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[G.R. No. 18463. October 4, 1922.]
THE PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS, plaintiff-appellee, vs.
GREGORIO PERFECTO, defendant-appellant.
SYLLABUS
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
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"After all, the perpetration of the robbery, especially
under the circumstances that have surrounded it, does not
surprise us at all.
"The execution of the crime was but the natural effect
of the environment of the place in which it was committed.
"How many of the present Senators can say without
remorse in their conscience and with serenity of mind, that they
do not owe their victory to electoral robbery? How many?
"The author or authors of the robbery of the records
from the said iron safe of the Senate have, perhaps, but
followed the example of certain Senators who secured their
election through fraud and robbery."
The Philippine Senate, in its session of September 9, 1920, adopted a
resolution authorizing its committee on elections and privileges to report as to
the action which should be taken with reference to the article published in La
Nacion. On September 15, 1920, the Senate adopted a resolution authorizing
the President of the Senate to indorse to the Attorney-General, for his study
and corresponding action, all the papers referring to the case of the
newspaper La Nacion and its editor, Mr. Gregorio Perfecto. As a result, an
information was filed in the municipal court of the city of Manila by an assistant
city fiscal, in which the editorial in question was set out and in which it was
alleged that the same constituted a violation of article 256 of the Penal Code.
The defendant Gregorio Perfecto was found guilty in the municipal court and
again in the Court of First Instance of Manila.
During the course of the trial in the Court of First Instance, after the
prosecution had rested, the defense moved for the dismissal of the case. On
the subject of whether or not article 256 of the Penal Code, under which the
information was presented, is in force, the trial judge, the Honorable George R.
Harvey, said:
"This antiquated provision was doubtless incorporated
into the Penal Code of Spain for the protection of the Ministers
of the Crown and other representatives of the King against free
speech and action by Spanish subjects. A severe punishment
was prescribed because it was doubtless considered a much
more serious offense to insult the King's representative than to
insult an ordinary individual. This provision, with almost all the
other articles of that Code, was extended to the Philippine
Islands when under the dominion of Spain because the King's
subject in the Philippines might defame, abuse or insult the
Ministers of the Crown or other representatives of His Majesty.
We now have no Ministers of the Crown or other persons in
authority in the Philippines representing the King of Spain, and
said provision, with other articles of the Penal Code, had
apparently passed into "innocuous desuetude,' but the
Supreme Court of the Philippine Islands has, by a majority
decision, held that said article 256 is the law of the land today . . .
"The Helbig case is a precedent which, by the rule
of stare decisis, is binding upon this court until otherwise
determined by proper authority."
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Whether such a trial was actually had, is not known, but at least, the record in
the Helbig case has never again been elevated to this court.
There may perchance exist some doubt as to the authority of the
decision in the Helbig case, in view of the circumstances above described. This
much, however, is certain: The facts of the Helbig case and the case and that
case before us, which we may term the Perfecto case, are different, for in the
first case there was an oral defamation, while in the second there is a written
defamation. Not only this, but a new point which, under the facts, could not
have been considered in the Helbig case, is in the Perfecto case, urged upon
the court. And, finally, as is apparent to all, the appellate court is not
restrained, as was the trial court, by strict adherence to a former decision. We
much prefer to resolve the question before us unhindered by references to the
Helbig decision.
This is one of those cases on which a variety of opinions all leading to
the same result can be had. A majority of the court are of the opinion that the
Philippine Libel Law, Act No. 227, has the effect of repealing so much of article
256 of the Penal Code as relates to written defamation, abuse, or insult, and
that under the information and the facts, the defendant is neither guilty of a
violation of article 256 of the Penal Code, nor of the Libel Law. The view of the
Chief Justice is that the accused should be acquitted for those reason that the
facts alleged in the information do not constitute a violation of article 256 of
the Penal Code. Three members of the court believe that article 256 was
abrogated completely by the change from Spanish to America sovereignty over
the Philippines and is inconsistent with democratic principles of government.
Without prejudice to the right of any member of the court to explain
his position, we will discuss the two main points just mentioned.
1. Effect of the Philippine Libel Law, Act No. 277, on article 256 of the
Spanish Penal Code. The Libel Law, Act No. 277, was enacted by the
Philippine Commission shortly after the organization of this legislative body.
Section 1 defines libel as a "malicious defamation, expressed either in writing,
printing, or by signs or pictures, or the like, or public theatrical exhibitions,
tending to blacken the memory of one who is dead or to impeach the honesty,
virtue, or reputation, or natural defects of one who is alive, and thereby expose
him to public hatred, contempt or ridicule." Section 13 provides that "All laws
and parts of laws now in force, so far as the same way be in conflict herewith,
are hereby repealed. . . ."
That parts of laws in force in 1901 when the Libel Law took effect,
were in conflict therewith, and that the Libel Law abrogated certain portions of
the Spanish Penal Code cannot be gainsaid. Title X of Book II of the Penal Code,
covering the subjects of columny and insults, must have been particularly
affected by the Libel Law. Indeed, in the early case of Pardo de Tavera vs.
Garcia Valdez ([1902], 1. Phil., 468), the Supreme Court spoke of the Libel Law
as
"reforming the
preexisting
Spanish
law
on
the
subject
of calumnia and injuria." Recently, specific attention was given to the effect of
the Libel Law on the provisions of the Penal Code, dealing with calumny and
insults, and it was found that those provisions of the Penal Code on the subject
of calumny and insults in which the elements of writing and publicity entered,
were abrogated by the Libel Law. (People vs. Castro [1922]. p. 842, ante.)
The Libel Law must have had the same result on other provisions of
the Penal Code, as for instance, article 256.
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were repugnant to the "'great principles of liberty and law' which had been
'made the basis of our governmental system.'" But when the question has been
squarely raised, the appellate court has been forced on occasion to hold certain
portions of the Spanish codes repugnant to democratic institutions and
American constitutional principles. (U. S vs. Sweet [1901], 1 Phil., 18; U. S. vs.
Balcorta [1913], 25 Phil., 273; U. S. vs. Smith [1919], 39 Phil., 533; Weems vs.
U. S., supra.)
It cannot admit of doubt that all those provisions of the Spanish Penal
Code having to do with such subjects as treason, lesse majeste religion and
worship, rebellion, sedition, and contempts of ministers of the crown, are no
longer in force. Our present task therefore, is a determination of whether article
256 has met the same fate, or, more specifically stated, whether it is in the
nature of a municipal law or a political law, and is consistent with the
Constitution and laws of the United States and the characteristics and
institutions of the American Government.
The nature of the government which has been set up in the Philippines
under American sovereignty was outlined by President McKinley in that Magna
Charta of Philippine liberty, his instructions to the Commission, of April 7, 1900.
In part, the President said:
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representatives of the king. With the chance of sovereignty, a new government,
and a new theory of government, was set up in the Philippines. It was in no
sense a continuation of the old, though merely for convenience certain of the
existing institutions and laws were continued. The demands which the new
government made, and makes, on the individual citizen are likewise different.
No longer is there a Minister of the Crown or a person in authority of such
exalted position that the citizen must speak of him only with bated breath. "In
the eye of our Constitution and laws, every man is a sovereign, a ruler and a
freedom, and has equal rights with every other man. We have no rank or
station, except that of respectability and intelligence as opposed to indecency
and ignorance, and the door to this rank stands open to every man to freely
enter and abide therein, if he is qualified, and whether he is qualified or not
depends upon the life and character and attainments and conduct of each
person for himself. Every man may lawfully do what he will, so long as it is
not malum in se or malum prohibitum or does not infringe upon the equally
sacred rights of others." (State vs. shepherd [1903], 177 mo., 99 A. S R., 624.)
It is true that in England, from which so many of the laws and
institutions of the United States are derived, there were once statues of
scandalum, under which words which would not be actionable if spoken of an
ordinary subject were made actionable if spoken of a peer of the realm or of
any of the great officers of the Crown, without proof of any special damage.
The Crow of England, unfortunately, took a view less tolerant than that of other
sovereigns, as for instance, the Emperors Augustus, Ceasar, and Tiberius.
These English statues have, however, long since, become obsolete, while in the
United States, the offense ofscandalum magnatum is not known. In the early
days of the American Republic, a sedition law was enacted, making it an
offense to libel the Government, the Congress, or the President of the United
States, but the law met with so much popular disapproval, that it was soon
repealed. "In this country no distinction as to person is recognized, and in
practice a person holding a high office is regarded as a target at whom any
person may left fly his poisonous words. High official position, instead of
affording immunity from slanderous and libelous charges, seems rather to be
regarded as making his character free plunder for any one who desires to
create a sensation by attacking it." (Newell, Slander and Libel, 3d ed., p.245;
Sillars vs. Collier [1890], 151 Mass., 50; 6L. R. A., 680.)
Article 256 of the Penal code is contrary to the genius and
fundamental principles of the American character and systems of government.
The gulf which separates this article from the spirit which inspires all penal
legislation of American origin, is as wide as that which separates a monarchy
from a democratic republic like that of the United States. This article was
crowded out by implication as soon as the United States established its
authority in the Philippine Islands. Penalties out of all proportion to the gravity
of the offense, grounded in a distorted monarchical conception of the nature of
political authority, as opposed to the American conception of the protection of
the interest of the public, have been obliterated by the present system of
government in the Islands.
From an entirely different point of view, it must be noted that this
article punishes contempts against executive officials, although its terms are
broad enough to cover the entire official class. Punishment for contempt of non
judicial officers has no place in a government based upon American principles.
Our official class is not, as in monarchies, an agent of some authority greater
than the people but it is an agent and servant of the people themselves. These
officials are only entitled to respect and obedience when they are acting within
B.
SYNOPSIS
Respondent judge was charged for having violated (1) Article 1491 of
the New Civil Code when he acquired by purchase portion of a lot which was
involved in a civil case decided by him; (2) Article 14 of the Code of Commerce,
the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act, the Civil Service Rules, and the
Canons of Judicial Ethics, when he associated himself with the Traders
Manufacturing and Fishing Industries, Inc., as a stockholder and a ranking
officer while he was a judge of the Court of First Instance.
The Supreme Court held that there was no violation of
Paragraph 5, Article 1491 of the New Civil Code because the sale took
place after finality of the decision; that respondent may not be held
liable under paragraphs 1 and 5, Article 14 of the Code of Commerce
(which is of Spanish vintage), because the provision partakes of the
nature of a political law as it regulates the relationship between the
government and certain public officers and employees and as such is
deemed to have been automatically abrogated with the change of
sovereignty from Spain to the United States; that respondent cannot be
held liable under Paragraph H, Section 3 of the Anti-Graft and Corrupt
Practices Act because there is no showing (a) that he participated or
intervened in his official capacity in the business or transaction of the
Traders Manufacturing and Fishing Industries, Inc., or (b) that said
corporation gained any undue advantage by reason of respondent's
financial involvement in it, and because neither the 1935 nor the 1973
Constitution of the Philippines or any existing law expressly prohibits
members of the Judiciary from engaging or having any interest in any
lawful business.
5
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Respondent is reminded to be more discreet in his private and
business activities.
SYLLABUS
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
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9.
aforestated, Section 67 of the Judiciary Act recognizes only two grounds for
their removal, namely, serious misconduct and inefficiency.
