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G.R. No. 166471. March 22, 2011.

TAWANG MULTI-PURPOSE COOPERATIVE, petitioner,


vs. LA TRINIDAD WATER DISTRICT, respondent.

Equity; If acts that cannot be legally done directly can be done


indirectly, then all laws would be illusory.—What cannot be
legally done directly cannot be done indirectly. This rule is basic
and, to a reasonable mind, does not need explanation. Indeed, if
acts that

_______________

* EN BANC.

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22 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED

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cannot be legally done directly can be done indirectly, then all


laws would be illusory. In Alvarez v. PICOP Resources, Inc., 606
SCRA 444 (2009), the Court held that, “What one cannot do
directly, he cannot do indirectly.” In Akbayan Citizens Action
Party v. Aquino, 558 SCRA 468 (2008), quoting Agan, Jr. v.
Philippine International Air Terminals Co., Inc., 402 SCRA 612
(2003), the Court held that, “This Court has long and consistently
adhered to the legal maxim that those that cannot be done
directly cannot be done indirectly.” In Central Bank Employees
Association, Inc. v. Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, 446 SCRA 299
(2004), the Court held that, “No one is allowed to do indirectly
what he is prohibited to do directly.”
Public Utilities; Franchises; The President, Congress and the
Court cannot create directly franchises for the operation of a public
utility that are exclusive in character.—The President, Congress
and the Court cannot create directly franchises for the operation
of a public utility that are exclusive in character. The 1935, 1973
and 1987 Constitutions expressly and clearly prohibit the creation
of franchises that are exclusive in character. x x x Plain words do
not require explanation. The 1935, 1973 and 1987 Constitutions
are clear—franchises for the operation of a public utility cannot be
exclusive in character. The 1935, 1973 and 1987 Constitutions
expressly and clearly state that, “nor shall such franchise x x
x be exclusive in character.” There is no exception.
Same; Same; Water Resources; The President, Congress and
the Court cannot create indirectly franchises that are exclusive in
character by allowing the Board of Directors (BOD) of a water
district and the Local Water Utilities Administration (LWUA) to
create franchises that are exclusive in character.—The President,
Congress and the Court cannot create directly franchises that are
exclusive in character. What the President, Congress and the
Court cannot legally do directly they cannot do indirectly. Thus,
the President, Congress and the Court cannot create indirectly
franchises that are exclusive in character by allowing the Board of
Directors (BOD) of a water district and the Local Water Utilities
Administration (LWUA) to create franchises that are exclusive in
character. In PD No. 198, as amended, former President
Ferdinand E. Marcos (President Marcos) created indirectly
franchises that are exclusive in character by allowing the BOD of
LTWD and the LWUA to create directly franchises that are
exclusive in character. Section 47 of PD No. 198, as

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amended, allows the BOD and the LWUA to create directly


franchises that are exclusive in character. Section 47 states: Sec.
47. Exclusive Franchise. No franchise shall be granted to any
other person or agency for domestic, industrial or commercial
water service within the district or any portion thereof unless
and except to the extent that the board of directors of said
district consents thereto by resolution duly adopted, such
resolution, however, shall be subject to review by the
Administration.
Same; Same; There is no “reasonable and legitimate” ground
to violate the Constitution.—The dissenting opinion states two
“reasonable and legitimate grounds” for the creation of exclusive
franchise: (1) protection of “the government’s investment,” and (2)
avoidance of “a situation where ruinous competition could
compromise the supply of public utilities in poor and remote
areas.” There is no “reasonable and legitimate” ground to violate
the Constitution. The Constitution should never be violated by
anyone. Right or wrong, the President, Congress, the Court, the
BOD and the LWUA have no choice but to follow the Constitution.
Any act, however noble its intentions, is void if it violates the
Constitution. This rule is basic.
Police Power; Police power does not include the power to
violate the Constitution.—Police power does not include the power
to violate the Constitution. Police power is the plenary power
vested in Congress to make laws not repugnant to the
Constitution. This rule is basic. In Metropolitan Manila
Development Authority v. Viron Transportation Co., Inc., 530
SCRA 341 (2007), the Court held that, “Police power is the
plenary power vested in the legislature to make, ordain, and
establish wholesome and reasonable laws, statutes and
ordinances, not repugnant to the Constitution.” In Carlos
Superdrug Corp. v. Department of Social Welfare and
Development, 526 SCRA 130 (2007), the Court held that, police
power “is ‘the power vested in the legislature by the constitution
to make, ordain, and establish all manner of wholesome and
reasonable laws, statutes, and ordinances x  x  x not repugnant
to the constitution.’” In Metropolitan Manila Development
Authority v. Garin, 456 SCRA 176 (2005), the Court held that,
“police power, as an inherent attribute of sovereignty, is the
power vested by the Constitution in the legislature to make,
ordain, and establish all manner of wholesome and reasonable
laws, statutes and ordinances x x x not repugnant to the
Constitution.”

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BRION, J., Dissenting Opinion:


Public Utilities; Franchises; View that despite its title, Sec. 47
of PD 198, does not absolutely prohibit other franchises from water
service from being granted to other persons or agencies. It merely
requires the consent of the local water district’s Board of Directors
before another franchise within the district is granted.—An
exclusive franchise, in its plainest meaning, signifies that no
other entity, apart from the grantee, could be given a franchise.
Section 47 of P.D. No. 198, by its clear terms, does not provide for
an exclusive franchise in stating that: “Sec. 47. Exclusive
Franchise.—No franchise shall be granted to any other person or
agency for domestic, industrial, or commercial water service
within the district or any portion thereof unless and except to
the extent that the board of directors of said district
consents thereto by resolution duly adopted, such
resolution, however, shall be subject to review by the
Administration.” Despite its title, the assailed provision
does not absolutely prohibit other franchises for water
service from being granted to other persons or agencies. It
merely requires the consent of the local water district’s
Board of Directors before another franchise within the
district is granted. Thus, it is a regulation on the grant of any
subsequent franchise where the local water district, as original
grantee, may grant or refuse its consent. If it consents, the non-
exclusive nature of its franchise becomes only too clear. Should it
refuse, its action does not remain unchecked as the franchise
applicant may ask the LWUA to review the local water district’s
refusal. It is thus the LWUA (on the Office of the President in
case of further appeal) that grants a subsequent franchise if one
will be allowed.
Same; Same; View that a government agency’s refusal to
consent to the grant of a franchise to another entity, based on
reasonable and legitimate grounds, should not be construed as a
violation of the constitutional mandate on the non-exclusivity of a
franchise where the standards for the grant or refusal are clearly
spelled out in the law.—I submit that the prerogative of the local
water district’s board of directors or the LWUA to give or refuse
its consent to the application for a CPC cannot be considered as a
constitutional infringement. A government agency’s refusal to
consent to the grant of a franchise to another entity, based on
reasonable and legitimate grounds, should not be construed as a
violation of the constitutional mandate

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on the non-exclusivity of a franchise where the standards for the


grant or refusal are clearly spelled out in the law. Effectively,
what the law and the State (acting through its own agency or a
government-owned or controlled corporation) thereby undertake
is merely an act of regulation that the Constitution does not
prohibit. To say that a legal provision is unconstitutional simply
because it enables a grantee, a government instrumentality, to
determine the soundness of granting a subsequent franchise in its
area is contrary to the government’s inherent right to exercise
police power in regulating public utilities for the protection of the
public and the utilities themselves.
Same; Same; View that the local water districts and the Local
Water Utilities Administration (LWUA) are government-owned
and controlled corporations (GOCCs). The directors of the local
water districts and the trustees of the LWUA are government
employees subject to civil service laws and anti-graft laws.
Moreover, the LWUA is attached to the Office of the President
which has the authority to review its acts. Should these acts in the
Executive Department constitute grave abuse of discretion, the
Court may strike them down under its broad powers of review.—
The refusal of the local water district or the LWUA to consent to
other franchises would carry with it the legal presumption that
public officers regularly perform their official functions. If, on the
other hand, the officers, directors or trustees of the local water
districts and the LWUA act arbitrarily and unjustifiably refuse
their consent to an applicant of a franchise, they may be held
liable for their actions. The local water districts and the LWUA
are government-owned and controlled corporations (GOCCs). The
directors of the local water districts and the trustees of the LWUA
are government employees subject to civil service laws and anti-
graft laws. Moreover, the LWUA is attached to the Office of the
President which has the authority to review its acts.   Should
these acts in the Executive Department constitute grave abuse of
discretion, the Courts may strike them down under its broad
powers of review.
Same; Same; View that a first reason the government seeks to
prioritize local water districts is the protection of its investments—
it pours its scarce financial resources into these water districts.—A
first reason the government seeks to prioritize local water
districts is the protection of its investments—it pours its scarce
financial resources into these water districts. The law primarily
establishes the LWUA as a specialized lending institution for the
promotion, development

