Second Division (G.R. No. 166680, July 07, 2014)
Second Division (G.R. No. 166680, July 07, 2014)
Second Division (G.R. No. 166680, July 07, 2014)
SECOND DIVISION
DECISION
A prior notice or demand for liquidation of cash advances is not a condition sine qua non
before an accountable public officer may be held liable under Article 218[1] of the Revised
Penal Code.
Before us is a Petition for Review on Certiorari filed under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court of
the September 10, 2004 Decision[2] of the Sandiganbayan in Criminal Case No. 26528 and
its January 11, 2005 Resolution[3] denying reconsideration thereo.
The Information[4] dated January 25, 2001 under which petitioner Aloysius Dait Lumauig
(petitioner) was tried and convicted has this accusatory portion:
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During the course of her examination of the records and related documents of the
municipality, she came across a disbursement voucher[6] for P101,736.00 prepared for
petitioner, a former mayor of the municipality, as cash advance for the payment of freight
and other cargo charges for 12 units of motorcycles supposed to be donated to the
municipality. The amount was covered by Land Bank Check No. 11894200[7] dated August
29, 1994 wherein the payee is petitioner. Her further investigation of the accounting records
revealed that no payment intended for the charge was made to Royal Cargo Agencies for the
month of August 1994. Thus, she issued a certification[8] to this effect on November 29,
2001. She likewise claimed that she prepared two letters to inform the petitioner of his
unliquidated cash advance but the same were not sent to him because she could not get his
exact address despite efforts exerted. She averred that on June 4, 2001, petitioner paid the
subject cash advance before the treasurer of the municipality, for which reason, incumbent
Mayor Glenn D. Prudenciano executed an Affidavit of Desistance.[9]
Petitioner admitted having obtained the cash advance of P101,736.00 during his incumbency
as municipal mayor of Alfonso Lista, Ifugao.[10] This amount was intended for the payment
of freight and insurance coverage of 12 units of motorcycles to be donated to the
municipality by the City of Manila. However, instead of motorcycles, he was able to secure
two buses and five patrol cars. He claimed that it never came to his mind to settle or
liquidate the amount advanced since the vehicles were already turned over to the
municipality. He alleged that he was neither informed nor did he receive any demand from
COA to liquidate his cash advances. It was only in 2001 while he was claiming for separation
pay when he came to know that he still has an unliquidated cash advance. And so as not to
prolong the issue, he paid the amount of P101,736.00 to the municipal treasurer on June 4,
2001.
From the same facts stemmed an Information for violation of Section 3 of Republic Act (RA)
No. 3019[11] docketed as Criminal Case No. 26527 against petitioner for having allegedly
utilized the cash advance for a purpose other than for which it was obtained.
On September 10, 2004, after a joint trial, the Sandiganbayan rendered a consolidated
Decision[12] disposing thusly:
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SO ORDERED.[13]
On January 11, 2005, the Sandiganbayan promulgated its Resolution[14] denying petitioner’s
Urgent Motion for Reconsideration.[15]
After a thorough review of the records of the case and a judicious consideration of the
arguments of the petitioner, the Court does not find sufficient basis to reverse the judgment
of conviction. From the prevailing facts, we entertain no doubt on the guilt of petitioner.
Petitioner stakes the present Petition on the assertion that since the cases for which he was
indicted involve the same subject cash advance in the amount of P101,736.00, his
exoneration in the anti-graft case should likewise exculpate him from further liability in the
present case.
It is undisputed that the two charges stemmed from the same incident. “However, [we have]
consistently held that the same act may give rise to two or more separate and distinct
charges.”[16] Further, because there is a variance between the elements of the two offenses
charged, petitioner cannot safely assume that his innocence in one case will extend to the
other case even if both cases hinge on the same set of evidence.
To hold a person criminally liable under Section 3(e) of RA 3019, the following elements
must be present:
(1) That the accused is a public officer or a private person charged in conspiracy
with the former;
(2) That said public officer commits the prohibited acts during the performance of
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On the other hand, the elements of the felony punishable under Article 218 of the Revised
Penal Code are:
(1) That the offender is a public officer whether in the service or separated
therefrom;
(2) That he must be an accountable officer for public funds or property;
(3) That he is required by law or regulation to render accounts to the COA or to a
provincial auditor; and,
(4) That he fails to do so for a period of two months after such account should be
rendered.[18]
The glaring differences between the elements of these two offenses necessarily imply that
the requisite evidence to establish the guilt or innocence of the accused would certainly differ
in each case. Hence, petitioner’s acquittal in the anti-graft case provides no refuge for him in
the present case given the differences between the elements of the two offenses.
The central aspect of petitioner’s next argument is that he was not reminded of his
unliquidated cash advances. The Office of the Special Prosecutor countered that Article 218
does not require the COA or the provincial auditor to first make a demand before the public
officer should render an account. It is sufficient that there is a law or regulation requiring
him to render an account.
The question has been settled in Manlangit v. Sandiganbayan[19] where we ruled that prior
demand to liquidate is not necessary to hold an accountable officer liable for violation of
Article 218 of the Revised Penal Code:
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Citing United States v. Saberon, petitioner contends that Article 218 punishes the
refusal of a public employee to render an account of funds in his charge when
duly required by a competent officer. He argues that he cannot be convicted of
the crime unless the prosecution has proven that there was a demand for him to
render an account. Petitioner asserts that COA Circular No. 90-331 provides that
the public officer shall be criminally liable for failure to settle his accounts after
demand had been made. Moreover, petitioner asserts that the case had become
moot and academic since he already submitted his liquidation report.