ID.; ID.; JUDGES; ENGAGING IN PRIVATE BUSINESS, IMPROPER UNDER THE
CANONS. Although the actuation of respondent Judge in engaging in
private business by joining the Traders Manufacturing and Fishing Industries,
Inc. as a stockholder and a ranking officer, is not violative of the provisions of
Article 14 of the Code of Commerce and Section 3 (h) of the Anti-Graft and
Corrupt Practices Act as well as Section 12, Rule XVIII of the Civil Service
Rules promulgated pursuant to the Civil Service Act of 1959, the impropriety
of the same is clearly unquestionable because Canon 25 of the Canons of
Judicial Ethics expressly declares that: "A judge should abstain from making
personal investments in enterprises which are apt to be involved in litigation
in his court; and, after his accession to the bench, he should not retain such
investments previously made, longer than a period sufficient to enable him
to dispose of them without serious loss The disposal or sale by respondent
and his wife of their shares in the corporation only 22 days after the
incorporation of the corporation, indicates that ' respondent realized that
early that their interest in the corporation contravenes the aforesaid Canon
25. Respondent Judge and his wife therefore deserve commendation for their
immediate withdrawal from the firm after its incorporation and before it
became involved in any court litigation.
DECISION
MAKASIAR, J p:
In a verified complaint dated August 6, 1968 Bernardita R.
Macariola charged respondent Judge Elias B. Asuncion of the Court of
First Instance of Leyte, now Associate Justice of the Court of Appeals,
with "acts unbecoming a judge."
The factual setting of the case is stated in the report dated May
27, 1971 of then Associate Justice Cecilia Muoz Palma of the Court of
Appeals now retired Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, to whom
this case was referred on October 28, 1968 for investigation, thus: llcd
"Civil Case No. 3010 of the Court of First Instance
of Leyte was a complaint for partition filed by Sinforosa R.
Bales, Luz R. Bakunawa, Anacorita Reyes, Ruperto Reyes,
Adela Reyes, and Priscilla Reyes, plaintiffs, against
Bernardita R. Macariola, defendant, concerning the
properties left by the deceased Francisco Reyes, the
common father of the plaintiff and defendant.
"In her defenses to the complaint for partition,
Mrs. Macariola alleged among other things that: a) plaintiff
Sinforosa R. Bales was not a daughter of the deceased
Francisco Reyes; b) the only legal heirs of the deceased
were defendant Macariola, she being the only offspring of
the first marriage of Francisco Reyes with Felisa Espiras,
and the remaining plaintiffs who were the children of the
deceased by his second marriage with Irene Ondes; c) the
properties left by the deceased were all the conjugal
properties of the latter and his first wife, Felisa Espiras, and
no properties were acquired by the deceased during his
second marriage; d) if there was any partition to be made,
CONSTI 1
Directing the parties, within thirty days after this judgment
shall have become final to submit to this court, for
approval, a project of partition of the hereditary estate in
the proportion above indicated, and in such manner as the
parties may, by agreement, deemed convenient and
equitable to them taking into consideration the location,
kind, quality, nature and value of the properties involved;
(10) Directing the plaintiff Sinforosa R. Bales and
defendant Bernardita R. Macariola to pay the costs of this
suit, in the proportion of one-third (1/3) by the first named
and two-thirds (2/3) by the second named; and (11)
Dismissing all other claims of the parties [pp. 27-29 of Exh.
C].
"The decision in civil case 3010 became final for
lack of an appeal, and on October 16, 1963, a project of
partition was submitted to Judge Asuncion which is marked
Exh. A. Notwithstanding the fact that the project of
partition was not signed by the parties themselves but only
by the respective counsel of plaintiffs and defendant, Judge
Asuncion approved it in his Order dated October 23, 1963,
which for convenience is quoted hereunder in full:
'The parties, through their respective counsels,
presented to this Court for approval the following project of
partition:
'COMES NOW, the plaintiffs and the defendant in
the above-entitled case, to this Honorable Court
respectfully submit the following Project of Partition:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
CONSTI 1
lots denominated as Lot 1184-A to 1184-E inclusive (Exh.
V).
"Lot 1184-D was conveyed to Enriqueta D. Anota,
a stenographer in Judge Asuncion's court (Exhs. F, F-1 and
V-1), while Lot 1184-E which had an area of 2,172.5556 sq.
meters was sold on July 31, 1964 to Dr. Arcadio Galapon
(Exh. 2) who was issued transfer certificate of title No.
2338 of the Register of Deeds of the city of Tacloban (Exh.
12).
"On March 6, 1965, Dr. Arcadio Galapon and his
wife sold a portion of Lot 1184-E with an area of around
1,306 sq. meters to Judge Asuncion and his wife, Victoria S.
Asuncion (Exh. 11), which particular portion was declared
by the latter for taxation purposes (Exh. F).
"On August 31, 1966, spouses Asuncion and
spouses Galapon conveyed their respective shares and
interest in Lot 1184-E to 'The Traders Manufacturing and
Fishing Industries Inc.' (Exh. 15 & 16). At the time of said
sale the stockholders of the corporation were Dominador
Arigpa Tan, Humilia Jalandoni Tan, Jaime Arigpa Tan, Judge
Asuncion, and the latter's wife, Victoria S. Asuncion, with
Judge Asuncion as the President and Mrs. Asuncion as the
secretary (Exhs. E-4 to E-7). The Articles of Incorporation of
'The Traders Manufacturing and Fishing Industries, Inc.'
which we shall henceforth refer to as 'TRADERS' were
registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission
only on January 9, 1967 (Exh. E)" [pp. 378-385, rec.].
Complainant Bernardita R. Macariola filed on August 9, 1968
the instant complaint dated August 6, 1968 alleging four causes of
action, to wit: [1] that respondent Judge Asuncion violated Article 1491,
paragraph 5, of the New Civil Code in acquiring by purchase a portion of
Lot No. 1184-E which was one of those properties involved in Civil Case
No. 3010 decided by him; [2] that he likewise violated Article 14,
paragraphs 1 and 5 of the Code of Commerce, Section 3, paragraph H,
of R.A. 3019, otherwise known as the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices
Act, Section 12, Rule XVIII of the Civil Service Rules, and Canon 25 of the
Canons of Judicial Ethics, by associating himself with the Traders
Manufacturing and Fishing Industries, Inc., as a stockholder and a
ranking officer while he was a judge of the Court of First Instance of
Leyte; [3] that respondent was guilty of coddling an impostor and acted
in disregard of judicial decorum by closely fraternizing with a certain
Dominador Arigpa Tan who openly and publicly advertised himself as a
practising attorney when in truth and in fact his name does not appear
in the Rolls of Attorneys and is not a member of the Philippine Bar; and
[4] that there was a culpable defiance of the law and utter disregard for
ethics by respondent Judge (pp. 1-7, rec.).
Respondent
answer to which a
complainant. In Our
case to then Justice
CONSTI 1
i.
B.
C.
D.
10
CONSTI 1
The fact remains that respondent Judge purchased on March 6,
1965 a portion of Lot 1184-E from Dr. Arcadio Galapon; hence, after the
finality of the decision which he rendered on June 8, 1963 in Civil Case
No. 3010 and his two questioned orders dated October 23, 1963 and
November 11, 1963. Therefore, the property was no longer subject of
litigation.
The subsequent filing on November 9, or 11, 1968 of Civil Case
No. 4234 can no longer alter, change or affect the aforesaid facts that
the questioned sale to respondent Judge, now Court of Appeals Justice,
was effected and consummated long after the finality of the aforesaid
decision or orders.
Consequently, the sale of a portion of Lot 1184-E to respondent
Judge having taken place over one year after the finality of the decision
in Civil Case No. 3010 as well as the two orders approving the project of
partition, and not during the pendency of the litigation, there was no
violation of paragraph 5, Article 1491 of the New Civil Code.
It is also argued by complainant herein that the sale on July 31,
1964 of Lot 1184-E to Dr. Arcadio Galapon by Priscilla Reyes, Adela
Reyes and Luz R. Bakunawa was only a mere scheme to conceal the
illegal and unethical transfer of said lot to respondent Judge as a
consideration for the approval of the project of partition. In this
connection, We agree with the findings of the Investigating Justice thus:
"And so we are now confronted with this allimportant question whether or not the acquisition by
respondent of a portion of Lot 1184-E and the subsequent
transfer of the whole lot to 'TRADERS' of which respondent
was the President and his wife the Secretary, was
intimately related to the Order of respondent approving
the project of partition, Exh. A.
"Respondent vehemently denies any interest or
participation in the transactions between the Reyeses and
the Galapons concerning Lot 1184-E, and he insists that
there is no evidence whatsoever to show that Dr. Galapon
had acted, in the purchase of Lot 1184-E, in mediation for
him and his wife. (See p. 14 of Respondent's
Memorandum).
xxx xxx xxx
"On this point, I agree with respondent that there
is no evidence in the record showing that Dr. Arcadio
Galapon acted as a mere 'dummy' of respondent in
acquiring Lot 1184-E from the Reyeses. Dr. Galapon
appeared to this investigator as a respectable citizen,
credible and sincere, and I believe him when he testified
that he bought Lot 1184-E in good faith and for valuable
consideration from the Reyeses without any intervention
of, or previous understanding with Judge Asuncion" (pp.
391-394, rec.).
On the contention of complainant herein that respondent Judge
acted illegally in approving the project of partition although it was not
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that one-half of one-fourth of Lot 1154 belonged to the
estate of Francisco Reyes Diaz while the other half of said
one-fourth was the share of complainant's mother, Felisa
Espiras; in other words, the decision did not adjudicate the
whole of the one-fourth of Lot 1154 to the herein
complainant (see Exhs. C-3 & C-4). Complainant became
the owner of the entire one fourth of Lot 1154 only by
means of the project of partition, Exh. A. Therefore, if Mrs.
Macariola sold Lot 1154 on October 22, 1963, it was for no
other reason than that she was well aware of the
distribution of the properties of her deceased father as per
Exhs. A and B. It is also significant at this point to state
that Mrs. Macariola admitted during the cross-examination
that she went to Tacloban City in connection with the sale
of Lot 1154 to Dr. Decena (tsn. p. 92, November 28, 1968)
from which we can deduce that she could not have been
kept ignorant of the proceedings in civil case 3010 relative
to the project of partition.
"Complainant also assails the project of partition
because according to her the properties adjudicated to her
were insignificant lots and the least valuable. Complainant,
however, did not present any direct and positive evidence
to prove the alleged gross inequalities in the choice and
distribution of the real properties when she could have
easily done so by presenting evidence on the area,
location, kind, the assessed and market value of said
properties. Without such evidence there is nothing in the
record to show that there were inequalities in the
distribution of the properties of complainant's father" (pp.
386-389, rec.).
Finally, while it is true that respondent Judge did not violate
paragraph 5, Article 1491 of the New Civil Code in acquiring by purchase
a portion of Lot 1184-E which was in litigation in his court, it was,
however, improper for him to have acquired the same. He should be
reminded of Canon 3 of the Canons of Judicial Ethics which requires that:
"A judge's official conduct should be free from the appearance of
impropriety, and his personal behavior, not only upon the bench and in
the performance of judicial duties, but also in his everyday life, should
be beyond reproach." And as aptly observed by the Investigating Justice:
". . . it was unwise and indiscreet on the part of respondent to have
purchased or acquired a portion of a piece of property that was or had
been in litigation in his court and caused it to be transferred to a
corporation of which he and his wife were ranking officers at the time of
such transfer. One who occupies an exalted position in the judiciary has
the duty and responsibility of maintaining the faith and trust of the
citizenry in the courts of justice, so that not only must he be truly honest
and just, but his actuations must be such as not give cause for doubt
and mistrust in the uprightness of his administration of justice. In this
particular case of respondent, he cannot deny that the transactions over
Lot 1184-E are damaging and render his actuations open to suspicion
and distrust. Even if respondent honestly believed that Lot 1184-E was
no longer in litigation in his court and that he was purchasing it from a
third person and not from the parties to the litigation, he should
nonetheless have refrained from buying it for himself and transferring it
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extended to the Philippines by the Royal Decree of August 6, 1888, and
took effect as law in this jurisdiction on December 1, 1888.
respondent, then Judge of the Court of First Instance, now Associate Justice
of the Court of Appeals.
