G.R. No. 220598 (Gloria Macapagal Arroyo v. People of the Philippines
and the Sandiganbayan [First Division]); G.R. No. 220953 (Benigno B.
Aguas v. Sandiganbayan [First Division])
Promulgated:
July 19, 2016
x- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
セ@ セMZ@
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DISSENTING OPINION
SERENO, CJ:
Given the records and pleadings in these cases, I register my dissent
from the ponencia. Contrary to the ponencia's conclusion, I find that the
prosecution has sufficiently alleged and established conspiracy in the
commission of the crime of plunder involving, among others, petitioners
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo (Arroyo) and Benigno B. Aguas (Aguas). I
therefore find no grave abuse of discretion in the Sandiganbayan rulings,
which denied petitioners' demurrers and motions for reconsideration.
In sum, my strong objection to the Majority Opinion is impelled by at
least five (5) doctrinal and policy considerations.
1. The ponencia completely ignores the stark irregularities in the
Confidential/Intelligence Fund (CIF) disbursement process and
effectively excuses the breach of budget ceilings by the practice of
commingling of funds;
2. The ponencia retroactively introduces two additional elements in
the prosecution of the crime of plunder - the identification of a
main plunderer and personal benefit to him or her - an effect that
is not contemplated in the law nor explicitly required by any
jurisprudence;
3. The ponencia denies efficacy to the concept of implied conspiracy
that had been carefully laid down in Alvizo v. Sandiganbayan; 1
4. The ponencia creates an unwarranted certiorari precedent by
completely ignoring the evidentiary effect of formal reports to the
Commission on Audit (COA) that had been admitted by the trial
court; and
1
454 Phil. 34 (2003).
(
Dissenting Opinion
2
G.R. Nos. 220598 and 220953
5. The ponencia has grossly erred in characterizing the prosecution's
evidence as not showing "even the remotest possibility that the
CIFs of the PCSO had been diverted to either [Arroyo] or Aguas or
Uriarte," 2 when petitioner Aguas himself reported to COA that
P244 million of nearly P366 million controverted Philippine
Charity Sweepstakes Office (PCSO) funds had been diverted to the
Office of the President.
I
The prosecution has sufficiently alleged and established
conspiracy among the accused specifically petitioners
Arroyo and Aguas.
Preliminarily, the ponencia states that the prosecution did not properly
allege conspiracy. I disagree.
Estrada v. Sandiganbayan 3 (2002 Estrada) is instructive as to when
the allegations in the Information may be deemed sufficient to constitute
conspiracy. In that case, We stated:
[I]t is enough to allege conspiracy as a mode in the commission of
an offense in either of the following manner: (1) by use of the word
conspire, or its derivatives or synonyms, such as confederate, connive,
collude, etc; or (2) by allegation of basic facts constituting the conspiracy
in a manner that a person of common understanding would know what is
intended, and with such precision as would enable the accused to
competently enter a plea to a subsequent indictment based on the same
4
facts.
In the Information5 in this case, all the accused public officers were
alleged to have "connived and conspired" in unlawfully amassing,
accumulating and acquiring ill-gotten wealth in the total amount of
1>365,997,915 through (a) "diverting funds from the operating budget of
PCSO to its [CIF] xx x and transferring the proceeds to themselves xx x for
their personal gain and benefit; (b) "raiding the public treasury by
withdrawing and receiving x xx and unlawfully transferring or conveying
the same into their possession and control;" and (c) "taking advantage of
their respective official positions x x x to unjustly enrich themselves x x x at
the expense of, and the damage and prejudice of the Filipino people and the
Republic of the Philippines."
2
Decision, p. 42.
G.R. No. 148965, 26 February 2002, 377 SCRA 538.
4
Id. at 563, 565.
3
5
Annex "D" of the Petition.
(
Dissenting Opinion
3
G.R. Nos. 220598 and 220953
Contrary to the ponencia, I find the allegations above consistent with
Our pronouncement in 2002 Estrada, 6 wherein conspiracy was successfully
proven.
On another point, the ponencia declares that the prosecution failed to
establish or prove conspiracy. A review of the records before us contradicts
this position.
The prosecution's theory of the conspiracy to commit plunder is that
PCSO funds were repeatedly siphoned off purportedly to fund activities
which were not actually conducted - a 3-year process which could not have
been accomplished without the indispensable acts of accused public officers
who took advantage of their positions to amass nearly P366 million.
To appreciate the prosecution's theory of conspiracy, it is necessary to
have a bird's eye view of the procedure for disbursement of CIF funds. The
testimony before the Sandiganbayan of prosecution witness, Atty. Aleta
Tolentino, Chairperson of the PCSO Audit Committee, provides the
procedure briefly outlined below:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Provision or allotment of a budget for the CIF in the Corporate
Operating Budget; 7
Approval of the release of the CIF by the President of the
Philippines; 8
Designation of a disbursing officer who will have custody of the
amounts
received
as
cash
advances
for
the
confidential/intelligence (CI) operation;
Issuance of the check for the cash advance and disbursement
thereof;
Liquidation of the CIF cash advances with the documents sent
directly by sealed envelope to the COA chairperson or his/her
•
9
representative;
and
Clearing of accountability on the basis of the Credit Notice
issued by the COA chairperson or his/her representative. 10
The PCSO funds are comprised of the Prize Fund (PF), Charity Fund
(CF) and the Operating Fund (OF). These have specific allotments from
PCSO net receipts: 55o/o for prizes, 30% for charity and only 15% are
allotted for operating expenses and capital expenditures. 11 However, the CIF
expenditures are by nature operating expenses. Therefore, the funding is and
must be sourced from the Operating Fund.
6
G.R. No. 148965, 26 February 2002, 377 SCRA 538.
Rollo (G.R. No. 220598), p. 466; see also COA Circular 92-385.
8
Id.; see also COA Circular 92-385 and Letter oflnstruction No. 1282 (1983).
9
Id. at 466-469; see also COA Circulars 92-385 and 2009-02.
10
Id. at 471.
11
See Section 2, Batas Pambansa Big. 42, An Act Amending the Charter of the Philippine Charity
Sweepstakes Office.
7
(
Dissenting Opinion
4
G.R. Nos. 220598 and 220953
Expenditures for prizes and charity follow strict disbursement,
accounting, and liquidation procedures. 12 In contrast, procedures for CIF
expenditures are less strict because of their confidential nature.
Funds for confidential or intelligence projects are usually released as
cash advances. Under COA rules, the liquidation documents therefor are
sent in sealed envelopes directly to the COA chairperson (or his/her
representative).
