Saln 2 Dof VS Omb

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G.R. No. 238510.

July 14, 2021

DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE - REVENUE INTEGRITY PROTECTION SERVICE (DOF - RIPS),


REPRESENTED BY REYNALITO L. LAZARO AND JESUS S. BUENO, PETITIONER, VS.
OFFICE OF THE OMBUDSMAN AND EVELYN RODRIGUEZ RAMIREZ, RESPONDENTS.

The Code of Conduct and Ethical Standards for Public Officials and Employees stipulates a
mechanism that immediately reveals the non-filing of statements of assets, liabilities, and net worth
(SALNs), as well as the filing of incomplete and/or formally defective SALNs. Because immediate
discovery is facilitated, the prescription for liability ensuing from non-filing or defective filing, inclusive
of non-declarations or mis-declarations, shall begin to run from the due date of filing.

To be liable for falsification under Article 171(4) of the Revised Penal Code, 3 a public officer or
employee must have taken advantage of his or her official position. This means that he or she must
have wielded particular power in connection with the preparation of a document closely related with
his or her office and functions, so that no false declaration could be made without the unique
opportunities and competencies facilitated by his or her office. Particular privity between one's office
and the document allegedly falsified is essential. A document such as a SALN, which is prepared by
public officers across the board, and is not connected with the unique competencies afforded by a
specific public office, cannot be characterized as susceptible to the abuse contemplated by Article
171(4).

FACTS:
Respondent- Ramirez served as Revenue Officer at the Bureau of Internal Revenue.

Department of Finance – Revenue Integrity Protection Service (DOF-RIPS), received a letter,


sent by a Batangas Bureau of Internal Revenue "concerned taxpayer," charging Ramirez with
extortion. Specifically, the letter claimed that Ramirez would "usually harass businessmen by
examining the books[,]" and would assess the tax payable "at a very high rate[.]" The businessmen
would then "compromise by paying half of the assessed tax[,]" but the official receipt only reflects
one-third of the payment.10

This letter prompted the DOF-RIPS to conduct a lifestyle check on Ramirez. In the course of
this, graft prevention and control officers reviewed Ramirez's 2000 to 2013 SALNs and cross-
checked their contents against data gathered from the Bureau of Internal Revenue, Land
Registration Authority, Land Transportation Office, Securities and Exchange Commission, and the
Department of Trade and Industry, among others.11

DOF-RIPS claimed it was apparent that Ramirez's acquisitions were grossly disproportionate to
her and her husband's combined incomes. Parenthetically, no income was ever reported for her
husband, except in 2012, in the amount of P898,684.54.58

In addition, the DOF-RIPS found that despite not having any travel authority issued to her by the
Department of Finance,59 Ramirez went abroad five times from 2000 to 2011. The DOF-RIPS noted
that these omissions violated Executive Order No. 6, series of 1986, concerning the need for a travel
authority before public officers may travel abroad.60
Acting on its findings, on November 28, 2014,61 the DOF-RIPS filed complaints against Ramirez
before the Office of the Ombudsman for: (1) violation of Section 8 of Republic Act No. 6713; (2)
forfeiture of ill-gotten wealth under Section 8 of Republic Act No. 3019,62 in relation to Republic Act
No. 1379;63 (3) perjury under Article 183 of the Revised Penal Code;64 and (4) falsification under
Article 171(4) of the Revised Penal Code.

Ramirez admitted ownership of the properties uncovered by the investigation. She maintained
that she lawfully acquired those properties through her salary and other legitimate funds.65 She
further claimed to have obtained loans from Batangas Rural Bank for Cooperatives,
Inc.,66 Producers Credit Corporation,67 and BPI Family Savings Bank.68 In addition, her husband
supposedly received proceeds of pensions from Insular Life Assurance Company, Ltd. and
Philippine American Life and General Insurance Company.69 Both Ramirez and her husband also
allegedly obtained income from businesses.70

ISSUE

whether or not public respondent Office of the Ombudsman gravely abused its discretion in ruling
that: first, private respondent Evelyn Rodriguez Ramirez's liability for violating Section 8 of Republic
Act No. 6713, concerning the non-declarations in her 2000 to 2005 SALNs has prescribed; and
second, that respondent Ramirez cannot be prosecuted for falsification under Article 171(4) of the
Revised Penal Code.

