PHILCONSA v. Gimenez
G.R. No. 113105
August 19, 1994
Regala, J.
Facts:
Philippine
Constitution Association, Inc (PHILCONSA) assails the validity of RA 3836 insofar
as the same allows retirement gratuity and commutation of vacation and sick leave
to Senators and Representatives, and to the elective officials of both Houses (of
Congress). The provision on retirement gratuity is an attempt to circumvent the
Constitutional ban on increase of salaries of the members of Congress during their
term of office, contrary to the provisions of Article VI, Section 14 of the Constitution.
The same provision constitutes “selfish class legislation” because it allows members
and officers of Congress to retire after twelve (12) years of service and gives
them a gratuity equivalent to one year salary for every four years of service, which
is not refundable in case of reinstatement or re election of the retiree, while
all other officers and employees of the government can retire only after at least
twenty (20) years of service and are given a gratuity which is only equivalent to
one month salary for every year of service, which, in any case, cannot exceed 24
months. The provision on vacation and sick leave, commutable at the highest rate
received, insofar as members of Congress are concerned, is another attempt of the
legislator to further increase their compensation in violation of the Constitution.
The Solicitor General
counter-argued alleging that the grant of retirement or pension benefits under Republic
Act No. 3836 to the officers objected to by the petitioner does not constitute
“forbidden compensation” within the meaning of Section 14 of Article VI of the Philippine
Constitution. The law in question does not constitute class legislation. The payment
of commutable vacation and sick leave benefits under the said Act is merely “in
the nature of a basis for computing the gratuity due each retiring member” and,
therefore, is not an indirect scheme to increase their salary.
Issue:
whether
Republic Act 3836 violates Section 14, Article VI, of the Constitution which reads
as follows:
The senators and the Members of the House of Representatives
shall, unless otherwise provided by law, receive an annual compensation of seven
thousand two hundred pesos each, including per diems and other emoluments or allowances,
and exclusive only of travelling expenses to and from their respective districts
in the case of Members of the House of Representative and to and from their places
of residence in the case of Senators, when attending sessions of the Congress. No
increase in said compensation shall take effect until after the expiration of the
full term of all the Members of the Senate and of the House of Representatives approving
such increase. Until otherwise provided by law, the President of the Senate and
the Speaker of the House of Representatives shall each receive an annual compensation
of sixteen thousand pesos.
Held:
Yes.
When the Constitutional Convention first determined the compensation for the Members
of Congress, the amount fixed by it was only P5,000.00 per annum but it embodies
a special proviso which reads as follows: “No increase in said compensation shall
take effect until after the expiration of the full term of all the members of the
National Assembly elected subsequent to approval of such increase.” In other words,
under the original constitutional provision regarding the power of the National
Assembly to increase the salaries of its members, no increase would take effect
until after the expiration of the full term of the members of the Assembly elected
subsequent to the approval of such increase.
The Constitutional
provision in the aforementioned Section 14, Article VI, includes in the term compensation
“other emoluments”. This is the pivotal point on this fundamental question as to
whether the retirement benefit as provided for in Republic Act 3836 fall within
the purview of the term “other emoluments.”
Emolument is defined as the profit arising from office or employment; that which is
received as compensation for services or which is annexed to the possession of an
office, as salary, fees and perquisites.
It is evident that
retirement benefit is a form or another species of emolument, because it is a part
of compensation for services of one possessing any office.
Republic Act 3836
provides for an increase in the emoluments of Senators and Members of the House
of Representatives, to take effect upon the approval of said Act, which was on June
22, 1963. Retirement benefits were immediately available thereunder, without awaiting
the expiration of the full term of all the Members of the Senate and the House of
Representatives approving such increase. Such provision clearly runs counter to
the prohibition in Article VI, Section 14 of the Constitution. RA 3836 is therefore
unconstitutional.
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