Given the prosecution's claim that PCSO funds were all commingled
in one account, it is easier to see the significance of using the CIF route in
diverting funds for personal gain. Utilizing that route minimizes the risks of
discovery and the tracking of any anomaly, irregularity, or illegality in the
withdrawal of funds.
The lax process of disbursement, accounting, and liquidation has been
identified in the field of financial management as a possible, if not perfect,
locus for fraud. In Fraud and Corruption Awareness Handbook, How It
Works and What to Look For: A Handbook for Staff, 13 the World Bank states
that fraud thrives in accounting systems with vulnerabilities. 14
Fraud in financial management (FM) can take the form of either
individuals taking advantage of system vulnerabilities to redirect funds for
their own purposes, or working with other parties in a collusive set-up.
xxx
Theft may range from very small amounts to sophisticated schemes
involving large sums of money. More often than not, theft is performed
in a manner that is premeditated, systematic or methodical, with the
explicit intent to conceal the activities from other individuals. Often, it
involves a trusted person embezzling only a small proportion or fraction of
the funds received, in an attempt to minimize the risk of detection. The
method usually involves direct and gradual transfers of project funds for
personal use or diversion of payments for legitimate expenses into a
personal account. 15 (Emphases ours)
To my mind, the prosecution has successfully established the
conspiracy scheme through the various irregularities in the CIF
disbursement. These irregularities or red flags clearly spell a conspiracy to
commit plunder when the amounts involved and the processes of requesting,
approval, and liquidating the amounts are holistically considered.
12
See for example, PCSO's answers to Frequently Asked Questions on how to claim prizes and request for
medical assistance (http://www.pcso.gov.ph/index.php/rrequently-ask-questions/) and its Prize Payment
workflow chart (http://www.pcso.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/44.-functional-chart-treas.pdf), both
accessed on 6 July 2016).
13
Fraud and Corruption Awareness Handbook, How it Works and What to Look For: A Handbook for
(last
Staff. http://siteresources.worldbank.org/INTDOII/Resources/INT inside rraud text 090909.pdf
accessed on 15 July 2016).
14 Id.
is Id.
(
Dissenting Opinion
5
G.R. Nos. 220598 and 220953
The irregularities in the
approval, disbursement, and
liquidation of the funds
First, when Arroyo approved the requests, the PCSO was operating
on a deficit. 16 This situation means that it is irregular to authorize additional
CIF when the fund source is negative. It is tantamount to authorizing the use
of other PCSO funds - that of the Prize Fund and Charity Fund - for
purposes other than those allowed by law.
In 2005, the PCSO had a deficit of P916 million. 17 In 2006, the deficit
was Pl,000,078,683.23, P215 million of which comprised the CIF expenses.
For that year, the CIF budget was only P 10 million. 18 Otherwise stated, the
CIF expense exceeded the budget by P205 million.
On the other hand, the CIF disbursements amounted to P77,478,705 19
in 2007 when the CIF budget was only P25,480,550. 20 The CIF expenditure
exceeded its budget by almost P52 million.
In 2008, Uriarte asked for and received approval from Arroyo for
additional CIF in the amount of P25 million in April and another P50
million in August. 21 In its Corporate Operating Budget (COB) approved in
May, the PCSO board allocated P28 million for the CIF. 22 The actual
disbursement amounted to P86,555,060 23 so CIF expenditures were P58
million more than its allocated budget. 24
Four times in 2009, Uriarte asked for and received approval from
Arroyo for additional CIF in the total amount of P90 million - P50 million
in January, PlO million in April, another PlO million in July and then P20
million in October. 25 The board allocated P60 million in its Corporate
Operating Budget approved in March. 26 The actual CIF disbursement was
?138,420,875, 27 so the overspending was more than P78 million.
For 2010, Uriarte asked for and received approval from Arroyo for
additional CIF in the amount of Pl50 million in January. 28 The board
allocated P60 million for the CIF in its Corporate Operating Budget, which
was approved in March. The CIF disbursement, as of June 2010, was
Pl41,021,980, 29 so overspending was by more than P81 million.
16
Rollo (G.R. No. 220598), p. 463; "They were working on a deficit from 2004 to 2009."
Id. at 464.
18 Id.
19 Id.
20 Id.
21
Id. at 157.
22 Id.
23
Id. at 466.
24
Or PIO million if the budget was P28 million.
25
Rollo (G.R. No. 220598), p. 158.
26 Id.
27
Id. at. 470.
28
Id. at 158.
29
Id. at 466.
17
f
6
Dissenting Opinion
G.R. Nos. 220598 and 220953
It is worth noting that from previous allocations of PlO million (PS
million each for the Office of the Chairperson and for the Office of the ViceChairperson ), the CIF budget was gradually but significantly increased to
P60 million in 2009 and 2010. Still, additional amounts were requested and
authorized, reaching very significant CIF expenditures in the years when the
PCSO was on a deficit, from 2004 to 2009. For a fuller context, the
information is tabulated:
Year
CIF Allocation
in PCSO COB
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
Total
Pl 0,000,000
P25,480,550
P28,000,000
P60,000,000
P60,000,000
P183,480,550
Actual CIF
Disbursements
P215,000,000
P77,478,705
P86,555,060
P138,420,875
P141,021,980jU
P658,476,620
Additional
CIF
Disbursement CIF approved
Over Budget
by Arroyo
P205,000,000 No information
P51,998,155 No information
P58,555,060
P75,000,000
P78,420,875
P90,000,000
P81,021,980
P150,000,000
P4 74,996,070
P315,000,000
From the above, various irregularities can already be noted. The
repeated and unqualified approval of additional CIF was made even when
there were no more operating funds left. The requests were made and
approved even before the Corporate Operating Budget was approved by the
PCSO Board. And the amounts requested were significantly large amounts.
Despite the above facts and figures culled from the records, the
ponencia remarks that commingling was far from illegal. 31 The ponencia
downplays the fact that there was no longer any budget when Arroyo
approved the requests and considers the approval justified "considering that
the funds of the PCSO were commingled into one account xx x." While the
act of commingling may not by itself be illegal, the fact that it continued to
be successfully maintained despite the COA advice to stop the practice
means that it was deliberately used to facilitate the raid of government
coffers. The majority should not have downplayed the viciousness of this
practice. It is a critical red flag of financial fraud.
Second, the prosecution witness testified that for 2009, the recorded
CIF expense was only P24,968,300, while actual vouchers for the CIF cash
advances totalled P138,420,875. 32 This discrepancy is another red flag.
The CIF cash advances remain as accountabilities of the special
disbursing officers until liquidated. After they are properly liquidated and
cleared by the COA chairperson or his/her representative, the
Confidential/Intelligence expenses are then recorded as such.
30
For six months, up to June 2010 only.
