Philippine Supreme Court Jurisprudence


Philippine Supreme Court Jurisprudence > Year 1967 > August 1967 Decisions > G.R. No. L-27017 August 15, 1967 - PACIFICO M. BRAGANZA v. COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS, ET AL.:




PHILIPPINE SUPREME COURT DECISIONS

EN BANC

[G.R. No. L-27017. August 15, 1967.]

PACIFICO M. BRAGANZA, Petitioner, v. THE COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS, THE COMMISSIONER OF CIVIL SERVICE and BENJAMIN ABELLA, Respondents.

Castillo & Castillo for Petitioner.

Solicitor General Antonio P. Barredo, Asst. Solicitor General F .C . Zaballero & R.L. Pronove, Jr. for Respondents.


SYLLABUS


1. PUBLIC OFFICERS; APPOINTMENT; CASE AT BAR. — On November 2, 1964, provisional appointments as "Election Registrar in the Commission on Elections," without designation of specific official station, were extended by the COMELEC to petitioner P. B. and to respondent B. A. Both appointees were subsequently directed, on November 9, 1964 to report and assume duties as election registrars for Mabini, Pangasinan. On August 20, 1965, petitioner was designated officer-in- charge of the election registrar’s office at Mabini, with full administrative supervision over the registrars assigned thereto. On September 7, 1966, however, respondent B. A. was appointed "Election Registrar for Mabini, Pangasinan" and on November 8, 1966, he formally qualified and commenced the discharge of the duties of his office. Petitioner P. B. then asked the COMELEC to reconsider said appointment of P. B. and to have himself retained as permanent election registrar of Mabini. He argued that his provisional appointment was irregular, as the COMELEC at the time it extended such appointment did not have discretion but to extend to him a permanent appointment with specific designation of official station. Held: It is quite evident that petitioner’s contention is untenable. For one thing, it is too late for petitioner to assail the validity of his appointment. Having accepted the same, discharged the functions it imposed, exercised the rights it conferred, and reaped the benefits it afforded, petitioner cannot now be heard to impugn its validity. Besides, if that appointment was, indeed, illegally extended, that illegality vitiated the entirety thereof, and the appointment cannot, in the same breath, be denounced as illegal and yet considered as a valid one of another category. If it was void, to start with, it was void through and through — there can be no middle ground. Since a void appointment confers no rights whatsoever except, perhaps, those recognized under the general de facto doctrine, then petitioner cannot predicate his claim to preference to the office involved upon that appointment. Otherwise stated, the petitioner’s argument carries its own refutation.

2. ID.; ID.; ONLY OFFICERS APPOINTED TO PARTICULAR STATIONS ARE ENTITLED TO SECURITY OF TENURE. — Only such officers as are appointed not merely assigned - to particular stations are entitled to seek refuge under the aegis of the constitutional guaranty of security of tenure (Ibañez, Et. Al. v. Commission on Elections, Et Al., L-26558, April 27, 1967; Hojilla v. Marino, Et Al., L-20574, February 26, 1965; Miclat v. Ganade, Et Al., 108 Phil. 439; Jaro v. Valencia, Et Al., L-18352, August 30, 1963). In the instant case, inasmuch as the appointments of both petitioner and respondent do not state that they are appointed election registrars of Mabini, Pangasinan, their detail thereto by subsequent directives of the COMELEC does not entitle either one to assert as against the other any right to be retained as permanent election registrar thereof.

3. ID.; ID.; POWER TO APPOINT IS DISCRETIONARY ON APPOINTING POWER. — The power to appoint is in essence discretionary on the part of the proper authority. The appointing power has the right of choice which he may exercise freely according to his judgment, deciding for himself who is best qualified for any competitive position in the Civil Service (Jimenez v. Francisco, 100 Phil., 1025.

4. ID.; ID.; GOVERNMENT HAS RIGHT TO DETERMINE POSITION FOR APPOINTEE. — What position should be deemed most advantageous to the government for the appointee to occupy is a question to be decided by the representative of the government, and the government cannot be denied the right to determine, experimentally or otherwise, in what position it could make use of respondent’s services to the best advantage of the service and of the public (Gorospe v. De Veyra, 96 Phil., 545).


D E C I S I O N


CASTRO, J.:


The object of the present petition for prohibition and mandamus, with preliminary injunction, is to bar the respondent Benjamin Abella from the position of permanent election registrar of Mabini, Pangasinan, and to compel the respondent Commission on Elections (COMELEC) to annul his appointment to said post and to extend, in lieu thereof, another appointment thereto in favor of the petitioner Pacifico M. Braganza.

On November 2, 1964 provisional appointments as "Election Registrar in the Commission on Elections", without designation of any specific official station, were extended by the COMELEC to the petitioner Pacifico M. Braganza (Item No. 178 [816], page 2455, R.A. 4164) and to the respondent Benjamin Abella (Item No. 178 [825], page 2455, R.A. 4164). Both appointees were subsequently directed, in identical telegrams dated November 9, 1964, to report and assume duties as election registrars for Mabini, Pangasinan. They thereafter duly qualified — the petitioner on November 11, 1964, the respondent Abella on November 19, 1964 — and forthwith complied with the telegram directive aforesaid. On August 20, 1965 the petitioner was designated officer-in-charge of the election registrar’s office at Mabini, Pangasinan, with full administrative supervision over other registrars assigned thereto.

On September 7, 1966, however, the COMELEC appointed Abella as permanent "Election Registrar for Mabini, Pangasinan" under Item No. 179 (997), page 2587, R.A. 4848. In due course, this appointment was certified by the Civil Service Commission and, on November 8, 1960, the said respondent formally qualified and commenced the discharge of the duties of his office as such.

