Sarmiento
III v Mison
GR No.
79974 December 17, 1987
Section 16. The President shall nominate
and, with the consent of the Commission on Appointments, appoint the heads of
the executive departments, ambassadors, other public ministers and consuls, or
officers of the armed forces from the rank of colonel or naval captain, and
other officers whose appointments are vested in him in this Constitution. He
shall also appoint all other officers of the Government whose appointments are
not otherwise provided for by law, and those whom he may be authorized by law
to appoint. The Congress may, by law, vest the appointment of other officers
lower in rank in the President alone, in the courts, or in the heads of
departments, agencies, commissions, or boards.cralaw
The President shall have the power to make
appointments during the recess of the Congress, whether voluntary or
compulsory, but such appointments shall be effective only until disapproved by
the Commission on Appointments or until the next adjournment of the Congress.
PADILLA, J:
FACTS:
(1) Petitioners
contend that Mison's appointment as Commissioner of the Bureau of Customs is
unconstitutional by reason of its not having been confirmed by the Commission
on Appointments. The respondents, on the other hand, maintain the constitutionality
of respondent Mison's appointment without the confirmation of the Commission on
Appointments.
(2) There are four
(4) groups of officers whom the President shall appoint.
First, the heads
of the executive departments, ambassadors, other public ministers and consuls,
officers of the armed forces from the rank of colonel or naval captain, and
other officers whose appointments are vested in him in this Constitution;
Second, all other
officers of the Government whose appointments are not otherwise provided for by
law;
Third, those whom
the President may be authorized by law to appoint;
Fourth, officers
lower in rank 4 whose appointments the Congress may by law vest in the
President alone.
The first group of
officers is clearly appointed with the consent of the Commission on
Appointments.
The second, third
and fourth groups of officers are the present bone of contention.
ISSUE:
Whether or not the
President can appoint Mison without submitting his nomination to the Commission
on Appointments
HELD:
Petition
dismissed. President of the Philippines acted within her constitutional
authority and power in appointing respondent Salvador Mison, Commissioner of
the Bureau of Customs, without submitting his nomination to the Commission on
Appointments for confirmation. He is thus entitled to exercise the full
authority and functions of the office and to receive all the salaries and
emoluments pertaining thereto.
In sum:
1. Confirmation by
the Commission on Appointments is required only for presidential appointees
mentioned in the first sentence of Section 16, Article VII, including, those
officers whose appointments are expressly vested by the Constitution itself in
the president (like sectoral representatives to Congress and members of the
constitutional commissions of Audit, Civil Service and Election).
2. Confirmation is
not required when the President appoints other government officers whose
appointments are not otherwise provided for by law or those officers whom he
may be authorized by law to appoint (like the Chairman and Members of the
Commission on Human Rights). Also, as observed in Mison, when Congress creates
inferior offices but omits to provide for appointment thereto, or provides in
an unconstitutional manner for such appointments, the officers are considered
as among those whose appointments are not otherwise provided for by law.
RATIO:
(1) By following
the accepted rule in constitutional and statutory construction that an express
enumeration of subjects excludes others not enumerated, it would follow that
only those appointments to positions expressly stated in the first group
require the consent (confirmation) of the Commission on Appointments.
(2) It is evident
that the position of Commissioner of the Bureau of Customs (a bureau head) is
not one of those within the first group of appointments where the consent of
the Commission on Appointments is required. As a matter of fact, as already
pointed out, while the 1935 Constitution includes "heads of bureaus"
among those officers whose appointments need the consent of the Commission on
Appointments, the 1987 Constitution, on the other hand, deliberately excluded
the position of "heads of bureaus" from appointments that need the
consent (confirmation) of the Commission on Appointments.
(3) In the 1987
Constitution, however, as already pointed out, the clear and expressed
intent of its framers was to exclude presidential appointments from
confirmation by the Commission on Appointments, except appointments to offices
expressly mentioned in the first sentence of Sec. 16, Art. VII.
Consequently, there was no reason to use in the third sentence of Sec. 16,
Article VII the word "alone" after the word "President" in
providing that Congress may by law vest the appointment of lower-ranked
officers in the President alone, or in the courts, or in the heads of
departments, because the power to appoint officers whom he (the president) may
be authorized by law to appoint is already vested in the President, without
need of confirmation by the Commission on Appointments, in the second sentence
of the same Sec. 16, Article VII.
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