Decision, p. 29.
32
Rollo (G.R. No. 220598), p. 476.
31
/
Dissenting Opinion
7
G.R. Nos. 220598 and 220953
The witness found, however, that receivables from Uriarte and
Valencia for the CIF disbursements amounting to Pl06,386,800 and
P90,428,780, respectively, were removed. These were instead recorded as
expenses under the Prize Fund and Charity Fund. 33 For 2008, another P63.75
million was obtained from the Charity Fund and the Prize Fund. 34
These facts and figures are the most compelling evidence of a
fraudulent scheme in this case - cash advances being taken as CIF
expenses for withdrawal purposes and thereafter being passed off as PF
and CF expenses for recording purposes. Apparently, the reason for
taking cash advances from the common (commingled) account as CIF
expenses was the relative ease of withdrawal and subsequent liquidation of
the funds. On the other hand, the apparent purpose of recording the same
cash advances in the books as PF and CF expenses was to avoid detection of
the lack of CIF.
Red flags are again readily noticeable here in the form of missing
funds and apparent misuse. Missing funds occur when cash appears to be
missing after a "review of transaction documentation and financial
documents," while apparent misuse happens when funds are spent on
"personal or non-business-related" matters. 35
The prosecution witness pointed out these red flags as follows:
The witness also related that she traced the records of the CIF fund
(since such was no longer stated as a receivable), and reviewed whether it
was recorded as an expense in 2008. She found out that the recorded CIF
fund expense, as recorded in the corporate operating budget as actually
disbursed, was only P21,102,000. As such, she confronted her
accountants and asked them "Saan tinago itong amount na to?"The
personnel in the accounting office said that the balance of the P86 million
or the additional P21 million was not recorded in the operating fund
budget because they used the prize fund and charity fund as
instructed by Aguas. Journal Entry Voucher No. 8121443 dated
December 31, 2008, signed by Elmer Camba, Aguas (Head of the
Accounting Department), and Hutch Balleras (one of the staff in the
Accounting Department), showed that this procedure was done.xx x
Attached to the Journal Entry Voucher was a document which
reads "Allocation of Confidential and Intelligence Fund Expenses," and
was the basis of Camba in doing the Journal Entry Voucher. In the same
document, there was a written annotation dated 12-31-2008 which reads
that the adjustments of CIF, CF and IF, beneficiary of the fund is CF and
PF and signed by Aguas.
The year 2009 was a similar case xx x. 36 (Emphases ours)
Id.
Id.
See note 13.
36
Rollo (G.R. No. 220598), p. 475.
33
34
35
(
Dissenting Opinion
8
G.R. Nos. 220598 and 220953
From the foregoing, the participation of petitioner Aguas is
established. He was intimately privy to the transactions and to the scheme.
His participation was necessary for diverting the funds from the Prize Fund
and the Charity Fund to underwrite the lack of Operating Fund for the CIF
cash advances. He is thus proven to have committed an indispensable act in
covering the tracks of Uriarte and Valencia, as will be explained further.
Third, witness Tolentino reported that for their respective cash
advances, Uriarte and Valencia approved the vouchers certifying the
necessity and the legality of the disbursement and thereafter authorized the
payment thereof. They also co-signed with the treasurer the checks payable
to their own names.
Thus, a situation in which the same person approved the disbursement
and signed the check for payment to that same person is readily observed.
This situation is irregular. In the usual course of things, payees do not get to
approve vouchers and sign checks payable to themselves.
The witness further found that while Uriarte was authorized by the
Board of Directors37 to be the Special Disbursing Officer (SDO), Valencia
designated himself as the SDO for his own cash advances, upon the
recommendation of COA Auditor Plaras. 38 Under COA rules, the Board of
Directors, not the Chairperson, has authority to designate SDOs.
The usual check-and-balance mechanism for the segregation of duties
was therefore totally ignored. The disregard of that mechanism strongly
indicates an intention to keep knowledge of the transactions to as few people
as possible. In fraudulent schemes, risks of detection are avoided by keeping
the conspiracy or connivance known to as few people as necessary. This is
therefore another red flag.
Fourth, the accountabilities of Uriarte and Valencia for the CIF cash
advances they availed of were removed from the records on the basis of the
issuance of a Credit Notice. And this issuance of credit notice by COA CIF
Unit Head Plaras is also marked by irregularities. 39
The relevant testimony of prosecution witness Atty. Aleta Tolentino is
summed up by the Sandiganbayan in its Resolution dated 5 November 2013
as follows:
As regards the sixth step - the credit notice, the same was not
validly issued by the COA. The credit notice is a settlement or an action
made by the COA Auditors and is given once the Chairman, in the case of
CIF Fund, finds that the liquidation report and all the supporting papers
are in order. In this case, the supporting papers and the liquidation report
were not in order, hence, the credit notice should not have been issued.
37
38
39
Id. at 467.
Id.
Id.at 471.
セ@
Dissenting Opinion
9
G.R. Nos. 220598 and 220953
Further, the credit notice has to follow a specific form. The COA
Chairman or his representative can: 1) settle the cash advance when
everything is in order; 2) suspend the settlement if there are deficiencies
and then ask for submission of the deficiencies; or 3) out rightly disallow
it in case said cash advances are illegal, irregular or unconscionable,
extravagant or excessive. Instead of following this form, the COA
issued a document dated January 10, 2011, which stated that there is
an irregular use of the price fund and the charity fund for CIF Fund.
The document bears an annotation which says, "wait for transmittal, draft"
among others. The document was not signed by Plaras, who was the
Head of the Confidential and Intelligence Fund Unit under COA
Chairman Villar. Instead, she instructed her staff to "please ask Aguas to
submit the supplemental budget." This document was not delivered to
PCSO General Manager J.M. Roxas. They instead received another letter
dated January 12, 2011 which was almost identical to the first document,
except it was signed by Plaras, and the finding of the irregular use of the
prize fund and the charity fund was omitted. Instead, the word "various"
was substituted and then the amount of P 13 7,500,000. Therefore, instead
of the earlier finding of irregularity, suddenly, the COA issued a
credit notice as regards the total of P140,000,000. The credit notice
also did not specify that the transaction has been audited, indicating
that no audit was made. 40 (Emphases ours)
In effect, Uriarte and Valencia were cleared of the responsibility to
liquidate their CIF cash advances, thereby rendering the funds fully in their
control and disposition.
The clearance made by COA Auditor Plaras, despite the presence of
several irregularities, is another red flag - a species of approval override
which ignores an irregularity with respect to payment. 41
Finally, the purposes for the amounts were supposedly for the
conduct of CIF activities as reflected in the accomplishment report but these
activities were subsequently belied by testimonial evidence. The
prosecution in this regard sufficiently established an aspect of the
conspiracy scheme by showing that the final destination of the amount
was linked to petitioner Arroyo and her Office as admitted by a coconspirator.
