Almario v. Exec. Secretary (G.R. No. 189028; July 16, 2013)

CASE DIGEST: NATIONAL ARTIST FOR LITERATURE VIRGILIO ALMARIO, NATIONAL ARTIST FOR LITERATURE BIENVENIDO LUMBERA, NATIONAL ARTIST FOR VISUAL ARTS (PAINTING) BENEDICTO CABRERA, NATIONAL ARTIST FOR VISUAL ARTS (SCULPTURE) NAPOLEON ABUEVA, NATIONAL ARTIST FOR VISUAL ARTS (PAINTING AND SCULPTURE) ARTURO LUZ, NATIONAL ARTIST FOR PRODUCTION DESIGN SALVADOR BERNAL, UNIVERSITY PROFESSOR EMERITUS GEMINO ABAD, DEAN MARVIC M.V.F. LEONEN (UP COLLEGE OF LAW), DEAN DANILO SILVESTRE (UP COLLEGE OF ARCHITECTURE), DEAN ROLAND TOLENTINO (UP COLLEGE OF MASS COMMUNICATION), PROF. JOSE DALISAY, DR. ANTON JUAN, DR. ALEXANDER CORTEZ, DR. JOSE NEIL GARCIA, DR. PEDRO JUN CRUZ REYES, PROF. JOSE CLAUDIO GUERRERO, PROF. MICHAEL M. COROZA, PROF. GERARD LICO, PROF. VERNE DE LA PENA, PROF. MARIAN ABUAN, PROF. THEODORE O. TE, DR. CRISTINA PANTOJA-HIDALGO, PROF. JOSE WENDELL CAPILI, PROF. SIR ANRIAL TIATCO, PROF. NICOLO DEL CASTILLO, PROF. HORACIO DUMANLIG, PROF. DANTON REMOTO, PROF. PRISCELINA PATAJOLEGASTO, PROF. BELEN CALINGACION, PROF. AMIEL Y. LEONARDIA, PROF. VIM NADERA, PROF. MARILYN CANTA, PROF. CECILIA DELA PAZ, ROF. CHARLSON ONG, PROF. CLOD MARLON YAMBAO, PROF. KENNETH JAMANDRE, PROF. JETHRO JOAQUIN, ATTY. F.D. NICOLAS B. PICHAY, ATTY. ROSE BEATRIX ANGELES, MR. FERNANDO JOSEF, MS. SUSAN S. LARA, MR. ALFRED YUSON, MS. JING PANGANIBANMENDOZA, MR. ROMULO BAQUIRAN, JR., MR. CARLJOE JAVIER, MS. REBECCA T. ANONUEVO, MR. JP ANTHONY D. CUNADA, MS. LEAH NAVARRO, MR. MARK MEILLY, MR. VERGEL O. SANTOS, MR. GIL OLEA MENDOZA, MR. EDGAR C. SAMAR, MS. CHRISTINE BELLEN, MR. ANGELO R. LACUESTA, MS. ANNA MARIA KATIGBAKLACUESTA, MR. LEX LEDESMA, MS. KELLY PERIQUET, MS. CARLA PACIS, MR. J. ALBERT GAMBOA, MR. CESAR EVANGELISTA BUENDIA, MR. PAOLO ALCAZAREN, MR. ALWYN C. JAVIER, MR. RAYMOND MAGNO GARLITOS, MS. GANG BADOY, MR. LESLIE BOCOBO, MS. FRANCES BRETANA, MS. JUDITH TORRES, MS. JANNETTE PINZON, MS. JUNE POTICAR-DALISAY, MS. CAMILLE DE LA ROSA, MR. JAMES LADIORAY, MR. RENATO CONSTANTINO, JR., and CONCERNED ARTISTS OF THE PHILIPPINES (CAP), Petitioners, vs. THE EXECUTIVE SECRETARY, THE SECRETARY OF THE DEPARTMENT OF BUDGET AND MANAGEMENT, THE CULTURAL CENTER OF THE PHILIPPINES, THE NATIONAL COMMISSION ON CULTURE AND THE ARTS, MS. CECILE GUIDOTE-ALVAREZ, MR. CARLO MAGNO JOSE CAPARAS,1 MR. JOSE MORENO, MR. FRANCISCO MANOSA, AND ALL PERSONS, PUBLIC AND PRIVATE, ACTING UNDER THEIR INSTRUCTIONS, DIRECTION, CONTROL AND SUPERVISION IN RELATION TO THE CONFERMENT OF THE ORDER OF THE NATIONAL ARTIST AND THE RELEASE OF FUNDS IN RELATION TO THE CONFERMENT OF THE HONORS AND PRIVILEGES OF THE ORDER OF NATIONAL ARTISTS ON RESPONDENTS GUIDOTE-ALVAREZ, CAPARAS, MORENO AND MANOSA, Respondents.

