ENDENCIA vs DAVID
PASTOR M. ENDENCIA and
FERNANDO JUGO, plaintiffs-appellees, vs.SATURNINO DAVID, as Collector of
Internal Revenue, defendant-appellant.G.R. No. L-6355-56 August 31, 1953
Facts:
Saturnino David, then Collector of Internal Revenue,
ordered the taxing of Justice Pastor Endencia’s and Justice Fernando Jugo’s
salary pursuant to Sec13 of RA590 which provides that “SEC. 13. No salary wherever received by any public officer of
the Republic of the Philippines shall be considered as exempt from the income
tax, payment of which is hereby declared not to be adiminution of his
compensation fixed by the Constitution or by law. ”According to the brief of
the Solicitor General on behalf of appellant Collector of Internal Revenue, the
decision in the case of Perfecto vs. Meer, was not received favorably by
Congress, because immediately after its promulgation, Congress enacted Republic
Act No.590. To bring home his point, the Solicitor General reproduces what he
considers the pertinent discussion in the Lower House of House Bill No. 1127
which became Republic Act No. 590.
Issue:
1. WON the imposition of
an income tax upon the salaries of Justice Endencia and Justice Jugo and other
members of the Supreme Court and all judges of inferior courts amount to
adiminution?
2. WON Section 13 of
Republic Act No. 590 constitutional?
Held:
On the issue of
imposition of income tax upon the salaries of the judges, in a rather
exhaustive and well considered decision found and held under the doctrine laid
down by the court in the case of Perfecto vs. Meer, 85 Phil 552, Judge Higinio
B. Macadaeg held that the collection of income taxes from the salaries of
Justice Jugo and Justice Endencia was in violation of the Constitution of the
Philippines, and so ordered there fund of said taxes. On the issue of whether
Section 13 of Republic Act No. 590 is constitutional, the court believes that
this is a clear example of interpretation or ascertainment of the meaning of
the phrase “which shall not be diminished during their continuance in office,”
found in section 9, Article VIII of the Constitution, referring to the salaries
of judicial officers. By legislative fiat as enunciated in section 13, Republic
Act No. 590, Congress says that taxing the salary of a judicial officer is not
a decrease of compensation. This act of interpreting the Constitution or any
part thereof by the Legislature is an invasion of the well-defined and
established province and jurisdiction of the Judiciary. “The rule is recognized
elsewhere that the legislature cannot pass any declaratory act, or act
declaratory of what the law was before its passage, so as to give it any
binding weight with the courts. A legislative definition of a word as used in a
statute is not conclusive of its meaning as used elsewhere; otherwise, the
legislature would be usurping a judicial
function in defining a term. The court reiterates the doctrine laid down in the
case of Perfecto vs. Meer, to the effect that the collection of income tax on
the salary of a judicial officer is a diminution thereof and so violates the
Constitution. Further, the court holds that the interpretation and application
of the Constitution and of statutes is within the exclusive province and
jurisdiction of the judicial department, and that in enacting a law, the
Legislature may not legally provide therein that it be interpreted in such a
way that it may not violate a Constitutional prohibition, thereby tying the
hands of the courts in their task of later interpreting said statute,
especially when the interpretation sought and provided in said statute runs
counter to a previous interpretation already given in a case by the highest
court of the land. Thus the court holds that judgment is affirmed, that
Section13, Republic Act 590 in so far as it provides that taxing of the salary
of a judicial officer shall be considered “not to be adiminution of his
compensation fixed by the Constitution or by law”, constitutes and invasion of
the province and jurisdiction of the judiciary. In this sense, the court is of
the opinion that said section is null and void, it being a transgression of the
fundamental principles underlying the separation of powers. In the light of the
issue on imposing income tax on judges salaries, dissenting opinion of court
cited that judges are also citizens and thus their salaries are subjected to
the Income Tax Law prevailing. The debates, interpellations and opinions
expressed regarding the constitutional provision in question until it was
finally approved by the Commission disclosed that the true intent of the
framers of the1987 Constitution, in adopting it, was to make the salaries of
members of the Judiciary taxable. The ascertainment of that intent is but in
keeping with the fundamental principle of constitutional construction that the
intent of the framers of the organic law and of the people adopting it should
be given effe.
Dispo:
Court affirms judgment as
in Perfecto vs. Meer on the issue of imposing income tax on judges’ salaries.
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