Association
of Philippine Coconut Desiccators v. PCA
G.R. No. 110526 February 10, 1998
Mendoza, J.
Facts:
PCA
was created by PD 232 as independent public corporation to promote the rapid
integrated development and growth of the coconut and other palm oil industry in
all its aspects and to ensure that coconut farmers become direct participants
in, and beneficiaries of, such development and growth through a regulatory
scheme set up by law. PCA is also in charge of the issuing of licenses to
would-be coconut plant operators. On 24 March 1993, however, PCA issued Board
Resolution No. 018-93 which no longer require those wishing to engage in
coconut processing to apply for licenses as a condition for engaging in such
business. The purpose of which is to promote free enterprise unhampered by
protective regulations and unnecessary bureaucratic red tapes. But this caused
cut-throat competition among operators specifically in congested areas,
underselling, smuggling, and the decline of coconut-based commodities. The APCD then filed a petition for mandamus to
compel PCA to revoke BR No. 018-93.
Issue:
whether
or not PCA ran in conflict against the very nature of its creation
Held:
Yes.
Our Constitutions, beginning with the 1935 document, have repudiated
laissez-faire as an economic principle. Although the present Constitution
enshrines free enterprise as a policy, it nonetheless reserves to the
government the power to intervene whenever necessary to promote the general
welfare. As such, free enterprise does not call for the removal of “protective
regulations” for the benefit of the general public. This is so because under
Art 12, Sec 6 and 9, it is very clear that the government reserves the power to
intervene whenever necessary to promote the general welfare and when the public
interest so requires.
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