Del Rosario's, Casayuran's, Germar's, and Eneiro's dispositions were in keeping with how—
immediately after the requisite date for filing SALNs—the government is in a position to identify
those who failed to timely file. Conceivably, running a simple command on the Office of the
Ombudsman's database would have revealed the identities of those who failed to file on time.
Further, even without a computerized database, such checking would still have been easy and
straightforward, albeit crude. After all, the only thing that needs to be done is to check off names as
against a master list.

In the same vein, upon a public officer's filing of his or her SALN, the government is in a position
to make an initial review of its contents and form. Ultimately, it is not difficult to conceive of situations
when public officers: (1) miss the deadline; (2) make erroneous, inaccurate, or incomplete
declarations; and/or (3) make formal errors, all in good faith. It is precisely for this reason that the
Code of Conduct and Ethical Standards for Public Officials and Employees provides a mechanism,
not only for review, but even for prompting compliance by those who, in good faith, are unable to
comply with the SALN requirement's strictest terms.

II

The urgency and limited window of time within which the government must act and pursue
liability in relation to unfiled or defective SALNs is confirmed by how Section 8(C)(4) of the Code of
Conduct and Ethical Standards for Public Officials and Employees mandates the keeping of SALNs
for a period of only 10 years. Unless there is an ongoing investigation upon the arrival of the
10th year, archived SALNs may be destroyed. Consistent with this, the lack of archived SALNs that
have aged beyond 10 years should be interpreted as arising from compliance with Section 8(C)(4),
e.g., that they have been destroyed because the statutorily mandated period for keeping them has
lapsed:
SECTION 8. Statements and Disclosure. — Public officials and employees have an
obligation to accomplish and submit declarations under oath of, and the public has
the right to know, their assets, liabilities, net worth and financial and business
interests including those of their spouses and of unmarried children under eighteen
(18) years of age living in their households.

....

(C) Accessibility of documents. - (1) Any and all statements filed under
this Act, shall be made available for inspection at reasonable hours.

....

(4) Any statement filed under this Act shall be available to the
public for a period of ten (10) years after receipt of the
statement. After such period, the statement may be
destroyed unless needed in an ongoing investigation.

III

A statement of assets liabilities and net worth is not an end in itself. It is only a means to a
greater end. Office of the Ombudsman v. Racho115 explained how a SALN is a mechanism
designed "to curtail [the] 'acquisition of unexplained wealth"':

By mandate of law, every public official or government employee is required to


make a complete disclosure of his [or her] assets, liabilities and net worth in order to
suppress any questionable accumulation of wealth because the latter usually results
from non-disclosure of such matters. Hence, a public official or employee who has
acquired money or property manifestly disproportionate to his [or her] salary or his
[or her] other lawful income shall be prima facie presumed to have illegally acquired
it.

It should be understood that what the law seeks to curtail is "acquisition of


unexplained wealth." Where the source of the undisclosed wealth can be properly
accounted, then it is "explained wealth' which the law does not
penalize.116 (Emphasis supplied)

The Statement of Assets and Liabilities law "aims to guard against [the] accumulated wealth of
public servants that are grossly disproportionate to their income or other sources of income, and
which cannot be properly accounted for or explained[.]"117 Thus, errors made in good faith, and
mis-declarations or non-declarations that do not entail manifest, and unaccounted or unexplained
disproportion with sources of income do not signify dishonesty:

In this case, the discrepancies in the statement of Racho's assets are not the
results of mere carelessness. On the contrary, there is substantial evidence pointing
to a conclusion that Racho is guilty of dishonesty because of his unmistakable intent
to cover up the true source of his questioned bank deposits.

