Title
City Government of Makati City vs. Civil Service Commission
Case
G.R. No. 131392
Decision Date
Feb 6, 2002
Employee detained without warrant, suspended, and later dropped from rolls; acquitted, sought reinstatement. Court ruled automatic leave during detention, no abandonment, due process violation; ordered reinstatement with back wages.
A

Case Summary (G.R. No. 131392)

Key Dates

Arrest and detention: September 6, 1991 (arrest without warrant; inquest proceedings followed).
Employer suspension: Memorandum placing Galzote under suspension dated September 9, 1991 (suspension “until final disposition” of the criminal case).
Dropped from rolls: Memorandum effective January 21, 1993 for absence “more than one (1) year without official leave.”
Acquittal and release: September 22, 1994 (acquitted for lack of evidence).
Request for reinstatement: Galzote presented herself and sought lifting of suspension and reinstatement on October 19, 1994.
CSC resolution: Resolution No. 960153 (ordered immediate reinstatement with back wages; dated January 9, 1996).
Court of Appeals: Affirmed CSC (CA decision cited).
Supreme Court decision: Petition denied; CSC and CA rulings affirmed.

Applicable Law and Authority

Constitutional basis: 1987 Philippine Constitution (Civil Service Commission’s constitutional mandate, Art. IX-B).
Statutory/regulatory framework: Administrative Code of 1987 (Book V provisions empowering CSC); CSC Rules implementing Book V (Resolution No. 91-1631, Rules Implementing Book V of EO No. 292) — notably provisions on leaves (former Secs. 20 and 35, subsequently Renumbered Secs. 52 and 63).
Other statutes cited regarding remedies and back pay: RA 6656 and RA 7160.
Relevant CSC authority: power to promulgate, interpret, amend rules implementing civil service laws and to prescribe leave rules (Sec. 60 of the Administrative Code; CSC rulemaking authority).

Facts — Arrest, Employer Action, and Acquittal

Galzote was arrested without warrant on or about 6 September 1991 on kidnapping-with-physical-injuries charges and detained thereafter. The City issued a suspension memorandum dated 9 September 1991 stating she was suspended “until the final disposition of her criminal case.” While detained, Galzote did not file a formal application for leave. On 21 January 1993 Makati issued a memorandum dropping her from the rolls for absence “for more than one (1) year without official leave.” Galzote was acquitted on 22 September 1994; she presented herself for reinstatement on 19 October 1994 but was turned away. She sought relief from the CSC, which ordered reinstatement with back wages effective 19 October 1994; the CA affirmed, and the City petitioned to the Supreme Court.

Issues Presented

  1. Whether Galzote may be considered absent without leave (AWOL) for failing to file a formal leave application while detained.
  2. Whether due process was observed before Makati dropped her from the rolls.
  3. Whether failure to file a formal leave application or prolonged absence justifies permanent removal such that reinstatement with back wages is precluded.

CSC and CA Findings Adopted by Supreme Court

CSC held that Galzote was on an “automatic leave of absence” during detention because she could not physically report for work and there was no administrative case warranting separate disciplinary removal; CSC ordered reinstatement with back wages from the date she first presented herself to resume duties (19 October 1994). The Court of Appeals affirmed the CSC resolution. The Supreme Court adopted and affirmed these conclusions.

Legal Reasoning — Suspension Memorandum and Effect on Leave Requirement

The Supreme Court found the September 9, 1991 suspension memorandum to have been issued by the Municipal Personnel Officer with competence and to have effectively recognized Galzote’s predicament. The suspension “until final disposition” was construed as excusing her from reporting for work and, in practical effect, operating as an employer-authorized leave or its equivalent for purposes of protecting her reinstatement rights upon acquittal. Given that the employer itself placed her under suspension, the Court reasoned she had a legitimate basis not to file a formal leave application while incapacitated by detention.

Legal Reasoning — Authority of CSC to Interpret Its Rules and the Concept of “Automatic Leave”

The Court emphasized that the CSC, as the constitutionally mandated central personnel agency, has rulemaking authority and the power to interpret its own rules. The CSC’s interpretation recognizing automatic leave by analogy to other force majeure situations (e.g., illness or compulsory detention) was deemed a reasonable construction within its delegated authority. The Court applied established principles that an administrative agency’s contemporaneous and reasonable interpretation of its own rules is entitled to weight and may become part of the operative rule, absent clear unreasonableness or arbitrariness.

Legal Reasoning — Due Process and Service of Notice

The Supreme Court found Makati City had actual and official knowledge of Galzote’s incarceration. Given that knowledge, the City was obliged to effect notice to where she was detained (Rizal Provincial Jail) rather than rely solely on service at her residence. The Court held the City’s memorandum dropping her from the rolls, served at her house while she was incarcerated, failed to satisfy due process. The presumption of regularity as to service was not enough in light of the City’s knowledge and the absence of proof of proper service (e.g., affidavit of server). Gonzales v. CSC and related precedent were invoked to stress that strict due process must be observed where employment and security of tenure are at stake.

Equitable and Policy Considerations — Security of Tenure and Protection of Labor

The Court resolved doubts in favor of the lower-ranking employee, invoking constitutional mandates to afford full protection to labor and to promote security of tenure for civil servants. It treated the employer—being in a better position to shoulder consequences of prolonged absence not attributable to the employee—as the party to bear the operational impact rather than penalize the detained employee by loss of employment and back pay.

Precedents and Analogous Authorities Relied Upon

The Court relied on prior decisions and doctrines cited in the record that support treating compelled absence due to detention or other force majeure as not constituting voluntary abandonment: Magtoto v. NLRC (detention and dismissal for prolonged absence), Geukeko v. Araneta (administrative agency’s interpretation of its own rules), Gonzales v. CSC (due process in notice to drop from rolls), and University of the Philippines v. CSC (exceptions to leave rules under special institutional considerations), among others. The Court contrasted these with Ramo v. Elefaño and Quezon v. Borromeo, which involved voluntary or culpable absences and thus were distinguished.

Rejection of City’s Arguments and Estoppel

The Supreme Court rejected Makati’s contention that the CSC’s automatic-leave doctrine is non-existent or impermissible. The Court held that to deprive Galzote of reliance on the suspension memorandum—issued by the City itself—would be unfair; the City should be estopped from asserting the suspension was void where Galzote had reasonably relied on it and where the employer had constructive and actual knowledge of her detention. The Court also noted that even if an order were later adjudged void, past reliance on it

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