THIRD DIVISION
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FLORENCIO B.
CAMPOMANES, Petitioner, - versus - PEOPLE OF THE Respondent. |
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G.R. No. 161950 Present: QUISUMBING, J., Chairperson, CARPIO, CARPIO MORALES, TINGA, and VELASCO, JR., JJ. Promulgated: December 19, 2006 |
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D E C I S I O N
CARPIO, J.:
The Case
This is a
petition for review on certiorari[1] assailing the Decision[2] promulgated on
The
Sandiganbayan acquitted then Philippine Sports Commission (PSC) Chairman Cecilio
G. Hechanova (“Hechanova”) for failure of the prosecution to prove
conspiracy. The Sandiganbayan, however,
convicted accused-petitioner Florencio B. Campomanes (“Campomanes”), then President of the Federation
Internationale Des Echecs (FIDE), of the crime of failure to render
accounts as defined in Article 218 in relation to Article 222 of the Revised
Penal Code. The Sandiganbayan sentenced
Campomanes to one year and ten months of imprisonment.
On
reconsideration, the Sandiganbayan reduced Campomanes’ penalty to a fine of P6,000 due to his advanced age.
The Facts
The present
petition involves alleged irregularities in the disbursement and liquidation of
the funds that the PSC made available to the FIDE through Campomanes in
connection with the PSC’s bid to host the 1992 Chess Olympiad and Congress in
The parties stipulated upon the following
facts:
1. That during the period material to the Information of this case, accused Cecilio G. Hechanova was the Chairman of the Philippine Sports Commission (PSC) and Florencio B. Campomanes was the President of the Federation International [sic] Des Echecs (FIDE), a private international organization with offices at Lausanne, Switzerland.
2.
That on
|
‘- Financial Guarantee Declaration and/or Government Guarantee if applicable. Provisional budget to be added. |
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The Funding of the
Olympiad and Congress shall be the responsibility of the Philippine Sports
Commission. (attached board resolution) budget US$6
million |
(1) Additional arrangements:
The sum of One Millions [sic] Swiss Francs (SFr. 1,000,000.00) has been placed in the Philippine National Bank in an account In Trust to the Federation Internationale Des Echecs to guarantee the organization of the 1992 Chess Olympiad and Congress, in case of the award of the same, which amount shall be forfeited in favor of FIDE in the event that the Philippine Sports Commission fails to organize the said Chess Olympiad and Congress.
- Deposit: We enclose with out [sic] offer/bid our deposit fee of SFr. 5,000.00 to FIDE. We are aware that we forfeit this sum if for any reason we do not organize the event. If we do organize the event this sum will be put to the credit of our account with FIDE.
We have organized the specific FIDE stipulations for the above mentioned event and will observe them.
- All conditions offered are subject to the approval of the FIDE President or his representatives.
- The President has the right to demand additional deposits or guarantees from the organizers when he so decides.
- Twelve months before the commencement of the event the President must be in possession of sufficient evidence of the full financial reliability and attention of the sponsors. If such evidence is not at hand at the given time, the President has the right to withdraw the option.
3.
That the PSC’s bid offer was accepted by FIDE,
and accordingly the Philippine government thru the PSC was granted the right to
organize and host the 30th World Chess Olympiad in
4. That in connection with the 30th World Chess Olympiad, the PSC governing board passed Resolution No. 292 on June 4, 1991 appropriating the amount of Fourty [sic] Thousand Swiss Francs (SFr40,000.00) as monthly expenditure of FIDE from May 1991 to June 1992.
5.
That from October 1990 to June 1992 the PSC,
also complying with its obligations under the bid offer, remitted to FIDE –
received in FIDE’s behalf by its President, Florencio Campomanes – the total
amount of P12,876,008.00 in connection with the 30th World
Chess Olympiad in Manila.
6.
That the amount of P12,876,008.00
was acknowledged as having been received by FIDE as shown by a letter dated
7. Also the FIDE transmitted to the PSC two letter-explanations/clearances re the above funds received from PSC:
Letter dated
- ‘As far as the World Chess Federation is concerned, Mr. Florencio Campomanes made his clarifications and there are no further queries on the amount assigned for FIDE for the Manila Olympiad 1992. As you may know, he was given a total vote of confidence by the General Assembly and elected FIDE Chairman.’ -[see Exhibit “2-Campomanes”]
Letter dated
- ‘Attached is my letter dated Singapore, 22 December 1995, where we had our FIDE Presidential Board meeting, as authenticated today 29 May 1997, by the Philippine Embassy in Brussels.
