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8/16/23, 11:25 PM G.R. No.

103578

Today is Wednesday, August 16, 2023

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Republic of the Philippines


SUPREME COURT
Manila

EN BANC

G.R. No. 103578 January 29, 1993

JUDGE RODOLFO T. ALLARDE, petitioner,


vs.
THE COMMISSION ON AUDIT and the MUNICIPAL TREASURER OF MUNTINLUPA, respondents.

GRIÑO-AQUINO, J.:

This is a petition for certiorari and/or mandamus seeking to annul and set aside the decisions dated June 5, 1991,
November 5, 1991, August 20, 1991 and January 27, 1992 of the Commission on audit (COA) which denied
petitioner's request for inclusion of the monthly allowance he had been receiving from the Municipality of Muntinlupa
as Metropolitan Trial Court Judge, as part of his retirement benefits.

Petitioner Rodolfo T. Allarde was the Presiding Judge of Branch LXXX, Metropolitan Trial Court in Muntinlupa, Metro
Manila, until his courtesy resignation was accepted on January 13, 1987. He applied for retirement under Republic
Act No. 910, as amended by Presidential Decree No. 1438, which this Court approved on July 11, 1989.

In computing his total retirement pay, the Government Service Insurance System (GSIS) included the amount of
P240,000.00 representing the five-year lump sum of the P4,000.00-monthly allowance which he had been receiving
from the Municipality of Muntinlupa during his incumbency therein as judge, provided said lump sum of P240,000.00
should be charged to the funds of the municipality pursuant to Section 30 of Batas Pambansa Blg. 866, and subject
to the availability of funds. On April 16, 1990, the Sangguniang Bayan of Muntinlupa, by Resolution No. 90-145,
appropriated and awarded the amount of P240,000.00 in favor of the petitioner.

However, petitioner's claim for payment of that additional retirement benefit reached the Metro Manila Authority
which denied it on the ground that:

. . . the Commission on Audit who is the final authority on questions of money claims against the
government has already ruled (in similar cases as the one at bar) that (like) allowances formerly
granted you by the Municipal Government of Muntinlupa, by the very nature and intent of the grant,
"are expense items not to be equated with compensation for purposes of computing retirement
benefits." (p. 49, Rollo.)

On April 4, 1991, the petitioner filed his claim with the Commission on Audit (COA). On June 5, 1991, the COA
rendered Decision No. 1877 denying the claim.

On September 9, 1991, petitioner flied a Memorandum/Motion for Reconsideration of the decision, but the COA
issued Decision No. 1983 dated November 5, 1991, reiterating its denial of the petitioner's claim.

A second reconsideration met the same fate (COA Decision No. 2159, dated January 27, 1992). Hence, this petition
for review.

The sole issue in this case is: whether or not the P4,000.00 monthly allowance that the petitioner had been receiving
from the Municipality of Muntinlupa should be included in the computation of his retirement benefits under Republic
Act No. 910, as amended by Presidential Decree No. 1438.

Petitioner's claim is anchored on Section 3 of Republic Act No. 910. An Act Providing For The Retirement of Justices
and All Judges in the Judiciary, as amended by P.D. No. 1438 which provides:

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Sec. 3. Upon retirement, a justice of the Supreme Court or of the Court of Appeals, or a judge of the
Court of First Instance, Circuit Criminal Court, Agrarian Relations, Tax Appeals, Juvenile and Domestic
Relations, city or municipal court, or any other court hereafter established shall be automatically
entitled to a lump sum of five years' gratuity computed on the basis of the highest monthly salary plus
the highest monthly aggregate of transportation, living and representation allowances he was receiving
on the date of his retirement; Provided, however, that if the reason for the retirement be any permanent
disability contracted during his incumbency in office and prior to the date of retirement he shall receive
only a gratuity equivalent to ten years' salary and allowances aforementioned with no further annuity
payable monthly during the rest of the retiree's natural life.

As clearly specified in the law, only transportation, living and representation allowances may be included in the
computation of the first
five-year lump sum retirement benefits for members of the judiciary.

It is an elementary principle of statutory construction that where the words and phrases of a statute are not obscure
or ambiguous, the meaning and intention of the legislature should be determined from the language employed, and
where there is no ambiguity in the words, there is no room for construction (Provincial Board of Cebu vs. Presiding
Judge of Cebu, CFI, Branch IV, 171 SCRA 1).

Accordingly, the provisions of Section 3, P.D. No. 1438, which are clear and unambiguous, should be given their
plain and natural meaning. Inasmuch as the law limits the computation of the lump sum of 5 years' gratuity to "the
highest monthly salary plus the highest monthly aggregate of transportation, living and representation allowances
that the judge was receiving on the date of his retirement," it is understood that other allowances are excluded.
Inclusio unius est exclusio alterius.