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and financing of water utilities. Section 73 of P.D. No. 198 also


authorizes the LWUA to contract loans and credits, and incur
indebtedness with foreign governments or international financial
institutions for the accomplishment of its objectives. Moreover,
the President of the Philippines is empowered not only to
negotiate or contract with foreign governments or international
financial institutions on behalf of the LWUA; he or she may also
absolutely and unconditionally guarantee, in the name of the
Republic of the Philippines, the payment of the loans. In addition,
the law provides that the General Appropriations Act shall
include an outlay to meet the financial requirements of non-viable
local water districts or the special projects of local water districts.
Same; Same; The law adopts a policy to keep the operations of
local water districts economically secure and viable.—The law also
adopts a policy to keep the operations of local water districts
economically secure and viable. The “whereas” clauses of the law
explain the need to establish local water districts: the lack of
water utilities in provincial areas and the poor quality of the
water found in some areas. The law sought to solve these
problems by encouraging the creation of local water districts that
the national government would support through technical
advisory services and financing. These local water districts are
heavily regulated and depend on government support for their
subsistence. If a private entity provides stiff competition against a
local water district, causes it to close down and, thereafter,
chooses to discontinue its business, the problem of finding a
replacement water supplier for a poor, remote area will recur. Not
only does the re-organization of a local water district drain limited
public funds; the residents of these far-flung areas would have to
endure the absence of water supply during the considerable time
it would take to find an alternative water supply.
Same; Same; As a matter of foresight, Section 47 of
Presidential Decree No. 198 and other provisions within the law
aim to avert the negative effects of competition on the financial
stability of local water districts.—As a matter of foresight, Section
47 of P.D. No. 198 and other provisions within the law aim to
avert the negative effects of competition on the financial stability
of local water districts. These sections work hand in hand with
Section 47 of P.D. No. 198. Section 31 of P.D. No. 198, which is
very similar to Section 47 of P.D. No. 198, directly prohibits
persons from selling or disposing water for public purposes within
the service area of the local water district:

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Section 31. Protection of Waters and Facilities of District.—A


district shall have the right to: x x x x (c) Prohibit any person,
firm or corporation from vending selling, or otherwise disposing of
water for public purposes within the service area of the district
where district facilities are available to provide such service, or fix
terms and conditions by permit for such sale or disposition of
water. Thus, Section 47 of P.D. No. 198 provides that before a
person or entity is allowed to provide water services where the
local water district’s facilities are already available, one must ask
for the consent of the board of directors of the local water district,
whose action on the matter may be reviewed by the LWUA.
Same; Same; In all, Section 47 of Presidential Decree (P.D.)
198 does not violate the constitutional proscription against
exclusive franchises as other persons and entities may still obtain
franchises for water utilities within the district upon the consent of
the local water district or upon a favorable finding by the Local
Water Utilities Administration (LWUA), which, in turn, is
accountable to the Office of the Preisdent.—In all, Section 47 of
P.D. No. 198 does not violate the constitutional proscription
against exclusive franchises as other persons and entities may
still obtain franchises for water utilities within the district upon
the consent of the local water district or upon a favorable finding
by the LWUA, which, in turn, is accountable to the Office of the
President. By granting this privilege to local water districts, the
law does not seek to favor private interests as these districts are
GOCCs whose profits are exclusively for public use and whose
expenditures the law subjects to the strictest scrutiny. The
restrictions applied to other private persons or entities are
intended to protect the government’s considerable investment in
local water districts and to promote its policy of prioritizing local
water districts as a means of providing water utilities throughout
the country. The protectionist approach that the law has taken
towards local water districts is not per se illegal as the
Constitution does not promote a total deregulation in the operation
of public utilities and is a proper exercise by the government of its
police power.
ABAD, J., Concurring Opinion:
Courts; Judgments; Statutes; Separation of Powers; The
Supreme Court’s power of review does not permit it to rewrite
Presidential Decree (P.D.) 198 in a subsequent case and breathe
life to its dead provisions—only Congress can.—Since the Court,
exercising its

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Constitutional power of judicial review, has declared Section 47 of


P.D. 198 void and unconstitutional, such section ceased to become
law from the beginning. The Supreme Court’s power of review
does not permit it to rewrite P.D. 198 in a subsequent case and
breathe life to its dead provisions. Only Congress can. Besides,
such course of action is unwise. The Court will be establishing a
doctrine whereby people and the other branches of government
will not need to treat the Court’s declaration of nullity of law too
seriously. They can claim an excuse for continuing to enforce such
law since even the Court concedes that it can in another case
change its mind regarding its nullity.

PETITION for review on certiorari of the decision and


order of the Regional Trial Court, Judicial Region 1, Br.
62, La Trinidad, Benguet.
   The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
  Abansi and Felipe for petitioner.
  Peter C. Fianza for respondent.

CARPIO, J.:
The Case

This is a petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45


of the Rules of Court. The petition1 challenges the 1
October 2004 Judgment2 and 6 November 2004 Order3 of
the Regional Trial Court (RTC), Judicial Region 1, Branch
62, La Trinidad, Benguet, in Civil Case No. 03-CV-1878.

The Facts

Tawang Multi-Purpose Cooperative (TMPC) is a


cooperative, registered with the Cooperative Development
Authority,

_______________

1 Rollo, pp. 9-19.


2 Id., at pp. 22-40. Penned by Judge Fernando P. Cabato.
3 Id., at pp. 41-44.

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and organized to provide domestic water services in


Barangay Tawang, La Trinidad, Benguet.
La Trinidad Water District (LTWD) is a local water
utility created under Presidential Decree (PD) No. 198, as
amended. It is authorized to supply water for domestic,
industrial and commercial purposes within the
municipality of La Trinidad, Benguet.
On 9 October 2000, TMPC filed with the National Water
Resources Board (NWRB) an application for a certificate of
public convenience (CPC) to operate and maintain a
waterworks system in Barangay Tawang. LTWD opposed
TMPC’s application. LTWD claimed that, under Section 47
of PD No. 198, as amended, its franchise is exclusive.
Section 47 states that:

“Sec. 47. Exclusive Franchise.—No franchise shall be granted


to any other person or agency for domestic, industrial or
commercial water service within the district or any portion
thereof unless and except to the extent that the board of directors
of said district consents thereto by resolution duly adopted, such
resolution, however, shall be subject to review by the
Administration.”

In its Resolution No. 04-0702 dated 23 July 2002, the


NWRB approved TMPC’s application for a CPC. In its 15
August 2002 Decision,4 the NWRB held that LTWD’s
franchise cannot be exclusive since exclusive franchises are
unconstitutional and found that TMPC is legally and
financially qualified to operate and maintain a waterworks
system. NWRB stated that:

“With respect to LTWD’s opposition, this Board observes that:


1. It is a substantial reproduction of its opposition to the
application for water permits previously filed by this same CPC
applicant, under WUC No. 98-17 and 98-62 which was decided
upon by this Board on April 27, 2000. The issues being raised by
Oppositor

_______________

4 Id., at pp. 45-49.

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had been already resolved when this Board said in pertinent


portions of its decision:
“The authority granted to LTWD by virtue of P.D. 198 is not
Exclusive. While Barangay Tawang is within their territorial
jurisdiction, this does not mean that all others are excluded in
engaging in such service, especially, if the district is not capable of
supplying water within the area. This Board has time and again
ruled that the “Exclusive Franchise” provision under P.D. 198 has
misled most water districts to believe that it likewise extends to
be [sic] the waters within their territorial boundaries. Such
ideological adherence collides head on with the constitutional
provision that “ALL WATERS AND NATURAL RESOURCES
BELONG TO THE STATE”. (Sec. 2, Art. XII) and that “No
franchise, certificate or authorization for the operation of public
[sic] shall be exclusive in character”.
xxxx
All the foregoing premises all considered, and finding that
Applicant is legally and financially qualified to operate and
maintain a waterworks system; that the said operation shall
redound to the benefit of the homeowners/residents of the
subdivision, thereby, promoting public service in a proper and
suitable manner, the instant application for a Certificate of Public
Convenience is, hereby, GRANTED.”5

LTWD filed a motion for reconsideration. In its 18


November 2002 Resolution,6 the NWRB denied the motion.
LTWD appealed to the RTC.

