Garcia vs. Sandiganabayan (Digest)
Garcia vs. Sandiganabayan (Digest)
Garcia vs. Sandiganabayan (Digest)
SUBJECT: Crimes committed by public officers – Section 3 (b) of Republic Act 3019 (Anti-
Graft and Corrupt Practices Act)
FACTS:
In criminal cases filed by the complainant Maria Lourdes Miranda, Timoteo Garcia, then
Regional Director of the Land Transportation Office Region X, together with Gilbert G. Nabo
and Nery Tagupa, employees of the same office, were charged for a violation of Section 3 (b) of
the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act for their alleged frequent borrowing of motor vehicles
from Oro Asian Automotive Center Corporation, which is engaged in the business of vehicle
assembly and dealership in Cagayan de Oro City, knowing that said corporation regularly
transacts with the accused’s LTO Office for the registration of its motor vehicles, in the reporting
of its engine and chassis numbers as well as the submission of its vehicle dealer’s report and
other similar transaction which require the prior approval and/or intervention of the said accused
Regional Director and employees and/or their said LTO office in Cagayan de Oro City, to the
damage and prejudice of and undue injury to said Oro Asian Automotive Corporation, including
complainant Maria Lourdes Miranda.
On the other hand, Chiong testified that accused Garcia would ask his driver to get a vehivle on a
Saturday at around 6:30am. He would return it in the late afternoon of the same day. There was
only one instance when accused Garcia returned the motor vehicle on the day after, and this was
the time when the said vehicle had figured in a vehicular accident which resulted in the death of
a certain Jane, the daughter of Miranda.
HELD: No!
To be convicted of violation of Section 3 (b) of RA 3019, the prosecution has the burden
of proving the following elements:
(1) The offender is a public officer; (PO)
(2) Who requested or received a gift, a present, a share, a percentage, or a benefit;
(GPSPB)
(3) On behalf of the offender or any other person;
(4) In connection with a contract or transaction with the government; (CT) and
(5) In which the public officer, in an official capacity under the law, has the right to
intervene.
4th element not established. The requesting or receiving of any gift, present, share,
percentage, or benefit must be in connection with “a contract or transaction” wherein the public
officer in his official capacity had to intervene under the law. In the case at bar, the prosecution
did not specify what transaction the Company had with the LTO that petitioner intervened in
when he allegedly borrowed the vehicles from the company. It is not insufficient that petitioner
admitted that the Company has continually transacted with his office. What is required is that the
transaction involved should at least be described with particularity and proven. To establish the
existence of the 4th element, the relation of the fact requesting and/or receiving, and that of the
transaction involved must be clearly shown. The prosecution's allegation that the Company
regularly transacts with petitioner's LTO Office for the registration of its motor vehicles, in the
reporting of its engine and chassis numbers, as well as the submission of its vehicle dealer's
report, and other similar transactions, will not suffice. This general statement failed to show the
link between the 56 alleged borrowings with their corresponding transactions.
The crime of bribery as defined in Article 210 of the RPC consists of the following
elements:
(1) That the accused is a public officer;
(2) That he received directly or through another some gift or present, offer or promise;
(3) That such gift, present or promise has been given in consideration of his commission
of some crime, or any act not constituting a crime, or to refrain from doing something
which it is his official duty to do; and
(4) That the crime or act relates to the exercise of his functions as a public officer.
There is utter lack of evidence adduced by the prosecution showing that petitioner
committed any of the three acts constituting direct bribery. The two prosecution witnesses did not
mention anything about petitioner asking for something is exchange for his performance of, or
abstaining to perform, an act in connection with his official duty. In fact, Aurora Chiong, VP and
GM of the Company, testified that the company complied with all the requirements of the LTO
without asking for any intervention from petitioner or from anybody else from said office.
Indirect bribery under Article 211 of the RPC is committed by a public officer who shall
accept gifts offered to him by reason of his office. The essential ingredient of this crime is that
the public officer concerned must have accepted the gift or material consideration. In the case at
bar, the prosecution was not able to show that petitioner indeed accepted a gift from the
Company. The alleged borrowing of a vehicle by petitioner from the company can be considered
as the gift in contemplation of the law. To prove that petitioner borrowed a vehicle from the
Company 56 times, the prosecution adduced in evidence 56 delivery receipts allegedly signed by
petitioner’s representative whom the latter would send to pick up the vehicle.
The SC find that the delivery receipts do not sufficiently prove that petitioner received the
vehicles considering that his signatures do not appear therein. In addition, the prosecution failed
to establish that it was petitioner's representatives who picked up the vehicles. The acquittal of
one of the accused
(Nery Tagupa) who allegedly received the vehicles from the Company further strengthens this
argument. If the identity of the person who allegedly picked up the vehicle on behalf of the
petitioner is uncertain, there can also be no certainty that it was petitioner who received the
vehicles in the end.