USA v. Guinto
G.R. No. 76607 February 26, 1990
Cruz, J.
Facts:
The
private respondents are suing several officers of the U.S. Air Force stationed in
Clark Air Base in connection with the bidding conducted by them for contracts for
barber services in the said base.
On February 24, 1986, the Western Pacific
Contracting Office, Okinawa Area Exchange, U.S. Air Force, solicited bids for such
contracts through its contracting officer, James F. Shaw. Among those who submitted
their bids were private respondents Roberto T. Valencia, Emerenciana C. Tanglao,
and Pablo C. del Pilar. Valencia had been a concessionaire inside Clark for 34 years;
del Pilar for 12 years; and Tanglao for 50 years.
The bidding was
won by Ramon Dizon, over the objection of the private respondents, who claimed that
he had made a bid for four facilities, including the Civil Engineering Area, which
was not included in the invitation to bid.
The private respondents
complained to the Philippine Area Exchange (PHAX). The latter, through its representatives,
petitioners Yvonne Reeves and Frederic M. Smouse explained that the Civil Engineering
concession had not been awarded to Dizon as a result of the February 24, 1986 solicitation.
Dizon was already operating this concession, then known as the NCO club concession,
and the expiration of the contract had been extended from June 30, 1986 to August
31, 1986. They further explained that the solicitation of the CE barbershop would
be available only by the end of June and the private respondents would be notified.
The private respondents
filed a complaint in the court below to compel PHAX and the individual petitioners
to cancel the award to defendant Dizon, to conduct a rebidding for the barbershop
concessions and to allow the private respondents by a writ of preliminary injunction
to continue operating the concessions pending litigation.
The petitioners
filed a motion to dismiss and opposition to the petition for preliminary injunction
on the ground that the action was in effect a suit against the United States of
America, which had not waived its non-suability. The individual defendants, as official
employees of the U.S. Air Force, were also immune from suit.
Issue:
whether
the case must be dismissed on the ground that the action was in effect a suit against
the United States of America, which had not waived its non-suability
Held:
The rule
that a state may not be sued without its consent, now expressed in Article XVI,
Section 3, of the 1987 Constitution, is one of the generally accepted principles
of international law that we have adopted as part of the law of our land under Article
II, Section 2. This latter provision merely reiterates a policy earlier embodied
in the 1935 and 1973 Constitutions and also intended to manifest our resolve to
abide by the rules of the international community.
Even without
such affirmation, we would still be bound by the generally accepted principles of
international law under the doctrine of incorporation. Under this doctrine, as accepted
by the majority of states, such principles are deemed incorporated in the law of
every civilized state as a condition and consequence of its membership in the society
of nations. Upon its admission to such society, the state is automatically obligated
to comply with these principles in its relations with other states.
As applied
to the local state, the doctrine of state immunity is based on the justification
given by Justice Holmes that “there can be no legal right against the authority
which makes the law on which the right depends.” There are other practical reasons for the enforcement
of the doctrine. In the case of the foreign state sought to be impleaded in the
local jurisdiction, the added inhibition is expressed in the maxim par in parem, non habet imperium. All states are sovereign equals and cannot assert
jurisdiction over one another. A contrary disposition would, in the language of
a celebrated case, “unduly vex the peace of nations.”
While the
doctrine appears to prohibit only suits against the state without its consent, it
is also applicable to complaints filed against officials of the state for acts allegedly
performed by them in the discharge of their duties. The rule is that if the judgment
against such officials will require the state itself to perform an affirmative act
to satisfy the same, such as the appropriation of the amount needed to pay the damages
awarded against them, the suit must be regarded as against the state itself although
it has not been formally impleaded. In
such a situation, the state may move to dismiss the complaint on the ground that
it has been filed without its consent.
The doctrine
is sometimes derisively called “the royal prerogative of dishonesty” because
of the privilege it grants the state to defeat any legitimate claim against it by
simply invoking its non-suability.
The consent
of the state to be sued may be manifested expressly or impliedly. Express consent
may be embodied in a general law or a special law. Consent is implied when the state
enters into a contract or it itself commences litigation.
The general
law waiving the immunity of the state from suit is found in Act No. 3083, under
which the Philippine government “consents and submits to be sued upon any moneyed
claim involving liability arising from contract, express or implied, which could
serve as a basis of civil action between private parties.” When the government enters
into a contract, it is deemed to have descended to the level of the other contracting
party and divested of its sovereign immunity from suit with its implied consent. Waiver is also implied when the government files
a complaint, thus opening itself to a counterclaim.
The above
rules are subject to qualification. Express consent is effected only by the will
of the legislature through the medium of a duly enacted statute. Not all contracts entered into by the government
will operate as a waiver of its non-suability; distinction must be made between
its sovereign and proprietary acts. As
for the filing of a complaint by the government, suability will result only where
the government is claiming affirmative relief from the defendant.
In the case
of the United States of America, the customary rule of international law on state
immunity is expressed with more specificity in the RP-US Bases Treaty. Article III
thereof provides as follows:
It is mutually agreed that the
United States shall have the rights, power and authority within the bases which
are necessary for the establishment, use, operation and defense thereof or appropriate
for the control thereof and all the rights, power and authority within the limits
of the territorial waters and air space adjacent to, or in the vicinity of, the
bases which are necessary to provide access to them or appropriate for their control.
The United States of America, like any other state, will
be deemed to have impliedly waived its non-suability if it has entered into a contract
in its proprietary or private capacity. It is only when the contract involves its
sovereign or governmental capacity that no such waiver may be implied.
The individually-named
petitioners in this case were acting in the exercise of their official functions
when they conducted the buy-bust operation against the complainant and thereafter
testified against him at his trial. The said petitioners were in fact connected
with the Air Force Office of Special Investigators and were charged precisely with
the function of preventing the distribution, possession and use of prohibited drugs
and prosecuting those guilty of such acts. It cannot be imagined that they were
acting in their private or unofficial capacity when they apprehended and later testified
against the complainant. It follows that for discharging their duties as agents
of the United States, they cannot be directly impleaded for acts imputable to their
principal, which has not given its consent to be sued.
Suability depends on the
consent of the state to be sued, liability on the applicable law and the established
facts. The circumstance that a state is suable does not necessarily mean that it
is liable; on the other hand, it can never be held liable if it does not first consent
to be sued. Liability is not conceded
by the mere fact that the state has allowed itself to be sued. When the state does
waive its sovereign immunity, it is only giving the plaintiff the chance to prove,
if it can, that the defendant is liable.
The said article
establishes a rule of liability, not suability. The government may be held liable
under this rule only if it first allows itself to be sued through any of the accepted
forms of consent.
Moreover, the agent
performing his regular functions is not a special agent even if he is so denominated,
as in the case at bar. No less important, the said provision appears to regulate
only the relations of the local state with its inhabitants and, hence, applies only
to the Philippine government and not to foreign governments impleaded in our courts.
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