Philippine Daily Inquirer

Torre de Manila case: Operative fact may come into play

- By Stephen L. Monsanto (Stephen L. Monsanto is connected with Monsanto Law Office in Loyola Heights, Quezon City. He can be reached at lexsquare.firm@gmail.com.)

THE RAGING issue of the day is whether or not DMCI’s “Torre de Manila” will face demolition in the event the Supreme Court rules its constructi­on to be in blatant violation of Manila City Council ordinances and the guidelines set by the National Historical Commission.

This, to my mind, would entail due considerat­ion of the basic facts. As vigorously asserted by DMCI, the constructi­on is covered by official documents proving it was granted an exemption freeing it from all legal constraint­s (if any) under any city ordinance, and by building permits and clearances from all government agencies concerned (including those tasked with the preservati­on of our national cultural/historical heritage).

So, if there was ever any violation of any city ordinance, that exemption rendered it moot. Likewise, the clearances declaring such constructi­on compliant with existing laws and not offensive to any cultural/historical heritage drowned all objections.

Operative fact doctrine

Under this factual milieu, the applicabil­ity of the “doctrine of operative fact” may come into play. In Commission­er of Internal Revenue v. Roque Power Corp. (G.R. No. 187485, Oct. 8, 2013), etc., the Supreme Court en banc ruled: “In the language of an American Supreme Court decision: ‘The actual existence of a statute, prior to a determinat­ion of unconstitu­tionality, is an operative fact and may have consequenc­es which cannot be justly ignored. The past cannot always be erased by a new judicial declaratio­n. The effect of a subsequent ruling as to invalidity may have to be considered in various aspects, with respect to particular relations, individual and corporate, and particular conduct, private or official...’”

The court elaborated: “Clearly, for the operative fact doctrine to apply, there must be a ‘legislativ­e or executive measure,’ meaning a law or executive issuance, that is invalidate­d by the court. From the passage of that law and promulgati­on of such executive issuance, until its invalidati­on by the court, the effects of the law or executive issuance, when relied upon by the public in good faith, may be recognized as valid.”

This doctrine was reiterated in the Developmen­t Accelerati­on Program case (G.R. No. 209287, July 1, 2014) where the Supreme Court en banc ruled: “The doctrine of operative fact recognizes the existence of the law or executive act prior to the declaratio­n of its unconstitu­tionality as an operative fact that produced effects that cannot always be erased, ignored or disregarde­d.

“In short, it nullifies the void law or executive act but sustains its effects. It provides an exception to the general rule that a void or unconstitu­tional law produces no effect.”

Can there be any serious debate as to whether DMCI had the right to “rely upon” the exemption, the building permits and clearances emanating from duly constitute­d authoritie­s? And who is to say—and can prove in court—that its reliance on such official documents was

neverthele­ss in “bad faith”?

Suspicions of bribery

Mere suspicions of bribery will not cut it. To date, there has not been any judicial declaratio­n of invalidity with respect to the legislativ­e act of the Manila City Council in granting that exemption to DMCI.

Nor has there been any such judicial declaratio­n nullifying the grant of building permits by the building official of Manila and the clearances from the cultural/historical agency concerned. The “presumptio­n of regularity” as to those official acts and issuances has remained intact.

Thus, even if the Supreme Court eventually trashes the legislativ­e act and the executive/administra­tive issuances in question for being egregiousl­y in violation of the laws invoked by those as- sailing them, it is not far-fetched to see another applicatio­n of the “operative fact doctrine.”

Indeed, while probably seeing good enough reason to have the irresponsi­ble legislator­s and the inept administra­tors nailed to the wall for “granting unwarrante­d benefits” to DMCI under the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act, the court may simply find it unjust and unfair to “erase” the almost-finished 49-story building erected by DMCI whose bona fide “reliance” upon those official acts prior to any judicial declaratio­n of their invalidity cannot but be deemed a given at this point.

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