It should be emphasized, however, that mere misdeclaration of the SALN does


not automatically amount to dishonesty. Only when the accumulated wealth
becomes manifestly disproportionate to the employee's income or other sources of
income and the public officer/employee fails to properly account or explain his other
sources of income, does he become susceptible to dishonesty because when a
public officer takes an oath or office, he or she binds himself or herself to faithfully
perform the duties of the office and use reasonable skill and diligence, and to act
primarily for the benefit of the public. Thus, in the discharge of duties, a public officer
is to use that prudence, caution and attention which careful persons use in the
management of their affairs.118

Considering that the real evil sought to be addressed is the accumulation of ill-gotten wealth, our
legal system should guard against the weaponizing of SALNs where errors were made in good faith.
It should not mistake a lapse in compliance with a mere adjunct mechanism with the greater
authentic cause which that mechanism serves. A measure of leniency can be extended to casual,
isolated, and / or infrequent non-declarations or mis-declarations that do not point to a scheme to
mislead and defraud. Such non-declarations or mis-declarations are innocuous mistakes that do not
signal the accumulation of unexplained wealth, though they may signify a degree of carelessness.
Such innocuous mistakes may be addressed by the customary corrective action enabled by Section
10 of Republic Act No. 6713.

In any case, well-meaning, albeit occasionally imprecise or neglectful, public officers should not
be made to suffer the heavy penalties that are meant for those who are unequivocally nefarious,
those who take advantage of whatever benefits public office affords, and those who make a mockery
of the trust reposed in them by the public.

IV

In accordance with Section 10's wisdom, it follows that when the government is unable to timely
and dutifully discharge its function of making an initial review of filings, non-filings, and defective
filings, the period for extinguishing liability by way of prescription begins to run. This is true even
when it is manifest that the public officer concerned was in error. The government's failure to act
means that, at the appropriate time, no alternative is left except but to deem liability precluded.

Such is the government's fatal error here. This Court understands petitioner's lament. Indeed, all
indications point to how respondent Ramirez made egregious non-declarations and mis-declarations
that engender liability. Hence, the proper finding of probable cause for years following 2005.
However, the task of pursuing liability is a duty that the government must heedfully discharge. Doing
so entails acting in a timely manner as much as tending to the substantive content of the cases it
pursues. Act No. 3326 sets a period of prescription, and the Code of Conduct and Ethical Standards
for Public Officials and Employees spells out a wisdom for why prescription should be reckoned from
the date of the defective SALN's filing. The task of faithfully carrying out applicable laws compels this
Court to sustain the Office of the Ombudsman's ruling that prescription has set in.

Neither was there grave abuse of discretion in the Office of the Ombudsman's ruling that there is
no probable cause to indict respondent Ramirez for falsification.

Unlike the prescriptive period for charges of violating Section 8 of the Code of Conduct and
Ethical Standards for Public Officials and Employees, the prescriptive period for falsification under
Article 171 of the Revised Penal Code is 15 years. This offense is punished by "[t]he penalty
of prisión mayor and a fine not to exceed [P5,000.00."119 Article 25 of the Revised Penal Code
classifies prisión mayor as an afflictive penalty.120 Further, Article 90(1) provides that crimes
punishable by afflictive penalties other than reclusión perpetua or reclusión temporal shall prescribe
in 15 years.121

Despite the differing periods, as with violations of Section 8, prescription for the charge of
falsification arising from defective SALN declarations must similarly begin from the due date of filing
the specific SALN concerned. Regardless of the precise or nuanced nature of the ensuing charge,
the underlying wisdom of affording opportunities to rectify mistakes made in good faith remains. It
also remains that the government is in a position to readily identify errors that attend a SALN through
the review and compliance mechanism stipulated in Section 10 of the Code of Conduct and Ethical
Standards for Public Officials and Employees. All the same, the urgency of government action to
enforce liability is sustained by Section 8(C)(4)'s stipulation enabling the destruction of archived
SALNs that have aged beyond 10 years. 1âшphi1

In this case, a complaint was filed against respondent Ramirez on November 28, 2014. This
means that 15 years had not yet lapsed from the filing of the first SALN (e.g., 2000 SALN) involved
in the charges against her.

