Title
Villarosa vs. Ombudsman
Case
G.R. No. 221418
Decision Date
Jan 23, 2019
Municipal officials misused Tobacco Fund for unauthorized purposes, leading to Technical Malversation charges; no probable cause for R.A. No. 3019 violation.
A

Case Summary (G.R. No. 221418)

Key Dates and Applicable Law

  • Decision reviewed: Joint Resolution of the Office of the Ombudsman (March 23, 2015) and denial of reconsideration (July 29, 2015); Supreme Court decision dated January 23, 2019 (1987 Constitution applied).
  • Primary legal provisions: Article 220, Revised Penal Code (Technical Malversation); Section 3(e), R.A. No. 3019 (Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act); R.A. No. 8240 (amendment to NIRC governing local share of tobacco excise collections); Joint Circular No. 2009-1 (guidelines on release and use of LGU tobacco fund shares); Ombudsman powers under Article XI, Section 12 of the 1987 Constitution and R.A. No. 6770 (Ombudsman Act of 1989).

Procedural History

Private respondent Basilio filed criminal and administrative complaints (Sept. 23, 2011) with the Ombudsman against the Mayor, Accountant and Treasurer for misapplication of the Tobacco Fund and related administrative charges. The Ombudsman conducted preliminary investigation, directed submission of counter-affidavits and supporting documents, and later issued a Joint Resolution finding probable cause for Technical Malversation and violation of Section 3(e) of R.A. No. 3019, and recommended filing of informations with the Sandiganbayan. The petitioners sought reconsideration before the Ombudsman, which was denied; they then filed a Rule 65 petition with the Supreme Court challenging the Ombudsman’s findings as grave abuse of discretion.

Allegations and Factual Findings by the Ombudsman

  • The Tobacco Fund (LGU share of incremental tobacco excise revenue) is statutorily limited to cooperative, livelihood, and agro-industrial projects that benefit farmers and related activities under R.A. No. 8240 and implementing Joint Circular No. 2009-1.
  • Respondents charged significant disbursements of the Tobacco Fund for purposes not among the statutory list: purchase of multi-cab vehicles, Christmas lights, meals/snacks for barangay officials, medicines, gravel and sand, maintenance of PNP and service vehicles, bus rentals, and other municipal activities.
  • Representative Amelita Villarosa’s letters and escrow/subscription agreements were submitted; Ombudsman concluded the letters did not confer unbridled discretion to spend the funds for any purpose and in fact specified authorized projects and reaffirmed compliance with R.A. 8240 and related guidelines.
  • The disbursement vouchers bore coding consistent with trust fund (code “300”), and the Accountant and Treasurer were aware or ought to have been aware of the trust nature and limitations of the Tobacco Fund.

Petitioners’ Defenses

  • Mayor Villarosa: asserted that the Tobacco Fund was the congressional share coming through Representative Amelita Villarosa and that the representative’s authority/delegation authorized municipal use; defense also highlighted alleged absence of statutory prohibition against treating tobacco-derived funds as part of the general fund. Justified vehicle purchases for agricultural sector needs.
  • Municipal Accountant Alvaro: claimed ministerial role; contended lack of discretion in disallowing purchases once proper procedures were followed; argued that bulk of funds came from the Representative and that the Representative had delegated spending authority to the Mayor’s office.
  • Municipal Treasurer Cajayon: claimed ministerial action — signed disbursement vouchers after verifying completeness of supporting documents and availability of allotment; relied on Sanggunian resolutions appropriating funds as allotment basis.

Legal Standards and Scope of Review

  • The Ombudsman is vested by the 1987 Constitution and R.A. No. 6770 with wide investigatory and prosecutorial latitude; courts generally defer to the Ombudsman’s probable cause determinations absent grave abuse of discretion. Grave abuse of discretion is a capricious, whimsical exercise of judgment tantamount to lack or excess of jurisdiction.
  • Probable cause for indictment is a lower evidentiary threshold than proof beyond reasonable doubt; it requires facts and circumstances that would lead a prudent person to strongly suspect the accused’s guilt — probability of guilt, not certainty.
  • Elements of Technical Malversation (Article 220, RPC): (1) the offender is an accountable public officer; (2) he applies public funds or property under his administration to some public use; and (3) the public use is different from the purpose for which such funds were appropriated by law or ordinance.
  • Elements of Section 3(e), R.A. No. 3019: (1) offender is a public officer; (2) act done in discharge of official duties; (3) act done through manifest partiality, evident bad faith, or gross inexcusable negligence; and (4) the act caused undue injury to any party or conferred unwarranted benefit to a private party.

Analysis Concerning Technical Malversation

  • The Ombudsman’s factual findings established that the funds were trust funds earmarked for specified agricultural and livelihood projects under R.A. No. 8240 and Joint Circular No. 2009-1, while respondents applied them to ordinary municipal expenses and varied purposes outside the statutory list.
  • The Accountant and Treasurer, as accountable officers, had duties beyond ministerial formality: the Accountant must ascertain the proper budgetary allotment and review supporting documents before preparing vouchers; the Treasurer must manage and disburse funds properly and certify availability. The coding of vouchers as trust fund (code “300”) put them on notice of the nature and limitations of the fund.
  • The record showed that Representative Villarosa’s letters and related bank agreements did not authorize unrestricted municipal use of the Tobacco Fund; they identified authorized projects and confirmed compliance with applicable law. Thus, the claimed delegation of unqualified authority to the municipality was unsubstantiated in the record.
  • Given these factual circumstances, the elements of Technical Malversation were reasonably apparent at the preliminary-investigation stage: the accused were accountable officers; the funds were applied to uses different from their statutory purpose; and the application was traceable to the administration of these funds by respondents. The Supreme Court found no grave abuse of discretion in the Ombudsman’s finding of probable cause for Technical Malversation and deferred to the Ombudsman’s factual assessment and conclusion that there was probable cause to indict.

Analysis Concerning Section 3(e), R.A. No. 3019

  • The Ombudsman concluded that the diversion of the Tobacco Fund demonstrated evident bad faith and manifest partiality or gross inexcusable negligence because the fund’s diversion deprived intended beneficiaries (farmers) and favored local officials and other non-enumerated uses.
  • The Supreme Court held that the factual record did not support the heightened factual sh
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