Thus, We held in Roa vs. Collector of Customs (23 Phil. 315, 330,
311 [1912]) that:
"'By well-settled public law, upon the cession of
territory by one nation to another, either following a
conquest or otherwise, . . . those laws which are political in
their nature and pertain to the prerogatives of the former
government immediately cease upon the transfer of
sovereignty.' (Opinion, Atty. Gen., July 10, 1899).
"While municipal laws of the newly acquired
territory not in conflict with the laws of the new sovereign
continue in force without the express assent or affirmative
act of the conqueror, the political laws do not. (Halleck's Int.
Law, chap. 34, par. 14). However, such political laws of the
prior sovereignty as are not in conflict with the constitution
or institutions of the new sovereign, may be continued in
force if the conqueror shall so declare by affirmative act of
the commander-in-chief during the war, or by Congress in
time of peace. (Ely's Administrator vs. United States, 171
U.S. 220, 43 L. Ed. 142). In the case of American and Ocean
Ins. Cos. vs. 356 Bales of Cotton (1 Pet. [26 U.S.] 511, 542, 7
L. Ed. 242), Chief Justice Marshall said:
'On such transfer (by cession) of territory, it has
never been held that the relations of the inhabitants with
each other undergo any change. Their relations with their
former sovereign are dissolved, and new relations are
created between them and the government which has
acquired their territory. The same act which transfers their
country, transfers the allegiance of those who remain in it;
and the law which may be denominated political, is
necessarily changed, although that which regulates the
intercourse and general conduct of individuals, remains in
force, until altered by the newly-created power of the State.'"
Likewise, in People vs. Perfecto (43 Phil. 887, 897 [1922]), this
Court stated that: "It is a general principle of the public law that on
acquisition of territory the previous political relations of the ceded region
are totally abrogated."
There appears no enabling or affirmative act that continued the
effectivity of the aforestated provision of the Code of Commerce after the
change of sovereignty from Spain to the United States and then to the
Republic of the Philippines. Consequently, Article 14 of the Code of
Commerce has no legal and binding effect and cannot apply to the
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prohibiting members of the Judiciary from engaging or having interest in
any lawful business.
It may be pointed out that Republic Act No. 296, as amended,
also known as the Judiciary Act of 1948, does not contain any prohibition
to that effect. As a matter of fact, under Section 77 of said law,
municipal judges may engage in teaching or other vocation not
involving the practice of law after office hours but with the permission of
the district judge concerned.
Likewise, Article 14 of the Code of Commerce which prohibits
judges from engaging in commerce is, as heretofore stated, deemed
abrogated automatically upon the transfer of sovereignty from Spain to
America, because it is political in nature.
Moreover, the prohibition in paragraph 5, Article 1491 of the
New Civil Code against the purchase by judges of a property in litigation
before the court within whose jurisdiction they perform their duties,
cannot apply to respondent Judge because the sale of the lot in question
to him took place after the finality of his decision in Civil Case No. 3010
as well as his two orders approving the project of partition; hence, the
property was no longer subject of litigation.
In addition, although Section 12, Rule XVIII of the Civil Service
Rules made pursuant to the Civil Service Act of 1959 prohibits an officer
or employee in the civil service from engaging in any private business,
vocation, or profession or be connected with any commercial, credit,
agricultural or industrial undertaking without a written permission from
the head of department, the same, however, may not fall within the
purview of paragraph h, Section 3 of theAnti-Graft and Corrupt Practices
Act because the last portion of said paragraph speaks of a prohibition by
the Constitution or law on any public officer from having any interest in
any business and not by a mere administrative rule or regulation. Thus,
a violation of the aforesaid rule by any officer or employee in the civil
service, that is, engaging in private business without a written
permission from the Department Head may not constitute graft and
corrupt practice as defined by law.
14
CONSTI 1
of the Civil Service Rules promulgated pursuant to the Civil Service Act
of 1959, the impropriety of the same is clearly unquestionable because
Canon 25 of the Canons of Judicial Ethics expressly declares that:
"A judge should abstain from making personal
investments in enterprises which are apt to be involved in
litigation in his court; and, after his accession to the bench,
he should not retain such investments previously made,
longer than a period sufficient to enable him to dispose of
them without serious loss. It is desirable that he should, so
far as reasonably possible, refrain from all relations which
would normally tend to arouse the suspicion that such
relations warp or bias his judgment, or prevent his
impartial attitude of mind in the administration of his
judicial duties. . . ."
WE are not, however, unmindful of the fact that respondent
Judge and his wife had withdrawn on January 31, 1967 from the
aforesaid corporation and sold their respective shares to third parties,
and it appears also that the aforesaid corporation did not in anyway
benefit in any case filed by or against it in court as there was no case
filed in the different branches of the Court of First Instance of Leyte from
the time of the drafting of the Articles of Incorporation of the corporation
on March 12, 1966, up to its incorporation on January 9, 1967, and the
eventual withdrawal of respondent on January 31, 1967 from said
corporation. Such disposal or sale by respondent and his wife of their
shares in the corporation only 22 days after the in corporation of the
corporation, indicates that respondent realized that early that their
interest in the corporation contravenes the aforesaid Canon 25.
Respondent Judge and his wife therefore deserve the commendation for
their immediate withdrawal from the firm after its incorporation and
before it became involved in any court litigation.
III
With respect to the third and fourth causes of action,
complainant alleged that respondent was guilty of coddling an impostor
and acted in disregard of judicial decorum, and that there was culpable
defiance of the law and utter disregard for ethics. WE agree, however,
with the recommendation of the Investigating Justice that respondent
Judge be exonerated because the aforesaid causes of action are
groundless, and WE quote the pertinent portion of her report which
reads as follows:
"The basis for complainant's third cause of action
is the claim that respondent associated and closely
fraternized with Dominador Arigpa Tan who openly and
publicly advertised himself as a practising attorney (see
Exhs. I, I-1 and J) when in truth and in fact said Dominador
Arigpa Tan does not appear in the Roll of Attorneys and is
not a member of the Philippine Bar as certified to in Exh. K.
The "respondent denies knowing that Dominador
Arigpa Tan was an 'impostor' and claims that all the time
he believed that the latter was a bona fidemember of the
bar. I see no reason for disbelieving this assertion of
respondent. It has been shown by complainant that
15
CONSTI 1
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
for in Sec. 2 of R.A. No. 6132 cannot possibly conflict with its own intent
expressed therein; for it merely obeyed and implemented the intent of
Congress acting as a Constituent Assembly expressed in Sec. 1 of Res. No. 4,
which provides that the 320 delegates should be apportioned among the
existing representative districts according to the number of their respective
inhabitants, but fixing a minimum of at least two delegates for a representative
district.
ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; ABSOLUTE PROPORTIONAL REPRESENTATION NOT REQUIRED.
That the lone and small congressional district of Batanes, may be overrepresented, because it is allotted two delegates by R.A. 6132 despite the fact
that it has a population very much less than several other congressional
districts, each of which is also allotted only two delegates, and therefore underrepresented vis-a-vis Batanes alone, does not vitiate the apportionment as not
affecting proportional representation. Absolute proportional apportionment is
not required and is not possible when based on the number of inhabitants, for
the population census cannot be accurate nor complete, dependent as it is on
the diligence of the census takers aggravated by the constant movement of
population, as well as daily death and birth. It is enough that the basis
employed is reasonable and the resulting apportionment is substantially
proportional.
ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; NOT UNREASONABLE. While there may be other formulas for
a reasonable apportionment, considering the evidence submitted to Congress
by the Bureau of Census and Statistics, We are not prepared to rule that the
computation formula adopted by Congress for proportional representation as
directed in Res. No. 4 is unreasonable and that the apportionment provided
in R.A. 6132 does not constitute a substantially proportional representation.
ID.;
APPORTIONMENT
OF
CONGRESSIONAL
DISTRICTS;
ABSOLUTE
REPRESENTATION CANNOT BE EFFECTED, SECTION 5 ARTICLE VI,
CONSTITUTION. The impossibility of absolute proportional representation is
recognized by the Constitution itself when it directs that the apportionment of
congressional districts among the various provinces shall be "as nearly as may
be according to their respective inhabitants, but each province shall have at
least one member." The employment of the phrase "as nearly as may be
according to their respective inhabitants" emphasizes the fact that the human
mind can only approximate a reasonable apportionment but cannot affect an
absolutely proportional representation with mathematical precision or
exactitude.
ID.; PUBLIC OFFICE; NO INHERENT RIGHT TO PUBLIC OFFICE. That a citizen
does not have any inherent nor natural right to a public office, is axiomatic
under our Constitutional system. The State, through its Constitution or
legislative body, can create an office and define the qualifications and
disqualifications therefor as well as impose inhibitions on a public officer.
Consequently, only those with qualifications and who do not fall under any
constitutional or statutory inhibition can be validly elected or appointed to a
public office.
ID.; CON-CON; DISQUALIFICATION OF ELECTED DELEGATES FROM PUBLIC
OFFICE; SECTION 5. Section 5 of R.A. 6132 disqualifies any elected delegate
from running "for any public office in any election" or from assuming "any
appointive office or position in any branch of the government until after the
final adjournment of the Constitutional Convention." The obvious reason for the
questioned inhibition is to immunize the delegates from the perverting
influence of self-interest, party interest or vested interest and to insure that he
dedicates all his time to performing solely, in the interest of the nation, his high
and well nigh sacred function of formulating the supreme law of the land, which
16
CONSTI 1
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
may endure for generations and which cannot easily be changed like an
ordinary statute.
ID.; ID.; SECTION 5 of RA. 6132; REASON. With the disqualification embodied
in Section 5, the delegate will not utilize his position as a bargaining leverage
for concessions in the form of an elective or appointive office as long as the
convention has not finally adjourned. The appointing authority may, by his
appointing power, entice votes for his own proposals. Not love of self, but love
of country must always motivate his actuations as delegate, otherwise the
several provisions of the new Constitution may only satisfy individual or special
interests subversive of the welfare of the general citizenry.
ID.; ID.; ID.; CONSTITUTIONAL. Thus, the challenged disqualification
prescribed in Section 5 of R.A. 6132 is a valid limitation on the right to public
office pursuant to state police power as it is reasonable and not arbitrary.
ID.; ID.; ID.; DISCRIMINATION AGAINST DELEGATES; CONSTITUTIONAL. The
discrimination under Sec. 5 against delegates is constitutional since it is based
upon substantial distinction which makes for real differences. The function of
delegate is more far-reaching and its effects more enduring than that of any
ordinary legislator or any other public officer. A delegate shapes the
fundamental law of the land which delineates the essential nature of the
government, its basic organization and powers, defines the liberties of the
people, and controls all other laws. Unlike ordinary statutes, constitutional
amendments cannot be changed in one or two years. No other public officer
possesses such a power, not even the members of Congress unless they
themselves propose constitutional amendments when acting as a Constituent
Assembly pursuant to Art. XV of the Constitution. The classification, therefore,
is neither whimsical nor repugnant to the sense of justice of the community.
ID.; ID.; ID.; GERMANE TO PURPOSES OF THE LAW. The inhibition under
Section 5 of R.A. 6132 is relevant t the object of the law, which is to insure that
the proposed amendments are meaningful to the masses of our people and not
designed for the enhancement of selfishness, greed, corruption, or injustice.