In its Resolution dated 6 April 2015, the Sandiganbayan stated the
following:
In an attempt to explain and justify the use of these CIF funds,
Uriarte, together with Aguas, certified that these were utilized for the
following purposes:
a) Fraud and threat that affect integrity of operation.
b) Bomb threat, kidnapping, destabilization and terrorism.
c) Bilateral and security relation.
40
41
Id.
See note 13.
r
Dissenting Opinion
10
G.R. Nos. 220598 and 220953
According to Uriarte and Aguas, these purposes were to be
accomplished through "cooperation" of law enforcers which include
the military, police and the NBI. The second and third purposes were
never mentioned in Uriarte's letter-requests for additional CIF funds
addressed to Arroyo. Aguas, on the other hand, issued an accomplishment
report addressed to the COA, saying that the "Office of the President"
required funding from the CIF funds of the PCSO to achieve the
second and third purposes abovementioned. For 2009 and 2010, the
funds allegedly used for such purposes amounted to P244,500,000.
Such gargantuan amounts should have been covered, at the very
least, by some documentation covering fund transfers or agreements with
the military, police or the NBI, notwithstanding that these involved CIF
funds. However, all the intelligence chiefs of the Army, Navy, Air
Force, the PNP and the NBI, testified that for the period 2008-2010,
their records do not show any PCSO-related operations involving any
of the purposes mentioned by Uriarte and Aguas in their matrix of
accomplishments. Neither were there any memoranda of agreements or
any other documentation covering fund transfers or requests for assistance
or surveillance related to said purposes. x x x As it stands, the actual use
of these CIF funds is still unexplained. 42 (Citations omitted and
emphases ours)
These statements made by the anti-graft court are not without any
legal or factual basis.
In the Formal Offer of Exhibits for the Prosecution dated 4 June 2014
in addition to the Exhibits previously offered in evidence on the Formal
Offer of Exhibits for the Prosecution dated 26 February 2013, various pieces
of documentary evidence were presented. Among them are the certifications
made by Uriarte and Aguas. The most pertinent of these are the following:
7
Exhibit "Z -14"
Exhibit "Z7 -17"
Exhibit "Z 1-42"
Exhibit "Z 1- 72"
42
PCSO Matrix of Intelligence Accomplishments for the
period of January 2009 to December 2009 dated March
9,2010
PCSO Matrix of Intelligence Accomplishments for the
period of January 2009 to December 2009
Letter dated February 8, 2010 addressed to Reynaldo
A. Villar, Chairman, COA, from Rosario C. Uriarte,
showing the amount of P73,993,846.00 as the Total IF
advanced and liquidated covering the period of July 1
to December 31, 2009
Letter dated February 8, 2010 addressed to Reynaldo
A. Villar, Chairman, COA, from Sergio 0. Valencia,
PCSO Chairman, re: cash advances and liquidation
made from the Intelligence/Confidential Fund in the
amount of P2,394,654.00
Id. at 163-164.
(
Dissenting Opinion
Exhibit "Z 7-84"
Exhibit "A8-16"
Exhibit "A 11 -35"
Exhibit "A11 -55"
11
G.R. Nos. 220598 and 220953
Letter dated October 19, 2009 addressed to Reynaldo
A. Villar, Chairman, COA, from Sergio 0. Valencia,
re: various cash advances and liquidation made from
the Intelligence/Confidential Fund in the amount. of
P2498,300.00
Matrix of Intelligence Accomplishment period covered
January 2010 to June 2010 dated 06.29.10 prepared by
OIC, Manager, Budget and Accounting Department
and Reviewed by Vice Chairman and General Manager
dated 06.29.10
PCSO Matrix of Intelligence Accomplishment from
January 2010 to June 2010
PCSO Matrix of Intelligence Accomplishment from
January 2010 to June 2010
Exhibit "Y7-68," the Accomplishment Report on the Utilization of the
CIF of the PCSO, is most crucial. In this report, petitioner Aguas specifically
stated:
But what is more pronounce (sic) in the disposition and handling
of the CIF was those activities and programs coming from the Office of
the President which do not only involved the PCSOs (sic) operation but
the national security threat (destabilization, terrorist act, bomb scare, etc.)
in general which require enough funding from available sources coming
from different agencies under the Office of the President.
These pieces of documentary evidence were used as basis by the
Sandiganbayan to conclude that the Office of the President had required and
received the CIF funds of the PCSO to purportedly achieve the second and
third purposes, i.e. bomb threat, kidnapping, destabilization and terrorism
and bilateral and security relation, respectively. The testimonies of all the
intelligence chiefs of the Army, Navy, Air Force, the Philippine National
Police and the National Bureau of Investigation, however, all prove that
for the period 2008-2010, there never was any PCSO-related or funded
operation.
The conspiracy is thus sufficiently shown through the repeated
approvals of Arroyo of additional CIF requests in the course of three
years; the irregularities in the disbursement, accounting, and
liquidation of the funds and the active participation therein of the
accused; and finally, a showing that the Office of the President, which
Arroyo controlled, was the final destination of the amounts. The CIF
releases would not have been made possible without the approval of
Arroyo. The funds could not have been disbursed without the
complicity and overt act of Aguas. Uriarte (the one who received the
amounts) was definitely part of the scheme. Aguas could not have
cleared Uriarte (and Valencia) without the credit notice of Plaras. Thus,
the connivance and conspiracy of Arroyo, Uriarte, Valencia, Aguas and
Plaras are clearly established.
セ@
Dissenting Opinion
12
G.R. Nos. 220598 and 220953
Law
Plunder
Relevant
prov1s1ons and jurisprudence
in relation to the case
Section 4 of the Plunder Law states:
Section 4. Rule of Evidence. - For purposes of establishing the
crime of plunder, it shall not be necessary to prove each and every
criminal act done by the accused in furtherance of the scheme or
conspiracy to amass, accumulate or acquire ill gotten wealth, it being
sufficient to establish beyond reasonable doubt a pattern of overt or
criminal acts indicative of the overall unlawful scheme or conspiracy.
For purposes of proving the crime of plunder, proof of each and every
criminal act done by the accused in furtherance of the scheme or conspiracy
to amass, accumulate or acquire ill-gotten wealth is not required. Section 4
deems sufficient the establishment beyond reasonable doubt of "a pattern of
overt or criminal acts indicative of the overall unlawful scheme or
conspiracy."
