Morales v. Subido
27 SCRA 131
Digest by Kirk Yngwie Enriquez
Facts:
Petitioner Enrique Morales is the chief of the detective bureau of the Manila Police Department and holds the rank of lieutenant colonel. Upon resignation of Brig. Gen. Ricardo papa on March 14, 1968, petitioner was designated acting chief of police of Manila and given a provisional appointment to the same position by the Mayor of Manila. On September 24, 1968, respondent CSC Commissioner Abelardo Subido approved the designation of the petitioner but rejected his appointment for failure to meet the minimum educational and civil service eligibility requirements for the said position. Section 10 of Police Act of 1966 (RA 4864) states:
Minimum qualification for appointment as Chief of Police Agency – No person may be appointed chief of a city police agency unless he holds a bachelor’s degree from a recognized institution of learning and has served either in the AFP or NBI, or has served as chief of police with exemplary record, or has served in the police department of any city with the rank of captain or its equivalent therein for at least 3 years, or any high school graduate who has served as officer in the Armed Forces for at least 8 years with the rank of captain and/or higher.
Respondent certified other persons as qualified for the post and called the attention of the mayor to Section 4 of the Decentralization Act of 1967 which requires the filing of a vacancy within 30 days after coming into existence. In response, the petitioner in a letter demanded that respondent include him in a list of eligible and qualified applicants from which the mayor might appoint one as chief of police of the city. The mayor endorsed the letter favorably, but respondent refused to reconsider, hence this petition.
Below is the petitioner’s reading of Section 10 of the Police Act of 1966:
No person may be a chief of a city police agency unless he
Holds a bachelor’s degree from a recognized institution of learning AND has served in the AFP OR NBI; OR
Has served as chief of police with exemplary record; OR
Has served in the police department of any city with the rank of captain or its equivalent therein for at least 3 years; OR
Any high school graduate who has served as officer in the AFP for at least 8 years with the rank of captain and/or higher.
Petitioner contends that since he has served as captain, major, and lieutenant colonel in the MPD since 1954, he falls under the third class of persons qualified as chief of a city police department.
MAIN DECISION
The Court ruled in its main decision that an applicant should have the required service and educational qualification (bachelor’s degree) to be appointed as chief of a city police department.
The requirement of a college degree as additional qualification is compatible with the policy of the statute which is place the local police service in a professional level. The last paragraph of Section 10 of the Police Act of 1966 states:
When no civil service eligible is available, provisional appointment may be made provided that the appointee possesses the above educational qualification and that the appointment should not extend beyond 6 months except for a valid cause approved by the CSC.
The Act makes it unequivocal that possession of a college degree or a high school diploma is an indispensable requirement. That the purpose is to require both educational and service qualifications of those seeking appointment as chief of police is evident from a reading of the original provision of HB 6951 and the successive revisions it underwent. Section 12 of HB 6951 (now Section 10 of Police Act of 1966) reads:
Minimum Qualification for appointment as Chief of a Police Agency – No chief of police agency of a province or chartered city shall be appointed unless he is a member of the Philippine Bar, or a holder of a bachelor’s degree in police administration or holder of a bachelor’s degree who served either in the Philippine Constabulary or the police department of any city from the rank of captain or inspector, second class, or its equivalent for at least 3 years shall be eligible for appointment to the position of the police agency.
In the Senate, the Committee on Government Reorganization to which HB 6951 was referred reported a substitute measure to which Section 10 of the Police Act owes its present form and substance. Thus, service in the AFP or the NBI was intended to be in the capacity of captain for at least 3 years.
At the behest of Sen. Francisco Rodrigo, the phrase “has served as officer in the Armed Forces was inserted and thus it read:
No person may be appointed chief of a city police agency unless he holds a bachelor’s degree and has served either in the AFP or the NBI or police department of any city and has held the rank of captain or its equivalent therein for at least 3 years or any high school graduate who has served the police department of a city or who has served as officer in the Armed Forces for at least 8 years with the rank of captain and/or higher.
However, somewhere in the legislative process, the phrase was dropped and only the Rodrigo amendment was retained. The writer, upon checking the enrolled bill, found that the text of Section 10 of the Act is as set forth in the beginning of this opinion. It was signed by the secretaries and presiding officers of both Houses. Under the enrolled bill theory announced in Mabanag v. Lopez Vito, the text in the enrolled bill must be deemed as importing absolute verity and as binding on the Courts. This means that a high school graduate, no matter how long he has served in a city police department, is not qualified for appointment as chief of police.
RESOLUTION
The petitioner insisted that the version of the provision as amended at the behest of Sen. Rodrigo was the version approved by the Senate on third reading. According to him, the House bill division deleted the entire provision and substituted what now is Section 10 of the Police Act of 1966. It would appear that the omission, whether deliberate or unintended, of the phrase “who has served the police department of a city or” was made not at any stage of the legislative proceedings but only in the course of the engrossment of the bill specifically in the proofreading thereof, and that the change was made not by Congress but buy an employee thereof.
Issue:
WON the enrolled bill is controlling.
Ruling:
Yes.
The enrolled Act in the office of the legislative secretary of the President shows that Section 10 is exactly as it is in the statute. The Court cannot go behind the enrolled Act to discover what really happened. The investigation which the petitioner would like this Court to make can be better done in Congress.
In Marshall Field v. Clark, the US SC rules that the signing of the presiding officers of both Houses of Congress is an official attestation by the two Houses that such bill is the one that has passed Congress.
In Mabanag v. Lopez Vito, an enrolled bill imports absolute verity and is binding on the courts.
With respect to matters not expressly required to be entered on the journal, the enrolled bill prevails in the event of discrepancy.