ID.; GUARANTEE OF DUE PROCESS AND OTHER RIGHTS NOT ABSOLUTE. This
Court ruled last year that the guarantees of due process, equal protection of
the laws, peaceful assembly, free expression, and the right of association are
neither absolute nor illimitable rights; they are always subject to the pervasive
and dominant police power of the State and may be lawfully abridged to serve
appropriate and important public interest.
ID.; CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION; SECTION 5, PARAGRAPH I R.A.. 6132; BAN
AGAINST POLITICAL PARTIES. The ban against all political parties or
organized groups of whatever nature contained in par. 1 of Sec. 8(a), is
confined to party or organization support or assistance, whether material,
moral, or emotional or otherwise.
ID.; ID.; ID.; ACTS PERMITTED. The very Sec. 8(a) in its provisos permits the
candidate to utilize in his campaign the help of the members of his family
within the fourth civil degree of consanguinity or affinity, and a campaign staff
composed of not more than one for every ten precincts in his district. It allows
the full exercise of his freedom of expression and his right to peaceful
assembly, because he cannot be denied any permit to hold a public meeting on
the pretext that the provision of said section may or will be violated. The right
of a member of any political party or association to support him or oppose his
opponent is preserved as long as such member acts individually. The very party
or organization to which he may belong or which may be in sympathy with his
cause or program or reforms, is guaranteed the right to disseminate
information about, or to arouse public interest in, or to advocate for
constitutional reforms, programs, policies or constitutional proposals for
amendments.
CONSTI 1
candidate who advocates reforms which they believe are imperative. The civic
associations other than political parties cannot with reason insist that they
should be exempted from the ban; because then by such exemption they would
be free to utilize the facilities of the campaign machinery's which they are
denying to the political parties. Whenever an organization engages in a political
activity, as in this campaign for election of delegates to the Constitutional
Convention, to that extent it partakes of the nature of a political organization.
21. ID.; ID.; ID.; FREEDOM OF SPEECH AND ASSEMBLY NOT TRANSGRESSED IN
INSTANT CASE. The freedom of association also implies the liberty not to
associate or join with others nor join any existing organization. A person may
run independently on his own merits without need of catering to a political
party or any other association for support. And he, as much as the candidate
whose candidacy does not evoke sympathy from any political party or
organized group, must be afforded equal chances.
5.
2.
3.
4.
6.
7.
national elections of 1946, 1953, 1961 and 1965, the presidency was won by
the opposition candidates. The national election for senators alone of 1951 was
a complete sweep of the field by the minority party. The result of the plebiscite
in the two proposed amendments in 1967 indicate unmistakably that the
people can make their wishes prevail. There is thus no assurance that the mere
identification with party labels would automatically insure the success of a
candidacy.
ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; POLITICAL ACTIVITY. It is not easy to yield assent to the
proposition that on a matter so essentially political as the amendment or
revision of an existing Constitution, political parties or political groups are to be
denied the opportunity of launching the candidacy of their choice. It is to carry
the essential process of making the government responsive to the will of the
people and that changes, if desired, may be attained by peaceful means, one
step farther to recognize and to implement the right of every political group to
select the candidates who, by their election, could translate into actuality their
hopes for the fundamental law that the times demand.
ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; POLITICAL ACTIVITY OF ASSOCIATIONS ESSENTIAL. It
could very well happen then, in not a few cases, assuming the strength of
political parties, that a candidate thus favored is sure of emerging the victor.
What is thus sought to be accomplished to guard against the evil of party spirit
prevailing could very well be doomed to futility. The high hopes entertained by
the articulate and vocal groups of young people, intellectuals and workers, may
not be realized. The result would be that this unorthodox and novel provision
could assume the character of a tease, an illusion like a magnificent bequest in
the pauper's will.
ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; CASE OF GONZALES VS. COMELEC DISTINGUISHED FROM
INSTANT CASE. What survived the test of constitutional validity in the case of
Gonzales vs. Comelec is the prohibition for any political party, political
committee or political group to nominate candidates for any elective public
office voted for at large earlier than 150 days immediately preceding elections
and for any other public office earlier than 90 days immediately preceding such
election. The challenged provision in the two instant petitions however, goes
much farther. Political parties or any other organization or organized group are
precluded from selecting and supporting candidates for delegates to the
Constitutional Convention. This is to enter a forbidden domain, Congress
trespassing on a field rightfully assumed to be within the sphere of liberty.
Thus, I am unable to conclude that our previous decision in Gonzales vs.
Comelec which already was indicative of the cautious and hesitant approach to
lending its approval to what otherwise are invasions of vital constitutional
safeguards to freedoms or belief, of expression, and of association lends
support to the decision reached by the minority insofar as this challenged
provision is concerned.
BARREDO, J., concurring and dissenting:
1.
CONSTI 1
2.
3.
DECISION
MAKASIAR, J p:
On August 24, 1970, Congress, acting as a legislative body, enacted Republic Act
No. 6132, implementing Resolutions Nos. 2 and 4, and expressly repealing R.A. No.
4914. 3
Petitioner Raul M. Gonzales assails the validity of the entire law as well as the
particular provisions embodied in Sections 2, 4, 5, and par. 1 of 8(a). Petitioner
Manuel B. Imbong impugns the constitutionality of only par. 1 of Sec. 8 (a) of
said R.A. No. 6132 practically on the same grounds advanced by petitioner
Gonzales.
I
The validity of Sec. 4 of R.A. No. 6132, which considers all public officers and
employees, whether elective or appointive, including members of the Armed Forces
of the Philippines, as well as officers and employees of corporations or enterprises
of the government, as resigned from the date of the filing of their certificates of
candidacy, was recently sustained by this Court, on the grounds, inter alia, that the
same is merely an application of and in consonance with the prohibition in Sec. 2 of
Art. XII of the Constitution and that it does not constitute a denial of due process or
of the equal protection of the law. Likewise, the constitutionality of paragraph 2 of
Sec. 8(a) of R.A. No. 6132 was upheld. 4
II
These two separate but related petitions for declaratory relief were filed pursuant to
Sec. 19 of R.A. No. 6132 by petitioners Manuel B. Imbong and Raul M. Gonzales,
both members of the Bar, taxpayers and interested in running as candidates for
delegates to the Constitutional Convention. Both impugn the constitutionality
of R.A. No. 6132, claiming during the oral argument that it prejudices their rights as
such candidates. After the Solicitor General had filed answers in behalf the
respondents, hearings were held at which the petitioners and the amici curiae,
namely Senator Lorenzo Taada, Senator Arturo Tolentino, Senator Jovito Salonga,
and Senator Emmanuel Pelaez argued orally.
It will be recalled that on March 16, 1967, Congress, acting as a Constituent
Assembly pursuant to Art. XV of the Constitution, passed Resolution No. 2 which
among others called for a Constitutional Convention to propose constitutional
amendments to be composed of two delegates from each representative district
who shall have the same qualifications as those of Congressmen, to be elected on
the second Tuesday of November, 1970 in accordance with the Revised Election
Code.
Without first considering the validity of its specific provisions, we sustain the
constitutionality of the enactment of R.A. No. 6132 by Congress acting as a
legislative body in the exercise of its broad lawmaking authority, and not as a
Constituent Assembly, because
1.
2.
After the adoption of said Res. No. 2 in 1967 but before the November elections of
that year, Congress, acting as a legislative body, enacted Republic Act No.
4914implementing the aforesaid Resolution No. 2 and practically restating in toto
the provisions of said Resolution No. 2.
On June 17, 1969, Congress, also acting as a Constituent Assembly, passed
Resolution No. 4 amending the aforesaid Resolution No. 2 of March 16, 1967 by
providing that the convention "shall be composed of 320 delegates apportioned
among the existing representative districts according to the number of their
respective inhabitants: Provided, that a representative district shall be entitled to at
least two delegates, who shall have the same qualifications as those required of
members of the House of Representatives, " 1 "and that any other details relating
to the specific apportionment of delegates, election of delegates to, and the holding
of, the Constitutional Convention shall be embodied in an implementing legislation:
Provided, that it shall not be inconsistent with the provisions of this Resolution. " 2
3.
CONSTI 1
4.
5.
The apportionment provided for in Sec. 2 of R.A. No. 6132 cannot possibly conflict
with its own intent expressed therein; for it merely obeyed and implemented the
intent of Congress acting as a Constituent Assembly expressed in Sec. 1 of Res. No.
4, which provides that the 320 delegates should be apportioned among the existing
representative districts according to the number of their respective inhabitants, but
fixing a minimum of at least two delegates for a representative district. The
presumption is that the factual predicate, the latest available official population
census, for such apportionment was presented to Congress, which, accordingly
employed a formula for the necessary computation to effect the desired
proportional representation.
The records of the proceedings on Senate Bill No. 77 sponsored by Senator Pelaez
which is now R.A. No. 6132, submitted to this Tribunal by the amici curiae, show
that it based its apportionment of the delegates on the 1970 official preliminary
population census taken by the Bureau of Census and Statistics from May 6 to June
30, 1970; and that Congress adopted the formula to effect a reasonable
IV
20
CONSTI 1
election" or from assuming "any appointive office or position in any branch of the
government until after the final adjournment of the Constitutional Convention."
That the citizen does not have any inherent nor natural right to a public office, is
axiomatic under our constitutional system. The State through its Constitution or
legislative body, can create an office and define the qualifications and
disqualifications therefor as well as impose inhibitions on a public officer.
Consequently, only those with qualifications and who do not fall under any
constitutional or statutory inhibition can be validly elected or appointed to a public
office. The obvious reason for the questioned inhibition, is to immunize the
delegates from the perverting influence of self-interest, party interest or vested
interest and to insure that he dedicates all his time to performing solely in the
interest of the nation his high and well-nigh sacred function of formulating the
supreme law of the land, which may endure for generations and which cannot easily
be changed like an ordinary statute. With the disqualification embodied in Sec. 5,
the delegate will not utilize his position as a bargaining leverage for concessions in
the form of an elective or appointive office as long as the convention has not finally
adjourned. The appointing authority may, by his appointing power, entice votes for
his own proposals. Not love for self, but love for country must always motivate his
actuations as delegate; otherwise the several provisions of the new Constitution
may only satisfy individual or special interests, subversive of the welfare of the
general citizenry. It should be stressed that the disqualification is not permanent but
only temporary only to continue until the final adjournment of the convention
which may not extend beyond one year. The convention that framed the present
Constitution finished its task in approximately seven months from July 30, 1934
to February 8, 1935.
As admitted by petitioner Gonzales, this inhibition finds analogy in the
constitutional provision prohibiting a member of Congress, during the time for
which he was elected, from being appointed to any civil office which may have been
created or the emolument whereof shall have been increased while he was a
member of the Congress. (Sec. 16, Art VI, Phil. Constitution.)
As observed by the Solicitor General in his Answer, the overriding objective of the
challenged disqualification, temporary in nature, is to compel the elected delegates
to serve in full their term as such and to devote all their time to the convention,
pursuant to their representation and commitment to the people; otherwise, his seat
in the convention will be vacant and his constituents will be deprived of a voice in
the convention. The inhibition is likewise "designed to prevent popular political
figures from controlling elections or positions. Also it is a brake on the appointing
power, to curtail the latter's desire to 'raid' the convention of 'talents' or attempt to
control the convention." (p. 10, Answer in L-32443.)
Thus the challenged disqualification prescribed in Sec. 5 of R.A. No. 6132 is a valid
limitation on the right to public office pursuant to state police power as it is
reasonable and not arbitrary.