- We began issuing official receipts only in late 1993 and it is FIDE practice not to issue official receipts unless specifically requested.’ [see Exhibit “4-Campomanes”][4]
The Commission
on Audit (COA) conducted an audit of the PSC’s transactions from March 1990 up
to June 1992. During the audit, the COA
team, composed of team leader Rexy Mendoza (“Mendoza”) and members Ignacia
Rodrigo and Alexander Rodriguez, requested for the journal and checks and disbursements
issued by the PSC pertaining to the P12 million appropriated to defray
the organization, administration, and hosting of the Chess Olympiad and
Congress. The COA team noticed
irregularities in the claims payable to the FIDE. The irregularities consisted of the lack of
acknowledgment receipts and of accounting liquidation attached to the
disbursement vouchers. The COA defined
an acknowledgment receipt as an official receipt evidencing that the FIDE received
the funds from the PSC. An accounting
liquidation is used to explain how the funds were expended pursuant to the
purpose specified in the disbursement voucher.
The COA
invited the PSC officials to an exit conference on P12,876,008 without acknowledgment and without
liquidation.
In an Information dated
That, on
or about August 25, 1992, or sometime prior or subsequent thereto, in the City
of Manila and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above-named
accused Cecilio G. Hechanova, a public officer, being then the Chairman of the
Philippine Sports Commission (PSC), and as such was accountable for public
funds disbursed by his office, conspiring and confederating with Florencio B.
Campomanes, President of the Federacion [sic] Internationale des Echecs (FIDE),
a private organization, to whose custody and possession was entrusted PSC funds
to be used in connection with the World Chess Olympiad in Manila, hosted by the
Philippine Government from June 6-25, 1992, amounting to PESOS: TWELVE MILLION
EIGHT HUNDRED SEVENTY SIX THOUSAND EIGHT (P12,876,008.00), Philippine
Currency, did then and there willfully, unlawfully and feloniously fail to
render account on the disbursement thereof, within the period provided for by law and the rules and
regulations of the Commission on Audit, preventing the auditors from fully
establishing the cash accountabilities of both accused and/or the offices they
represent to the prejudice of the Government.[5]
Campomanes
entered a plea of not guilty upon arraignment on
During trial,
the prosecution presented
The Ruling of the Sandiganbayan
In its
decision promulgated on
Premises considered, accused Cecilio G. Hechanova is hereby ACQUITTED of the crime charged for failure of the prosecution to prove conspiracy.
On the
basis of proof beyond reasonable doubt, accused Florencio B. Campomanes is
hereby CONVICTED of the crime of failure to render accounts as defined in
Article 218 in relation to Article 222 of the Revised Penal Code. Accordingly, he is hereby meted the straight
penalty of one (1) year and ten (10) months imprisonment.
There is no pronouncement as to civil liability as the fact from which the same might arise was not established in the case at bar.
The cash bond posted by accused Hechanova is hereby ordered returned to him subject to the usual accounting and auditing procedures.
The
Hold Departure Order issued on
SO ORDERED.[6] (Emphasis in the original)
In its
resolution promulgated on
In view of
all the foregoing, the instant Motion for Reconsideration dated
SO ORDERED.[7]
Justices Francisco Villaruz, Jr. and Diosdado Peralta wrote separate
dissenting opinions.
The Issues
Campomanes
comes before this Court to question the Sandiganbayan’s rulings. He raises
the following issues:
I
The Assailed Decision violated petitioner’s constitutional right to be informed of the nature and cause of the charges against him.
II
Even assuming that the Sandiganbayan’s findings were alleged in the Information, petitioner is not required by law to render an accounting and therefore did not violate Article 218 of the RPC.
III
Assuming
further that petitioner was required by law to account for the funds paid by
the PSC to the FIDE, the admitted and undisputed facts warrant his acquittal.[8]
The Ruling of the Court
The petition
has merit.
The main issue
in this appeal is whether Campomanes is indeed guilty of failure to render
accounts as defined in Article 218 in relation to Article 222 of the Revised
Penal Code.
