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Posted by kaye lee on 10:51 PM
GR No. 170165, August 15, 2006 [Article VI Sec. 22: Congress' Power of Inquiry; Legislative Investigation]
FACTS:
The Senate invited Gen. Gudani and Lt. Col. Balutan to clarify allegations of 2004 election fraud and the surfacing
of the “Hello Garci” tapes. PGMA issued EO 464 enjoining officials of the executive department including the
military establishment from appearing in any legislative inquiry without her consent. AFP Chief of Staff Gen. Senga
issued a Memorandum, prohibiting Gen. Gudani, Col. Balutan et al from appearing before the Senate Committee
without Presidential approval. However, the two appeared before the Senate in spite the fact that a directive has been
given to them. As a result, the two were relieved of their assignments for allegedly violating the Articles of War and
the time honoured principle of the “Chain of Command.” Gen. Senga ordered them to be subjected before the
General Court Martial proceedings for willfuly violating an order of a superior officer.
ISSUE:
Whether or not the President has the authority to issue an order to the members of the AFP preventing them from
testifying before a legislative inquiry.
RULING:
Yes. The SC hold that President has constitutional authority to do so, by virtue of her power as commander-in-chief,
and that as a consequence a military officer who defies such injunction is liable under military justice. At the same
time, any chamber of Congress which seeks the appearance before it of a military officer against the consent of the
President has adequate remedies under law to compel such attendance. Any military official whom Congress
summons to testify before it may be compelled to do so by the President. If the President is not so inclined, the
President may be commanded by judicial order to compel the attendance of the military officer. Final judicial orders
have the force of the law of the land which the President has the duty to faithfully execute.
SC ruled in Senate v. Ermita that the President may not issue a blanket requirement of prior consent on executive
officials summoned by the legislature to attend a congressional hearing. In doing so, the Court recognized the
considerable limitations on executive privilege, and affirmed that the privilege must be formally invoked on
specified grounds. However, the ability of the President to prevent military officers from testifying before Congress
does not turn on executive privilege, but on the Chief Executive’s power as commander-in-chief to control the
actions and speech of members of the armed forces. The President’s prerogatives as commander-in-chief are not
hampered by the same limitations as in executive privilege.
At the same time, the refusal of the President to allow members of the military to appear before Congress is still
subject to judicial relief. The Constitution itself recognizes as one of the legislature’s functions is the conduct of
inquiries in aid of legislation. Inasmuch as it is ill-advised for Congress to interfere with the President’s power as
commander-in-chief, it is similarly detrimental for the President to unduly interfere with Congress’s right to conduct
legislative inquiries. The impasse did not come to pass in this petition, since petitioners testified anyway despite the
presidential prohibition. Yet the Court is aware that with its pronouncement today that the President has the right to
require prior consent from members of the armed forces, the clash may soon loom or actualize.
The duty falls on the shoulders of the President, as commander-in-chief, to authorize the appearance of the military
officers before Congress. Even if the President has earlier disagreed with the notion of officers appearing before
the legislature to testify, the Chief Executive is nonetheless obliged to comply with the final orders of the courts.
29 JAN
Held:
No. The products are covered by the exception of trade secrets being divulged in compulsory
disclosure. The Court affirms the ruling of the Court of Appeals which upheld the finding of the RTC
that there is substantial basis for respondent to seek protection of the law for its proprietary rights
over the detailed chemical composition of its products.
The Supreme Court has declared that trade secrets and banking transactions are
among the recognized restrictions to the right of the people to information as
embodied in the Constitution. SC said that the drafters of the Constitution also unequivocally
affirmed that, aside from national security matters and intelligence information, trade or industrial
secrets (pursuant to the Intellectual Property Code and other related laws) as well as banking
transactions (pursuant to the Secrecy of Bank Deposits Act), are also exempted from compulsory
disclosure.
A trade secret is defined as a plan or process, tool, mechanism or compound known only to its
owner and those of his employees to whom it is necessary to confide it. The definition also extends to
a secret formula or process not patented, but known only to certain individuals using it in
compounding some article of trade having a commercial value. American jurisprudence has utilized
the following factors to determine if an information is a trade secret, to wit:
(1) the extent to which the information is known outside of the employer’s business;
(2) the extent to which the information is known by employees and others involved in the business;
(3) the extent of measures taken by the employer to guard the secrecy of the information;
(4) the value of the information to the employer and to competitors;
(5) the amount of effort or money expended by the company in developing the information; and
(6) the extent to which the information could be easily or readily obtained through an independent
source.
Rule 27 sets an unequivocal proviso that the documents, papers, books, accounts, letters,
photographs, objects or tangible things that may be produced and inspected should not be privileged.
The documents must not be privileged against disclosure. On the ground of public policy, the rules
providing for production and inspection of books and papers do not authorize the production or
inspection of privileged matter; that is, books and papers which, because of their
confidential and privileged character, could not be received in evidence. Such a condition
is in addition to the requisite that the items be specifically described, and must constitute or contain
evidence material to any matter involved in the action and which are in the party’s possession,
custody or control.
In the case at bar, petitioner cannot rely on Section 77of Republic Act 7394, or the Consumer Act of
the Philippines, in order to compel respondent to reveal the chemical components of its
products. While it is true that all consumer products domestically sold, whether manufactured
locally or imported, shall indicate their general make or active ingredients in their respective labels
of packaging, the law does not apply to respondent. Respondent’s specialized lubricants — namely,
Contact Grease, Connector Grease, Thixohtropic Grease, Di-Electric Strength Protective Coating, Dry
Lubricant and Anti-Seize Compound — are not consumer products.
What is clear from the factual findings of the RTC and the Court of Appeals is that the chemical
formulation of respondent’s products is not known to the general public and is unique only to
it. Both courts uniformly ruled that these ingredients are not within the knowledge of the
public. Since such factual findings are generally not reviewable by this Court, it is not duty-bound to
analyze and weigh all over again the evidence already considered in the proceedings below.
The revelation of respondent’s trade secrets serves no better purpose to the disposition of the main
case pending with the RTC, which is on the collection of a sum of money. As can be gleaned from the
facts, petitioner received respondent’s goods in trade in the normal course of business. To be sure,
there are defenses under the laws of contracts and sales available to petitioner. On the other hand,
the greater interest of justice ought to favor respondent as the holder of trade secrets. Weighing the
conflicting interests between the parties, SC rules in favor of the greater interest of
respondent. Trade secrets should receive greater protection from discovery, because
they derive economic value from being generally unknown and not readily
ascertainable by the public.