The discrimination under Sec. 5 against delegates to the Constitutional Convention
is likewise constitutional; for it is based on a substantial distinction which makes for
real differences, is germane to the purposes of the law, and applies to all members
of the same class. 7 The function of a delegate is more far-reaching and its effect
more enduring than that of any ordinary legislator or any other public officer. A
delegate shapes the fundamental law of the land which delineates the essential
nature of the government, its basic organization and powers, defines the liberties of
the people, and controls all other laws. Unlike ordinary statutes, constitutional
amendments cannot be changed in one or two years. No other public officer
possesses such a power, not even the members of Congress unless they
themselves propose constitutional amendments when acting as a Constituent
Assembly pursuant to Art. XV of the Constitution. The classification, therefore, is
neither whimsical nor repugnant to the sense of justice of the community.
As heretofore intimated, the inhibition is relevant to the object of the law, which is
to insure that the proposed amendments are meaningful to the masses of our
people and not designed for the enhancement of selfishness, greed, corruption, or
injustice.
Lastly, the disqualification applies to all the delegates to the convention who will be
elected on the second Tuesday of November, 1970.
V
Paragraph 1, Sec. 8(a) of R.A. No. 6132 is impugned by both petitioners as violative
of the constitutional guarantees of due process, equal protection of the laws,
freedom of expression, freedom of assembly and freedom of association.
This Court ruled last year that the guarantees of due process, equal protection of
the laws, peaceful assembly, free expression, and the right of association are
neither absolute nor illimitable rights; they are always subject to the pervasive and
dominant police power of the State and may be lawfully abridged to serve
appropriate and important public interests. 8
In said Gonzales vs. Comelec case, the Court applied the clear and present danger
test to determine whether a statute which trenches upon the aforesaid
constitutional guarantees, is a legitimate exercise of police power. 9
Paragraph 1 of Sec. 8(a), R.A. No. 6132 prohibits:
1.
2.
The ban against all political parties or organized groups of whatever nature
contained in par. 1 of Sec. 8(a), is confined to party or organization support or
assistance, whether material, moral, emotional or otherwise. The very Sec. 8(a) in
its provisos permits the candidate to utilize in his campaign the help of the
members of his family within the fourth civil degree of consanguinity or affinity, and
a campaign staff composed of not more than one for every ten precincts in his
district. It allows the full exercise of his freedom of expression and his right to
peaceful assembly, because he cannot be denied any permit to hold a public
meeting on the pretext that the provision of said section may or will be violated.
The right of a member of any political party or association to support him or oppose
his opponent is preserved as long as such member acts individually. The very party
or organization to which he may belong or which may be in sympathy with his
21
CONSTI 1
cause or program of reforms, is guaranteed the right to disseminate information
about, or to arouse public interest in, or to advocate for constitutional reforms,
programs, policies or constitutional proposals for amendments.
It is therefore patent that the restriction contained in Sec. 8 (a) is so narrow that the
basic constitutional rights themselves remain substantially intact and inviolate. And
it is therefore a valid infringement of the aforesaid constitutional guarantees
invoked by petitioners.
In the aforesaid case of Gonzales vs. Comelec, supra, this Court unanimously
sustained the validity of the limitation on the period for nomination of candidates in
Sec. 50-A of R.A. No. 4880, thus:
"The prohibition of too early nomination of
candidates presents a question that is not too formidable
in character. According to the act: 'It shall be unlawful for
any political party, political committee, or political group to
nominate candidates for any elective public office voted
for at large earlier than one hundred and fifty days
immediately preceding an election, and for any other
elective public office earlier than ninety days immediately
preceding an election.
"The right of association is affected. Political
parties have less freedom as to the time during which they
may nominate candidates; the curtailment is not such,
however, as to render meaningless such a basic right.
Their scope of legitimate activities, save this one, is not
unduly narrowed. Neither is there infringement of their
freedom to assemble. They can do so, but not for such a
purpose. We sustain its validity. We do so unanimously." 10
In said Gonzales vs. Comelec case, this Court likewise held that the period for the
conduct of an election campaign or partisan political activity may be limited without
offending the aforementioned constitutional guarantees as the same is designed
also to prevent a "clear and present danger of a substantive evil, the debasement
of the electoral process." 11
Even if the partisan activity consists of (a) forming organizations, associations,
clubs, committees or other groups of persons for the purpose of soliciting votes
and/or undertaking any campaign or propaganda for or against a party or
candidate; (b) holding political conventions, caucuses, conferences, meetings,
rallies, parades or other similar assemblies for the purpose of soliciting votes and/or
undertaking any campaign or propaganda for or against any candidate or party;
and (c) giving, soliciting, or receiving contributions for election campaign either
directly or indirectly, (Sec. 50-B, pars. (a), (b), and (c), R.A. 4880), the abridgment
was still affirmed as constitutional by six members of this Court, which could not
"ignore . . . the legislative declaration that its enactment was in response to a
serious substantive evil affecting the electoral process, not merely in danger of
happening, but actually in existence, and likely to continue unless curbed or
remedied. To assert otherwise would be to close one's eyes to the reality of the
situation." 12 ;
Likewise, because four members dissented, this Court in said case of Gonzales vs.
Comelec, supra, failed to muster the required eight votes to declare as
unconstitutional the limitation on the period for (a) making speeches,
CONSTI 1
The questioned par. 1 of Sec. 8(a) likewise can easily pass the balancing-of-interest
test. 19
In the apt words of the Solicitor General:
"It is to be noted that right now the nation is on
the threshold of rewriting its Constitution in a hopeful
endeavor to find a solution to the grave economic, social
and political problems besetting the country. Instead of
directly proposing the amendments, Congress has chosen
to call a Constitutional Convention which shall have the
task of fashioning a document that shall embody the
aspirations and ideals of the people. Because what is to be
amended is the fundamental law of the land, it is
indispensable that the Constitutional Convention be
composed of delegates truly representative of the people's
will. Public welfare demands that the delegates should
speak for the entire nation, and their voices be not those of
a particular segment of the citizenry, or of a particular
class or group of people, be they religious, political, civic or
professional in character. Senator Pelaez, Chairman of the
Senate
Committee
on
Codes
and
Constitutional
Amendments, eloquently stated that 'the function of a
constitution is not to represent any one interest or set of
interests, not to favor one group at the expense or
disadvantage of the candidates but to encompass all the
interests that exist within our society and to blend them
into one harmonious and balanced whole. For the
constitutional system means, not the predominance of
interests, but the harmonious balancing thereof.'
"So that the purpose for calling the Constitutional
Convention will not be defeated or frustrated, it is
necessary that the delegates thereto be independent,
beholden to no one but to God, country and conscience."
xxx xxx xxx
"The evil, therefore, which the law seeks to
prevent lies in the election of delegates who, because they
have been chosen with the aid and resources of
organizations, cannot be expected to be sufficiently
representative of the people. Such delegates could very
well be the spokesmen of narrow political, religious or
economic interest and not of the great majority of the
people." 20
We likewise concur with the Solicitor General that the equal protection of the laws is
not unduly subverted in par. 1 of Sec. 8(a); because it does not create any hostile
discrimination against any party or group nor does it confer undue favor or privilege
on an individual as heretofore stated. The discrimination applies to all
organizations, whether political parties or social, civic, religious, or professional
associations. The ban is germane to the objectives of the law, which are to avert
the debasement of the electoral process and to attain real equality of chances
among individual candidates and thereby make real the guarantee of equal
protection of the laws.
23
CONSTI 1
3.
4.
5.
ELECTIONS,
SYLLABUS
1.
2.
7.
8.
CONSTI 1
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
2.
CONSTI 1
2.
3.
4.
the date and manner of the election at which the aforesaid proposed
amendments shall be voted upon by the people, and appropriates funds for
said election. Resolutions of both Houses Nos. 1 and 3 propose two
amendments to the Constitution: the first, to amend Sec. 5 Art. VI, by
increasing the maximum membership of the House of Representatives from
120 to 180, apportioning 160 of said 180 seats and eliminating the provision
that Congress shall by law make an apportionment within three years after the
return of every enumeration; the second, to amend Sec. 16, Art. VI, by allowing
Senators and Representatives to be delegates to a constitutional convention
without forfeiting their seats.
ID.; ID.; ID.; RATIFICATION BY THE PEOPLE IN A SPECIAL ELECTION FOR THE
PURPOSE NOT SPECIFICALLY REQUIRED. Nowhere in Sec. 1, Art. XV is it
required that the ratification be thru an election solely for that purpose. It only
requires that it be at "an election at which the amendments are submitted to
the people for their ratification." To join it with an election for candidates to
public office, that is, to make it concurrent with such election, does not render
it any less an election at which the proposed amendments are submitted to the
people for their ratification. No prohibition being found in the plain terms of the
Constitution, none should be inferred. Had the framers of the Constitution
thought of requiring a special election for the purpose only of the proposed
amendments, they could have said so, by qualifying the phrase with some
word such as "special" or "solely" or "exclusively". They did not.
ID.; ID.; ID.; STATUTE WHICH PROVIDES FOR HOW AND WHEN THE
AMENDMENTS ALREADY PROPOSED ARE GOING TO BE VOTED UPON AND
APPROPRIATES FUNDS TO CARRY OUT ITS PROVISIONS DOES NOT NEED THE
3/4 VOTE OF CONGRESS IN JOINT SESSION. The submission of proposed
amendments can be done thru an ordinary statute passed by Congress. The
Constitution does not expressly state by whom the submission shall be
undertaken; the rule is that a power not lodged elsewhere under the
Constitution is deemed to reside with the legislative body, under the doctrine
of residuary powers. Congress therefore validly enactedRepublic Act 4913 to fix
the details of the date and manner of submitting the proposed amendments to
the people for their ratification. Since it does not "propose amendments" in the
sense referred to by Sec. 1, Art. XV of the Constitution, but merely provides for
how and when the amendments already proposed, are going to be voted upon,
the same does not need the 3/4 vote in joint session required in Sec. 1, Art. XV
of the Constitution. Furthermore, Republic Act 4913 is an appropriation
measure. Sec. 6 thereof appropriates P1,000,000 for carrying out its provisions.
Sec. 18, Art. VI of the Constitution states that "All appropriation bills shall
originate exclusively in the House of Representatives". Republic Act 4913,
therefore, could not have been validly adopted in a joint session, reinforcing
the view that Sec. 1, Art. XV does not apply to such a measure providing for the
holding of the election to ratify the proposed amendments, which must
perforce appropriate funds for its purpose.
ID.; ID.; ID.; STATUTE WHICH PROVIDES SUFFICIENT OPPORTUNITY TO THE
VOTERS TO CAST AN INTELLIGENT VOTE ON THE PROPOSALS, NOT OFFENSIVE
AGAINST THE DUE PROCESS CLAUSE. Republic Act 4913 does not offend
against substantive due process. An examination of the provisions of the law
shows no violation of the due process clause of the Constitution. The
publication in the Official Gazette at least 20 days before the election, the
posting of notices in public buildings not later than Oct. 14, 1967, to remain
posted until after the elections, the placing of copies of the proposed
amendments in the polling places, aside from printing the same at the back of
the ballot, provide sufficient opportunity to the voters to cast an intelligent vote
on the proposal. Due process refers only to providing fair opportunity; it does
5.
6.
7.
not guarantee that the opportunity given will in fact be availed of; that is the
look out of the voter and the responsibility of the citizen. As long as fair and
reasonable opportunity to be informed is given, and it is, the due process
clause is not infringed.
