Lazatin v. Desierto (As Ombudsman) and Sandiganbayan (Case Brief)
Lazatin v. Desierto (As Ombudsman) and Sandiganbayan (Case Brief)
Lazatin v. Desierto (As Ombudsman) and Sandiganbayan (Case Brief)
147097,
June 5, 2009 (Third Division), Peralta
Facts:
Ombudsman, however, ordered the Office of Legal Affairs (OLA) to REVIEW the
OSP Resolution. In a Memorandum, OSP RECOMMENDED THE DISSAPPROVAL of
the OSP Resolution and that it be DIRECTED TO PROCEED WITH TRIAL of the cases
against petitioners.
Ombudsman ADOPTED the OLA Memorandum and the cases were returned to
the Sandiganbayan for AGGRESSIVE PROSECUTION of the subject cases.
Hence, petitioners filed this PETITION FOR CERTIORARI alleging that: (1)
Ombudsman had no authority to overturn the OSP Resolution which dismissed the case
of the petitioners because accordingly in Sec.13, Art XI, of the 1987 Constitution, the
Ombudsman is clothed only with the power to watch, investigate, and recommend the
filing of proper cases against erring officials, but it had no power to prosecute; (2) OSP
is intended to be a separate and distinct entity from Ombudsman, which has the power
to prosecute, and thus the latter has no authority over the OSP; (3) RA 6770 “The
Ombudsman Act of 1989” which made OSP an organic component of the Ombudsman
should be struck down for being unconstitutional; (4) they should be absolved because
the checks issued to Lazatin were reimbursement for the advances he made from his
personal funds for expenses incurred in the projects badly needed by Pinatubo victims.
Issue/s: Whether or not RA 6770, “The Ombudsman Act,” granting the Office of the
Ombudsman prosecutorial powers and placing the OSP under said office is
unconstitutional.
Ruling:
No. It has long been settled that RA 6770 granting the Office of the Ombudsman
prosecutorial powers and placing the OSP under said office has no constitutional
infirmity. This issue had been fully dissected as far back as 1995 in Acop v. Office of
the Ombudsman.
In that case, the Court held that giving prosecutorial powers to the Ombudsman
is in accordance with the Constitution as paragraph 8, Section 13, Article XI provides
that the Ombudsman, “shall exercise such other functions or duties as may be provided
by law.”
The fact that the OSP is subsumed under the Office of the Ombudsman was
likewise upheld by the Court in Acop. It was explained thus:
The Court, basing its ratio decidendi on its ruling in the aforementioned case
declared that the OSP is “merely a component of the Office of the Ombudsman and may
only act under the supervision and control, and upon authority of the Ombudsman and
may only act under the supervision and control, and upon authority of the Ombudsman
and ruled that under RA 6770, the power to preventively suspend is lodged only with the
Ombudsman and Deputy Ombudsman.
The doctrine of stare decisis et non quieta movere (to adhere to precedents and
not to unsettle things which are established) is embodied in Article 8 of the Civil Code,
“Judicial decisions applying and interpreting the laws or the Constitution shall form part
of the legal system of the Philippines.”