[ G.R. No. 96266. July 18, 1991 ] 276 Phil. 493
EN BANC
[ G.R. No. 96266. July 18, 1991 ]
ERNESTO M. MACEDA, PETITIONER, VS. ENERGY REGULATORY BOARD, CALTEX (PHILIPPINES), INC., PILIPINAS SHELL PETROLEUM CORPORATION AND PETRON CORPORATION, RESPONDENTS. [G.R. NO. 96349. JULY 18, 1991] EUGENIO O. ORIGINAL, IRENEO N. AARON, JR., RENE LEDESMA, ROLANDO VALLE, ORLANDO MONTANO, STEVE ABITANG, NERI JINON, WILFREDO DELEONIO, RENATO BORRO, RODRIGO DE VERA, ALVIN BAYUANG, JESUS MELENDEZ, NUMERIANO, CAJILIG, JR., RUFINO DE LA CRUZ AND JOVELINO G. TIPON, PETITIONERS, VS. ENERGY REGULATORY BOARD, CALTEX (PHILIPPINES), INC., PILIPINAS SHELL PETROLEUM CORPORATION AND PETRON CORPORATION, RESPONDENTS. [G.R. NO. 96284. JULY 18, 1991] CEFERINO S. PAREDES, JR., PETITIONER, VS. ENERGY REGULATORY BOARD, CALTEX (PHILIPPINES), INC., PILIPINAS SHELL, INC. AND PETROPHIL CORPORATION, RESPONDENTS. R E S O L U T I O N
MEDIALDEA, J.:
In G.R. No. 96266, petitioner Maceda seeks nullification of the Energy Regulatory Board (ERB) Orders dated December 5 and 6, 1990 on the ground that the hearings conducted on the second provisional increase in oil prices did not allow him substantial cross-examination, in effect, allegedly, a denial of due process.
The facts of the case are as follows:
Upon the outbreak of the Persian Gulf conflict on August 2, 1990, private respondents oil companies filed with the ERB their respective applications on oil price increases (docketed as ERB Case Nos. 90-106, 90-382 and 90-384, respectively).
On September 21, 1990, the ERB issued an order granting a provisional increase of P1.42 per liter. Petitioner Maceda filed a petition for Prohibition on September 26, 1990 (E. Maceda v. ERB, et al., G.R. 95203), seeking to nullify the provisional increase. We dismissed the petition on December 18, 1990, reaffirming ERB’s authority to grant provisional increase even without prior hearing, pursuant to Sec. 8 of E.O. No. 172, clarifying as follows:
“What must be stressed is that while under Executive Order No. 172, a hearing is indispensable, it does not preclude the Board from ordering, ex-parte, a provisional increase, as it did here, subject to its final disposition of whether or not: (1) to make it permanent; (2) to reduce or increase it further; or (3) to deny the application. Section 3, paragraph (e) is akin to a temporary restraining order or a writ of preliminary attachment issued by the courts, which are given ex-parte and which are subject to the resolution of the main case.
“Section 3, paragraph (e) and Section 8 do not negate each other, or otherwise, operate exclusively of the other, in that the Board may resort to one but not to both at the same time. Section 3(e) outlines the jurisdiction of the Board and the grounds for which it may decree a price adjustment, subject to the requirements of notice and hearing. Pending that, however, it may order, under Section 8, an authority to increase provisionally, without need of a hearing, subject to the final outcome of the proceeding. The Board, of course, is not prevented from conducting a hearing on the grant of provisional authority – which is of course, the better procedure – however, it cannot be stigmatized later if it failed to conduct one. (pp. 129-130, Rollo) (Emphasis Ours)
In the same order of September 21, 1990, authorizing provisional increase, the ERB set the applications for hearing with due notice to all interested parties on October 16, 1990. Petitioner Maceda failed to appear at said hearing as well as on the second hearing on October 17, 1990.
To afford registered oppositors the opportunity to cross-examine the witnesses, the ERB set the continuation of the hearing to October 24, 1990. This was postponed to November 5, 1990, on written notice of petitioner Maceda.
On November 5, 1990, the three oil companies filed their respective motions for leave to file or admit amended/supplemental applications to further increase the prices of petroleum products.
The ERB admitted the respective supplemental/amended petitions on November 6, 1990 at the same time requiring applicants to publish the corresponding Notices of Public Hearing in two newspapers of general circulation (p. 4, Rollo and Annexes “F” and “G,” pp. 60 and 62, Rollo).
