Lazarte, Jr. v. SB
Lazarte, Jr. v. SB
Lazarte, Jr. v. SB
Promulgated:
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DECISION
TINGA, J.:
This is a Petition for Certiorari[1] under Rule 65 of the 1997 Rules of Civil
Procedure assailing the Resolution[2] dated 2 March 2007 of the First Division of the
Sandiganbayan in Criminal Case No. 26583 entitled, People of the Philippines v.
Robert P. Balao, et al., which denied petitioner Felicisimo F. Lazarte, Jr.s Motion to
Quash. The Resolution[3] dated 18 October 2007 of said court denying petitioners
motion for reconsideration is likewise challenged in this petition.
The antecedents follow.
In June 1990, the National Housing Authority (NHA) awarded the original
contract for the infrastructure works on the Pahanocoy Sites and Services Project,
Phase 1 in Bacolod City to A.C. Cruz Construction. The project, with a contract cost
of P7,666,507.55, was funded by the World Bank under the Project Loan Agreement
forged on 10 June 1983 between the Philippine Government and the IBRD-World
Bank.[4]
The contractor failed to comply with the work instruction. Upon Fajutag, Jr.s
further verification, it was established that there was no actual excavation and road
filling works undertaken by A.C. Cruz Construction. Fajutag, Jr.s findings are
summarized as follows:
1. No topographic map was appended, even if the same is necessary in land
development works; a discarded drawing sheet: Spot Elevations and Existing
Gradelines of the project site was found, but this contrasted significantly with the
alleged joint-survey results in support of the Variation/Extra Work Order No. 1;
3. There were no records of the excavation and disposal of unsuitable materials and
of road filling works having been made by the previous engineers, Rodolfo de los
Santos and Noel Lobrido at the time said activities were allegedly executed;
4. The excavation of unsuitable materials and road filling works were overestimated
to the prejudice of the government:
a. in a 10.00 meter right-of-way (ROW) road, the entire width of 10.00 meters was
used in calculating the volume of cut of unsuitable materials when the undisturbed
natural grounds on both sides of the road was only 6.00 meters;
b. the mathematical calculation in determining the volume of cut of unsuitable
materials are contrary to the contracts technical specifications which provides for
cut measurements, i.e.[,] by end-area method;
c. in a 10.00 ROW road, an effective width of 8.70 meters was used in calculating
the volume of road fill when the undisturbed natural grounds on both sides of the
road was only 6.00 meters apart;
5. No laboratory test was made to ascertain the quality of imported road fill
materials.[7]
In its Report dated 12 August 1991, the Inventory and Acceptance Committee
determined the total accomplishment of the contractor at 40.89%,
representing P3,433,713.10 out of the total revised contract amount
of P8,397,225.09 inclusive of Variation Order No. 1 in the amount
of P710,717.54. Thereafter, said Committee recommended that the temporary
project suspension imposed by the contractor, which incurred delays in the project
completion, be referred to the Legal Department for appropriate action.[9]
In March 1992, the NHA Board of Directors, per Resolution No. 2453,
approved the mutual termination of the A.C. Cruz Construction contract and
awarded the remaining work to Triad Construction and Development Corporation
(Triad). The contract amount for the remaining work
was P9,554,837.32.[11] Thereafter, representatives from A.C. Cruz Construction,
Triad and NHA-Bacolod conducted a joint measurement at the site to determine the
total accomplishment of A.C. Cruz Construction inclusive of accomplishments after
NHA inventory.
The Project Office was subsequently informed by the Central Office that the
accomplishments made by A.C. Cruz Construction after the NHA inventory would
be paid directly to said contractor by Triad. As of 27 March 1992, Triad had issued
checks in favor of A.C. Cruz Construction amounting to One Million Pesos
(P1,000,000.00) which were received by Arceo M. Cruz per Official Receipt No.
3003.[12]
Thereafter, Triad discovered that certain work items that had been in under
the inventory report as accomplished and acceptable were in fact non-existent.
Fajutag, Jr. brought these irregularities to the attention of the Commission on Audit
(COA).
After its special audit investigation, the COA uncovered some anomalies,
among which, are ghost activities, specifically the excavation of unsuitable materials
and road filling works and substandard, defective workmanship. Laboratory tests
confirmed the irregularities.[14]
Further, according to the COA, while it is true that the fourth billing of A.C.
