Beja, Sr. v. CA G.R. No. 97149
Beja, Sr. v. CA G.R. No. 97149
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powers are sanctioned, not only by Sec. 8 of P.D. No. 857 aforequoted, but also by Sec. 37 of P.D. No. 807 granting
heads of agencies the "jurisdiction to investigate and decide matters involving disciplinary actions against officers
and employees" in the PPA.
Parenthetically, the period of preventive suspension is limited. It may be lifted even if the disciplining authority has
not finally decided the administrative case provided the ninety-day period from the effectivity of the preventive
suspension has been exhausted. The employee concerned may then be reinstated. However, the said ninety-day
period may be interrupted. Section 42 of P.D. No. 807 also mandates that any fault, negligence or petition of a
suspended employee may not be considered in the computation of the said period. Thus, when a suspended
employee obtains from a court of justice a restraining order or a preliminary injunction inhibiting proceedings in an
administrative case, the lifespan of such court order should be excluded in the reckoning of the permissible period
of the preventive suspension.
With respect to the issue of whether or not the DOTC Secretary and/or the AAB may initiate and hear
administrative cases against PPA Personnel below the rank of Assistant General Manager, the Court qualifiedly
rules in favor of petitioner.
The PPA was created through P.D. No. 505 dated July 11, 1974. Under that Law, the corporate powers of the PPA
were vested in a governing Board of Directors known as the Philippine Port Authority Council. Sec. 5(i) of the
same decree gave the Council the power "to appoint, discipline and remove, and determine the composition of the
technical staff of the Authority and other personnel."
On December 23, 1975, P.D. No. 505 was substituted by P.D. No. 857, See. 4(a) thereof created the Philippine
Ports Authority which would be "attached" to the then Department of Public Works, Transportation and
Communication. When Executive Order No. 125 dated January 30, 1987 reorganizing the Ministry of
Transportation and Communications was issued, the PPA retained its "attached" status. Even Executive Order No.
292 or the Administrative Code of 1987 classified the PPA as an agency "attached" to the Department of
Transportation and Communications (DOTC). Sec. 24 of Book IV, Title XV, Chapter 6 of the same Code provides
that the agencies attached to the DOTC "shall continue to operate and function in accordance with the respective
charters or laws creating them, except when they conflict with this Code."
Attachment of an agency to a Department is one of the three administrative relationships mentioned in Book IV,
Chapter 7 of the Administrative Code of 1987, the other two being supervision and control and administrative
supervision. "Attachment" is defined in Sec. 38 thereof as follows:
(3) Attachment. (a) This refers to the lateral relationship between the Department or its
equivalent and the attached agency or corporation for purposes of policy and program
coordination. The coordination shall be accomplished by having the department represented in the
governing board of the attached agency or corporation, either as chairman or as a member, with or
without voting rights, if this is permitted by the charter; having the attached corporation or agency
comply with a system of periodic reporting which shall reflect the progress of programs and
projects; and having the department or its equivalent provide general policies through its
representative in the board, which shall serve as the framework for the internal policies of the
attached corporation or agency;
(b) Matters of day-to-day administration or all those pertaining to internal operations shall he left to
the discretion or judgment of the executive officer of the agency or corporation. In the event that the
Secretary and the head of the board or the attached agency or corporation strongly disagree on the
interpretation and application of policies, and the Secretary is unable to resolve the disagreement, he
shall bring the matter to the President for resolution and direction;
(c) Government-owned or controlled corporations attached to a department shall submit to the
Secretary concerned their audited financial statements within sixty (60) days after the close of the
fiscal year; and
(d) Pending submission of the required financial statements, the corporation shall continue to
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operate on the basis of the preceding year's budget until the financial statements shall have been
submitted. Should any government-owned or controlled corporation incur an operation deficit at the
close of its fiscal year, it shall be subject to administrative supervision of the department; and the
corporation's operating and capital budget shall be subject to the department's examination, review,
modification and approval. (emphasis supplied.)
An attached agency has a larger measure of independence from the Department to which it is attached than one
which is under departmental supervision and control or administrative supervision. This is borne out by the "lateral
relationship" between the Department and the attached agency. The attachment is merely for "policy and program
coordination." With respect to administrative matters, the independence of an attached agency from Departmental
control and supervision is further reinforced by the fact that even an agency under a Department's administrative
supervision is free from Departmental interference with respect to appointments and other personnel actions "in
accordance with the decentralization of personnel functions" under the Administrative Code of 1987. Moreover, the
Administrative Code explicitly provides that Chapter 8 of Book IV on supervision and control shall not apply to
chartered institutions attached to a Department.
Hence, the inescapable conclusion is that with respect to the management of personnel, an attached agency is, to a
certain extent, free from Departmental interference and control. This is more explicitly shown by P.D. No. 857
which provides:
Sec. 8. Management and Staff. a) The President shall, upon the recommendation of the Board,
appoint the General Manager and the Assistant General Managers.