The RTC’s Ruling


In its 1 October 2004 Judgment, the RTC set aside the
NWRB’s 23 July 2002 Resolution and 15 August 2002
Decision and cancelled TMPC’s CPC. The RTC held that
Section 47 is valid. The RTC stated that:

“The Constitution uses the term “exclusive in character”. To


give effect to this provision, a reasonable, practical and logical
inter-

_______________

5 Id., at pp. 47-49.


6 Id., at pp. 50-52.

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pretation should be adopted without disregard to the ultimate


purpose of the Constitution. What is this ultimate purpose? It is
for the state, through its authorized agencies or instrumentalities,
to be able to keep and maintain ultimate control and supervision
over the operation of public utilities. Essential part of this control
and supervision is the authority to grant a franchise for the
operation of a public utility to any person or entity, and to amend
or repeal an existing franchise to serve the requirements of public
interest. Thus, what is repugnant to the Constitution is a grant of
franchise “exclusive in character” so as to preclude the State itself
from granting a franchise to any other person or entity than the
present grantee when public interest so requires. In other words,
no franchise of whatever nature can preclude the State, through
its duly authorized agencies or instrumentalities, from granting
franchise to any person or entity, or to repeal or amend a
franchise already granted. Consequently, the Constitution does
not necessarily prohibit a franchise that is exclusive on its face,
meaning, that the grantee shall be allowed to exercise this
present right or privilege to the exclusion of all others.
Nonetheless, the grantee cannot set up its exclusive franchise
against the ultimate authority of the State.”7

TMPC filed a motion for reconsideration. In its 6


November 2004 Order, the RTC denied the motion. Hence,
the present petition.

Issue

TMPC raises as issue that the RTC erred in holding that


Section 47 of PD No. 198, as amended, is valid.

The Court’s Ruling


The petition is meritorious.
What cannot be legally done directly cannot be done
indirectly. This rule is basic and, to a reasonable mind,
does not need explanation. Indeed, if acts that cannot be
legally done

_______________

7 Id., at p. 35.

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directly can be done indirectly, then all laws would be


illusory.
In Alvarez v. PICOP Resources, Inc.,8 the Court held
that, “What one cannot do directly, he cannot do
indirectly.”9 In Akbayan Citizens Action Party v. Aquino,10
quoting Agan, Jr. v. Philippine International Air Terminals
Co., Inc.,11 the Court held that, “This Court has long and
consistently adhered to the legal maxim that those that
cannot be done directly cannot be done indirectly.”12 In
Central Bank Employees Association, Inc. v. Bangko
Sentral ng Pilipinas,13 the Court held that, “No one is
allowed to do indirectly what he is prohibited to do
directly.”14
The President, Congress and the Court cannot create
directly franchises for the operation of a public utility that
are exclusive in character. The 1935, 1973 and 1987
Constitutions expressly and clearly prohibit the creation of
franchises that are exclusive in character. Section 8, Article
XIII of the 1935 Constitution states that:

“No franchise, certificate, or any other form of authorization for


the operation of a public utility shall be granted except to citizens
of the Philippines or to corporations or other entities organized
under the laws of the Philippines, sixty per centum of the capital
of which is owned by citizens of the Philippines, nor shall such
franchise, certificate or authorization be exclusive in
character or for a longer period than fifty years.” (Empahsis
supplied)

Section 5, Article XIV of the 1973 Constitution states


that:

_______________

8  G.R. Nos. 162243, 164516 and 171875, 3 December 2009, 606 SCRA
444.
9  Id., at p. 485.
10 G.R. No. 170516, 16 July 2008, 558 SCRA 468.
11 450 Phil. 744; 402 SCRA 612 (2003).
12 Supra note 10 at p. 540.
13 487 Phil. 531; 446 SCRA 299 (2004).
14 Id., at p. 579; p. 366.

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“No franchise, certificate, or any other form of authorization for


the operation of a public utility shall be granted except to citizens
of the Philippines or to corporations or associations organized
under the laws of the Philippines at least sixty per centum of the
capital of which is owned by such citizens, nor shall such
franchise, certificate or authorization be exclusive in
character or for a longer period than fifty years.” (Emphasis
supplied)

Section 11, Article XII of the 1987 Constitution states


that:

“No franchise, certificate, or any other form of authorization for


the operation of a public utility shall be granted except to citizens
of the Philippines or to corporations or associations organized
under the laws of the Philippines, at least sixty per centum of
whose capital is owned by such citizens, nor shall such
franchise, certificate or authorization be exclusive in
character or for a longer period than fifty years.” (Emphasis
supplied)

Plain words do not require explanation. The 1935, 1973


and 1987 Constitutions are clear—franchises for the
operation of a public utility cannot be exclusive in
character. The 1935, 1973 and 1987 Constitutions
expressly and clearly state that, “nor shall such
franchise x x x be exclusive in character.” There is no
exception.
When the law is clear, there is nothing for the courts to
do but to apply it. The duty of the Court is to apply the law
the way it is worded. In Security Bank and Trust Company
v. Regional Trial Court of Makati, Branch 61,15 the Court
held that:

“Basic is the rule of statutory construction that when the law


is clear and unambiguous, the court is left with no
alternative but to apply the same according to its clear
language. As we have held in the case of Quijano v. Development
Bank of the Philippines:
“x x x We cannot see any room for interpretation or
construction in the clear and unambiguous language of the
above-

_______________

15 G.R. No. 113926, 23 October 1996, 263 SCRA 483.

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quoted provision of law. This Court had steadfastly


adhered to the doctrine that its first and
fundamental duty is the application of the law
according to its express terms, interpretation being
called for only when such literal application is impossible.
No process of interpretation or construction need be
resorted to where a provision of law peremptorily calls for
application. Where a requirement or condition is made
in explicit and unambiguous terms, no discretion is
left to the judiciary. It must see to it that its mandate
is obeyed.”16 (Emphasis supplied)

In Republic of the Philippines v. Express


17
Telecommunications Co., Inc., the Court held that, “The
Constitution is quite emphatic that the operation of a
public utility shall not be exclusive.”18 In Pilipino
Telephone Corporation v. National Telecommunications
Commission,19 the Court held that, “Neither Congress nor
the NTC can grant an exclusive ‘franchise, certificate, or
any other form of authorization’ to operate a public
utility.”20 In National Power Corp. v. Court of Appeals,21
the Court held that, “Exclusivity of any public franchise
has not been favored by this Court such that in most, if not
all, grants by the government to private corporations, the
interpretation of rights, privileges or franchises is taken
against the grantee.”22 In Radio Communications of the
Philippines, Inc. v. National Telecommunications
Commission,23 the Court held that, “The Constitution
mandates that a franchise cannot be exclusive in nature.”24

_______________

16 Id., at p. 488.
17 424 Phil. 372; 373 SCRA 316 (2002).
18 Id., at p. 400, p. 344.
19 457 Phil. 101; 410 SCRA 82 (2003).
20 Id., at 117; p. 93.
21 345 Phil. 9; 279 SCRA 506 (1997).
22 Id., at p. 34; p. 531.
23 234 Phil. 443; 150 SCRA 450 (1987).
24 Id., at p. 451; p. 459.

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Indeed, the President, Congress and the Court cannot


create directly franchises that are exclusive in character.
What the President, Congress and the Court cannot legally
do directly they cannot do indirectly. Thus, the President,
Congress and the Court cannot create indirectly franchises
that are exclusive in character by allowing the Board of
Directors (BOD) of a water district and the Local Water
Utilities Administration (LWUA) to create franchises that
are exclusive in character.
In PD No. 198, as amended, former President Ferdinand
E. Marcos (President Marcos) created indirectly franchises
that are exclusive in character by allowing the BOD of
LTWD and the LWUA to create directly franchises that are
exclusive in character. Section 47 of PD No. 198, as
amended, allows the BOD and the LWUA to create directly
franchises that are exclusive in character. Section 47
states:

“Sec. 47. Exclusive Franchise.—No franchise shall be


granted to any other person or agency for domestic,
industrial or commercial water service within the district or any
portion thereof unless and except to the extent that the
board of directors of said district consents thereto by
resolution duly adopted, such resolution, however, shall be
subject to review by the Administration.” (Emphasis
supplied)

In case of conflict between the Constitution and a


statute, the Constitution always prevails because the
Constitution is the basic law to which all other laws must
conform to. The duty of the Court is to uphold the
Constitution and to declare void all laws that do not
conform to it.
In Social Justice Society v. Dangerous Drugs Board,25
the Court held that, “It is basic that if a law or an
administrative rule violates any norm of the Constitution,
that issuance is null and void and has no effect. The
Constitution is the basic

_______________
25 G.R. Nos. 157870, 158633 and 161658, 3 November 2008, 570 SCRA
410.

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law to which all laws must conform; no act shall be valid if


it conflicts with the Constitution.”26 In Sabio v. Gordon,27
the Court held that, “the Constitution is the highest law of
the land. It is the ‘basic and paramount law to which all
other laws must conform.’  ”28 In Atty. Macalintal v.
Commission on Elections,29 the Court held that, “The
Constitution is the fundamental and paramount law of the
nation to which all other laws must conform and in
accordance with which all private rights must be
determined and all public authority administered. Laws
that do not conform to the Constitution shall be stricken
down for being unconstitutional.”30 In Manila Prince Hotel
v. Government Service Insurance System,31 the Court held
that:

“Under the doctrine of constitutional supremacy, if a law or


contract violates any norm of the constitution that law or
contract whether promulgated by the legislative or by the
executive branch or entered into by private persons for private
purposes is null and void and without any force and effect.
Thus, since the Constitution is the fundamental,
paramount and supreme law of the nation, it is deemed
written in every statute and contract.”32 (Emphasis supplied)

To reiterate, the 1935, 1973 and 1987 Constitutions


expressly prohibit the creation of franchises that are
exclusive in character. They uniformly command that “nor
shall such franchise x x x be exclusive in character.”
This constitutional prohibition is absolute and accepts no
exception. On the other hand, PD No. 198, as amended,
allows the BOD of LTWD and LWUA to create franchises
that are exclusive in

_______________

26 Id., at pp. 422-423.


27 G.R. No. 174340, 17 October 2006, 504 SCRA 704.
28 Id., at p. 731.
29 453 Phil. 586; 405 SCRA 614 (2003).
30 Id., at p. 631; pp. 631-632.
31 335 Phil. 82; 267 SCRA 408 (1997).
32 Id., at p. 101; pp. 430-431.
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character. Section 47 states that, “No franchise shall be


granted to any other person or agency x x x unless and
except to the extent that the board of directors
consents thereto x  x  x subject to review by the
Administration.” Section 47 creates a glaring exception to
the absolute prohibition in the Constitution. Clearly, it is
patently unconstitutional.
Section 47 gives the BOD and the LWUA the authority
to make an exception to the absolute prohibition in the
Constitution. In short, the BOD and the LWUA are given
the discretion to create franchises that are exclusive in
character. The BOD and the LWUA are not even legislative
bodies. The BOD is not a regulatory body but simply a
management board of a water district. Indeed, neither the
BOD nor the LWUA can be granted the power to create any
exception to the absolute prohibition in the Constitution, a
power that Congress itself cannot exercise.
In Metropolitan Cebu Water District v. Adala,33 the
Court categorically declared Section 47 void. The Court
held that:

“Nonetheless, while the prohibition in Section 47 of P.D. 198


applies to the issuance of CPCs for the reasons discussed above,
the same provision must be deemed void ab initio for being
irreconcilable with Article XIV, Section 5 of the 1973
Constitution which was ratified on January 17, 1973 — the
constitution in force when P.D. 198 was issued on May 25, 1973.
Thus, Section 5 of Art. XIV of the 1973 Constitution reads:
“SECTION 5. No franchise, certificate, or any other
form of authorization for the operation of a public utility
shall be granted except to citizens of the Philippines or to
corporations or associations organized under the laws of the
Philippines at least sixty per centum of the capital of which
is owned by such citizens, nor shall such franchise,
certificate, or authorization be exclusive in character or
for a longer period than fifty years. Neither shall any such
franchise or right be

_______________

33 G.R. No. 168914, 4 July 2007, 526 SCRA 465.

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granted except under the condition that it shall be subject


to amendment, alteration, or repeal by the Batasang
Pambansa when the public interest so requires. The State
shall encourage equity participation in public utiltities by
the general public. The participation of foreign investors in
the governing body of any public utility enterprise shall be
limited to their proportionate share in the capital thereof.”
This provision has been substantially reproduced in Article XII
Section 11 of the 1987 Constitution, including the prohibition
against exclusive franchises.
xxxx
Since Section 47 of P.D. 198, which vests an “exclusive
franchise” upon public utilities, is clearly repugnant to
Article XIV, Section 5 of the 1973 Constitution, it is
unconstitutional and may not, therefore, be relied upon by
petitioner in support of its opposition against respondent’s
application for CPC and the subsequent grant thereof by the
NWRB.
WHEREFORE, Section 47 of P.D. 198 is
unconstitutional.”34 (Emphasis supplied)

The dissenting opinion declares Section 47 valid and


constitutional. In effect, the dissenting opinion holds that
(1) President Marcos can create indirectly franchises that
are exclusive in character; (2) the BOD can create directly
franchises that are exclusive in character; (3) the LWUA
can create directly franchises that are exclusive in
character; and (4) the Court should allow the creation of
franchises that are exclusive in character.
Stated differently, the dissenting opinion holds that (1)
President Marcos can violate indirectly the Constitution;
(2) the BOD can violate directly the Constitution; (3) the
LWUA can violate directly the Constitution; and (4) the
Court should allow the violation of the Constitution.
The dissenting opinion states that the BOD and the
LWUA can create franchises that are exclusive in character
“based

_______________

34 Id., at pp. 479-482.

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on reasonable and legitimate grounds,” and such creation
“should not be construed as a violation of the constitutional
mandate on the non-exclusivity of a franchise” because it
“merely refers to regulation” which is part of “the
government’s inherent right to exercise police power in
regulating public utilities” and that their violation of the
Constitution “would carry with it the legal presumption
that public officers regularly perform their official
functions.” The dissenting opinion states that:

“To begin with, a government agency’s refusal to grant a


franchise to another entity, based on reasonable and legitimate
grounds, should not be construed as a violation of the
constitutional mandate on the non-exclusivity of a franchise; this
merely refers to regulation, which the Constitution does not
prohibit. To say that a legal provision is unconstitutional simply
because it enables a government instrumentality to determine the
propriety of granting a franchise is contrary to the government’s
inherent right to exercise police power in regulating public
utilities for the protection of the public and the utilities
themselves. The refusal of the local water district or the LWUA to
consent to the grant of other franchises would carry with it the
legal presumption that public officers regularly perform their
official functions.”

The dissenting opinion states two “reasonable and


legitimate grounds” for the creation of exclusive franchise:
(1) protection of “the government’s investment,”35 and (2)
avoidance of “a situation where ruinous competition could
compromise the supply of public utilities in poor and
remote areas.”36
There is no “reasonable and legitimate” ground to
violate the Constitution. The Constitution should never be
violated by anyone. Right or wrong, the President,
Congress, the Court, the BOD and the LWUA have no
choice but to follow the Constitution. Any act, however
noble its intentions, is void if it violates the Constitution.
This rule is basic.

_______________

35 Id., at p. 13.
36 Id.

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In Social Justice Society,37 the Court held that, “In the
discharge of their defined functions, the three
departments of government have no choice but to
yield obedience to the commands of the
Constitution. Whatever limits it imposes must be
observed.”38 In Sabio,39 the Court held that, “the
Constitution is the highest law of the land. It is ‘the basic
and paramount law to which x  x  x all persons,
including the highest officials of the land, must
defer. No act shall be valid, however noble its
intentions, if it conflicts with the Constitution.’ ”40 In
Bengzon v. Drilon,41 the Court held that, “the three
branches of government must discharge their respective
functions within the limits of authority conferred by the
Constitution.”42 In Mutuc v. Commission on Elections,43 the
Court held that, “The three departments of
government in the discharge of the functions with
which it is [sic] entrusted have no choice but to yield
obedience to [the Constitution’s] commands.
Whatever limits it imposes must be observed.”44
Police power does not include the power to violate the
Constitution. Police power is the plenary power vested in
Congress to make laws not repugnant to the
Constitution. This rule is basic.
In Metropolitan Manila Development Authority v. Viron
Transportation Co., Inc.,45 the Court held that, “Police
power is the plenary power vested in the legislature to
make, ordain, and establish wholesome and reasonable
laws, statutes and

_______________

37 Supra note 25.


38 Id., at p. 423.
39 Supra note 27.
40 Id., at p. 731.
41 G.R. No. 103524, 15 April 1992, 208 SCRA 133.
42 Id., at p. 142.
43 146 Phil. 798; 36 SCRA 228 (1970).
44 Id., at p. 806; p. 234.
45 G.R. Nos. 170656 and 170657, 15 August 2007, 530 SCRA 341.

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ordinances, not repugnant to the Constitution.”46 In


Carlos Superdrug Corp. v. Department of Social Welfare
and Development,47 the Court held that, police power “is
‘the power vested in the legislature by the constitution to
make, ordain, and establish all manner of wholesome and
reasonable laws, statutes, and ordinances x x x not
repugnant to the constitution.’  ”48 In Metropolitan
Manila Development Authority v. Garin,49 the Court held
that, “police power, as an inherent attribute of sovereignty,
is the power vested by the Constitution in the legislature to
make, ordain, and establish all manner of wholesome and
reasonable laws, statutes and ordinances x x x not
repugnant to the Constitution.”50
There is no question that the effect of Section 47 is the
creation of franchises that are exclusive in character.
Section 47 expressly allows the BOD and the LWUA to
create franchises that are exclusive in character.
The dissenting opinion explains why the BOD and the
LWUA should be allowed to create franchises that are
exclusive in character—to protect “the government’s
investment” and to avoid “a situation where ruinous
competition could compromise the supply of public utilities
in poor and remote areas.” The dissenting opinion declares
that these are “reasonable and legitimate grounds.” The
dissenting opinion also states that, “The refusal of the local
water district or the LWUA to consent to the grant of other
franchises would carry with it the legal presumption that
public officers regularly perform their official functions.”
When the effect of a law is unconstitutional, it is void. In
Sabio,51 the Court held that, “A statute may be declared

_______________

46 Id., at p. 362.
47 G.R. No. 166494, 29 June 2007, 526 SCRA 130.
48 Id., at p. 144.
49 496 Phil. 83; 456 SCRA 176 (2005).
50 Id., at pp. 91-92; pp. 185-186.
51 Supra note 27.