Estrada v. Sandiganbayan 43 (2001 Estrada) provides an instructive
discussion on "pattern" by using the provisions of the Anti-Plunder Law:
(A] 'pattern' consists of at least a combination or series of overt or
criminal acts enumerated in subsections (1) to (6) of Sec. 1 (d). Secondly,
pursuant to Sec. 2 of the law, the pattern of overt or criminal acts
is directed towards a common purpose or goal which is to enable the
public officer to amass, accumulate or acquire ill-gotten wealth. And
thirdly, there must either be an 'overall unlawful scheme' or 'conspiracy' to
achieve said common goal. As commonly understood, the term 'overall
unlawful scheme' indicates a 'general plan of action or method' which the
principal accused and public officer and others conniving with him, follow
to achieve the aforesaid common goal. In the alternative, if there is no
such overall scheme or where the schemes or methods used by multiple
accused vary, the overt or criminal acts must form part of a conspiracy to
. a common goa1.44
attam
By "series," Estrada teaches that there must be at least two overt or
criminal acts falling under the same category of enumeration found in
Section 1, paragraph (d) of the Anti-Plunder Law, such as misappropriation,
malversation and raids on the public treasury, all of which fall under Section
1, paragraph (d), subparagraph (1) of the law. 45
With respect to "combination," Estrada requires at least two acts that
fall under the different categories of the enumeration given by Section 1,
paragraph (d) of the Plunder Law. Examples would be raids on the public
43
44
45
421 Phil. 290, 515.
Id.
Id.
(
Dissenting Opinion
13
G.R. Nos. 220598 and 220953
treasury under Section 1, paragraph (d), subparagraph ( 1), and fraudulent
conveyance of assets belonging to the National Government under Section 1,
paragraph (d), subparagraph (3 ).
For ease of reference, Section 1 (d) is quoted below:
SECTION 1. . . . . (d) "Ill-gotten wealth" means any asset,
property, business, enterprise or material possession of any person
within the purview of Section Two (2) hereof, acquired by him directly
or indirectly through dummies, nominees, agents, subordinates and/or
business associates by any combination or series of the following means
or similar schemes:
(1) Through misappropriation, conversion, misuse, or malversation
of public funds or raids on the public treasury;
(2) By receiving, directly or indirectly, any commission, gift,
share, percentage, kickbacks or any other form of pecuniary
benefit from any person and/or entity in connection with any
government contract or project or by reason of the office or
position of the public office concerned;
(3) By the illegal or fraudulent conveyance or disposition of assets
belonging to the National Government or any of its
subdivisions, agencies or instrumentalities, or government
owned or controlled corporations and their subsidiaries;
(4) By obtaining, receiving or accepting directly or indirectly any
shares of stock, equity or any other form of interest or
participation including the promise of future employment in
any business enterprise or undertaking;
( 5) By establishing agricultural, industrial or commercial
monopolies or other combinations and/or implementation of
decrees and orders intended to benefit particular persons or
special interests; or
(6) By taking advantage of official position, authority, relationship,
connection or influence to unjustly enrich himself or
themselves at the expense and to the damage and prejudice of
the Filipino people and the Republic of the Philippines.
It is well to note, too, that conspiracy may be made by evidence of a
chain of circumstances. 46 It may be established from the "mode, method,
and manner by which the offense was perpetrated, or inferred
from the acts of the accused themselves when such acts point to a joint
purpose and design, concerted action and community of interest." 47
46
47
Peop!e v. Bergonia, 339 Phil. 284 (1997).
Salapuddin v. Court of Appeals, 704 Phil. 577 (2013).
(
14
Dissenting Opinion
G.R. Nos. 220598 and 220953
Our pronouncement in Alvizo v. Sandiganbayan 48 is instructive:
Direct proof is not essential to show conspiracy. It need not be
shown that the parties actually came together and agreed in express terms
to enter into and pursue a common design. The existence of the assent of
minds which is involved in a conspiracy may be, and from the secrecy of
the crime, usually must be, inferred by the court from proof of facts and
circumstances which, taken together, apparently indicate that they are
merely parts of some complete whole. If it is proved that two or more
persons aimed by their acts towards the accomplishment of the same
unlawful object, each doing a part so that their acts, though apparently
independent, were in fact connected and cooperative, indicating a
closeness of personal association and a concurrence of sentiments, then a
conspiracy may be inferred though no actual meeting among them to
concert means is proved. Thus, the proof of conspiracy, which is
essentially hatched under cover and out of view of others than those
directly concerned, is perhaps most frequently made by evidence of a
49
chain of circumstances only. (citations omitted)
The indispensable
petitioner Arroyo
role
of
In this regard, Arroyo's approval now assumes greater significance.
Petitioner Arroyo's act - her repeated and unqualified approval represented the necessary and indispensable action that started the "taking"
process. The repeated approval of the requests in the course of three years is
the crucial and indispensable act without which the amount of nearly P366
million could not have been plundered.
The ponencia rules that the prosecution failed to establish an overt act
in furtherance of the conspiracy, either on the part of petitioner Arroyo or
Aguas. It reasons that Arroyo's "mere approval" 50 of Vice Chairman and
General Manager Uriarte's requests for CIF did not make her part of any
criminal conspiracy. On the other hand, as regards petitioner Aguas, the
ponencia explains that "without GMA's participation, he could not release
any money because there was then no budget available for the additional
CIFs. Whatever irregularities he might have committed did not amount to
plunder, or to any conspiracy to commit plunder." 51
These pronouncements, however, are perceptibly conflicted. Contrary
to the pronouncements of the ponencia, Arroyo's manner of approving
requests for additional CIFs, seven times in the course of three years, reveals
the initial, indispensable act in the conspiracy to commit plunder. All the
individual acts of the conspirators from the time the requests were approved
until the moment the amounts were finally in the Office of the President
48
454 Phil. 34 (2003).
Id. at 106.
50
Decision, p. 27.
51
Id. at 40.
49
セ@
Dissenting Opinion
15
G.R. Nos. 220598 and 220953
indicate a complete whole. The intent to accumulate, amass, or acquire the
PCSO funds is thus shown through the successive acts which at first appear
to be independent but, in fact, are connected and cooperative. The chain of
circumstances from the inscription of a mere "ok" of petitioner Arroyo on all
the requests, up to the time the amounts were proven to be with the Office of
7
the President as indicated in the accomplishment report (Exhibit "Y -68")
sufficiently proves the conspiracy to commit plunder.