The petitioner failed to prove that the P4,000.00 additional monthly allowance that he was receiving from the
Municipal Government of Muntinlupa was a representation, living or transportation allowance, for as indicated in the
sample disbursement voucher that he used to fill up whenever he claimed such allowance, the amount was in the
nature of reimbursement for expenses which Judge Allarde certified "were incurred by me while performing my
duties."
(p. 52, Rollo.)

The pertinent observations of the COA in its decision dated June 5, 1991 are quoted as follows:

Upon a close scrutiny and examination of PD 1438, we note that the allowances contemplated therein
are "transportation, living and representation allowances" being granted to Justices and Judges from
national and/or local funds as authorized by existing laws, rules and regulations which constitute
integral part of their remuneration. (Vide. WHEREAS clauses) That being so, these allowances are
deemed as commutable in character and, hence, partake of the nature of additional compensation. For
this reason, they are included in the computation of the retirement benefits of Justices and Judges as
provided in the said law.

In your case, however, it appears that the allowances you have been collecting from the Municipality of
Muntinlupa during your stint therein as Municipal Trial Court Judge were non-commutable or
reimbursable in nature, let alone the fact that there is no indication as to whether they were
transportation, living or representation allowances. This conclusion can be readily drawn from the copy
of a sample voucher forming part of the set of papers accompanying your present claim whereby you
sought to collect "payment of the allowance of P4,000.00 a month for the period January
1-31, 1985" from the Municipality of Muntinlupa, and whereon you had to "certify that the expenses
were incurred by me (you) while performing my (your) duties covering the period heretofore cited,"
thereby signifying the reimbursable nature thereof. (Emphasis and words in parenthesis ours) Evidently
then, the allowances that you now seek to collect as part of your retirement gratuity are expense items
that cannot be equated with salary or compensation. On this score, it was patent error for the GSIS to
identify such allowance as "RATA" and to include the aggregate amount thereof corresponding to a 60-
month period in its computation of your retirement gratuity as the local share of the Municipality of
Muntinlupa. (p. 52, Rollo.)

Letter of Instruction No. 1418 which authorizes local governments to pay additional allowances to judges of the
courts within their territorial jurisdiction, limits the amount of such allowance and does not provide that it shall be
treated as part of the judge's remuneration in computing the retirement benefits.

WHEREAS, some local government units are ready, willing, and able to pay additional allowances to
Judges of the various courts within their respective territorial jurisdiction;

xxx xxx xxx

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3. The allowances provided in this letter shall be borne exclusively by the National Government.
However, provincial, city and municipal governments may pay additional allowances to the members
and personnel of the Judiciary assigned in their respective areas out of available local funds but not to
exceed P1,500.00: Provided, that in Metropolitan Manila, the city and municipal governments therein
may pay additional allowances not exceeding P3,000.00. (Emphasis ours). (pp.
42-43, Rollo.)

As observed by the Solicitor General the use of the word "may" signifies that the allowance may not be demanded
as a matter of right, but is entirely dependent on the will of the municipality concerned (p. 43, Rollo). It should be
treated as an honorarium, an amount that is "given not as a matter of obligation but in appreciation for services
rendered, a voluntary donation in consideration for services which admit of no compensation in money" (Santiago
vs. Commission on Audit, 199 SCRA 128, 130).

As the Solicitor General aptly observed: such additional allowance does not constitute an integral part of the judge's
remuneration for it may or may not be given by the local government and it is dependent on the liberality of the
latter. If said allowance were to be included in the computation of the retirement benefits of judges, the result would
be inequality and disparity in their retirement benefits. For there are rich municipalities that can give generous
allowances to the judges of the courts within their territorial jurisdiction, and there are poorer municipalities that can
give less substantial amounts or none at all. The result would be an unseemly jockeying among the trial judges for
assignment in the wealthy municipalities, and injustice to those who may be assigned to the less affluent regions, for
while they may have the same rank and perform essentially the same tasks, their more fortunate colleagues would
be enjoying more benefits. The retirement law was not intended to deal unequally and unfairly with the judges.

WHEREFORE, finding no grave abuse of discretion in the decision of the Commission on Audit, the petition for
review is hereby DISMISSED.

SO ORDERED.

Narvasa, C.J., Gutierrez, Jr., Cruz, Feliciano, Padilla, Bidin, Regalado, Davide, Jr., Romero, Nocon, Bellosillo, Melo
and Campos, Jr., JJ., concur.
The Lawphil Project - Arellano Law Foundation

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