JV EJERCITO Vs SANDIGANBAYAN (DIGEST) PDF
JV EJERCITO Vs SANDIGANBAYAN (DIGEST) PDF
JV EJERCITO Vs SANDIGANBAYAN (DIGEST) PDF
Facts:
Issues:
(1) Whether or not the trust accounts of petitioner are covered by the
term “deposits” as used in R.A. No. 1405.
On Issue (1)
YES. An examination of the law shows that the term “deposits” used
therein is to be understood broadly and not limited only to accounts
which give rise to a creditor-debtor relationship between the
depositor and the bank.
The policy behind the law is laid down in Section 1. If the money
deposited under an account may be used by banks for authorized
loans to third persons, then such account, regardless of whether it
creates a creditor-debtor relationship between the depositor and the
bank, falls under the category of accounts which the law precisely
seeks to protect for the purpose of boosting the economic
development of the country.
Trust Account No. 858 is, without doubt, one such account. The
Trust Agreement between petitioner and Urban Bank provides that
the trust account covers “deposit, placement or investment of funds”
by Urban Bank for and in behalf of petitioner. The money deposited
under Trust Account No. 858, was, therefore, intended not merely to
remain with the bank but to be invested by it elsewhere. To hold
that this type of account is not protected by R.A. 1405 would
encourage private hoarding of funds that could otherwise be
invested by banks in other ventures, contrary to the policy behind
the law.
Section 2 of the same law in fact even more clearly shows that the
term “deposits” was intended to be understood broadly. The phrase
“of whatever nature” proscribes any restrictive interpretation of
“deposits.” Moreover, it is clear from the immediately quoted
provision that, generally, the law applies not only to money which is
deposited but also to those which are invested. This further shows
that the law was not intended to apply only to “deposits” in the strict
sense of the word. Otherwise, there would have been no need to add
the phrase “or invested.”
On Issue (2)
The crime of bribery and the overt acts constitutive of plunder are
crimes committed by public officers, and in either case the noble
idea that “a public office is a public trust and any person who enters
upon its discharge does so with the full knowledge that his life, so
far as relevant to his duty, is open to public scrutiny” applies with
equal force.
On Issue (3)