Cruz Construction had not been paid its accomplishments after the August 1991
inventory found acceptable by NHA amounting to P896,177.08 were paid directly
by Triad.Effectively, A.C. Cruz Construction had been overpaid by as much
as P232,628.35, which amount is more than the net payment due per the computation
of the unpaid fourth billing.[15]
INFORMATION
CONTRARY TO LAW.[17]
Among the accused-movants, the public officer whose participation in the alleged
offense is specifically mentioned in the May 30, 2006 Memorandum is accused
Felicisimo Lazarte, Jr., the Chairman of the Inventory and Acceptance Committee
(IAC), which undertook the inventory and final quantification of the
accomplishment of A.C. Cruz Construction. The allegations of Lazarte that the
IAC, due to certain constraints, allegedly had to rely on the reports of the field
engineers and/or the Project Office as to which materials were actually installed;
and that he supposedly affixed his signature to the IAC Physical Inventory Report
and Memoranda dated August 12, 1991 despite his not being able to attend the
actual inspection because he allegedly saw that all the members of the Committee
had already signed are matters of defense which he can address in the course of the
trial. Hence, the quashal of the information with respect to accused Lazarte is
denied for lack of merit.
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, the Court hereby resolves as
follows:
(1) Accused Robert Balao, Josephine Angsico and Virgilio Dacalos Motion
to Admit Motion to Quash dated October 4, 2006 is GRANTED; the
Motion to Quash dated October 4, 2006 attached thereto,
is GRANTED. Accordingly, the case is hereby DISMISSED insofar as the
said accused-movants are concerned.
SO ORDERED. [19]
The Court also maintains the validity and sufficiency of the information against
accused Lazarte, Jr., Espinosa, Lobrido and Cruz. The information has particularly
alleged the ultimate facts constituting the essential elements of the offense charged
which are as follows:
1. that accused Lazarte, Jr., Espinosa, and Lobrido are public officers being
the Department Manager, Project Management Officer A, and Supervising
Engineer of the NHA during the time material in the criminal information; and
The other factual details which accused Lazarte, Jr. cited are matters of
evidence best threshed out in the course of the trial.[20]
Hence, the instant petition which is a reiteration of petitioners submissions.
Petitioner ascribes grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of
jurisdiction to the Sandiganbayan in: (1) upholding the validity and sufficiency of
the Information despite its failure to make out an offense and conform to the
prescribed form; (2) denying his motion to quash considering that the remaining
averments in the Information have been rendered unintelligible by the dismissal of
the charges against some of his co-accused; and (3) using as bases the
Prosecutions Memoranda dated 27 July 2004 and 30 May 2006 to supplement the
inadequacies of the Information. In addition, petitioner avers that his constitutional
right to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation against him had been
violated for failure of the Information to specify his participation in the commission
of the offense. Petitioner also argues that the facts charged in the Information do not
constitute an offense as no damage or injury had been made or caused to any party
or to the government. Finally, petitioner maintains that the Sandiganbayan lost its
jurisdiction over him upon the dismissal of the charges against his co-accused as the
remaining accused are public officers whose salary grade is below 27.
The Court is not persuaded. The Court affirms the resolutions of the
Sandiganbayan.
At the outset, it should be stressed that the denial of a motion to quash is not
correctible by certiorari. Well-established is the rule that when a motion to quash in
a criminal case is denied, the remedy is not a petition for certiorari but for petitioners
to go to trial without prejudice to reiterating the special defenses invoked in their
motion to quash. Remedial measures as regards interlocutory orders, such as a
motion to quash, are frowned upon and often dismissed. The evident reason for this
rule is to avoid multiplicity of appeals in a single court.[31]
When an offense is committed by more than one person, all of them shall
be included in the complaint or information.