For the People, the Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP) counters that demand
is not an element of the offense and that it is sufficient that there is a law or
regulation requiring the public officer to render an account. The OSP insists that
Executive Order No. 292, Presidential Decree No. 1445, the COA Laws and
Regulations, and even the Constitution mandate that public officers render an
account of funds in their charge. It maintains that the instant case differs from
Saberon which involved a violation of Act No. 1740 where prior demand was
required. In this case involving a violation of Article 218, prior demand is not
required. Moreover, the OSP points out that petitioner even admitted his failure to
liquidate the funds within the prescribed period, hence, he should be convicted of
the crime.
Nowhere in the provision does it require that there first be a demand before an
accountable officer is held liable for a violation of the crime. The law is very clear.
Where none is provided, the court may not introduce exceptions or conditions,
neither may it engraft into the law qualifications not contemplated. Where the law
is clear and unambiguous, it must be taken to mean exactly what it says and the
court has no choice but to see to it that its mandate is obeyed. There is no room
for interpretation, but only application.
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Section 5 of COA Circular No. 90-331, the circular in force at the time petitioner availed of
the subject cash advance, pertinently provides:
5.1 The AO (Accountable Officer) shall liquidate his cash advance as follows:
xxxx
Since petitioner received the subject cash advance sometime in 1994, he was, thus, required
to liquidate the same on or before January 20, 1995. Further, to avoid liability under Article
218, he should have liquidated the cash advance within two months from the time it was
due, or on or before March 20, 1995. In the case at bar, petitioner liquidated the subject
cash advance only on June 4, 2001. Hence, as correctly found by the Sandiganbayan,
petitioner was liable for violation of Article 218 because it took him over six years before
settling his accounts.
Petitioner argues that assuming that he is liable for violation of Article 218, he should be
meted a lesser penalty considering that (1) he subsequently liquidated the subject cash
advance when he later discovered and was confronted with his delinquency, and (2) the COA
did not immediately inform him of his unliquidated cash advance.
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In sentencing petitioner to a straight penalty of six months and one day of prisión
correccional and a fine of P1,000.00, the Sandiganbayan correctly considered the mitigating
circumstance of voluntary surrender, as borne by the records,[21] in favor of petitioner.
However, it failed to consider the mitigating circumstance of return or full restitution of the
funds that were previously unliquidated.
The prescribed penalty for violation of Article 218 is prisión correccional in its minimum
period or six months and one day to two years and four months, or by a fine ranging from
200 to 6,000 pesos, or both. Considering that there are two mitigating circumstances and
there are no aggravating circumstances, under Article 64 (5)[23] of the Revised Penal Code,
the imposable penalty is the penalty next lower to the prescribed penalty which, in this case,
is arresto mayor in its maximum period or four months and one day to six months.
The Indeterminate Sentence Law, under Section 2,[24] is not applicable to, among others,
cases where the maximum term of imprisonment does not exceed one year. In determining
“whether an indeterminate sentence and not a straight penalty is proper, what is considered
is the penalty actually imposed by the trial court, after considering the attendant
circumstances, and not the imposable penalty.”[25] In the case at bar, since the maximum of
the imposable penalty is six months, then the possible maximum term that can be actually
imposed is surely less than one year. Hence, the Indeterminate Sentence Law is not
applicable to the present case. As a result, and in view of the attendant circumstances in this
case, we deem it proper to impose a straight penalty of four months and one day of arresto
mayor and delete the imposition of fine.
1. Petitioner is sentenced to a straight penalty of four months and one day of arresto mayor,
and
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SO ORDERED.
[1] ARTICLE 218. Failure of Accountable Qfficer to Render Accounts. Any public officer,
whether in the service or separated therefrom by resignation or any other cause, who is
required by law or regulation to render account to the Insular Auditor, or to a provincial
auditor and who fails to do so for a period of two months after such accounts should be
rendered, shall be punished by prision correccional in its minimum period, or by a fine
ranging from 200 to 6,000 pesos, or both.
[2] Sandiganbayan records, pp. 202-219; penned by Associate Justice Ma. Cristina G.
Cortez-Estrada and concurred in by Associate Justices Francisco H. Villaruz, Jr. and Teresita
V. Diaz-Baldos.
[3] Id. at 278-281; penned by Associate Justice Ma. Cristina G. Cortez-Estrada and concurred
[5] Id. at 3.
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[17] Presidential Ad Hoc Fact-Finding Committee on Behest Loans v. Desierto, 585 Phil. 1,
14-15 (2008).
[19] Id.
[21] On June 1, 2001, petitioner voluntarily surrendered and posted his cash bail bond.
[22] Kimpo v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 95604, April 29, 1994, 232 SCRA 53, 62.
[23] ARTICLE 64. Rules for the Application of Penalties Which Contain Three Periods. — In
cases in which the penalties prescribed by law contain three periods, whether it be a single
divisible penalty or composed of three different penalties, each one of which forms a period
in accordance with the provisions of Articles 76 and 77, the courts shall observe for the
application of the penalty the following rules, according to whether there are or are no
mitigating or aggravating circumstances:
xxxx
5. When there are two or more mitigating circumstances and no aggravating circumstances
are present, the court shall impose the penalty next lower to that prescribed by law, in the
period that it may deem applicable, according to the number and nature of such
circumstances.
Sec. 2. This Act shall not apply x x x to those whose maximum term of imprisonment does
not exceed one year. x x x
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[25] Ladino v. Garcia, 333 Phil. 254, 259 (1996); People v. Dimalanta, 92 Phil. 239, 242
(1952).
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