FACTS: On April 27, 1972, former President Ferdinand E. Marcos issued Proclamation No. 1001and, upon recommendation of the Board of Trustees of the Cultural Center of the Philippines (CCP), created the category of Award and Decoration of National Artist to be awarded to Filipinos who have made distinct contributions to arts and letters. In the same issuance, Fernando Amorsolo was declared as the first National Artist.On April 3, 1992, Republic Act No. 7356, otherwise known as the Law Creating the National Commission for Culture and the Arts, was signed into law. It established the National Commission for Culture and the Arts (NCCA) and gave it an extensive mandate over the development, promotion and preservation of the Filipino national culture and arts and the Filipino cultural heritage.

CCP Board of Trustees and the NCCA have been mandated by law to promote, develop and protect the Philippine national culture and the arts, and authorized to give awards to deserving Filipino artists, the two bodies decided to team up and jointly administer the National Artists Award.

On April 3, 2009, the First Deliberation Panel met. A total of 87 nominees were considered during the deliberation and a preliminary shortlist of 32 names was compiled.

On April 23, 2009, the Second Deliberation Panel shortlisted 13 out of the 32 names in the preliminary shortlist.On May 6, 2009, the final deliberation was conducted by the 30-member Final Deliberation Panel comprised of the CCP Board of Trustees and the NCCA Board of Commissioners and the living National Artists.From the 13 names in the second shortlist, a final list of four names was agreed upon namely: Manuel Conde, Ramon Santos, Lazaro Francisco and Federico Aguilar-Alcuaz.

CCP and NCCA submitted this recommendation to the President. According to respondents, the aforementioned letter was referred by the Office of the President to the Committee on Honors. Meanwhile, the Office of the President allegedly received nominations from various sectors, cultural groups and individuals strongly endorsing private respondents Cecile Guidote-Alvarez, Carlo Magno Jose Caparas, Francisco Masa and Jose Moreno. The Committee on Honors purportedly processed these nominations and invited resource persons to validate the qualifications and credentials of the nominees.

Acting on this recommendation, Proclamation No. 1823 declaring Manuel Conde a National Artist was issued on June 30, 2009. Subsequently, on July 6, 2009, Proclamation Nos. 1824 to 1829 were issued declaring Lazaro Francisco, Federico AguilarAlcuaz and private respondents Guidote-Alvarez, Caparas, Masa and Moreno, respectively, as National Artists. This was subsequently announced to the public by then Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita on July 29, 2009.

Convinced that, by law, it is the exclusive province of the NCCA Board of Commissioners and the CCP Board of Trustees to select those who will be conferred the Order of National Artists and to set the standard for entry into that select group, petitioners instituted this petition for prohibition, certiorari and injunction (with prayer for restraining order) praying that the Order of National Artists be conferred on Dr. Santos and that the conferment of the Order of National Artists on respondents Guidote-Alvarez, Caparas, Masa and Moreno be enjoined and declared to have been rendered in grave abuse of discretion.

All of the petitioners claim that former President Macapagal-Arroyo gravely abused her discretion in disregarding the results of the rigorous screening and selection process for the Order of National Artists and in substituting her own choice for those of the Deliberation Panels. According to petitioners, the Presidents discretion to name National Artists is not absolute but limited. In particular, her discretion on the matter cannot be exercised in the absence of or against the recommendation of the NCCA and the CCP.

ISSUE: Was there grave abuse of discretion committed by former President Arroyo?

HELD: Legal Standing. The parties who assail the constitutionality or legality of a statute or an official act must have a direct and personal interest. They must show not only that the law or any governmental act is invalid, but also that they sustained or are in immediate danger of sustaining some direct injury as a result of its enforcement, and not merely that they suffer thereby in some indefinite way.

In this case, the petitioning National Artists will be denied some right or privilege to which they are entitled as members of the Order of National Artists as a result of the conferment of the award on respondents Guidote-Alvarez, Caparas, Masa and Moreno. In particular, they will be denied the privilege of exclusive membership in the Order of National Artists.