ID.; ID.; RATIFICATION OF; VOTERS TO BE SUFFICIENTLY INFORMED OF THE
PROPOSED AMENDMENTS TO INTELLIGENTLY VOTE THEREON; METHOD
ADOPTED IN THE CASE AT BAR NOT CONSTITUTIONALLY DEFECTIVE. Nonprinting of the provisions to be amended as they now stand, and the printing of
the full proposed amendments at the back of the ballot instead of the
substance thereof at the face of the ballot, do not deprive the voter of fair
opportunity to be informed. The present wording of the Constitution is not
being veiled or suppressed from him; he is conclusively presumed to know
them and they are available should he want to check on what he is
conclusively presumed to know. Should the voters choose to remain ignorant of
the present Constitution, the fault does not lie with Congress. For opportunity
to familiarize oneself with the Constitution as it stands has been available thru
all these years. Perhaps it would have been more convenient for the voters if
the present wording of the provisions were also to be printed on the ballot. The
same however, is a matter policy. As long as the method adopted provides
sufficiently reasonable chance to intelligently vote on the amendments, and I
think it does in this case, it is not constitutionally defective.
ID.; LEGISLATIVE DEPARTMENT; POWER OF CONGRESS TO PROPOSE
AMENDMENTS OR CALL A CONVENTION FOR THAT PURPOSE. Sec. 1, Art. XV
states that Congress "may propose amendments or call a convention for that
purpose". The term "or", however, is frequently used as having the same
meaning as "and" particularly in permissive, affirmative sentences so that the
interpretation of the word "or" as "and" in the Constitution in such use will not
change its meaning (Vicksburg, S. and P. R. Co. v. Goodenough, 32 So. 404,
411, 108 La. 442). And it should be pointed out that the resolutions proposing
amendments (R.B.H. Nos. 1 and 3) are different from that calling for a
convention (R.B.H. No. 2). Surely, if Congress deems it better or wise to amend
the Constitution before a convention caused for is elected, it should not be
fettered from doing so. For our purposes in this case, suffice it to note that the
Constitution does not prohibit it from doing so.
ID.; ID.; MEMBERS OF CONGRESS; REPRESENTATION ACCORDING TO
DISTRICTS; STATUS QUO RETAINED IN THE ABSENCE OF APPORTIONMENT
REQUIRED BY LAW. Sec. 5 of Art. VI of the Constitution provides in part that
"The Congress shall by law make an apportionment within three years after the
return of every enumeration, and not otherwise". It however further states in
the next sentence: "Until such apportionment shall have been made, the House
of Representatives shall have the same number of Members as that fixed by
law for the National Assembly, who shall be elected by the qualified electors
from the present Assembly districts". The failure of Congress, therefore, to pass
a valid redistricting law since the time the above provision was adopted, does
not render the present districting illegal or unconstitutional. For the
Constitution itself provides for its continuance in such cases, rendering legal
and de jure the status quo.
CONSTI 1
2.
3.
4.
DECISION
CONCEPCION, C.J p:
G.R. No. L-28196 is an original action for prohibition, with preliminary injunction.
Petitioner therein prays for judgment:
1)
2)
Restraining: (a) the Commission on Elections from enforcing Republic Act No.
4913, or from performing any act that will result in the holding of the plebiscite
for the ratification of the constitutional amendments proposed in Joint
Resolutions Nos. 1 and 3 of the two Houses of Congress of the Philippines,
approved on March 16, 1967; (b) the Director of Printing from printing ballots,
pursuant to said Act and Resolutions; and (c) the Auditor General from passing
in audit any disbursement from the appropriation of funds made in said Republic
Act No. 4913; and
declaring said Act unconstitutional and void.
The main facts are not disputed. On March 16, 1967, the Senate and the House of
Representatives passed the following resolutions:
R.B.H. (Resolution of Both Houses) No. 1, proposing Philippines, be amended so as
to increase the membership of the House of Representatives from a maximum
of 120, as provided in the present Constitution, to a maximum of 180, to be
apportioned among the several provinces as nearly as may be according to the
number of their respective inhabitants, although each province shall have, at
least, one (1) member;
R.B.H. No. 2, calling a convention to propose amendments to said Constitution, the
convention to be composed of two (2) elective delegates from each
representative district, to be "elected in the general elections to be held on the
second Tuesday of November, 1971;" and
27
CONSTI 1
3.
R. B. H. No. 3, proposing that Section 16, Article VI, of the same Constitution, be
amended so as to authorize senators and members of the House of
Representatives to become delegates to the aforementioned constitutional
convention, without forfeiting their respective seats in Congress.
of Constitutional Law, Dr. Jose P. Laurel declared that "the judicial department is
the only constitutional organ which can be called upon to determine the proper
allocation of power between the several departments and among the integral or
constitutional constituent units thereof."
It is true that in Mabanag vs. Lopez Vito, 5 this Court, characterizing the issue
submitted thereto as a political one, declined to pass upon the question whether or
not a given number of votes cast in Congress in favor of a proposed amendment to
the Constitution which was being submitted to the people for ratification
satisfied the three-fourths vote requirement of the fundamental law. The force of
this precedent has been weakened, however, by Suanes vs. Chief Accountant of the
Senate, 6 Avelino vs. Cuenco, 7 Taada vs. Cuenco, 8 and Macias vs. Commission
on Elections. 9 In the first, we held that the officers and employees of the Senate
Electoral Tribunal are under its supervision and control, not of that of the Senate
President, as claimed by the latter; in the second, this Court proceeded to
determine the number of Senators necessary for a quorum in the Senate; in the
third, we nullified the election, by Senators belonging to the party having the
largest number of votes in said chamber, purporting to act on behalf of the party
having the second largest number of votes therein, of two (2) Senators belonging to
the first party, as members, for the second party, of the Senate Electoral Tribunal;
and in the fourth, we declared unconstitutional an act of Congress purporting to
apportion the representative districts for the House of Representatives, upon the
ground that the apportionment had not been made as nearly as may be possible
according to the number of inhabitants of each province. Thus we rejected the
theory, advanced in these four (4) cases, that the issues therein raised were
political questions the determination of which is beyond judicial review.
The petition in L-28196 was filed on October 21, 1967. At the hearing thereof, on
October 28, 1967, the Solicitor General appeared on behalf of respondents.
Moreover, Atty. Juan T. David and counsel for the Philippine Constitution Association
hereinafter referred to as the PHILCONSA were allowed to argue as amici
curiae. Said counsel for the PHILCONSA, Dr. Salvador Araneta, likewise, prayed that
the decision in this case be deferred until after a substantially identical case
brought by said organization before the Commission on Elections, 1 which was
expected to decide it any time, and whose decision would, in all probability, be
appealed to this Court had been submitted thereto for final determination, for a
joint decision on the identical issues raised in both cases. In fact, on October 31,
1967, the PHILCONSA filed with this Court the petition in G.R. No. L-28224 for
review by certiorari of the resolution of the Commission on Elections 2 dismissing
the petition therein. The two (2) cases were deemed submitted for decision on
November 8, 1967, upon the filing of the answer of respondent, the memorandum
of the petitioner and the reply memorandum of respondent in L-28224.
Ramon A. Gonzales, the petitioner in L-28196, is admittedly a Filipino citizen, a
taxpayer, and a voter. He claims to have instituted case L-28196 as a class suit, for
and in behalf of all citizens, taxpayers, and voters similarly situated. Although
respondents and the Solicitor General have filed an answer denying the truth of this
allegation, upon the ground that they have no knowledge or information to form a
belief as to the truth thereof, such denial would appear to be a perfunctory one. In
fact, at the hearing of case L-28196, the Solicitor General expressed himself in favor
of a judicial determination of the merits of the issues raised in said case.
The PHILCONSA, petitioner in L-28224, is admittedly a corporation duly organized
and existing under the laws of the Philippines, and a civic, non-profit and nonpartisan organization the objective of which is to uphold the rule of law in the
Philippines and to defend its Constitution against erosions or onslaughts from
whatever source. Despite his aforementioned statement in L-28196, in his answer in
L- 28224 the Solicitor General maintains that this Court has no jurisdiction over the
subject-matter of L-28224, upon the ground that the same is "merely political' as
held in Mabanag vs. Lopez Vito. 3 Senator Arturo M. Tolentino, who appeared before
the Commission on Elections and filed an opposition to the PHILCONSA petition
therein, was allowed to appear before this Court and objected to said petition upon
the ground a) that the Court has no jurisdiction either to grant the relief sought in
the petition, or to pass upon the legality of the composition of the House of
Representatives; b) that the petition, if granted, would, in effect, render inoperational the legislative department; and c) that "the failure of Congress to enact
a valid reapportionment law . . . does not have the legal effect of rendering illegal
the House of Representatives elected thereafter, nor of rendering its acts null and
void."
As early as Angara vs. Electoral Commission, 4 this Court speaking through one
of the leading members of the Constitutional Convention and a respected professor
CONSTI 1
should be deemed modified accordingly. The Members of the Court are unanimous
on this point.
THE MERITS
Section 1 of Article XV of the Constitution, as amended, reads:
"The Congress in joint session assembled by a vote of three
fourths of all the Members of the Senate and of the House of
Representatives voting separately, may propose amendments
to this Constitution or call a convention for that purpose. Such
amendments shall be valid as part of this Constitution when
approved by a majority of the votes cast at an election at which
the amendments are submitted to the people for their
ratification."
Pursuant to this provision, amendments to the constitution may be proposed, either
by Congress, or by a convention called by Congress for that purpose. In either case,
the vote of "three-fourths of all the members of the Senate and of the House of
Representatives voting separately" is necessary. And, "such amendments shall be
valid as part of the "Constitution when approved by a majority of the votes cast at
an election at which the amendments are submitted to the people for their
ratification."
In the cases at bar, it is conceded that the R. B. H. Nos. 1 and 3 have been
approved by a vote of three-fourths of all the members of the Senate and of the
House of Representatives voting separately. This, notwithstanding, it is urged that
said resolutions are null and void because:
1.
2.
3.
4.
CONSTI 1
when it would be made. Those who drafted and adopted the Constitution in 1935
could be certain, therefore, that the three-year period, after the earliest possible
enumeration, would expire after the elections in 1938.
Even if we assumed, however, that the present Members of Congress are merely de
facto officers, it would not follow that the contested resolutions and Republic Act
No. 4913 are null and void. In fact the main reason for the existence of the de
facto doctrine is that public interest demands that acts of persons holding, under
color of title, an office created by a valid statute be, likewise, deemed valid insofar
as the public as distinguished from the officer in question is concerned 21 .
Indeed, otherwise, those dealing with officers and employees of the government
would be entitled to demand from them satisfactory proof of their title to the
position they hold, before dealing with them, before recognizing their authority or
obeying their commands, even if they should act within the limits of the authority
vested in their respective offices, positions or employments. 22 One can imagine
the great inconvenience, hardships and evils that would result in the absence of
thede factodoctrine.
Thus, the events contemporaneous with the framing and ratification of the original
Constitution in 1935 and of the amendment thereof in 1940 strongly indicate that
the provision concerning said apportionment and the effect of the failure to make it
were expected to be applied to conditions obtaining after the elections in 1935 and
1938, and even after subsequent elections.
Then again, since the report of the Director of the Census on the last enumeration
was submitted to the President on November 30, 1960, it follows that the three year
period to make the apportionment did not expire until 1963, or after the Presidential
Elections in 1961. There can be no question, therefore, that the Senate and the
House of Representatives organized or constituted on December 30, 1961, were de
jure bodies, and that the Members thereof were de jure officers. Pursuant to the
theory of petitioners herein upon expiration of said period of three years, or late in
1963, Congress became illegal and its Members, or at least, those of the House of
Representatives, became illegal holders of their respective offices, and were de
facto officers.
