PVTA
v. CIR
G.R. No. L-32052 July 25, 1975
Fernando, J.
Facts:
Private respondents filed a petition
wherein they alleged their employment relationship, the overtime services in excess
of the regular eight hours a day rendered by them, and the failure to pay them overtime
compensation in accordance with Commonwealth Act No. 444. Their prayer was for the
differential between the amount actually paid to them and the amount allegedly due
them. Petitioner Philippine Virginia Tobacco Administration would predicate its
plea for the reversal of the order complained of on the basic proposition that it
is beyond the jurisdiction of respondent Court as it is exercising governmental
functions and that it is exempt from the operation of Commonwealth Act No. 444.
Issue:
whether
PVTA discharges governmental and not proprietary functions
Held:
No. A reference to the enactments creating petitioner corporation
suffices to demonstrate the merit of petitioner’s plea that it performs governmental
and not proprietary functions. As originally established by Republic Act No. 2265, its purposes and objectives were set forth thus:
“(a) To promote the effective merchandising of Virginia tobacco in the domestic
and foreign markets so that those engaged in the industry will be placed on a basis
of economic security; (b) To establish and maintain balanced production and consumption
of Virginia tobacco and its manufactured products, and such marketing conditions
as will insure and stabilize the price of a level sufficient to cover the cost of
production plus reasonable profit both in the local as well as in the foreign market;
(c) To create, establish, maintain, and operate processing, warehousing and marketing
facilities in suitable centers and supervise the selling and buying of Virginia
tobacco so that the farmers will enjoy reasonable prices that secure a fair return
of their investments; (d) To prescribe rules and regulations governing the grading,
classifying, and inspecting of Virginia tobacco; and (e) To improve the living and
economic conditions of the people engaged in the tobacco industry.” The amendatory
statute, Republic Act No. 4155, renders
even more evident its nature as a governmental agency. Its first section on the
declaration of policy reads: “It is declared to be the national policy, with respect
to the local Virginia tobacco industry, to encourage the production of local Virginia
tobacco of the qualities needed and in quantities marketable in both domestic and
foreign markets, to establish this industry on an efficient and economic basis,
and, to create a climate conducive to local cigarette manufacture of the qualities
desired by the consuming public, blending imported and native Virginia leaf tobacco
to improve the quality of locally manufactured cigarettes.” The objectives are set forth thus: “To attain
this national policy the following objectives are hereby adopted: 1. Financing;
2. Marketing; 3. The disposal of stocks of the Agricultural Credit Administration
(ACA) and the Philippine Virginia Tobacco Administration (PVTA) at the best obtainable
prices and conditions in order that a reinvigorated Virginia tobacco industry may
be established on a sound basis; and 4. Improving the quality of locally manufactured
cigarettes through blending of imported and native Virginia leaf tobacco; such importation
with corresponding exportation at a ratio of one kilo of imported to four kilos
of exported Virginia tobacco, purchased by the importer-exporter from the Philippine
Virginia Tobacco Administration.”
Functions relating to the maintenance of peace and the prevention of crime,
those regulating property and property rights, those relating to the administration
of justice and the determination of political duties of citizens, and those relating
to national defense and foreign relations may not be strictly considered constituent.
Under the traditional constituent-ministrant classification, such constituent functions
are exercised by the State as attributes of sovereignty, and not merely to promote
the welfare, progress and prosperity of the people — these latter functions being
ministrant, the exercise of which is optional on the part of the government. Nonetheless, the growing complexities of modern
society, however, have rendered this traditional classification of the functions
of government quite unrealistic, not to say obsolete. The areas which used to be
left to private enterprise and initiative and which the government was called upon
to enter optionally, and only because it was better equipped to administer for the
public welfare than is any private individual or group of individuals”, continue
to lose their well-defined boundaries and to be absorbed within activities that
the government must undertake in its sovereign capacity if it is to meet the increasing
social challenges of the times. Here as almost everywhere else the tendency is undoubtedly
towards a greater socialization of economic forces. Here of course this development
was envisioned, indeed adopted as a national policy, by the Constitution itself
in its declaration of principle concerning the promotion of social justice.
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