Hearing for the presentation of the evidence-in-chief commenced on November 21, 1990 with ERB ruling that testimonies of witnesses were to be in the form of Affidavits (p. 6, Rollo). ERB subsequently outlined the procedure to be observed in the reception of evidence, as follows:
“CHAIRMAN FERNANDO:
“Well, at the last hearing, applicant Caltex presented its evidence-in-chief and there is an understanding or it is the Board’s wish that for purposes of good order in the presentation of the evidence considering that these are being heard together, we will defer the cross-examination of applicant Caltex’s witness and ask the other applicants to present their evidence-in-chief so that the oppositors will have a better idea of what all of these will lead to because as I mentioned earlier, it has been traditional and it is the intention of the Board to act on these applications on an industry-wide basis, whether to accept, reject, modify or whatever, the Board will do it on an industry wide basis, so, the best way to have (sic) the oppositors and the Board a clear picture of what the applicants are asking for is to have all the evidence-in-chief to be placed on record first and then the examination will come later, the cross-examination will come later. x x x (pp. 5-6, tsn., November 23, 1990, ERB Cases Nos. 90-106, 90-382 and 90-384).” (p. 162, Rollo)
Petitioner Maceda maintains that this order of proof deprived him of his right to finish his cross-examination of Petron’s witnesses and denied him his right to cross-examine each of the witnesses of Caltex and Shell. He points out that this relaxed procedure resulted in the denial of due process.
We disagree. The Solicitor General has pointed out:
“x x x The order of testimony both with respect to the examination of the particular witness and to the general course of the trial is within the discretion of the court and the exercise of this discretion in permitting to be introduced out of the order prescribed by the rules is not improper (88 C.J.S. 206-207).
“Such a relaxed procedure is especially true in administrative bodies, such as the ERB, which in matters of rate or price fixing, is considered as exercising a quasi-legislative, not quasi-judicial, function. As such administrative agency, it is not bound by the strict or technical rules of evidence governing court proceedings (Sec. 29, Public Service Act; Dickenson v. United States, 346, U.S. 389, 98 L. ed. 132, 74 S. St. 152). (Emphasis Ours)
“In fact, Section 2, Rule I of the Rules of Practice and Procedure Governing Hearings Before the ERB provides that –
“These Rules shall govern pleadings, practice and procedure before the Energy Regulatory Board in all matters of inquiry, study, hearing, investigation and/or any other proceedings within the jurisdiction of the Board. However, in the broader interest of justice, the Board may, in any particular matter, except itself from these rules and apply such suitable procedure as shall promote the objectives of the Order.”
(pp. 163-164, Rollo)
Petitioner Maceda also claims that there is no substantial evidence on record to support the provisional relief.
We have, in G.R. Nos. 95203-05, previously taken judicial notice of matters and events related to the oil industry, as follows:
“x x x ‘(1) as of June 30, 1990, the OPSF has incurred a deficit of P6.1 Billion; (2) the exchange rate has fallen to P28.00 to $1.00; (3) the country’s balance of payments is expected to reach $1 Billion; (4) our trade deficit is at $2.855 Billion as of the first nine months of the year.’
“x x x x x x x x x” (p. 150, Rollo)
The Solicitor General likewise commented:
“Among the pieces of evidence considered by ERB in the grant of the contested provisional relief were: (1) certified copies of bills of lading issued by crude oil suppliers to the private respondents; (2) reports of the Bankers Association of the Philippines on the peso-dollar exchange rate at the BAP oil pit; and (3) OPSF status reports of the Office of Energy Affairs. The ERB was likewise guided in the determination of international crude oil prices by traditional authoritative sources of information on crude oil and petroleum products, such as Platt’s Oilgram and Petroleum Intelligence Weekly.” (p. 158, Rollo)
Thus, We concede ERB’s authority to grant the provisional increase in oil price, as We note that the Order of December 5, 1990 explicitly stated:
“in the light, therefore, of the rise in crude oil importation costs, which as earlier mentioned, reached an average of $30.3318 per barrel at P25.551/US $ in September-October 1990; the huge OPSF deficit which, as reported by the Office of Energy Affairs, has amounted to P5.7 Billion (based on filed claims only and net of the P5 Billion OPSF) as of September 30, 1990, and is estimated to further increase to over P10 Billion by end-December 1990; the decision of the government to discontinue subsidizing oil prices in view of inflationary pressures; the apparent inadequacy of the proposed additional P5.1 Billion government appropriation for the OPSF; and the sharp drop in the value of the peso in relation to the US dollar to P28/US $, this Board is left with no other recourse but to grant applicants oil companies further relief by increasing the prices of petroleum products sold by them.” (p. 161, Rollo)
Petitioner Maceda together with petitioner Original (G.R. 96349) also claim that the provisional increase involved amounts over and above that sought by the petitioning oil companies.