Equal Protection. It should be recalled too that respondent Guidote-Alvarez was disqualified to be nominated for being the Executive Director of the NCCA at that time while respondents Masa and Caparas did not make it to the preliminary shortlist and respondent Moreno was not included in the second shortlist. Yet, the four of them were treated differently and considered favorably when they were exempted from the rigorous screening process of the NCCA and the CCP and conferred the Order of National Artists.

The special treatment accorded to respondents Guidote-Alvarez, Caparas, Masa and Moreno fails to pass rational scrutiny. No real and substantial distinction between respondents and petitioner Abad has been shown that would justify deviating from the laws, guidelines and established procedures, and placing respondents in an exceptional position. The undue classification was not germane to the purpose of the law. Instead, it contradicted the law and well-established guidelines, rules and regulations meant to carry the law into effect. While petitioner Abad cannot claim entitlement to the Order of National Artists, he is entitled to be given an equal opportunity to vie for that honor. In view of the foregoing, there was a violation of petitioner Abads right to equal protection, an interest that is substantial enough to confer him standing in this case.

Limits of the President's Discretion. The "power to recommend" includes the power to give "advice, exhortation or indorsement, which is essentially persuasive in character, not binding upon the party to whom it is made."

Thus, in the matter of the conferment of the Order of National Artists, the President may or may not adopt the recommendation or advice of the NCCA and the CCP Boards. In other words, the advice of the NCCA and the CCP is subject to the President's discretion.

Nevertheless, the Presidents discretion on the matter is not totally unfettered, nor the role of the NCCA and the CCP Boards meaningless. The Presidents power must be exercised in accordance with existing laws. Section 17, Article VII of the Constitution prescribes faithful execution of the laws by the President

The President's discretion in the conferment of the Order of National Artists should be exercised in accordance with the duty to faithfully execute the relevant laws. The faithful execution clause is best construed as an obligation imposed on the President, not a separate grant of power.

In this connection, the powers granted to the NCCA and the CCP Boards in connection with the conferment of the Order of National Artists by executive issuances were institutionalized by two laws, namely, Presidential Decree No. 208 dated June 7, 1973 and Republic Act No. 7356. In particular, Proclamation No. 1144 dated May 15, 1973 constituted the CCP Board as the National Artists Awards Committee and tasked it to "administer the conferment of the category of National Artist" upon deserving Filipino artists with the mandate to "draft the rules to guide its deliberations in the choice of National Artists".

By virtue of their respective statutory mandates in connection with the conferment of the National Artist Award, the NCCA and the CCP decided to work together and jointly administer the National Artist Award. They reviewed the guidelines for the nomination, selection and administration of the National Artist Award. An administrative regulation adopted pursuant to law has the force and effect of law. Thus, the rules, guidelines and policies regarding the Order of National Artists jointly issued by the CCP Board of Trustees and the NCCA pursuant to their respective statutory mandates have the force and effect of law. Until set aside, they are binding upon executive and administrative agencies,including the President himself/herself as chief executor of laws.

In view of the various stages of deliberation in the selection process and as a consequence of his/her duty to faithfully enforce the relevant laws, the discretion of the President in the matter of the Order of National Artists is confined to the names submitted to him/her by the NCCA and the CCP Boards. This means that the President could not have considered conferment of the Order of National Artists on any person not considered and recommended by the NCCA and the CCP Boards. That is the proper import of the provision of Executive Order No. 435, s. 2005, that the NCCA and the CCP "shall advise the President on the conferment of the Order of National Artists." Applying this to the instant case, the former President could not have properly considered respondents Guidote-Alvarez, Caparas, Masa and Moreno, as their names were not recommended by the NCCA and the CCP Boards. Otherwise, not only will the stringent selection and meticulous screening process be rendered futile, the respective mandates of the NCCA and the CCP Board of Trustees under relevant laws to administer the conferment of Order of National Artists, draft the rules and regulations to guide its deliberations, formulate and implement policies and plans, and undertake any and all necessary measures in that regard will also become meaningless.

Proclamation Nos. 1826 to 1829 dated July 6, 2009 proclaiming respondents Cecile Guidote-Alvarez, Carlo Magno Jose Caparas, Francisco Masa, and Jose Moreno, respectively, as National Artists are declared INVALID and SET ASIDE for having been issued with grave abuse of discretion.