The Crime of Failure to Render Accounts
under Article 218 in relation to Article 222
of the Revised Penal Code
The pertinent
articles of the Revised Penal Code read:
Art. 218. Failure of accountable officer to render accounts. — Any public officer, whether in the service or separated therefrom by resignation or any other cause, who is required by law or regulation to render account to the [Commission on Audit], or to a provincial auditor and who fails to do so for a period of two months after such accounts should be rendered, shall be punished by prision correccional in its minimum period, or by a fine ranging from 200 to 6,000 pesos, or both.
Art.
222. Officers included in the
preceding provision. —
The provisions of this chapter shall apply to private
individuals who, in any capacity whatever, have charge of any [national],
provincial or municipal funds, revenues or property and to any administrator or
depository of funds or property attached, seized or deposited by public
authority, even if such property belongs to a private individual.
There are four
elements of the crime under Article 218.
First, the offender is a public officer. Second, he must be an accountable officer for public funds or property. Third, the offender is required by law or
regulation to render accounts to the COA, or to a provincial auditor. Fourth, he fails to render an account for a
period of two months after such accounts should be rendered.
Campomanes is
clearly not a public officer. He is the president of the FIDE, a private
foreign corporation with whom the PSC, through Hechanova, negotiated to conduct
the 1992 Chess Olympiad and Congress in
1. That the offender is [a] private individual.
2. That he has charge of any insular (now national), provincial, or municipal funds, revenues, or property or [is an] administrator or depository of funds, property attached, seized, or deposited by public authority, even if such property belongs to a private individual.
3. That he is required by law or regulation to render accounts to the Commission on Audit, or to a provincial auditor.
4. That he fails to do so for a period of two months after such accounts should be rendered.[9]
Campomanes
admitted that he received funds from the PSC, through Hechanova. Campomanes’ admissions are found in the
exhibits and in the prosecution and defense’s testimonies. The exhibits show Campomanes’ signatures in
the respective disbursement vouchers issued by the PSC and FIDE’s letters to
PSC acknowledging receipt of the funds.
Moreover, Campomanes has not rendered an accounting of the funds even
after he received a letter dated
The
Sandiganbayan’s decision, however, failed to specify any law or regulation
requiring Campomanes to render accounts to the COA. The Sandiganbayan reasoned thus:
As to the third element of the offense that the accountable officer should be required by law or regulation to render accounts to the Commission on Audit, the prosecution’s evidence established that it was accused Campomanes, as President of the FIDE, a private international organization, and thus a private entity, was the one liable to render accounts on the grant that he had received in behalf of FIDE from the PSC.
The basis of the present charge is SAO Audit Report No. 93-27 on the Special Audit of the Philippine Sports Commission (Exh. “HH”). Section 1.2 thereof provides in part thus:
“1.2 Federation Internationale de Echecs (FIDE)
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The grant of financial assistance to the
Federation Internationale De Echecs (FIDE) amounting to P12,876,008.00 was highly irregular. All checks were
received by Mr. Florencio Campomanes, FIDE President, without issuing any
Official Receipt of the Organization. No liquidation was submitted by the
FIDE President to the PSC on the grant that he received in behalf of FIDE.”
The lone prosecution witness, COA Auditor, Ms. Rexy Ramos, herself testified that FIDE was supposed to render an account of the subject funds because it was the one which expended the same. Thus, she testified on direct examination:
“Q: When the PSC funds are turned-over from the PSC to FIDE, who are supposed to account for the funds, the PSC or the FIDE?
A: It should be FIDE, Your Honor Honor [sic], because it will be FIDE who will be expending.”
Likewise, on cross-examination, she declared that it was PSC’s responsibility to request for an accounting from the FIDE to which it transferred the funds, however, she did not mention in her written recommendation contained in the SAO Audit Report No 93-27 (Exh. “HH”), that PSC should request FIDE to account for the funds. Her testimony is quoted below:
“Q: And nowhere in your report, Special Audit report, which stated
that it is the PSC who is obligated or required to account for the P12.8
Million, more or less, financial assistance, is that correct?
A: Yes, sir, because PSC should not be the one to submit the
accounting, but it is responsible and obliged to ask FIDE to submit an accounting
of the P12.8 Million.
Q: And what is the basis for that answer, Madam Witness?
A: Section 102 of the Philippine Government Auditing Code Manual, PD 1445. Section 102, “Primary and Secondary Responsibility. The head of any agency of the government is immediately and primarily responsible for all government funds or property pertaining to his agency.”