The Solicitor General has pointed out that aside from the increase in crude oil prices, all the applications of the respondent oil companies filed with the ERB, covered claims from the OPSF.
We shall thus respect the ERB’s Order of December 5, 1990 granting a provisional price increase on petroleum products premised on the oil companies’ OPSF claims, crude cost peso differentials, forex risk for a subsidy on sale to NPC (p. 167, Rollo), since the oil companies are “entitled to as much relief as the fact alleged constituting the course of action may warrant,” (Javellana v. D.O. Plaza Enterprises, Inc., G.R. No. L-28297, March 30, 1970, 32 SCRA 261 citing Rosales v. Reyes, 25 Phil. 495; Aguilar v. Rubiato, 40 Phil. 470) as follows:
Petron
Shell
Caltex
Per Liter Weighted Average
Crude Cost
P 3.11
P3.6047
P2.9248
P3.1523
Peso Cost Diff’l.
2.1747
1.5203
1.5669
1.8123
Forex Risk Fee
-0.1089
-0.0719
-0.0790
-0.0896
Subsidy on Sales to NPC
0.1955
0.0685
0.0590
0.1203
Total Price Increase
Applied for
P 5.3713
P5.1216
P4.4717
P4.9954
Less: September 21 Price
P1.3333
P1.42
2.1269
Relief
Actual Price Increase
Actual Tax Reduction:
.7069
Ad Valorem Tax
(per Sept. 1, 1990 price build-up)
Specific Tax (per Oct. 5,
.6264
1990 price build up)
Net Price Increase
Applied for
2.8685
Nonetheless, it is relevant to point out that on December 10, 1990, the ERB, in response to the President’s appeal, brought back the increases in Premium and Regular gasoline to the levels mandated by the December 5, 1990 Order (P6.9600 and P6.3900, respectively), as follows:
“Product In Pesos Per Liter
OPSF
Premium Gasoline 6.9600
Regular Gasoline 6.3900
Avturbo 4.9950
Kerosene 1.4100
Diesel Oil 1.4100
Fuel Oil/Feedstock 0.2405
LPG 1.2200
Asphalt 2.5000
Thinner 2.5000
In G.R. No. 96349, petitioner. Original additionally claims that if the price increase will be used to augment the OPSF this will constitute illegal taxation. In the Maceda case, (G.R. Nos. 95203-05, supra) this Court has already ruled that “the Board Order authorizing the proceeds generated by the increase to be deposited to the OPSF is not an act of taxation but is authorized by Presidential Decree No. 1956, as amended by Executive Order No. 137.
The petitions of E. O. Original et al. (G.R. No. 96349) and C. S. Povedas, Jr. (G.R. No. 96284), insofar as they question the ERB’s authority under Sec. 8 of E.O. 172, have become moot and academic.
We lament Our helplessness over this second provisional increase in oil price. We have stated that this “is a question best judged by the political leadership” (G.R. Nos. 95203-05, G.R. Nos. 95119-21, supra). We wish to reiterate Our previous pronouncements therein that while the government is able to justify a provisional increase, these findings “are not final, and it is up to petitioners to demonstrate that the present economic picture does not warrant a permanent increase.”
In this regard, We also note the Solicitor General’s comments that “the ERB is not averse to the idea of a presidential review of its decision,” except that there is no law at present authorizing the same. Perhaps, as pointed out by Justice Padilla, our lawmakers may see the wisdom of allowing presidential review of the decisions of the ERB, since, despite its being a quasi-judicial body, it is still “an administrative body under the Office of the President whose decisions should be appealed to the President under the established principle of exhaustion of administrative remedies,” especially on a matter as transcendental as oil price increases which affect the lives of almost all Filipinos.
ACCORDINGLY, the petitions are hereby DISMISSED.
SO ORDERED.
Narvasa, Melencio-Herrera, Feliciano, Gancayco, Bidin, Griño-Aquino, and Regalado, JJ., concur. Paras, J., see separate dissent. Padilla, J., see dissenting opinion. Sarmiento, J., see separate opinion. Gutierrez, Jr., J., joins Justice Padilla’s dissent. Cruz, J., joins Justice Paras and Padilla in their dissent. Davide., J., in the result. Fernan, C.J., no part, former counsel for one of the respondents.