The acts or omissions complained of must be alleged in such form as is
sufficient to enable a person of common understanding to know what offense is
intended to be charged and enable the court to know the proper judgment. The
Information must allege clearly and accurately the elements of the crime
charged. What facts and circumstances are necessary to be included therein must be
determined by reference to the definition and elements of the specific crimes.[35]
The test is whether the crime is described in intelligible terms with such
particularity as to apprise the accused, with reasonable certainty, of the offense
charged. The raison detre of the rule is to enable the accused to suitably prepare his
defense.[36] Another purpose is to enable accused, if found guilty, to plead his
conviction in a subsequent prosecution for the same offense. The use of derivatives
or synonyms or allegations of basic facts constituting the offense charged is
sufficient.[37]
Pertinently, Section 3(e) of Republic Act No. 3019, otherwise known as the
Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act, reads:
xxx
(e) Causing any undue injury to any party, including the Government, or giving any
private party any unwarranted benefits, advantage or preference in the discharge of
his official, administrative or judicial functions through manifest partiality, evident
bad faith or gross inexcusable negligence. This provision shall apply to officers and
employees of offices or government corporations charged with the grant of licenses
or permits or other concessions.[38]
The essential elements for violation of Section 3(e) of R.A. No. 3019 are as
follows:
2. Said public officer commits the prohibited acts during the performance
of his official duties or in relation to his public position;
5. The public officer has acted with manifest partiality, evident bad faith or
gross inexcusable negligence.[39]
The Court finds that the Information in this case alleges the essential elements
of violation of Section 3(e) of R.A. No. 3019. The Information specifically alleges
that petitioner, Espinosa and Lobrido are public officers being then the Department
Manager, Project Management Officer A and Supervising Engineer of the NHA
respectively; in such capacity and committing the offense in relation to the office
and while in the performance of their official functions, connived, confederated and
mutually helped each other and with accused Arceo C. Cruz, with deliberate intent
through manifest partiality and evident bad faith gave unwarranted benefits to the
latter, A.C. Cruz Construction and to themselves, to the damage and prejudice of the
government. The felonious act consisted of causing to be paid to A.C. Cruz
Construction public funds in the amount of P232,628.35 supposedly for excavation
and road filling works on the Pahanocoy Sites and Services Project
in Bacolod City despite the fact that no such works were undertaken by said
construction company as revealed by the Special Audit conducted by COA.
On the contention that the Information did not detail the individual
participation of the accused in the allegation of conspiracy in the Information, the
Court underscores the fact that under Philippine law, conspiracy should be
understood on two levels. Conspiracy can be a mode of committing a crime or it
may be constitutive of the crime itself. Generally, conspiracy is not a crime in our
jurisdiction. It is punished as a crime only when the law fixes a penalty for its
commission such as in conspiracy to commit treason, rebellion and sedition.[40]
When conspiracy is charged as a crime, the act of conspiring and all the
elements of said crime must be set forth in the complaint or information. But when
conspiracy is not charged as a crime in itself but only as the mode of committing the
crime as in the case at bar, there is less necessity of reciting its particularities in the
Information because conspiracy is not the gravamen of the offense charged. The
conspiracy is significant only because it changes the criminal liability of all the
accused in the conspiracy and makes them answerable as co-principals regardless of
the degree of their participation in the crime. The liability of the conspirators is
collective and each participant will be equally responsible for the acts of others, for
the act of one is the act of all.[41]
As to the contention that the residual averments in the Information have been
rendered unintelligible by the dismissal of the charges against some of his co-
accused, the Court finds that the Information sufficiently makes out a case against
petitioner and the remaining accused.
Finally, the Court sustains the Sandiganbayans jurisdiction to hear the case.
As correctly pointed out by the Sandiganbayan, it is of no moment that petitioner
does not occupy a position with Salary Grade 27 as he was a department manager of
the NHA, a government-owned or controlled corporation, at the time of the
commission of the offense, which position falls within the ambit of its jurisdiction.
Apropos, the Court held in the case of Geduspan v. People[46] which involved a
regional Manager/Director of Region VI of the Philippine Health Insurance
Corporation (Philhealth) with salary grade 26, to wit:
It is of no moment that the position of petitioner is merely classified as salary grade
26. While the first part of the abovequoted provision covers only officials of the
executive branch with the salary grade 27 and higher, the second part thereof
specifically includes other executive officials whose positions may not be of grade
27 and higher but who are by express provision of law placed under the jurisdiction
of the said court.
SO ORDERED.