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unconstitutional because it is not within the legislative


power to enact; or it creates or establishes methods or
forms that infringe constitutional principles; or its purpose
or effect violates the Constitution or its basic
principles.”52 The effect of Section 47 violates the
Constitution, thus, it is void.
In Strategic Alliance Development Corporation v.
Radstock Securities Limited,53 the Court held that, “This
Court must perform its duty to defend and uphold the
Constitution.”54 In Bengzon,55 the Court held that, “The
Constitution expressly confers on the judiciary the power to
maintain inviolate what it decrees.”56 In Mutuc,57 the Court
held that:

“The concept of the Constitution as the fundamental law, setting


forth the criterion for the validity of any public act whether
proceeding from the highest official or the lowest functionary, is a
postulate of our system of government. That is to manifest fealty
to the rule of law, with priority accorded to that which occupies
the topmost rung in the legal hierarchy. The three departments of
government in the discharge of the functions with which it is [sic]
entrusted have no choice but to yield obedience to its commands.
Whatever limits it imposes must be observed. Congress in the
enactment of statutes must ever be on guard lest the restrictions
on its authority, whether substantive or formal, be transcended.
The Presidency in the execution of the laws cannot ignore or
disregard what it ordains. In its task of applying the law to the
facts as found in deciding cases, the judiciary is called upon to
maintain inviolate what is decreed by the fundamental law. Even
its power of judicial review to pass upon the validity of the acts of
the coordinate branches in the course of adjudication is a logical
corollary of this basic principle that the Constitution is
paramount. It overrides any governmental measure that

_______________

52 Id., at p. 730.
53 G.R. Nos. 178158 and 180428, 4 December 2009, 607 SCRA 413.
54 Id., at p. 528.
55 Supra note 41.
56 Id., at p. 142.
57 Supra note 43.

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fails to live up to its mandates. Thereby there is a recognition of


its being the supreme law.”58

Sustaining the RTC’s ruling would make a dangerous


precedent. It will allow Congress to do indirectly what it
cannot do directly. In order to circumvent the
constitutional prohibition on franchises that are exclusive
in character, all Congress has to do is to create a law
allowing the BOD and the LWUA to create franchises that
are exclusive in character, as in the present case.
WHEREFORE, we GRANT the petition. We DECLARE
Section 47 of Presidential Decree No. 198
UNCONSTITUTIONAL. We SET ASIDE the 1 October
2004 Judgment and 6 November 2004 Order of the
Regional Trial Court, Judicial Region 1, Branch 62, La
Trinidad, Benguet, in Civil Case No. 03-CV-1878 and
REINSTATE the 23 July 2002 Resolution and 15 August
2002 Decision of the National Water Resources Board.
SO ORDERED.

Corona (C.J.), Velasco, Jr., Nachura, Peralta, Bersamin,


Del Castillo, Villarama, Jr., Perez and Sereno, JJ., concur.
Carpio-Morales, J., Consistent with my position in
Metropolitan Cebu Water District v. Adala, I concur.
Leonardo-De Castro, J., I join the dissent of Justice
Brion.
Brion, J., I dissent. See Opinion.
Abad, J., See Concurring Opinion.
Mendoza, J., On Official Leave.

_______________

58 Id., at pp. 806-807; p. 234.

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DISSENTING OPINION

BRION, J.:
I dissent.
Lest this Dissent be misunderstood, I shall clarify at the
outset that I do not dispute the majority position that an
exclusive franchise is forbidden by the Constitution. The
prohibition is in an express words of the Constitution and
cannot be disputed.  
My misgiving arises from the majority’s failure to
properly resolve the issue of whether or not Section 47 of
P.D. No. 198 embodies a prohibited exclusive franchise. I
believe that the Court must carefully examine and analyze
the application of the constitutional command to Section 47
and explain the exact legal basis for its conclusion. We
must determine what an exclusive franchise really means
to avoid overextending the prohibition to unintended areas.
In the process, we must determine whether—can regulate
the grant of subsequent franchises.   In the present case, I
take the view that the law can so allow in order to
efficiently and effectively provide its citizens with the most
basic utility.
Respondent La Trinidad Water District (LTWD) is a
local water utility created under Presidential Decree (P.D.)
No. 198.1 It is a government-owned and controlled
corporation2 authorized by law to supply water for
domestic, industrial,

_______________

1 Entitled “Declaring a National Policy Favoring Local Operation and


Control of Water Systems; Authorizing the Formation of Local Water
Districts and Providing for the Government and Administration of such
Districts; Chartering a National Administration to Facilitate Improvement
of Local Water Utilities; Granting said Administration such Powers as are
Necessary to Optimize Public Service from Water Utility Operations, and
for other Purposes,” promulgated May 25, 1973, as amended by P.D. No.
1479.
2 Baguio Water District v. Trajano, GRN L-65428, February 20, 1984,
127 SCRA 730.

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and commercial purposes within the Municipality of La


Trinidad.  On the other hand, the petitioner Tawang Multi-
Purpose Cooperative (TMPC) is an applicant for a
certificate of public convenience (CPC) to operate and
maintain a waterworks system in Barangay Tawang in the
Municipality of La Trinidad.
The RTC ruled that a CPC in favor of TMPC cannot be
issued without the latter having applied for the consent of
the local water district in accordance with Section 47 of
P.D. No. 198. In effect, the RTC ruled that Section 47 does
not involve the grant of an exclusive franchise. Thus, the
TMPC filed the present petition for review on certiorari
under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court, questioning the
validity of Section 47 of P.D. No. 198, which provides:

“Sec. 47. Exclusive Franchise.—No franchise shall be granted


to any other person or agency for domestic, industrial, or
commercial water service within the district or any portion
thereof unless and except to the extent that the board of
directors of said district consents thereto by resolution
duly adopted, such resolution, however, shall be subject to
review by the Administration.”3 [Emphasis supplied]
The invalidity of exclusive
franchises is not in dispute
I reiterate that, contrary to the majority’s statements, I
do not dispute that both the 1973 and the 1987
Constitutions clearly mandate that no franchise certificate,
or any other form of authorization, for the operation of a
public utility shall be exclusive in character. I fully support
the position that the legislative entity that enacted Section
47 of P.D. 198 (in this case, former President Ferdinand E.
Marcos in the exercise of his martial law legislative
powers) must comply with Article XIV, Section 5 of the
1973 Constitution4 (the

_______________

3 Supra note 1, at 28.


4 Sec. 5, Art. XIV of the 1973 Constitution provides:

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Constitution in force when P.D. No. 198 was enacted). This


constitutional provision has been carried over to the 1987
Constitution as Article XII, Section 11 and states:

“No franchise, certificate, or any other form of authorization for


the operation of a public utility shall be granted except to citizens
of the Philippines or to corporations or associations organized
under the laws of the Philippines, at least sixty per centum of
whose capital is owned by such citizens; nor shall such
franchise, certificate, or authorization be exclusive in
character or for a longer period than fifty years. Neither shall
any such franchise or right be granted except under the condition
that it shall be subject to amendment, alteration, or repeal by the
Congress when the common good so requires. The State shall
encourage equity participation in public utilities by the general
public. The participation of foreign investors in the governing
body of any public utility enterprise shall be limited to their
proportionate share in its capital, and all the executive and
managing officers of such corporation or association must be
citizens of the Philippines.”

For the majority to characterize the Dissent as an


argument for the grant of exclusive franchises by former
President Marcos, by the water district’s board of directors,
by the

_______________
No franchise, certificate, or any other form of authorization for the
operation of a public utility shall be granted except to citizens of the
Philippines or to corporations or associations organized under the laws of
the Philippines at least sixty per centum of the capital of which is owned
by such citizens, nor shall such franchise, certificate or
authorization be exclusive in character or for a longer period than
fifty years. Neither shall any such franchise or right be granted except
under the condition that it shall be subject to amendment, alteration or
repeal in by the Batasang Pambansa when the public interest so requires.
The State shall encourage equity participation in public utilities by the
general public. The participation of foreign investors in the governing
body of any public utility enterprise shall be limited to their proportionate
share in the capital thereof.