In other words, Arroyo's approval of Uriarte's request cannot be
simply downplayed as an innocent, legal, common and valid practice, as the
ponencia would want, to exonerate Arroyo and Aguas. As aptly stated by the
Sandiganbayan:
While it is true that Arroyo was never involved in the actual
withdrawals/cash advances and release of the CIF or in their
disbursements and its liquidation, Arroyo's approval of the grant and
release of these funds facilitated Uriarte' s commission of the series of
raids on PCSO coffers because without Arroyor's approval of the release,
Uriarte could not have succeeded in accumulating the same. 52
The power of control over the
PCSO of petitioner Arroyo
Given the totality of the circumstances discussed above, the
prosecution's claim that Arroyo had known that Uriarte would raid the
public treasury and misuse the funds the latter had disbursed, owing to the
fact that the former President had the power of control over the PCSO,
consequently appears to be correct.
The ponencia, however, misses this point and deliberately chooses to
reject the prosecution's claim by stating that the doctrine of command
responsibility does not apply since this case does not involve Arroyo's
functions as Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, or
a human rights issue.
Contrary to that statement of the ponencia, however, the control of the
President, not only over the PCSO, but also over the intelligence funds, is
clearly mandated by Letter of Instruction No. (LOI) 1282 which sheds light
on the role of the President when it comes to the expenditure of intelligence
funds. LOI 1282 provides:
In recent years intelligence funds appropriated for the various
ministries and certain offices have been, as reports reaching me indicate,
spent with less than full regard for secrecy and prudence. On the one hand,
there have been far too many leakages of information on expenditures of
said funds; and on the other hand, where secrecy has been observed, the
President himself was often left unaware of how these funds had been
utilized.
51
Rollo (G.R. No. 220598), p. 502.
セ@
Dissenting Opinion
16
G.R. Nos. 220598 and 220953
Effective immediately, all requests for the allocation or release
of intelligence funds shall indicate in full detail the specific purposes
for which said funds shall be spent and shall explain the circumstances
giving rise to the necessity for the expenditure and the particular aims to
be accomplished.
The requests and the detailed explanations shall be submitted to the
President personally.
It is imperative that such detailed presentations be made to the
Presidents in order to avoid such duplication of expenditures as has
taken place in the past because of the lack of centralized planning and
organized disposition of intelligence funds.
Full compliance herewith is desired. (Emphases ours)
The foregoing shows the nature of the control of the President
over the intelligence funds. Unless Arroyo were to demonstrate in her
defense, the responsibility and control of intelligence funds is direct and
personal. The irregularities that transpired should therefore be within
the knowledge of Arroyo as President of the Philippines, considering the
fact that this case involves not one but repeated and unqualified
approval of seven requests for release of CIF funds in a span of three
years. Even the ponencia admits: "[w]ithout GMA's participation, he
(Aguas) could not release any money because there was then no budget
available for the additional CIFs." 53
II
There is evidence to show that Uriarte, Arroyo, or Aguas
amassed, accumulated, or acquired ill-gotten wealth.
The ponencia states that "the Prosecution adduced no evidence
showing that either Arroyo or Aguas or even Uriarte, for that matter, had
amassed, accumulated or acquired ill-gotten wealth of any amount. It also
did not present evidence, testimonial or otherwise, showing even the
remotest possibility that the CIFs of the PCSO had been diverted to Arroyo,
Aguas, or Uriarte. " 54 I must disagree.
As held by this Court in 2001 Estrada, 55 the only elements of the
crime of plunder are the following:
1. That the offender is a public officer who acts by himself or in
connivance with members of his family, relatives by affinity or
consanguinity, business associates, subordinates or other persons;
53
Decision, p. 40.
54
Id. at 42.
55
421 Phil. 290, 5 I 5.
(
G.R. Nos. 220598 and 220953
17
Dissenting Opinion
2. That he amassed, accumulated or acquired ill-gotten wealth through a
combination or series of the following overt or criminal acts: (a)
through misappropriation, conversion, misuse, or malversation of
public funds or raids on the public treasury; (b) by receiving, directly
or indirectly, any commission, gift, share, percentage, kickback or any
other form of pecuniary benefits from any person and/or entity in
connection with any government contract or project or by reason of the
office or position of the public officer; (c) by the illegal or fraudulent
conveyance or disposition of assets belonging to the National
Government or any of its subdivisions, agencies or instrumentalities of
Government owned or controlled corporations or their subsidiaries; (d)
by obtaining, receiving or accepting directly or indirectly any shares of
stock, equity or any other form of interest or participation including
the promise of future employment in any business enterprise or
undertaking; (e) by establishing agricultural, industrial or commercial
monopolies or other combinations and/or implementation of decrees
and orders intended to benefit particular persons or special interests; or
(f) by taking advantage of official position, authority, relationship,
connection or influence to unjustly enrich himself or themselves at the
expense and to the damage and prejudice of the Filipino people and the
Republic of the Philippines; and,
3. That the aggregate amount or total value of the ill-gotten wealth
amassed, accumulated or acquired is at least P50,000,000.00.
To emphasize, the prosecution, as previously discussed, presented
evidence proving that Uriarte had made several cash advances. The
Sandiganbayan quoted pertinent parts of its Resolution dated 5 November
2013 denying the petitions for bail in its Resolution dated 6 April 2015
denying the petitioners' demurrers. The Sandiganbayan stated therein that
"Uriarte was able to accumulate during that period CIF funds in the total
amount of P352,681,646;" that "Uriarte looted government funds and
appears to have not been able to account for it;" and that "the encashment of
the checks, which named her as the 'payee,' gave Uriarte material
possession of the CIF funds that she disposed of at will." 56
From January 2008 to June 2010, the following cash advances were
made:
CIF in the COB from
the previous lOM CIF
in 2000
Additional CIF
requested by Uriarte
and granted by Arroyo
Cash
advances
by
Uriarte
Cash advances by
Valencia
TOTAL
56
2008
2009
2010
Total
P28,000,000
P60,000,000
P60,000,000
P148,000,000
P75,000,000
P90,000,000
Pl50,000,000
P315,000,000
P8 l ,698,060
Pl32,760,096
Pl38,223,490
P352,681,646
P4,857,000
PS,660,779
P2,798,490
Pl3,316,269
P86,555,060
Pl38,420,875
Pl41,021,980
P365,997 ,915
Id. at 160; Sandiganbayan Resolution dated 6 April 2015, p. 31.
セ@
Dissenting Opinion
18
G.R. Nos. 220598 and 220953
Again, in its 6 April 2015 Resolution, the Sandiganbayan considered
the accomplishment report that was submitted by petitioner Aguas to COA.
He said therein that the Office of the President required funding from the
CIF funds of the PCSO to achieve the second and the third purposes, i.e.,
bomb threat, kidnapping, destabilization and terrorism; and bilateral and
. re 1at10n.