Q: So, you mean to say that it is also PSC who is required to
account for the P12.8 Million, more or less, financial assistance?
A: It is not to account but it is his responsibility to request for an accounting to the agency wherein he happened to transfer any funds.
Q: The responsibility to request, not to account for it, is that an accurate statement?
A: Yes, sir.
Q: But based on your findings in the Audit Report, you never mentioned in your recommendation that the PSC should request FIDE to account for this fund, is that correct? Nowhere in your recommendation was it stated that the PSC should request FIDE to account for this fund, is that correct?
A: Yes, sir.”
Based on the foregoing evidence, it is crystal clear that it was accused Campomanes who should render an accounting of the funds that FIDE received from the PSC.[11] (Emphasis in the original)
The Office of
the Special Prosecutor (OSP), for its part, recognized the Sandiganbayan’s
failure to specify the law or regulation requiring Campomanes to render an
accounting. The OSP enumerated various
laws which presumably specify that Campomanes had the legal obligation to
render an account to the COA. The OSP
stated thus:
Petitioner
finds fault in the assailed Decision of the court
a quo in convicting him of the crime charged. He contends that there is no law or
regulation requiring him to render an accounting for the amount of P12.8
Million Pesos to the Commission on Audit, which he, as President of the FIDE,
received from the PSC.
On the contrary, Section 102(2) of P.D. 1445, as well as Section 27 of the Manual on Certificate of Settlement and Balances (1993 edition), expressly provides petitioner’s duty and obligation to render an account of the 12.8 Million Pesos which he received in behalf of FIDE, viz:
“Persons entrusted with the possession or custody of the funds or property under the agency head shall be immediately responsible to him without prejudice to the liability of either party to the government.”
The obligation of petitioner to render an account is crystal clear from this provision. The fact that there was no agreement between the PSC and FIDE for the latter to liquidate or to account is of no moment, because the law expressly imposes, and laid upon petitioner an obligation to render an account, which he manifestly failed.
Secondly, all monies and property officially received by any person in whatever capacity and in whatever occasion must be duly accounted for, and must be duly receipted and acknowledged officially. These again were violated by FIDE, although complied with belatedly. This belated act of FIDE merely proves that it acquiesced that, indeed, it has obligation to render an account for the amount of 12.8 Million Pesos.
Thirdly, the obligation to render an account is buttressed by the provision of Article 222 of the Revised Penal Code which provides that Article 218, among others, “shall apply to private individuals who, in any capacity whatever, have charge of any insular (now national), provincial or municipal funds, revenues or property …”
Fourthly, Article IX [D], Section 2 [1] of the 1987 Constitution vests upon the Commission o[n] Audit the power and authority, as well as the duty, to examine, audit, among others, all accounts pertaining to the expenditures or uses of funds owned by or pertaining to the Government or any of its agencies, instrumentalities and departments; and this authority extends to the accounts of all persons, regardless of whether an officer or employee of the government or a private individual, respecting funds or properties they received, expended or held in an accountable capacity or not. This is so because of the principle that all government monies must be duly accounted for in order to see to it that government resources are not put to waste and thus, properly protected. Be it noted that government funds must be spent for and used solely for public purpose and only for the purpose for which it is intended. Concomitantly, all persons who received, in whatever capacity, and expended public funds, shall have the obligation to render an account of such funds to the Commission on Audit. Thus, petitioner i[s] under obligation to render an account for the amount of 12.8 Million Pesos which he received as President of FIDE as financial assistance in hosting the World Chess Olympiad in the Philippines.
All these established facts belie the allegation of petitioner that he is under no legal obligation to render an account.[12] (Emphasis in the original)
It is
well-settled that penal statutes must be liberally construed in favor of the
accused and strictly construed against the state. To paraphrase our ruling in Kilosbayan,
Inc. v. COMELEC,[13] no matter how believable a story may be, no
matter how possible it could really have been that the FIDE and Campomanes were
financial conduits for criminal elements, criminal charges cannot ever be
sanctioned by mere possibilities or coffee shop rumors. Campomanes should be
acquitted because neither the Sandiganbayan nor the OSP was able to show any
law or regulation requiring Campomanes to render an accounting to the COA.
