When the guilty is ‘not guilty’
>> Tuesday, May 5, 2015
PERRYSCOPE
Perry Diaz
Perry Diaz
First introduced into Philippine
jurisprudence in 1959, the “doctrine of condonation” has become the elected
officials’ “escape hatch” from potential administrative liability committed
during a previous term. In other words, it’s a “not guilty” verdict sans
judicial process, absolving the elected official from past administrative
misconduct for as long as he gets re-elected to another term. The only
exception to this doctrine is that it doesn’t apply to criminal cases.
This is the
gist of Makati City Mayor Jejomar “Junjun” Binay Jr.’s contention before the
Supreme Court that since he’s been reelected mayor in 2013, he is immune from
administrative liability in connection with the alleged overpricing in the
construction of the Makati City Hall parking building, which was built during
his first term. By invoking the “doctrine of condonation,” Binay claims that by
virtue of his reelection, he’s forgiven for whatever administrative liability
he might have had committed during his previous term.
And this is
where his case goes into a grayish area. Did he commit a crime when he made –
inadvertently or advertently — an administrative error? Or was a crime – e.g.,
dishonesty, graft, plunder – committed in approving the overpriced cost of
building the parking building?
Unconscionable
overpricing
Last year, a
group of Makati City citizens brought graft and plunder charges against Vice
President Jejomar “Jojo” Binay, his son Junjun, and 23 others over alleged
“unconscionable overpricing” in the construction of the 11-story parking
building that was supposedly built for P1.56 billion. In their complaint filed
before the Ombudsman, lawyer Renato Bondal and Nicolas Enciso VI, members of
the group known as the “Save Makati Movement,” claimed that it was “the most
expensive parking building in the entire country, if not the entire world.”
In their
complaint, the group said that the project was “proposed and approved” in 2007
with an initial budget of P400 million during the administration of then Mayor
Jojo Binay. The complainants claimed that based on the construction cost
estimate by the National Statistics Office (NSO), the project should have cost
only P245.6 million. They said that the city should only have paid P7,691 per
square meter, but the project cost was marked up to P48,859 per square meter
when it was completed in 2013, or an overprice of a whopping P1.255 billion!
Accusing the elder Binay and his son of “despicable mismanagement and gross
abuse of public funds,” Bondal and Enciso sought the preventive suspension of
the Binays to keep them from influencing the investigation by the Ombudsman.
Preventive
suspension
On March 12,
2015, Ombudsman Conchita Carpio-Morales issued a preventive suspension against
Junjun Binay and 20 other Makati City Hall officials for six months pending the
preliminary investigation into the alleged overpricing in the construction of
the Makati City Parking Building. But in an act of defiance, Binay said he
would not vacate his office even if the Department of Interior and Local
Government (DILG) serves him the order. “Hindi kami aalis dito. Ang stand
nga namin ay there is no reason for the suspension order,” Binay told
reporters, which makes one wonder: Is this how the Binays would rule when the
elder Binay were elected President? Hmm…
On March 17,
Junjun submitted a petition for certiorari to the Court of Appeals (CA) asking
for the issuance of a temporary restraining order (TRO) on the implementation
of Binay’s suspension. The CA issued the TRO and also directed the Ombudsman to
file her comment on Binay’s plea to cite her in contempt for defying the TRO.
The
Ombudsman then filed a petition for certiorari to the Supreme Court (SC) to
stop the implementation of the CA’s TRO. Morales argued that the Office of the
Ombudsman is an independent constitutional body, which must be protected from
the “unconstitutional interference” of the CA Sixth Division.
The CA Sixth
Division retaliated by issuing a writ of preliminary injunction on the
Ombudsman’s preventive suspension. Then the government’s Solicitor General,
Florin Hilbay, came to the Ombudsman’s rescue. “Does the Court of Appeals have
statutory authority from Congress to issue a writ of preliminary injunction on
[orders] of the Ombudsman? No, because we cannot find any statutory authority
with such express provision,” Hilbay said during the oral argument before the
High Court.
Believe it
or not
While all
the players of this “zarzuela” are dancing to their own tunes, Sen. Sonny
Trillanes introduced Senate Resolution 1265 calling for a probe on “justice for
sale” involving CA justices. Trillanes claimed that a prominent lawyer had arranged
for Junjun Binay a P50-million bribe to two of the three CA Sixth Division
justices for the issuance of a TRO and, eventually, a writ of preliminary
injunction against the Ombudsman’s suspension order.
Trillanes
claimed that the two justices initially received P20 million each for issuing
the TRO. But when the Ombudsman, the DILG, and the Department of Justice
ignored the TRO, another P5 million was given to each of the two justices for
the issuance of a writ of temporary injunction. “This was purportedly the
reason why the concerned CA division issued the writ of preliminary injunction
with undue and inordinate haste, long before its TRO is supposed to elapse,”
Trillanes said.
Institutionalized
corruption
It was about
this time that the lawyers pleading Junjun’s case before the Supreme Court
invoked the “doctrine of condonation.” In short, they begged the High Court to
forget all the charges of overpricing; to forget all the accusations of
corruption; and to forget all allegations of bribery. Yes, just for being
reelected to another term, Junjun Binay would be forgiven and deemed “not
guilty” of all administrative wrongdoings while he was in office.
This led
Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno to scold Binay’s lawyer, Sandra Marie
Coronel, for repeatedly insisting that the “doctrine of condonation” – which
was adopted from American jurisprudence — is ground for removal of Binay’s
administrative liability over the alleged overpricing of the parking building.
Three legal
luminaries – retired Associate Justice Vicente Mendoza, San Beda College of Law
Dean Ranhilio Aquino, and former U.P. Law Dean Pacifico Agabin – all agreed
that the Philippine legal system does not have to be stuck with the 56-year-old
doctrine. According to Mendoza, the ruling on condonation doctrine can be
abandoned, retained or modified. It’s up to the High Court to make that
decision and it doesn’t require any legislative action.
Mendoza
explained that it can be retained “with respect to minor administrative lapses
of public officials like light misconduct where his re-election means
condonation as in the 1959 Pascual case.” “But where the administrative offense
is serious like dishonesty and was not publicly well known, the ruling
[condonation] should not apply. I think this is how the [Binay] hearing should
proceed,” he said.
If the
Supreme Court upholds the “condonation doctrine,” Sereno said that it could
wipe out all statutes that provide preventive suspension. She warned about the
magnitude of upholding the “condonation doctrine” of the 690,502 local elective
posts in the country. And when that situation arises, it would make a mockery
of justice… and the Constitution. It would make the Office of the Ombudsman and
the graft court, Sandiganbayan, inutile and unable to prosecute those who are
guilty of administrative wrongdoings. Yes, that would be when the guilty is
“not guilty.” It’s called institutionalized corruption.(PerryDiaz@gmail.com)
0 comments:
Post a Comment