. 57
secunty
The act of amassing, accumulating, or acquiring CIF funds is thus
evident. I agree with the Sandiganbayan' s pronouncement that Arroyo was
rightly charged as a co-conspirator of Uriarte who received the cash advance
for most of the amounts. 58
It had been argued that receipt by the Office of the President is not
necessarily receipt of the moneys by Arroyo. This however is a matter of
defense, considering that Arroyo controls the Office of the President.
III
Personal benefit need not be proven.
The ponencia harps on the failure of the prosecution to allege in the
Information and prove that the amount amassed, accumulated, and acquired
was for the benefit of an identified main plunderer.
In particular, the ponencia leans on this Court's pronouncement that
what is required in a conspiracy charge is not that every accused must have
performed all the acts constituting the crime of plunder, but that "each of
them, by their individual acts, agreed to participate, directly or indirectly, in
the amassing, accumulation and acquisition of ill-gotten wealth of and/or for
former President Estrada. " 59
The ponencia also takes issue with the Sandiganbayan's statement
that all that is required is that the public officer must have raided the public
coffers, without need to prove personal benefit on the part of the public
officer.
It cites the deliberations on Senate Bill No. 733, which later on
became Republic Act No. 7080, to support the thesis that personal benefit on
the part of the main plunderer, or the co-conspirators by virtue of their
plunder, is still necessary. It then concludes that the prosecution failed to
show not only where the money went but, more important, whether Arroyo
and Aguas had personally benefited therefrom.
57
Id. at 163.
Rollo (G.R. No. 220598), p. 205; Sandiganbayan Resolution dated I 0 September 2015.
59 Id.
58
r
Dissenting Opinion
19
G.R. Nos. 220598 and 220953
To begin with, the failure of the Information to name the mam
plunderer in particular is not crucial.
Section 2 of the Plunder Law does not require a mastermind or a main
recipient when it comes to plunder as a collective act:
Section 2. Definition of the Crime of Plunder; Penalties. Any public
officer who, by
himself or
in
connivance with
members of his family, relatives by affinity or consanguinity, business
associates, subordinates or other persons, amasses, accumulates
or acquires ill-gotten wealth through a combination or series of overt
criminal acts as described in Section 1 (d) hereof in the aggregate amount
or total value of at least Fifty million pesos (PS0,000,000.00) shall be
guilty of the crime of plunder and shall be punished by reclusion
perpetua to death. Any person who participated with the said public
officer in the commission of an offense contributing to the
crime of plunder shall likewise be punished for such offense. In the
imposition of penalties, the degree of participation and the attendance of
mitigating and extenuating circumstances, as provided by the Revised
Penal Code, shall be considered by the court. The court shall declare any
and all ill-gotten wealth and their interests and other incomes and assets
including the properties and shares of stocks derived from the deposit or
investment thereof forfeited in favor of the State. (Emphasis ours)
On the other hand, as can be seen from above, all that is required by
Section 2 is that there is a public officer who acts in connivance with other
offenders in a common design to amass, accumulate or acquire ill-gotten
wealth, the aggregate amount of which is at least P50 Million. In other
words, it is only the conspiracy that needs to be alleged in an Information.
In a conspiracy, the act of one is the act of all. 60 Every conspirator
becomes a principal even if the person did not participate in the actµal
commission of every act constituting the crime. 61 Hence, it is not material if
only Uriarte among all the accused is proven or shown to have taken
material possession of the plundered amount.
It is thus not crucial to identify the main plunderer in the Information,
so long as conspiracy is properly alleged and established. Identification in
the Information of the main plunderer or the accused who acquires the
greatest loot is immaterial, as it suffices that any one or two of the
conspirators are proven to have transfen-ed the plundered amount to
themselves.
In this case, there is ample evidence to show that Uriarte gained
material possession of the amounts through cash advances facilitated by the
repeated and unqualified approval of the requests by An-oyo and that a large
portion of the amount received as cash advance was later certified by Aguas
to have been used by the Office of the President.
60
61
U.S. v. /pi!, 27 Phil. 530 (1914).
Id.
セ@
Dissenting Opinion
20
G.R. Nos. 220598 and 220953
What should be underscored at this juncture is that in prosecution for
plunder, it is enough that one or more of the conspirators must be shown to
have gained material possession of at least P50 million through any or a
combination or a series of overt criminal acts, or similar schemes or means
enumerated in the law and stated in the Information.
Our ruling in Valenzuela v. People, 62 a theft case, is instructive:
The ability of the offender to freely dispose of the property stolen
is not a constitutive element of the crime of theft. x x x To restate what
this Court has repeatedly held: the elements of the crime of theft as
provided for in Article 308 of the Revised Penal Code are: (1) that there be
taking of personal property; (2) that said property belongs to another; (3)
that the taking be done with intent to gain; (4) that the taking be done
without the consent of the owner; and (5) that the taking be accomplished
without the use of violence against or intimidation of persons or force
upon things.
x x x it is immaterial to the product of the felony that the
offender, once having committed all the acts of execution for theft, is
able or unable to freely dispose of the property stolen since the
deprivation from the owner alone has already ensued from such acts
of execution. This conclusion is reflected in Chief Justice Aquino's
commentaries, as earlier cited, that [i]n theft or robbery the crime is
consummated after the accused had material possession of the thing
with intent to appropriate the same, although his act of making use of
the thing was frustrated.
xx xx
Indeed, we have, after all, held that unlawful taking,
or apoderamiento, is deemed complete from the moment the offender
gains possession of the thing, even if he has no opportunity to dispose
of the same.
So it is with plunder. How the money was disposed of and who
inevitably benefited the most therefrom among all the accused need not be
shown for as long as material possession of at least P50 million was shown
through the unlawful acts mentioned in the law.
I quote with approval the Sandiganbayan in its pronouncement, as
follows:
It should be noted that in both R.A. No. 7080 and the PCGG rules,
the enumeration of the possible predicate acts in the commission of
plunder did not associate or require the concept of personal gain/benefit or
unjust enrichment with respect to raids on the public treasury, as a means
to commit plunder. It would, therefore, appear that a "raid on the public
treasury" can be said to have been achieved thru the pillaging or looting of
62
G. R. No. 160188, 21June2007.
r
Dissenting Opinion
21
G.R. Nos. 220598 and 220953
public coffers either through misuse, misappropriation or conversion,
without need of establishing gain or profit to the raider. Otherwise stated,
once a "raider" gets material possession of a government asset
through improper means and has free disposal of the same, the raid
or pillage is completed. x x x
xx xx
It is not disputed that Uriarte asked for and was granted authority
by Arroyo to use additional CIF funds during the period 2008-2010.