Petitioners do not allege that the expiration of said three-year period, without a
reapportionment, had the effect of abrogating or repealing the legal provision
creating Congress, or, at least, the House of Representatives, and we are not aware
of any rule or principle of law that would warrant such conclusion. Neither do they
allege that the term of office of the members of said House automatically expired or
that they ipso facto forfeited their seats in Congress, upon the lapse of said period
for reapportionment. In fact, neither our political law, in general, nor our law on
public officers, in particular, supports the view that failure to discharge a mandatory
duty, whatever it may be, would automatically result in the forfeiture of an office, in
the absence of a statute to this effect.
Similarly, it would seem obvious that the provisions of our Election Law relative to
the election of Members of Congress in 1965 were not repealed in consequence of
the failure of said body to make an apportionment within three (3) years after the
census of 1960. Inasmuch as the general elections in 1965 were presumably held in
conformity with said Election Law, and the legal provisions creating Congress
with a House of Representatives composed of members elected by qualified voters
of representative districts as they existed at the time of said elections remained
in force, we can not see how said Members of the House of Representatives can be
regarded as de facto officers owing to the failure of their predecessors in office to
make a reapportionment within the period aforementioned.
Upon the other hand, the Constitution authorizes the impeachment of the President,
the Vice-President, the Justices of the Supreme Court and the Auditor General
for, inter alia, culpable violation of the Constitution, 20 the enforcement of which is,
not only their mandatory duty, but, also their main function. This provision indicates
that, despite the violation of such mandatory duty, the title to their respective
30
CONSTI 1
It is, also, noteworthy that R.B.H. Nos. 1 and 3 propose amendments to the
constitutional provisions on Congress, to be submitted to the people for ratification
onNovember 14, 1967, whereas R.B.H. No. 2 calls for a convention in 1971, to
consider proposals for amendment to the Constitution, in general In other words,
the subject- matter of R.B.H. No. 2 is different from that of R.B.H. Nos. 1 and 3.
Moreover, the amendments proposed under R.B.H. Nos. 1 and 3, will be submitted
for ratification several years before those that may be proposed by the
constitutional convention called in R.B.H. No. 2. Again, although the three (3)
resolutions were passed on the same date, they were taken up and put to a vote
separately, or one after the other. In other words, they were not passed at the same
time.
In any event, we do not find, either in the Constitution, or in the history thereof,
anything that would negate the contested of different Congresses to approve the
contested Resolutions, or of the same Congress to pass the same in different
sessions or different days of the same congressional session. And, neither has any
plausible reason been advanced to justify the denial of authority to adopt said
resolutions on the same day.
Counsel ask: Since Congress has decided to call a constitutional convention to
propose amendments, why not let the whole thing be submitted to said convention,
instead of, likewise, proposing some specific amendments, to be submitted for
ratification before said convention is held? The force of this argument must be
conceded, but the same impugns the wisdom of the action taken by Congress, not
its authority to take it. One seeming purpose thereof is to permit Members of
Congress to run for election as delegates to the constitutional convention and
participate in the proceedings therein, without forfeiting their seats in Congress.
Whether or nothing should be done is a political question, not subject to review by
the courts of justice.
On this question there is no disagreement among the members of the Court.
May Constitutional Amendments Be Submitted for Ratification in a General
Election?
Article XV of the Constitution provides:
". . . The Congress in joint session assembled, by a vote of threefourths of all the Members of the Senate and of the House of
Representatives voting separately, may propose amendments to
this Constitution or call a convention for that purpose. Such
amendments shall be valid as part of this Constitution when
approved by a majority of the votes cast at an election at which
the amendments are submitted to the people for their
ratification."
There is in this provision nothing to indicate that the "election" therein referred to is
a "special," not a general election. The circumstance that three previous
amendments to the Constitution had been submitted to the people for ratification in
special elections merely shows that Congress deemed it best to do so under the
circumstances then obtaining. It does not negate its authority to submit proposed
amendments for ratification in general elections.
It would be better, from the viewpoint of a thorough discussion of the proposed
amendments, that the same be submitted to the people's approval independently
of the election of public officials. And there is no denying the fact that an adequate
CONSTI 1
(4) that "when practicable, copies in the principal native languages, as may be
determined by the Commission on Elections, shall be kept in each polling place;
(5) that "the Commission on Elections shall make available copies of said
amendments in English, Spanish and, whenever practicable, in the principal
native languages, for free distribution;" and
(6) that the contested Resolutions "shall be printed in full" on the back of the ballots
which shall be used on November 14, 1967.
We are not prepared to say that the foregoing measures are palpably inadequate to
comply with the constitutional requirement that proposals for amendment be
"submitted to the people for their ratification," and that said measures are
manifestly insufficient, from a constitutional viewpoint, to inform the people of the
amendments sought to be made.
These were substantially the same means availed of to inform the people of the
subject submitted to them for ratification, from the original Constitution down to the
Parity Amendment. Thus, referring to the original Constitution, Section 1 of Act No.
4200, provides:
"Said Constitution, with the Ordinance appended thereto, shall be
published in the Official Gazette, in English and in Spanish, for
three consecutive issues at least fifteen days prior to said
election, and a printed copy of said Constitution, with the
Ordinance appended thereto, shall be posted in a conspicuous
place in each municipal and provincial government office building
and in each polling place not later than the twenty-second day of
April, nineteen hundred and thirty-five, and shall remain posted
therein continually until after the termination of the election. At
least ten copies of the Constitution with the Ordinance appended
thereto, in English and in Spanish, shall be kept at each polling
place available for examination by the qualified electors during
election day. Whenever practicable, copies in the principal local
dialects as may be determined by the Secretary of the Interior
shall also be kept in each polling place."
The provision concerning woman's suffrage in Section 1 of Commonwealth Act No.
34, reading:
"Said Article V of the Constitution shall be published in the Official
Gazette, in English and in Spanish, for three consecutive issues at
least fifteen days prior to said election, and the said Article V shall
be posted in a conspicuous place in the municipal and provincial
office building and in each polling place not later than the twentysecond day of April, nineteen hundred and thirty-seven, and shall
remain posted therein continually until after the termination of
the plebiscite. At least ten copies of the said Article V of the
Constitution, in English and in Spanish, shall be kept at each
polling place available for examination by the qualified electors
during the plebiscite. Whenever practicable, copies in the
principal native languages, as may be determined by the
Secretary of the Interior, shall also be kept in each polling place."
Similarly, Section 2, Commonwealth
amendments, is of the following tenor:
Act
No.
517,
referring
to
the
1940
CONSTI 1
to the members of Congress to run for delegates to the Constitutional Convention
and, if elected thereto, to discharge the duties of such delegates, without forfeiting
their seats in Congress. We who constitute the minority believe that Republic
Act No. 4913 satisfies such requirement and that said Act is, accordingly,
constitutional.
A considerable portion of the people may not know how over 160 of the proposed
maximum of representative districts are actually apportioned by R.B.H. No. 1
among the provinces in the Philippines. It is not improbable, however, that they are
not interested in the details of the apportionment, or that a careful reading thereof
may tend, in their simple minds, to impair a clear vision thereof. Upon the other
hand, those who are more sophisticated, may enlighten themselves sufficiently by
reading the copies of the proposed amendments posted in public places, the copies
kept in the polling places and the text of the contested resolutions, as printed in full
on the back of the ballots they will use.
It is, likewise, conceivable that as many people, if not more, may fail to realize or
envisage the effect of R.B.H. No. 3 upon the work of the Constitutional Convention
or upon the future of our Republic. But, then, nobody can foretell such effect with
certainty. From our viewpoint, the provisions of Article XV of the Constitution are
satisfied so long as the electorate knows that R.B.H. No. 3 permits Congressmen to
retain their seats as legislators, even if they should run for and assume the
functions of delegates to the Convention.
We are impressed by the factors considered by our distinguished and esteemed
brethren, who opine otherwise, but, we feel that such factors affect
the wisdom ofRepublic Act No. 4913 and that of R.B.H. Nos. 1 and
3, not the authority of Congress to approve the same.
The system of checks and balances underlying the judicial power to strike down
acts of the Executive or of Congress transcending the confines set forth in the
fundamental law is not in derogation of the principle of separation of powers,
pursuant to which each department is supreme within its own sphere. The
determination of the conditions under which the proposed amendments shall be
submitted to the people is concededly a matter which falls within the legislative
sphere. We do not believe it has been satisfactorily shown that Congress has
exceeded the limits thereof in acting Republic Act No. 4913. Presumably, it could
have done something better to enlighten the people on the subject-matter thereof.
But, then, no law is perfect. No product of human endeavor is beyond improvement.
Otherwise, no legislation would be constitutional and valid. Six (6) Members of this
Court believe, however, said Act and R.B.H. Nos. 1 and 3 violate the spirit of the
Constitution.
Inasmuch as there are less than eight (8) votes in favor of declaring Republic Act
4913 and R.B.H. Nos. 1 and 3 unconstitutional and invalid, the petitions in these two
(2) cases must be, as they are hereby, dismissed, and the writs therein prayed for
denied, without special pronouncement as to costs. It is so ordered.
||| (Gonzales v. COMELEC, G.R. No. L-28196, L-28224, [November 9, 1967])
CONSTI 1
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
latter should be deemed modified accordingly. The Members of the Court are
unanimous on this point.
ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; EFFECTIVITY OF PROPOSED AMENDMENTS DEPENDENT ON
PEOPLE'S RATIFICATION. True it is that once convened, the Constitutional
Convention became endowed with extraordinary powers generally beyond the
control of any department of the existing government, but the compass of such
powers can be co-extensive only with the purpose for which the convention was
called and as it is self-evident that the amendments it may propose cannot have
any effect as part of the Constitution until the same are duly ratified by the
people, it necessarily follows that the acts of the convention, its officers and
members are not immune from attack on constitutional grounds. The present
Constitution is in full force and effect in its entirely and in everyone of its parts,
the existence of the Convention notwithstanding, and operates even within the
walls of that assembly.
ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; EXTENT THEREOF. While it is indubitable that in its internal
operation and the performance of its task to propose amendments to the
Constitution it is not subject to any degree of restraint or control by any other
authority than itself, it is equally beyond cavil that neither the Convention nor
any of its officers or members can rightfully deprive any person of life, liberty or
property without due process of law, deny to anyone in this country the equal
protection of the laws or the freedom of speech and of the press in disregard of
the Bill of Rights of the existing Constitution. Nor, for that matter, can such
Convention validly pass any resolution providing for the taking of private
property without just compensation or for the imposition or exacting of any tax,
impost, or assessment, or declare war or call the Congress to a special session,
suspend the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus, pardon a convict or render
judgment in a controversy between private individuals or between such
individuals and the state, in violation of the distribution of powers in the
Constitution.
POLITICAL LAW; JUDICIARY; "JUDICIAL SUPREMACY" OR POWER OF JUDICIAL
REVIEW. When the judiciary mediates to allocate constitutional boundaries, it
does not assert any superiority over the other departments; it does not in reality
nullify or invalidate an act of the legislature, but only asserts the solemn and
sacred obligation assigned to it by the Constitution to determine conflicting
claims of authority under the Constitution and to establish for the parties in an
actual controversy the rights which that instrument secures and guarantees to
them. This is in truth all that is involved in what is termed "judicial supremacy"
which properly is the power of judicial review under the Constitution.