(b) All other officials and employees of the Authority shall be selected and appointed on the basis of
merit and fitness based on a comprehensive and progressive merit system to be established by the
Authority immediately upon its organization and consistent with Civil Service rules and regulations.
The recruitment, transfer, promotion, and dismissal of all personnel of the Authority, including
temporary workers, shall be governed by such merit system.
(c) The General Manager shall, subject to the approval of the Board, determine the staffing pattern
and the number of personnel of the Authority, define their duties and responsibilities, and fix their
salaries and emoluments. For professional and technical positions, the General Manager shall
recommend salaries and emoluments that are comparable to those of similar positions in other
government-owned corporations, the provisions of existing rules and regulations on wage and
position classification notwithstanding.
(d) The General Manager shall, subject to the approval by the Board, appoint and remove personnel
below the rank of Assistant General Manager.
xxx xxx xxx
(emphasis supplied.)
Although the foregoing section does not expressly provide for a mechanism for an administrative investigation of
personnel, by vesting the power to remove erring employees on the General Manager, with the approval of the PPA
Board of Directors, the law impliedly grants said officials the power to investigate its personnel below the rank of
Assistant Manager who may be charged with an administrative offense. During such investigation, the PPA
General Manager, as earlier stated, may subject the employee concerned to preventive suspension. The
investigation should be conducted in accordance with the procedure set out in Sec. 38 of P.D. No. 807. Only after
gathering sufficient facts may the PPA General Manager impose the proper penalty in accordance with law. It is the
latter action which requires the approval of the PPA Board of Directors.
From an adverse decision of the PPA General Manager and the Board of Directors, the employee concerned may
elevate the matter to the Department Head or Secretary. Otherwise, he may appeal directly to the Civil Service
Commission. The permissive recourse to the Department Secretary is sanctioned by the Civil Service Law (P.D.
No. 807) under the following provisions:
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Sec. 37. Disciplinary Jurisdiction. (a) The Commission shall decide upon appeal all
administrative disciplinary cases involving the imposition of a penalty of suspension for more than
thirty days, or fine in an amount exceeding thirty days salary, demotion in rank or salary or transfer,
removal or dismissal from office. A complaint may be filed directly with the Commission by a
private citizen against a government official or employee in which case it may hear and decide the
case or it may deputize any department or agency or official or group of officials to conduct the
investigation. The results of the investigation shall be submitted to the Commission with
recommendation as to the penalty to be imposed or other action to be taken.
(b) The heads of departments, agencies and instrumentalities, provinces, cities and municipalities
shall have jurisdiction to investigate and decide matters involving disciplinary action against officers
and employees under their jurisdiction. The decisions shall be final in case the penalty imposed is
suspension for not more than thirty days or fine in an amount not exceeding thirty days' salary. In
case the decision rendered by a bureau or office head is appealable to the Commission, the same
may be initially appealed to the department and finally to the Commission and pending appeal, the
same shall be executory except when the penalty is removal, in which case the same shall be
executory only after confirmation by the department head.
xxx xxx xxx
(Emphasis supplied.)
It is, therefore, clear that the transmittal of the complaint by the PPA General Manager to the AAB was premature.
The PPA General Manager should have first conducted an investigation, made the proper recommendation for the
imposable penalty and sought its approval by the PPA Board of Directors. It was discretionary on the part of the
herein petitioner to elevate the case to the then DOTC Secretary Reyes. Only then could the AAB take jurisdiction
of the case.
The AAB, which was created during the tenure of Secretary Reyes under Office Order No. 88-318 dated July 1,
1988, was designed to act, decide and recommend to him "all cases of administrative malfeasance, irregularities,
grafts and acts of corruption in the Department." Composed of a Chairman and two (2) members, the AAB came
into being pursuant to Administrative Order No. 25 issued by the President on May 25, 1987. Its special nature as a
quasi-judicial administrative body notwithstanding, the AAB is not exempt from the observance of due process in
its proceedings. We are not satisfied that it did so in this case the respondents protestation that petitioner waived his
right to be heard notwithstanding. It should be observed that petitioner was precisely questioning the AAB's
jurisdiction when it sought judicial recourse.
WHEREFORE, the decision of the Court of Appeals is AFFIRMED insofar as it upholds the power of the PPA
General Manager to subject petitioner to preventive suspension and REVERSED insofar as it validates the
jurisdiction of the DOTC and/or the AAB to act on Administrative Case No. PPA-AAB-1-049-89 and rules that due
process has been accorded the petitioner.
The AAB decision in said case is hereby declared NULL and VOID and the case in REMANDED to the PPA
whose General Manager shall conduct with dispatch its reinvestigation.
The preventive suspension of petitioner shall continue unless after a determination of its duration, it is found that
he had served the total of ninety (90) days in which case he shall be reinstated immediately.
SO ORDERED.
Narvasa, C.J., Melencio-Herrera, Gutierrez, Jr., Cruz, Paras, Bidin, Grio-Aquino, Medialdea, Regalado, Davide,
Jr. and Nocon JJ., concur.
Padilla and Bellosillo, JJ., took no part.
Feliciano, J., is on leave.