
19 38 Phil. 414.
20 Cf. Phil. Sugar Centrals Agency v. The Insular Collector of Customs, 51 Phil. 131 (1927); Yra v.
Abaño, 52 Phil. 3 (1928); Guanio v. Fernandez, 55 Phil. 814 (1931) ; People v. Hernandez, 59 Phil.
272 (1933) ; Ortua v. Singson Encarnacion, 59 Phil. 440 (1934); Bengzon v. Secretary of Justice, 62
Phil. 912 (1936); Everett v. Bautista, 69 Phil. 137 (1939); Tamayo v. Manila Hotel Co., 101 Phil. 810
(1957).
* Designated to sit with the Second Division in place of Justice Aquino who is disqualified to take part.
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