The petitioner thereafter moved the COMELEC — to no avail — to reconsider the aforesaid appointment of the respondent and to have himself retained as permanent election registrar in the said municipality.

Hence, the present recourse.

The petitioner’s case hinges on the basic issue of whether or not he has acquired a vested right to the office of permanent election registrar of Mabini, Pangasinan, with the concommitant security of tenure therein.

In urging the affirmative side of this issue, the petitioner proceeds from the premise that his provisional appointment was irregular in that the COMELEC, at the time it extended such appointment, did not have any discretion in the premises but to extend to him a permanent appointment with a specific designation of official station. Accordingly, he contends that in extending to him, instead, a provisional appointment without designation of official station, the COMELEC acted illegally and with grave abuse of discretion, and therefore his appointment should be regarded as a permanent one which, supplemented by his telegraphic assignment to Mabini, Pangasinan, legally vested in him title to the office of election registrar of that municipality. Upon the foregoing assumption, he argues that, inasmuch as the guidelines adopted by the COMELEC on the matter accord him superior and preferential right to be retained in that office as against the respondent Abella, the appointment of the latter thereto is illegal and that, instead, that appointment should have been, and should now be, extended to him.

Actually, if the petitioner’s thesis in assailing the regularity of his provisional appointment is to be sustained, his claim to the office in question will collapse like the proverbial house of cards. Without deciding on the actual legal status of that appointment — as, indeed, it is unnecessary to do so — it is quite evident that the petitioner’s pose here is untenable. For one thing, it is too late for the petitioner to assail the validity of his appointment. Having accepted the same, discharged the functions it imposed, exercised the rights it conferred, and reaped the benefits it afforded, the petitioner cannot now be heard to impugn its validity. Besides, if that appointment was indeed illegally extended, that illegality vitiated the entirety thereof, and the appointment cannot, in the same breath, be denounced as illegal and yet considered as a valid one of another category. If it was void, to start with, it was void thru and thru — there can be no middle ground. Since a void appointment confers no rights whatsoever except, perhaps, those recognized under the general de facto doctrine, then the petitioner cannot predicate his claim to preference to the office involved upon that appointment. Otherwise stated, the petitioner’s argument carries its own refutation.

Prescinding from this flaw in the petitioner’s stand, however, the resolution of the case at bar must still have to reckon with the effects of that appointment, assuming its validity. We have already spelled out with sufficient specificity our position on this matter in our opinion in Ibañez, Et. Al. v. Commission on Elections, Et Al., G.R. L-26558, April 27, 1967. There, as here, where the appointments of election registrar relied upon did not indicate any particular places to which the respective appointees were to be officially stationed, but the appointees were subsequently merely detailed to particular localities by means of appropriate directives, we declined to give our imprimatur to the therein petitioners’ pose that they acquired a right to the offices claimed sufficient to shield them against unconsented transfers therefrom. This is in consonance with the doctrine that only such officers as are appointed — not merely assigned — to particular stations are entitled to seek refuge under the aegis of the constitutional guaranty of security of tenure (Hojilla v. Marino, Et Al., G.R. L-20574, February 26, 1965; Miclat v. Ganade, Et Al., 108 Phil. 439; Jaro v. Valencia, Et Al., G.R. L-18352, August 30, 1963). Since the Ibañez ruling afore-cited, we have occasion to reiterate this doctrine in three cases (vide: Co v. Commission on Elections, Et Al., 65 Off. Gaz., [4] 794-B; Salazar, Et. Al. v. Commission on Elections, Et Al., G.R. L-27121, July 21, 1967; Suarez, Et. Al. v. Commission on Elections, Et Al., G.R. L-26605, July 27, 1967). We do so once again. Inasmuch as the appointments of both the petitioner and the respondent Abella do not state that they are appointed election registrars of Mabini, Pangasinan, their detail thereto by subsequent directives of the COMELEC does not entitle either one to assert as against the other any right to be retained as permanent election registrar thereof.

Considering that —

"The power to appoint is in essence discretionary on the part of the proper authority . . . The appointing power has the right of choice which he may exercise freely according to his judgment, deciding for himself who is best qualified for any competitive position in the Civil Service . . ." (Jimenez v. Francisco, 100 Phil. 1025), and.

"What position should be deemed ‘most advantageous to the government’ for the respondent to occupy is a question to be decided by the representative of the government, and . . . the government cannot be denied the right to determine, experimentally or otherwise, in what position it could make use of respondent’s services to the best advantage of the service and of the public . . ." (Gorospe v. De Veyra, G.R. L-8408, February 17, 1955)

the determination made by the COMELEC respecting the question of who between the contenders should be retained in Mabini, Pangasinan as permanent election registrar must be respected.

The petitioner’s reliance upon the so-called "Guidelines In The Assignment Of Election Registrars" adopted by the COMELEC in its session of February 17, 1966 is misplaced. As pointed out by the respondents and confirmed by the certified copy of said guidelines, the rules of preference therein provided were intended merely as criteria for "the assignment of election registrars without making new appointments." Said guidelines, unmistakably, were not intended to control the discretion of the COMELEC in making appointments of permanent election registrars.

From what has been said, it is clear that the petitioner has not made out a case calling for the exercise by this Court of its powers of intervention.

Accordingly, the petition is denied, at petitioner’s cost.

Reyes, J .B.L., Makalintal, Bengzon, J .P., Zaldivar, Sanchez, Angeles, and Fernando, JJ., concur.

Concepcion, C.J. and Dizon, J., did not take part.




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