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LWUA, and by this Court would be to misread the


Dissent and blur the issues that it raises.5
Section 47 of P.D. 198 does not violate Section
5, Article XIV of the 1973 Constitution
The majority insists that Section 47 of P.D. 198
indirectly grants an exclusive franchise in favor of local
water districts.  In their reading, the law “allows the board
of directors of a water district and the Local Water Utilities
Administrator (LWUA) to create franchises that are
exclusive in character.”6 I disagree, as the majority opinion
does not at all specify and is unclear on how any franchise
can be indirectly exclusive.  What the law allows is merely
the regulation of the grant of subsequent franchises so that
the government—through government-owned and
controlled corporations—can protect itself and the general
public it serves in the operation of public utilities.
An exclusive franchise, in its plainest meaning, signifies
that no other entity, apart from the grantee, could be given
a franchise. Section 47 of P.D. No. 198, by its clear terms,
does not provide for an exclusive franchise in stating that:

“Sec. 47. Exclusive Franchise.—No franchise shall be granted


to any other person or agency for domestic, industrial, or
commercial water service within the district or any portion
thereof unless and except to the extent that the board of
directors of said district consents thereto by resolution
duly adopted, such resolution, however, shall be subject to
review by the Administration.”7

Despite its title, the assailed provision does not


absolutely prohibit other franchises for water service
from being granted to other persons or agencies. It
merely

_______________

5 Ponencia, p. 11.
6 Ponencia, p. 8.
7 Supra note 1.

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requires the consent of the local water district’s


Board of Directors before another franchise within
the district is granted. Thus, it is a regulation on the
grant of any subsequent franchise where the local water
district, as original grantee, may grant or refuse its
consent. If it consents, the non-exclusive nature of its
franchise becomes only too clear. Should it refuse, its action
does not remain unchecked as the franchise applicant may
ask the LWUA to review the local water district’s refusal.
It is thus the LWUA (on the Office of the President in case
of further appeal) that grants a subsequent franchise if one
will be allowed.
Under this arrangement, I submit that the prerogative
of the local water district’s board of directors or the LWUA
to give or refuse its consent to the application for a CPC
cannot be considered as a constitutional infringement. A
government agency’s refusal to consent to the grant of a
franchise to another entity, based on reasonable and
legitimate grounds, should not be construed as a violation
of the constitutional mandate on the non-exclusivity of a
franchise where the standards for the grant or refusal are
clearly spelled out in the law. Effectively, what the law and
the State (acting through its own agency or a government-
owned or controlled corporation) thereby undertake is
merely an act of regulation that the Constitution does not
prohibit. To say that a legal provision is unconstitutional
simply because it enables a grantee, a government
instrumentality, to determine the soundness of granting a
subsequent franchise in its area is contrary to the
government’s inherent right to exercise police power in
regulating public utilities for the protection of the public
and the utilities themselves.8
It should also be noted that even after the Marcos
regime, constitutional experts have taken the view that the
government can and should take a strong active part in
ensuring
_______________

8 Kilusang Mayo Uno Labor Center v. Garcia, Jr., G.R. No. 115381,
December 23, 1994, 239 SCRA 386, 412.

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public access to basic utilities. The deliberations of the


Constitutional Commission for the 1987 Constitution
(which contains the same provision found in the 1973
Constitution on the non-exclusivity of public utility
franchises) regarding monopolies regulated by the state
may guide, though not necessarily bind, us:

MR. DAVIDE: If the idea is really to promote the private sector, may
we not provide here that the government can, in no case,
practice monopoly except in certain areas?
MR. VILLEGAS.   No, because in the economic field, there are
definitely areas where the State can intervene and can
actually get involved in monopolies for the public good.
MR. DAVIDE.   Yes, we have provisions here allowing such a
monopoly in times of national emergency.
MR. VILLEGAS.   Not even in emergency; for the continuing welfare
of consumers.
MR. MONSOD.  May we just make a distinction? As we know, there
are natural monopolies or what we call “structural monopolies.”
Structural monopolies are monopolies not by the nature of their
activities, like electric power, for example, but by the nature of the
market. There may be instances when the market has not
developed to such extent that it will only allow, say, one steel
company.   Structural monopoly is not by the nature of the
business itself. It is possible under these circumstances that
the State may be the appropriate vehicle for such a
monopoly.9

If, indeed, the Constitutional Commission in discussing


the non-exclusivity clause had accepted the merits of
government monopolies, should this Court consider
unconstitutional a provision that allows a lesser degree of
regulation—i.e., a government agency giving its consent to
the application of a

_______________

9  Record of the Constitutional Commission, volume 3, 262-263,

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50 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
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CPC with the protection of the viability of the government


agency and public good as the standards of its action?
Safeguards against abuse of author-
ity by the water districts’ board of
directors and the LWUA
The refusal of the local water district or the LWUA to
consent to other franchises would carry with it the legal
presumption that public officers regularly perform their
official functions.10 If, on the other hand, the officers,
directors or trustees of the local water districts and the
LWUA act arbitrarily and unjustifiably refuse their
consent to an applicant of a franchise, they may be held
liable for their actions. The local water districts11 and the
LWUA12 are government-owned and controlled
corporations (GOCCs). The directors of the local water
districts and the trustees of the LWUA are government
employees subject to civil service laws and anti-graft
laws.13 Moreover, the LWUA is attached to the Office of the
President14 which has the authority to review its acts.
 Should these acts in the Executive Department constitute
grave abuse of discretion, the Courts may strike them down
under its broad powers of review.15

_______________

10 First United Constructors Corporation v. Poro Point Management


Corporation (PPMC), G.R. No. 178799, January 19, 2009, 576 SCRA 311,
321; Gatmaitan v. Gonzales, G.R. No. 149226, June 26, 2006, 492 SCRA
591, 604; and PAMECA Wood Treatment Plant, Inc. v. Court of Appeals,
369 Phil. 544, 555; 310 SCRA 281 (1999).
11 Davao City Water District v. Civil Service Commission, G.R. Nos.
95237-38, September 13, 1991, 201 SCRA 593, 602; see also Feliciano v.
Commission on Audit, 464 Phil. 439, 453-464; 419 SCRA 363 (2004).
12 Section 49 of P.D. No. 198.
13 Engr. Feliciano v. Commission on Audit, supra note 11, at 462-463.
14 Section 49 of P.D. No. 198.
15 CONSTITUTION, Article VII, Section 1.

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Any abuse of authority that the local water districts may


be feared to commit is balanced by the control that the
government exerts in their creation and operations. The
government creates and organizes local water districts in
accordance with a specific law, P.D. No. 198.16 There is no
private party involved as a co-owner in the creation of local
water districts.   Prior to the local water districts’ creation,
the national or local government directly owns and controls
all their assets. The government’s control over them is
further asserted through their board of directors, who are
appointed by the municipal or city mayor or by the
provincial governor. The directors are not co-owners of the
local water district but, like other water district personnel,
are government employees subject to civil

_______________

16 Francisco, Pepito, “Provincial Water Utilities Act of 1973, as


amended,” 2008 ed., pp. 25-26, citing the LWUA-Water District Primer.
The steps to be undertaken for the creation of a duly-organized water
districts are as follows:
(1) LWUA conducts preliminary talks and consultation with
interested local government entities.
(2) The local government conducts public hearings to arrive at
a consensus on whether to form a water   district or not.
(3) The local legislative body (the Sangguniang Bayan/Lungsod
or Sangguniang Panlalawigan, as the case may be) secures
nominations for candidates for the water district board of directors
from business, civic, professional, education and women sectors of
the community concerned.
(4) The Sanggunian secretary collates all nominations and
forwards the same to the appointing authority.
(5)  The Mayor or Governor appoints the directors.
(6) The local legislative body deliberates and enacts a resolution
to form a water district stating therein the names and terms of
office of the duly appointed board of directors.
(7) Mayor or Governor approves the resolution, submits the
same to LWUA.
(8) LWUA reviews the resolution to determine compliance with
Presidential Decree No. 198, as amended (Provincial Water
Utilities Act of 1973) and LWUA requirements.

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52 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED


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service laws and anti-graft laws.17 Under this set-up, the


control that exists over the grant of franchises, which
originally belongs to the State, simply remained and is
maintained with the State acting through the local
government units and the government-owned and controlled
corporations under them.
Because of the government’s extensive financial support
to these entities, it is part of the law’s policy to scrutinize
their expenditures and outlays. Section 20 of P.D. No. 198
states that the local water districts are subject to annual
audits performed by independent auditors and conducted
by the LWUA.18 Section 41 of P.D. No. 198 even limits the
authority of the board of directors of local water districts in
the manner in which it can dispose of their income: (1) as
payment for obligations and essential current operating
expenses; (2) as a reserve for debt service, and for
operations and maintenance to be used during periods of
calamities, force majeure or unforeseen events; and (3) as a
reserve exclusively for the expansion and improvement of
their facilities. In this manner, the law ensures that their
officers or directors do not profit from local water districts
and that the operations thereof would be focused on
improving public service. The possibility that the officers
would refuse their consent to another franchise applicant
for reasons of personal gain is, thus, eliminated.
Public policy behind Section 47
of P.D. No. 198
Without a clear showing that the Constitution was
violated by the enactment of Section 47 of P.D. 198, the
Court cannot invalidate it without infringing on
government policy, especially when Congress had not seen
fit to repeal the law and when the law appears to be based
on sound public policy.