Section 2(1)(d) of Article IX-D of the 1987 Constitution must be read
in conjunction with Article 222 of the Revised Penal Code. Section 2(1)(d) of
Article IX-D of the 1987 Constitution states that:
The Commission on
Audit shall have the power, authority, and duty to examine, audit, and settle
all accounts pertaining to the revenue and receipts of, and expenditures or
uses of funds and property, owned or held in trust by, or pertaining to, the
Government, or any of its subdivisions, agencies, or instrumentalities,
including government-owned and controlled corporations with original charters,
and on a post-audit basis: x x x
d) such
non-governmental entities receiving subsidy or equity, directly or indirectly,
from or through the government, which are required
by law or the granting institution to submit to such audit as a condition of
subsidy or equity. x x x (Emphasis added)
The
COA has the authority to demand an accounting from the FIDE if there is a law
which requires the PSC to ask the FIDE to render an accounting, or if the PSC
expressly required the FIDE to render an accounting as a condition for funding
the Chess Olympiad and Congress. Absent
such law or contractual obligation, the COA does not have the authority to
audit the accounts of non-governmental entities receiving subsidy or equity
from the government, like the FIDE. In
the same manner, non-governmental entities receiving subsidy or equity from the
government, like the FIDE, are not obliged to render an accounting to the COA
if no law or contract requires them to do so.
In the present case, the absence of the conditions contained
in Section 2(1)(d) of Article IX-D of the 1987
Constitution prevents the creation of an
obligation on the FIDE’s part to render an accounting to the PSC or the
COA. Consequently, Campomanes, as
representative of the FIDE which has no legal obligation to render an
accounting, cannot be liable under Article 222 of the Revised Penal Code.
The laws cited
by the OSP do not sufficiently show that Campomanes is legally required to
render accounts to the COA. Neither the
“prosecution’s evidence” nor the Audit Report is the “law or regulation”
contemplated by the Revised Penal Code.
Moreover, it is error for the OSP to submit that Section 102 of
Presidential Decree No. 1445 (“PD 1445”) is the law mandating the FIDE or its
officers to render an accounting.
Section 102 of PD 1445, read together with other Sections in Chapter 5
of PD 1445, clearly refers to “official(s) or employee(s)” who are “accountable
officers” of “any government agency,”[14] and not to
“non-governmental entities receiving subsidy or equity, directly or indirectly,
from or through the Government x x x.”
When it comes to subsidy or equity extended by the government to a
“non-governmental entity,” the legal obligation on the part of the non-governmental
entity to account for, and the power of the COA to audit, such subsidy or
equity arises only if “the law or the
granting institution” requires such audit as a condition for the subsidy or
equity.
As gleaned
from the parties’ stipulation of facts, the PSC and the FIDE entered here into
a contract
requiring the PSC to provide the FIDE the funds for the latter to organize the
Chess Olympiad and Congress in Manila.
The PSC delivered the funds to the FIDE, which apparently successfully
organized the Chess Olympiad and Congress since the PSC does not claim that the
FIDE failed to organize the two events. In short, the FIDE complied with its
undertaking under the contract.
There is no claim by the PSC or the COA that the FIDE, a foreign
non-governmental entity, is obligated under the contract to render an
accounting. There is also no showing
that the PSC’s charter or any law or regulation requires the FIDE to render an
accounting to the PSC or the COA as a condition for the receipt of funds. Clearly, this situation cannot give rise to criminal liability on the part of the
FIDE’s officers under Article 222 of the Revised Penal Code which admittedly
requires that there must be a “law or
regulation” requiring the rendering of accounts by private individuals.
We acquit
Campomanes because of the failure of the prosecution to prove all the elements
of Article 218, in relation to Article 222, of the Revised Penal Code. Because of this failure, we deem it
unnecessary to rule on the other issues raised by both parties.
WHEREFORE, we GRANT the petition. We SET ASIDE the Decision promulgated on
31 January 2003 and the Resolution promulgated on 6 February 2004 of the
Sandiganbayan. We ACQUIT Florencio
B. Campomanes of the crime of failure to render accounts as defined in Article
218, in relation to Article 222, of the Revised Penal Code.
SO ORDERED.
ANTONIO
T. CARPIO
Associate
Justice
WE CONCUR:
LEONARDO A. QUISUMBING
Associate Justice
Chairperson
|
CONCHITA CARPIO MORALES Associate Justice |
DANTE O. TINGA Associate
Justice |
PRESBITERO J. VELASCO, JR.
Associate Justice
ATTESTATION
I attest that the conclusions in the above Decision had
been reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the
opinion of the Court’s Division.