DANTE O. TINGA
Associate Justice
WE CONCUR:
On Official Leave
REYNATO S. PUNO
Chief Justice
CERTIFICATION
Pursuant to Article VIII, Section 13 of the Constitution, it is hereby certified
that the conclusions in the above Decision were reached in consultation before
the case was assigned to the writer of the opinion of the Court.
LEONARDO A. QUISUMBING
Acting Chief Justice
*
On Official Leave.
**
Acting Chief Justice.
[1]
Rollo, pp. 3-50; Dated 5 November 2007.
[2]
Id. at 51-57; Penned by Presiding Justice Teresita J. Leonardo-De Castro with the concurrence of Associate
Justices Diosdado M. Peralta and Alexander G. Gesmundo.
[3]
Id. at 58-62.
[4]
Id. at 8.
[5]
Id. at 111.
[6]
Id. at 112, 232.
[7]
Id. at 113-114.
[8]
Id. at 233.
[9]
Id.
[10]
Id. at 233-234.
[11]
Id. at 9.
[12]
Id. at 235.
[13]
Id.
[14]
Id. at 236-237.
[15]
Id. at 119.
[16]
Id. at 63-64; Dated 5 March 1991.
[17]
Id. at 63-64.
[18]
Id. at 134-135.
[19]
Id. at 56-57.
[20]
Id. at 61-62.
[21]
Id. at 229-250.
[22]
338 Phil. 1061 (1997).
[23]
379 Phil. 708 (2000).
[24]
Id. at 1071.
[25]
OTHERWISE KNOWN AS AN ACT FURTHER DEFINING THE JURISDICTION OF THE
SANDIGANBAYAN, AMENDING FOR THE PURPOSE PRESIDENTIAL DECREE NO. 1606, AS
AMENDED which pertinently states:
SEC. 4. Section 4 of the same decree is hereby further amended to read as follows:
SEC. 4. Jurisdiction. The Sandiganbayan shall exercise original jurisdiction in all cases involving:
a. Violations of Republic Act No. 3019, as amended, otherwise known as the Anti-Graft and Corrupt
Practices Act, Republic Act No. 1379, and Chapter II, Section 2, Title VII, Book II of the Revised Penal Code, where
one or more of the accused are officials occupying the following positions in the government, whether in a permanent,
acting or interim capacity, at the time of the commission of the offense;
(1) Officials of the executive branch occupying the positions of regional director and higher, otherwise
classified as Grade Grade 27 and higher, of the Compensation and Position Classification Act of 1989 (Republic Act
No. 6758), specifically including:
xxxx
(g) Presidents, directors or trustees, or managers of government-owned and controlled corporations, state
universities or educational institutions or foundations.
[26]
Id. at 253-272.
[27]
Id. at 257.
[28]
Id. at 259.
[29]
Supra note 22.
[30]
Supra note 24.
[31]
Serana v. Sandiganbayan, G.R. No. 162059, 22 January 2008, 542 SCRA 224, 236.
[32]
Id. citing Newsweek, Inc. v. IAC, G.R. No. L-63559, 30 May 1986, 142 SCRA 171.
[33]
Cabrera v. Sandiganbayan, 484 Phil. 350, 359 (2004).
[34]
People of the Philippines v. Hon. Teresita Dizon-Capulong, G.R. No. 106424, 18 June 1996, 257 SCRA
430, 445.
[35]
Serapio v. Sandiganbayan (Third Division), 444 Phil. 499, 522 (2003).
[36]
Miranda v. Hon. Sandiganbayan, G.R. No. 154098, 27 July 2005, 464 SCRA 165, 188-189.
[37]
Serapio v. Sandiganbayan (Third Division), supra
[38]
Republic Act No. 3019 (1960), Sec. 3(e).
[39]
Cabrera v. Sandiganbayan, 484 Phil. 350, 360 (2004).
[40]
Estrada v. Sandiganabayan, 427 Phil. 820, 853-854 (2002).
[41]
Estrada v. Sandiganbayan, 427 Phil. 820, 860 (2002).
[42]
354 Phil. 372 (1998).
[43]
Id. at 388-390.
[44]
Estrada v. Sandiganbayan, 427 Phil. 820, 862 (2002)
[45]
Rollo, p. 55.
[46]
G.R. No. 158187, 11 February 2005, 451 SCRA 187.
[47]
Id. at 192-193.