Uriarte was able to accumulate during that period CIF funds in the total
amount of P352,681,646. xx x
xx xx
These flagrant violations of the rules on the use of CIF funds
evidently characterize the series of withdrawals by and releases to Uriarte
as "raids" on the PCSO coffers, which is part of the public treasury. These
were, in every sense, "pillage," as Uriarte looted government funds and
appears to have not been able to account for it. The monies came into her
possession and, admittedly, she disbursed it for purposes other than what
these were intended for, thus, amounting to "misuse" of the same.
Therefore, the additional CIF funds are ill-gotten, as defined by R.A.
7080, the PCGG rules, and Republic v. Sandiganbayan. The encashment
of the checks, which named her as "payee," gave Uriarte material
possession of the CIF funds which she disposed of at will.
xx xx
x x x These were thus improper use of the additional CIF funds
amounting to raids on the PCSO coffers and were ill-gotten because
Uriarte had encashed the checks and came into possession of the
monies, which she had complete freedom to dispose of, but was not
able to account for. (Emphases ours)
These matters considered, I find the pronouncements in the ponencia
unwarranted.
IV
Arroyo and Aguas failed to show evidence that the
Sandiganbayan gravely abused its discretion.
Section 23 of Rule 119 states:
SECTION 23. Demurrer to Evidence. -After the prosecution
rests its case, the court may dismiss the action on the ground of
insufficiency of evidence (1) on its own initiative after giving the
prosecution the opportunity to be heard or (2) upon demurrer to evidence
filed by the accused with or without leave of court.
r
Dissenting Opinion
22
G.R. Nos. 220598 and 220953
If the court denies the demurrer to evidence filed with leave of
court, the accused may adduce evidence in his defense. When the
demurrer to evidence is filed without leave of court, the accused waives
the right to present evidence and submits the case for judgment on the
basis of the evidence for the prosecution. (15a)
The motion for leave of court to file demurrer to evidence shall
specifically state its grounds and shall be filed within a non-extendible
period of five (5) days after the prosecution rests its case. The prosecution
may oppose the motion within a non-extendible period of five (5) days
from its receipt.
If leave of court is granted, the accused shall file the demurrer to
evidence within a non-extendible period of ten (I 0) days from notice. The
prosecution may oppose the demurrer to evidence within a similar period
from its receipt.
The order denying the motion for leave of court to file
demurrer to evidence or the demurrer itself shall not be reviewable by
appeal or by certiorari before judgment. (n) 63 (Emphases supplied)
Jurisprudence has affirmed the rule, subject to the recognized
exception that the denial of a demurrer may be the proper subject of a Rule
65 petition when the denial is tainted with grave abuse of discretion. 64
Certiorari therefore is not the proper recourse against a denial of a
demurrer to evidence. Under the Rules of Court, the appropriate remedy is
for the court to proceed with the trial, after which the accused may file an
appeal from the judgment rendered by the lower court.
Consequently, I am not prepared to impute grave abuse of discretion
on the part of the Sandiganbayan. For reasons already discussed, the
prosecution's evidence has satisfactorily established the elements of the
crime of plunder.
Further, it must be emphasized that access to this Court through a
Rule 65 petition is narrow and limited. That recourse excludes the resolution
of factual questions. 65 In the present case, the question of whether a denial of
the demurrer to evidence is proper is factual in nature, as it involves a test of
the sufficiency of evidence.
This Court has made a pronouncement on the nature of a demurrer to
evidence in this wise:
[A d]emurrer to evidence is an objection by one of the parties in an
action, to the effect that the evidence which his adversary produced is
63
Revised Rules of Criminal Procedure, A.M. No. 00-5-03-SC, 3 October 2000.
People v. Go, G.R. No. 191015, 6 August 2014, 732 SCRA 216, and Alaril/a v. Sandiganbayan, 393
Phil. 143 (2000).
65
Don Orestes Romualdez Electric Cooperative, Inc. v. NLRC, 377 Phil. 268 (1999).
64
セ@
Dissenting Opinion
23
G.R. Nos. 220598 and 220953
insufficient in point of law, whether true or not, to make out a case or
sustain the issue. The party demurring challenges the sufficiency of the
whole evidence to sustain a verdict. The court, in passing upon the
sufficiency of the evidence raised in a demurrer, is merely required to
ascertain whether there is competent or sufficient evidence to sustain
the indictment or to support a verdict of guilt. 66
What constitutes sufficient evidence has also been defined as follows:
Sufficient evidence for purposes of frustrating a demurrer thereto
is such evidence in character, weight or amount as will legally justify the
judicial or official action demanded according to the circumstances. To be
considered sufficient therefore, the evidence must prove: (a) the
commission of the crime, and (b) the precise degree of participation
67
therein by the accused.
When there is no showing of such grave abuse, certiorari is not the
proper remedy. Rather, the appropriate recourse from an order denying a
demurrer to evidence is for the court to proceed with the trial, after which
the accused may file an appeal from the judgment of the lower court
rendered after such trial. In the present case, I am not prepared to rule that
the Sandiganbayan has gravely abused its discretion when it denied
petitioners' demurrer to evidence. The Sandiganbayan found that the
prosecution's evidence satisfactorily established the elements of the crime
charged. There is nothing in the records of this case, nor in the pleadings of
petitioners that would show otherwise.
Further, it must be borne in mind that the Sandiganbayan is a
constitutionally-mandated tribunal designed to resolve cases involving graft
and corruption. As such, it is the expert in the field of graft cases. On the
other hand, this Court is not a trier of facts. The Sandiganbayan must be
allowed to complete the entire course of the trial as it sees fit.
A final note. The crime charged, the personalities involved, the
amount in question, and the public interest at stake - are considerations that
should prompt us to demonstrate an even hand, conscious that the benefits of
the Decision would cascade to the least powerful accused in all future
proceedings. We must be mindful of the potentially discouraging impact of a
grant of this particular demurrer on the confidence of trial courts.
Nearly P366 million of the People's money is missing. Direct
documentary evidence whereby petitioner Aguas states that a large part of
this or P244.5 million to be exact was diverted to the Office of the President
under petitioner Arroyo was considered sufficient by the Sandiganbayari to
require both petitioners herein to proceed with the presentation of their
66
67
Gutib v. CA, 371Phil.293 (1999).
Id. at 305.
セ@
Dissenting Opinion
24
G.R. Nos. 220598 and 220953
defense evidence. This cogent conclusion by the constitutionally-mandated
court that has tried the prosecution's evidence on plunder cannot be
overridden willy-nilly by this Court.
I further fully agree with Justice Marvic Mario Victor F. Leonen in his
Separate Dissenting Opinion.
I therefore vote to DISMISS the petitions.
MARIA LOURDES P.A. SERENO
Chief Justice