Nevertheless, there is a more fundamental reason for holding that respondent Ramirez cannot
be indicted for falsification under Article 171(4) of the Revised Penal Code. The Office of the
Ombudsman correctly noted that there is no indication that respondent Ramirez specifically took
advantage of her official position to enable her non-declarations and mis-declarations.

The elements that must be satisfied for liability to ensue under Article 171(4) are settled.
In Fullero v. People:122

Article 171, paragraph (4) of the Revised Penal Code, provides:

ART. 171. Falsification by public officer, employee or notary or ecclesiastic minister.


— The penalty of prision mayor and a fine not to exceed 5,000 pesos shall be
imposed upon any public officer, employee, or notary who, taking advantage of his
official position, shall falsify a document by committing any of the following acts:

xxx xxx xxx

4. Making untruthful statements in a narration of facts.

The elements of falsification in the above provision are as follows:

a) the offender makes in a public document untruthful statements in a


narration of facts;

b) he has a legal obligation to disclose the truth of the facts narrated by


him; and

c) the facts narrated by him are absolutely false.

In addition to the aforecited elements, it must also be proven that the public
officer or employee had taken advantage of his official position in making the
falsification. In falsification of public document, the offender is considered to have
taken advantage of his official position when (1) he has the duty to make or prepare
or otherwise to intervene in the preparation of a document; or (2) he has the official
custody of the document which he falsifies.123 (Emphasis supplied, citations
omitted)

The element of taking advantage of one's official position has been described as the "essential
element of falsification of a public document by public officer."124 Petitioner correctly notes that it
has been stated that "[a]buse of public office is considered present when the offender falsifies a
document in connection with the duties of his [or her] office[,] which consist of either making or
preparing[,] or otherwise intervening in the preparation of a document."125

However, not every instance of preparing a document in connection with public office should
engender possible liability for falsification. To be able to take advantage, a public officer must wield
particular power. One who is not uniquely situated, or is not imbued with specific competencies has
nothing to abuse. Being similarly situated as other persons, there is nothing for him or her to
leverage and draw advantage from. For instance, a false claim as to qualification can be made, in
particular, by an officer involved in issuing permits and licenses; a false claim as to the existence
and availability of certain items can specifically be made by a custodian; and a false claim as to
quality and compliance can be made by reviewing personnel such as technical officers or auditors.

Thus, for liability to ensue under Article 171(4) of the Revised Penal Code, a public officer must
wield particular power in relation with the preparation of a document closely related with his or her
office and functions such that no false declaration can be made were it not for the unique
opportunities facilitated by the office one holds. The document's particular privity with one's office is
essential.

A SALN is a document required of all public officers and employees, "except those who serve in
an honorary capacity, laborers and casual or temporary workers."126 No particular office affords a
peculiar capacity that enables an officer to be more capable than others in being forthright with one's
wealth and economic interests. The honesty, cognition, and accuracy required in accomplishing a
SALN cuts across all levels of government.

In this case, respondent Ramirez, a revenue officer, was no more capacitated and duty-bound
than personnel junior to her, personnel elsewhere in government, the head of her agency, or, for that
matter, the President of the Philippines. Her mistakes remain to be mistakes. However, it is
misleading to think that those mistakes are borne precisely and uniquely by her being a revenue
officer. She can be held to account for her non-declarations and mis-declarations through other
avenues, but not through Article 171(4) for which the capacity to take advantage of one's office is
essential.

If Ramirez was dishonest—as indeed she appears to have been dishonest—it is because she
was dishonest, not because her office equipped her with extraordinary capacity to lie. Dishonest
public officers and employees who veil their accumulation of ill-gotten wealth with such dishonesty
should rightly be held to account. But this must be done with legal precision, employing proper
means, and resorting to appropriate remedies. A proverbial shotgun approach—indiscriminate,
overreaching, and precarious—cannot be sustained.

WHEREFORE, the Petition for Certiorari is DENIED.

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