_______________

17 Engr. Feliciano v. Commission on Audit, supra note 11, at 462-463.


18 Ibid.

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P.D. No. 198 requires an applicant to first obtain the


consent of the local water district and the LWUA for
important reasons. First, it aims to protect the
government’s investment.   Second, it avoids a situation
where ruinous competition could compromise the supply of
public utilities in poor and remote areas.
A first reason the government seeks to prioritize local
water districts is the protection of its investments—it pours
its scarce financial resources into these water districts. The
law primarily establishes the LWUA as a specialized
lending institution for the promotion, development and
financing of water utilities.19 Section 73 of P.D. No. 198
also authorizes the LWUA to contract loans and credits,
and incur indebtedness with foreign governments or
international financial institutions for the accomplishment
of its objectives. Moreover, the President of the Philippines
is empowered not only to negotiate or contract with foreign
governments or international financial institutions on
behalf of the LWUA; he or she may also absolutely and
unconditionally guarantee, in the name of the Republic of
the Philippines, the payment of the loans. In addition, the
law provides that the General Appropriations Act shall
include an outlay to meet the financial requirements of
non-viable local water districts or the special projects of
local water districts.20
The law also adopts a policy to keep the operations of
local water districts economically secure and viable. The
“whereas” clauses of the law explain the need to establish
local water districts: the lack of water utilities in provincial
areas and the poor quality of the water found in some
areas. The law sought to solve these problems by
encouraging the creation of local water districts that the
national government would support through technical
advisory services and financing.21 These

_______________

19 Section 50 of P.D. 198.


20 Sections 76 and 77 of P.D. No. 198.
21 WHEREAS, domestic water systems and sanitary sewers are two of
the most basic and essential elements of local utility system,

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54 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED


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local water districts are heavily regulated and depend on


government support for their subsistence. If a private
entity provides stiff competition against a local water
district, causes it to close down and, thereafter, chooses to
discontinue its business, the problem of finding a
replacement water supplier for a poor, remote area will
recur. Not only does the re-organization of a local water
district drain limited public funds; the residents of these
far-flung areas would have to endure the absence of water
supply during the considerable time it would take to find
an alternative water supply.
Thus, as a matter of foresight, Section 47 of P.D. No. 198
and other provisions within the law aim to avert the
negative effects of competition on the financial stability of
local water districts. These sections work hand in hand
with Section 47 of P.D. No. 198. Section 31 of P.D. No.
198, which is very similar to Section 47 of P.D. No. 198,
directly prohibits persons from selling or disposing water
for public purposes within the service area of the local
water district:

Section 31. Protection of Waters and Facilities of District.—A


district shall have the right to:
x x x x
(c) Prohibit any person, firm or corporation from vending selling, or
otherwise disposing of water for public purposes within the service
area of the district where district facilities are available to provide
such service, or fix

_______________

  which, with a few exceptions, do not exist in provincial areas in the


Philippines;

WHEREAS, existing domestic water utilities are not meeting the needs
of the communities they serve; water quality is unsatisfactory; pressure is
inadequate; and reliability of service is poor; in fact, many persons receive
no piped water service whatsoever;
x  x  x  x
WHEREAS, local water utilities should be locally-controlled and
managed, as well as have support on the national level in the area of
technical advisory services and financing[.]

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terms and conditions by permit for such sale or disposition


of water.

Thus, Section 47 of P.D. No. 198 provides that before a


person or entity is allowed to provide water services where
the local water district’s facilities are already available, one
must ask for the consent of the board of directors of the
local water district, whose action on the matter may be
reviewed by the LWUA.  
Even after a CPC is granted and the entity becomes
qualified to provide water services, Section 39 of P.D. No.
198 still allows a local water district to charge other
entities producing water for commercial or industrial uses
with a production assessment, to compensate for financial
reverses brought about by the operations of the water
provider; failure to pay this assessment results in liability
for damages and/or the issuance of an order of injunction.

“Section 39.  Production Assessment.—In the event the board of a


district finds, after notice and hearing, that production of ground
water by other entities within the district for commercial or
industrial uses i[s] injuring or reducing the district’s financial
condition, the board may adopt and levy a ground water
production assessment to compensate for such loss. In connection
therewith, the district may require necessary reports by the
operator of any commercial or industrial well. Failure to pay said
assessment shall constitute an invasion of the waters of the
district and shall entitle this district to an injunction and
damages pursuant to Section [31] of this Title.”

From these, it can be seen that Article XIV, Section


5 of the 1973 Constitution and P.D. No. 198 share the
same purpose of seeking to ensure regular water
supply to the whole country, particularly to the
remote areas.   By requiring a prospective franchise
applicant to obtain the consent of the local water district or
the LWUA, the law does not thereby grant it an exclusive
franchise; it simply gives the water district the opportunity
to have a say on the entry of a competitor whose operations
can adversely affect its viability

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56 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED


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and the service it gives to consumers. This is far from an


exclusive franchise that allows no other entity, apart from
the only grantee, to have a franchise. Section 47 of P.D. No.
198 does not bar other franchise applicants; it merely
regulates the grant of subsequent franchises to ensure that
the market is not too saturated to the point of adversely
affecting existing government water suppliers, all with the
end of ensuring the public the water supply it needs.
Revisiting Metropolitan Cebu Water District
(MCWD) v. Margarita A. Adala
Based on the foregoing discussion, I submit that there
exists ample justification to reverse our ruling in
Metropolitan Cebu Water District (MCWD) v. Margarita A.
Adala.22 As in the present ponencia, there was no
discussion in Metro Cebu Water District of what constitutes
a grant of an exclusive franchise as opposed to a valid
regulation of franchises by the government or how the
questioned provision violated the constitutional mandate
against exclusive franchises. It was simply presumed
that there was a violation. It is worth noting that the
Court disposed of the issue in just one paragraph
that stated:

“Since Section 47 of P.D. 198, which vests an “exclusive


franchise” upon public utilities, is clearly repugnant to Article
XIV, Section 5 of the 1973 Constitution, it is unconstitutional and
may not, therefore, be relied upon by [MCWD] in support of its
opposition against [Adala’s] application for CPC and the
subsequent grant thereof by the NWRB.”23

In a legal system that rests heavily on precedents, this


manner of reasoning would not only be unfair to the
parties; it would also confuse and bewilder the legal
community and the general public regarding the
interpretation of an important

_______________

22 G.R. No. 168914, July 4, 2007, 526 SCRA 465.


23 Ibid.

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constitutional provision. This kind of approach should


always be subject to our continuing review and
examination.
  In reversing a previous ruling issued by the Court, we
are not unmindful of the legal maxim stare decisis et non
quieta movere (literally, to stand by the decision and
disturb not what is settled). This maxim is a very
convenient practice that the conclusion reached in one case
can be applied to subsequent cases where the facts are
substantially the same, even though the parties are
different. However, the doctrine is not set in stone; the
Court may wisely set it aside upon a showing that
circumstances attendant in a particular case override the
benefits brought about by stare decisis.24
In our Resolution in de Castro v. Judicial and Bar
Council,25 we explained why stare decisis is not considered
inflexible with respect to this Court:

“The Court, as the highest court of the land, may be guided but
is not controlled by precedent. Thus, the Court, especially with a
new membership, is not obliged to follow blindly a particular
decision that it determines, after re-examination, to call for a
rectification. The adherence to precedents is strict and rigid in a
common-law setting like the United Kingdom, where judges make
law as binding as an Act of Parliament. But ours is not a common
law system; hence judicial precedents are not always strictly and
rigidly followed. A judicial pronouncement in an earlier decision
may be followed as a precedent in subsequent case only when its
reasoning and justification are relevant, and the Court in the
latter case accepts such reasoning and justification to be
applicable in the case.  The application of the precedent is for the
sake of convenience and stability.
For the intervenors to insist that Valenzuela ought not to be
disobeyed, or abandoned, or reversed, and that its wisdom should

_______________

24 Philippine Guardians Brotherhood, Inc. v. Commission on Elections, G.R.


No. 190529, April 29, 2010, 619 SCRA 585.
25 G.R. Nos. 191002, 191032, 191057, 191149, 191342 and 191420, and A.M.
No. 10-2-5-SC, April 20, 2010, 618 SCRA 639, citing Limketkai Sons Milling, Inc.
v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 118509, September 5, 1996, 261 SCRA 464, 467.