LEONARDO
A. QUISUMBING
Associate Justice
Chairperson
CERTIFICATION
Pursuant to Section 13, Article VIII of the Constitution,
and the Division Chairperson’s Attestation, I certify that the conclusions in
the above Decision had been reached in consultation before the case was
assigned to the writer of the opinion of the Court’s Division.
REYNATO S. PUNO
Chief Justice
[1] Under Rule 45 of the 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure.
[2] Penned by Associate Justice Ma. Cristina Cortez-Estrada with Associate Justices Minita V. Chico- Nazario (now Supreme Court Associate Justice) and Francisco H. Villaruz, Jr.,concurring. Rollo, pp. 67-90.
[3] Penned by Associate Justice Ma. Cristina Cortez-Estrada with Associate Justices Minita V. Chico- Nazario (now Supreme Court Associate Justice) and Norberto Y. Geraldez, concurring. Id. at 91-105. Associate Justices Francisco H. Villaruz, Jr. and Diosdado M. Peralta wrote separate dissenting opinions. Id. at 106-127.
[4] Rollo, pp. 68-70.
[5] Id. at 67.
[6] Id. at 89-90.
[7] Id. at 105.
[8] Id. at 22.
[9] Id. at 103.
[10] Id. at 88-89.
[11] Id. at 86-88.
[12] Id. at 221-224.
[13] 345 Phil. 1141 (1997).
[14] Sections 101 to 108, Chapter 5 of PD 1445 provide:
CHAPTER
5
Accountability
and Responsibility for Government Funds and Property
SECTION 101. Accountable
officers; bond requirement. — (1) Every officer of any government agency whose duties permit or require
the possession or custody of government funds or property shall be accountable
therefor and for the safekeeping thereof in conformity with law.
(2) Every accountable officer shall be properly bonded in
accordance with law.
SECTION 102. Primary and secondary
responsibility. — (1) The head of any
agency of the government is immediately and primarily responsible for all
government funds and property pertaining to his agency.
(2) Persons entrusted with the possession or custody of the
funds or property under the agency head shall be immediately responsible to
him, without prejudice to the liability of either party to the government.
SECTION 103.
General liability for unlawful expenditures. —
Expenditures of government funds or uses of government property in violation of
law or regulations shall be a personal
liability of the official or employee found to be directly responsible therefor.
SECTION 104. Records and reports required by primarily
responsible officers. — The head of any agency or instrumentality of the
national government or any government-owned or controlled corporation and any
other self-governing board or commission of the government shall exercise the
diligence of a good father of a family in supervising accountable officers under his control to prevent the incurrence of
loss of government funds or property, otherwise he shall be jointly and
solidarily liable with the person primarily accountable therefore. The
treasurer of the local government unit shall likewise exercise the same degree
of supervision over accountable officers
under his supervision otherwise, he shall be jointly and solidarily liable with
them for the loss of government funds or property under their control.
SECTION 105.
Measure of liability of accountable officers. —
(1) Every officer accountable for
government property shall be liable for its money value in case of improper
or unauthorized use or misapplication thereof, by himself or any person for
whose acts he may be responsible. He shall likewise be liable for all losses,
damages, or deterioration occasioned by negligence in the keeping or use of the
property, whether or not it be at the time in his actual custody.
(2) Every
officer accountable for government funds shall be liable for all losses
resulting from the unlawful deposit, use, or application thereof and for all
losses attributable to negligence in the keeping of the funds.
SECTION 106.
Liability for acts done by direction of superior officer.
— No accountable officer shall be
relieved from liability by reason of his having acted under the direction of a
superior officer in paying out, applying, or disposing of the funds or property
with which he is chargeable, unless prior to that act, he notified the superior officer in writing of the
illegality of the payment, application, or disposition. The officer directing
any illegal payment or disposition of the funds or property shall be primarily
liable for the loss, while the accountable officer who
fails to serve the required notice shall be secondarily liable.
SECTION 107. Time and mode of
rendering account. — In the absence of specific provision of law, all accountable officers shall render their
accounts, submit their vouchers, and make deposits of money collected or
held by them at such times and in such manner as shall be prescribed in the
regulations of the Commission.
SECTION 108. Prohibition against
pecuniary interest. — No
accountable or responsible officer shall be pecuniary interested, directly
or indirectly, in any contract or transaction of the agency in which he is such an officer. (Emphasis supplied)