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58 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED


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guide, if not control, the Court in this case is, therefore, devoid of
rationality and foundation. They seem to conveniently forget that
the Constitution itself recognizes the innate authority of
the Court en banc to modify or reverse a doctrine or
principle of law laid down in any decision rendered en
banc or in division.”

Thus, this Court had seen it fit to overturn or abandon


the rulings set in its previous decisions. In Philippine
Guardians Brotherhood, Inc. v. Commission on Elections,26
we reversed our earlier ruling in Philippine Mines Safety
Environment Association v. Commission on Elections.27
And in De Castro,28 we re-examined our decision in In re
appointments of Hon. Valenzuela and Hon. Vallarta29
although the re-examination failed for lack of the necessary
supporting votes.
During the deliberations of the present case, a respected
colleague hesitated at the idea of overturning a former
ruling that has declared a law unconstitutional on the
ground that this Court, once it declares a law null, cannot
breathe life into its already dead provisions. It raises fears
that the people and the other branches of government will
not treat the Court’s declarations of nullity of laws
seriously.30
We cannot hold that the Court is empowered to
reverse its established doctrines but is powerless to
review laws that have been declared void; no
justification simply exists for such distinctions. In
reversing its decisions, this Court’s primary consideration
is to arrive at a just and judicious ruling and avoiding the
ill effects of a previous ruling. It is by pursuing such
objectives that this Court earns the respect of the people
and the other branches of government. Precisely, this
Court has taken a contrary view in Kilosbayan,

_______________

26 Supra note 23.


27 G.R. No. 177548, Resolution dated May 10, 2007.
28 Supra note 24.
29 358 Phil. 896 (1998).
30 Justice Abad’s Dissenting Opinion, p. 2.

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Inc. v. Morato,31 when it noted that the US Supreme Court


declared the Legal Tender Acts void in Hepburn v.
Griswold,32 but subsequently declared these statutes as
valid in Knox v. Lee.33 We lauded the American jurists who
voted for the validity of the Legal Tender Acts, which had
been formerly declared void, and noted that a change of
composition in the Court could prove the means of undoing
an erroneous decision.34
In all, Section 47 of P.D. No. 198 does not violate the
constitutional proscription against exclusive franchises as
other persons and entities may still obtain franchises for
water utilities within the district upon the consent of the
local water district or upon a favorable finding by the
LWUA, which, in turn, is accountable to the Office of the
President. By granting this privilege to local water
districts, the law does not seek to favor private interests as
these districts are GOCCs whose profits are exclusively for
public use and whose expenditures the law subjects to the
strictest scrutiny. The restrictions applied to other private
persons or entities are intended to protect the government’s
considerable investment in local water districts and to
promote its policy of prioritizing local water districts as a
means of providing water utilities throughout the country.
The protectionist approach that the law has taken towards
local water districts is not per se illegal as the Constitution
does not promote a total deregulation in the operation of
public utilities and is a proper exercise by the government of
its police power.
_______________

31 320 Phil. 171, 181-182 (1995).


32 8 Wall. 603 (1869).
33 12 Wall. 457 (1871).
34 Supra note 30.  The Court declared that:
History has vindicated the overruling of the Hepburn case by the new
majority. The Legal Tender Cases proved to be the Court’s means of
salvation from what Chief Justice Hughes later described as one of the
Court’s “self-inflicted wounds.”

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60 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED


Tawang Multi-Purpose Cooperative vs. La Trinidad Water
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Thus, the TMPC should have first sought the consent of


LTWD’s Board of Directors, as directed under Section 47 of
P.D. No. 198. Had the Board of Directors refused to give its
consent, this action may still be reviewed by the LWUA,
the entity most able to determine the financial and
technical capacity of LTWD in order to decide whether
another water service provider is needed in the
municipality. Accordingly, it is my view that TMPC’s CPC
is invalid as it was issued without notice to the LTWD’s
Board of Directors.
CONCURRING OPINION
ABAD, J.:
On October 9, 2000 petitioner Tawang Multi-Purpose
Cooperative (TMPC), a registered cooperative established
by Barangay Tawang, La Trinidad residents for the
purpose of operating a domestic drinking water service,
applied with the National Water Resources Board (the
Board) for a Certificate of Public Convenience (CPC) to
maintain and operate a waterworks system within its
barangay.
But respondent La Trinidad Water District (LTWD), a
government-owned corporation1 that supplied water within
La Trinidad for domestic, industrial, and commercial
purposes, opposed the application. LTWD claimed that its
franchise was exclusive in that its charter provides that no
separate franchise can be granted within its area of
operation without its prior written consent. Still, the Board
granted TMPC’s application on July 23, 2002, resulting in
the issuance of a five-year CPC in its favor.
LTWD contested the grant before the Regional Trial
Court (RTC) of La Trinidad which, after hearing, rendered
judgment setting aside the Board’s decision and canceling
the CPC it
_______________

1 Created pursuant to Presidential Decree (P.D.) 198, also known as


the Provincial Water Utilities Act of 1973.

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issued to TMPC. The RTC denied TMPC’s motion for


reconsideration, prompting the latter to come to this Court
on petition for review.
The Court has previously held in Metropolitan Cebu
Water District v. Adala94 that Section 472 ofP.D. 198,3 is
unconstitutional for being contrary to Article XIV, Section
5 of the 1973 Constitution and Article XII, Section 11 of the
1987 Constitution. Some in the Court would, however, have
its above ruling reexamined based on the view that Section
47 does not actually provide for an exclusive franchise
which would violate the Constitution.
The Court’s conclusion and ruling in the Adala case
read:

“Since Section 47 of P.D. 198, which vests an “exclusive


franchise” upon public utilities, is clearly repugnant to
Article XIV, Section 5 of the 1973 Constitution, it is
unconstitutional and may not, therefore, be relied upon by
petitioner in support of its opposition against respondent’s
application for CPC and the subsequent grant thereof by
the NWRB.
WHEREFORE, Section 47 of P.D. 198 is unconstitu-
tional.”

_______________

2 G.R. No. 168914, July 4, 2007, 526 SCRA 465.


3 Sec. 47. Exclusive Franchise.—No franchise shall be granted to any
other person or agency for domestic, industrial or commercial water
service within the district or any portion thereof unless and except to the
extent that the board of directors of said district consents thereto by
resolution duly adopted, such resolution, however, shall be subject to
review by the Administration.
4 “Declaring a National Policy Favoring Local Operation and Control of
Water Systems; Authorizing the Formation of Local Water Districts and
Providing for the Government and Administration of such Districts;
Chartering a National Administration to Facilitate Improvement of Local
Water Utilities; Granting said Administration such Powers as are
Necessary to Optimize Public Service from Water Utility Operations, and
for Other Purposes.” This took effect upon its issuance by then President
Marcos on May 25, 1973.
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62 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED


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Paragraph 2, Article 7 of the New Civil Code provides


that “when the courts declared a law to be inconsistent
with the Constitution, the former shall be void and the
latter shall govern.”
Since the Court, exercising its Constitutional power of
judicial review, has declared Section 47 of P.D. 198 void
and unconstitutional, such section ceased to become law
from the beginning. The Supreme Court’s power of review
does not permit it to rewrite P.D. 198 in a subsequent case
and breathe life to its dead provisions. Only Congress can.
Besides, such course of action is unwise. The Court will
be establishing a doctrine whereby people and the other
branches of government will not need to treat the Court’s
declaration of nullity of law too seriously. They can claim
an excuse for continuing to enforce such law since even the
Court concedes that it can in another case change its mind
regarding its nullity.
I fully subscribe to the majority opinion, penned by
Justice Antonio T. Carpio that there exists no justification
for abandoning the Court’s previous ruling on the matter.
I vote to GRANT TMPC’s petition for review and SET
ASIDE the decision of the trial court.

Petition granted.

Notes.—It is precisely the inability of legislative bodies


to anticipate all (or many) possible detailed situations in
respect of any relatively complex subject matter, that
makes subordinate, delegated rule-making by
administrative agencies so important and unavoidable. All
that may be reasonably demanded is a showing that the
delegated legislation consisting of administrative
regulations are germane to the general purposes projected
by the governing or enabling statute. (Rabor vs. Civil
Service Commission, 244 SCRA 614 [1995])

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The Charter of the City of Iligan (R.A. No. 525) shows no


grant of the power to appropriate water resources—Section
15 of the Charter merely provides for the power to “provide
for the maintenance of waterworks for supplying water to
the inhabitants of the city.” (Buendia vs. City of Iligan, 457
SCRA 562 [2005])
——o0o—— 

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