ID.; ID.; ID.; LIMITATIONS. This power of judicial review is limited to actual
cases and controversies to be exercised after full opportunity of argument by
the parties, and limited further to the constitutional question raised or the very
lis mota presented. Any attempt at abstraction could only lead to dialectics and
barren legal questions and to strike conclusions unrelated to actualities.
Narrowed as its functions is in this manner, the judiciary does not pass upon
questions of wisdom, justice or expediency of legislation. More than that, courts
accord the presumption of constitutionality to legislative enactments, not only
because the legislature is presumed to abide by the Constitution but also
because the judiciary in the determination of actual cases and controversies
must reflect the wisdom and justice of the people as expressed through their
representatives in the executive and legislative departments of the government.
POLITICAL LAW; ELECTORAL COMMISSION; POWER AND LIMITATIONS THEREOF.
The Electoral Commission, is a constitutional organ, created for a specific
purpose, namely, to determine all contests resulting to the elections, returns
and qualifications of the members of the National Assembly. Although the
Electoral Commission may not be interfered with, when and while acting within
the limits of its authority, it does not follow that it is beyond the reach of the
constitutional mechanism adopted by die people and that it is not subject to
constitutional restriction. The Electoral Commission is not a separate
department of the government, and even if it were, conflicting claims of
authority under the fundamental law between departmental powers and
agencies of the government are necessarily determined by the judiciary in
justiciable and appropriate cases.
10. CONSTITUTIONAL LAW; SECTION 1, ARTICLE XV OF CONSTITUTION; CONGRESS
AS CONSTITUENT ASSEMBLY; PROPOSED AMENDMENTS, SUBJECT TO
RATIFICATION BY PEOPLE; ONLY ONE ELECTION TO BE HELD THEREFOR. The
language of Section 1 of Article XV of the Constitution is sufficiently clear. It says
distinctly that either Congress sitting as a constituent assembly or a convention
called for the purpose "may propose amendments to this Constitution," thus
placing no limit as to the number of amendments that Congress or the
Convention may propose. The same provision also as definitely provides that
"such amendments shall be valid as part of the this Constitution when approved
by a majority of the votes cast as an election at which the amendments are
submitted to the people for their ratification," thus leaving no room for doubt as
to how many "elections" or plebiscites may be held to ratify any amendment or
amendments proposed by the same constituent assembly of Congress or
convention, and the provision unequivocally says "an election" which means
only one.
REYES, J.B.L., ZALDIVAR, RUIZ CASTRO and MAKASIAR, JJ., concurring:
1.
1.
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2.
3.
yield to the superior force of the Constitution. There can then be no basis for the
exaggerated pretension that it is an alter ego of the people.
ID.; ID.; ID.; AUTONOMY IN PROPOSING CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS. The
view that commends itself for acceptance is that legislature and constitutional
convention, aliked recognized by the Constitution, are coordinate, there being
no superiority of one over the other. Insofar as the constituent power of
proposing amendments to the Constitution is concerned, a constitutional
convention enjoys a wide sphere of autonomy consistently with the Constitution
which can be the only source of valid restriction on its competence. It is true it is
to the legislative body that the call to a convention must proceed, but once
convened, it cannot in any wise be interfered with, much less controlled by
Congress. A contrary conclusion would impair its usefulness for the delicate and
paramount task assigned to it. A convention then is to be looked upon as if it
were one of the three coordinate departments which under the principle of
separation of powers is supreme within its field and has exclusive cognizance of
matters properly subject to its jurisdiction.
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION, RULES OF GRAMMAR NOT DULY RELIABLE IN
CONSTITUTIONAL INTERPRETATION. No undue reliance should be accorded
rules of grammar; they do not exert a compelling force in constitutional
interpretation. Meaning is to be sought not from specific language in the
singular but from the mosaic of significance derived from the total context. It
could be, if it were not thus, self-defeating. Such a mode of construction does
not commend itself. The words used in the Constitution are not inert; they
derive vitality from the obvious purposes at which they are aimed.
DECISION
BARREDO, J p:
Petition for prohibition principally to restrain the respondent Commission on
Elections "from undertaking to hold a plebiscite on November 8, 1971," at which the
proposed constitutional amendment "reducing the voting age" in Section 1 of
Article V of the Constitution of the Philippines to eighteen years "shall be
submitted" for ratification by the people pursuant to Organic Resolution No. 1 of the
Constitutional Convention of 1971, and the subsequent implementing resolutions,
by declaring said resolutions to be without the force and effect of law in so far as
they direct the holding of such plebiscite and by also declaring the acts of the
respondent Commission (COMELEC) performed and to be done by it in obedience to
the aforesaid Convention resolutions to be null and void, for being violative of the
Constitution of the Philippines.
As a preliminary step, since the petition named as respondent only the COMELEC,
the Court required that copies thereof be served on the Solicitor General and the
Constitutional Convention, through its President, for such action as they may deem
proper to take. In due time, respondent COMELEC filed its answer joining issues with
petitioner. To further put things in proper order, and considering that the fiscal
officers of the Convention are indispensable parties in a proceeding of this nature,
since the acts sought to be enjoined involve the expenditure of funds appropriated
by law for the Convention, the Court also ordered that the Disbursing Officer, Chief
Accountant and Auditor of the Convention be made respondents. After the petition
was so amended, the first appeared thru Senator Emmanuel Pelaez and the last two
thru Delegate Ramon Gonzales. All said respondents, thru counsel, resist
petitioner's action.
For reasons of orderliness and to avoid unnecessary duplication of arguments and
even possible confusion, and considering that with the principal parties being duly
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"BE IT RESOLVED as it is hereby resolved by the 1971
Constitutional Convention:
(Sgd.)
DIOSDADO
MACAPAGAL
DIOSDADO P. MACAPAGAL
P.
President"
On September 30, 1971, COMELEC "RESOLVED to inform the Constitutional
Convention that it will hold the plebiscite on condition that:
"(a) The Constitutional Convention will undertake the printing of
separate official ballots, election returns and tally sheets for the
use of said plebiscite at its expense;
"(c) Said official ballots and election forms will be delivered to the
Commission in time so that they could be distributed at the same
time that the Commission will distribute its official and sample
ballots to be used in the elections on November 8, 1971."
Manila
"RECESS RESOLUTION
Gentlemen:
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Upon these facts, the main thrust of the petition is that Organic Resolution No. 1
and the other implementing resolutions thereof subsequently approved by the
Convention have no force and effect as laws in so far as they provide for the holding
of a plebiscite co incident with the elections of eight senators and all city, provincial
and municipal Officials to be held on November 8, 1971, hence all of Comelec's acts
in obedience thereof and tending to carry out the holding of the plebiscite directed
by said resolutions are null and void, on the ground that the calling and holding of
such a plebiscite is, by the Constitution, a power lodged exclusively in Congress, as
a legislative body, and may not be exercised by the Convention, and that, under
Section 1, Article XV of the Constitution, the proposed amendment in question
cannot be presented to the people for ratification separately from each and all of
the other amendments to be drafted and proposed by the Convention. On the other
hand, respondents and intervenors posit that the power to provide for, fix the date
and lay down the details of the plebiscite for the ratification of any amendment the
Convention may deem proper to propose is within the authority of the Convention
as a necessary consequence and part of its power to propose amendments and that
this power includes that of submitting such amendments either individually or
jointly at such time and manner as the Convention may direct in its discretion. The
Court's delicate task now is to decide which of these two poses is really in accord
with the letter and spirit of the Constitution.
"It is true that in Mabanag v. Lopez Vito (supra), this Court characterizing
the issue submitted thereto as a political one, declined to pass upon the
question whether or not a given number of votes cast in Congress in favor
of a proposed amendment to the Constitution which was being
submitted to the people for ratification satisfied the three-fourths vote
requirement of the fundamental law. The force of this precedent has been
weakened, however, by Suanes v. Chief Accountant of the Senate (81 Phil:
818), Avelino v. Cuenco, (L-2851, March 4 & 14, 1943), Taada v. Cuenco,
(L-10520, Feb. 28, 1957) and Macias v. Commission on Elections, (L-18684,
Sept. 14, 1961). In the first we held that the officers and employees of the
Senate Electoral Tribunal are under its supervision and control, not of that
of the Senate President, as claimed by the latter; in the second, this Court
proceeded to determine the number of Senators necessary for quorum in
the Senate; in the third, we nullified the election, by Senators belonging to
the party having the largest number of votes in said chamber, purporting
to act, on behalf of the party having the second largest number of votes
therein of two (2) Senators belonging to the first party, as members, for the
second party, of the Senate Electoral Tribunal; and in the fourth, we
declared unconstitutional an act of Congress purporting to apportion the
representatives districts for the House of Representatives, upon the ground
that the apportionment had not been made as may be possible according
to the number of inhabitants of each province. Thus we rejected the theory,
advanced in these four (4) cases that the issues therein raised were
political questions the determination of which is beyond judicial review.
they
are the
very
source of
all
powers
of
government including the Constitution itself .
"Since, when proposing, as a constituent assembly, amendments to the
Constitution, the members of Congress derive their authority from the
Fundamental Law, it follows, necessarily, that they do not have the final
say on whether or not their acts are within or beyond constitutional limits.
Otherwise. they could brush aside and set the same at naught, contrary to
the basic tenet that ours is a government of laws, not of men, and to the
rigid nature of our Constitution. Such rigidity is stressed by the fact that,
the Constitution expressly confers upon the Supreme Court, (And,
inferentially, to lower courts.) the power to declare a treaty
37
CONSTI 1
unconstitutional. (Sec. 2 (1), Art. VIII of the Constitution), despite the
eminently political character of treaty-making power.
"In short, the issue whether or not a Resolution of Congress acting as a
constituent assembly violates the Constitution is essentially justiciable
not political, and, hence, subject to judicial review, and, to the extent that
this view may be inconsistent with the stand taken in Mabanag v. Lopez
Vito, (supra) the latter should be deemed modified accordingly. The
Members of the Court are unanimous on this point."
No one can rightly claim that within the domain of its legitimate authority, the
Convention is not supreme. Nowhere in his petition and in his oral argument and
memoranda does petitioner point otherwise. Actually, what respondents and
intervenors are seemingly reluctant to admit is that the Constitutional Convention
of 1971, as any other convention of the same nature, owes its existence and
derives all its authority and power from the existing Constitution of the Philippines.
This Convention has not been called by the people directly as in the case of a
revolutionary convention which drafts the first Constitution of an entirely new
government born of either a war of liberation from a mother country or of a
revolution against an existing government or of a bloodless seizure of power a la
coup d'etat. As to such kind of conventions, it is absolutely true that the convention
is completely without restrain and omnipotent all wise, and it is as to such
conventions that the remarks of Delegate Manuel Roxas of the Constitutional
Convention of 1934 quoted by Senator Pelaez refer. No amount of rationalization
can belie the fact that the current convention came into being only because it was
called by a resolution of a joint session of Congress acting as a constituent
assembly by authority of Section 1, Article XV of the present Constitution which
provides:
"ARTICLE XV AMENDMENTS
"SECTION 1. The Congress in joint session assembled, by a vote of threefourths of all the Members of the Senate and of the House of
Representatives voting separately. may propose amendments to this
Constitution or call a convention for the purpose. Such amendments shall
be valid as part of this Constitution when approved by a majority of the
votes cast at an election at which the amendments are submitted to the
people for their ratification."
True it is that once convened, this Convention became endowed with extraordinary
powers generally beyond the control of any department of the existing government,
but the compass of such powers can be co-extensive only with the purpose for
which the convention was called and as it may propose cannot have any effect as
part of the Constitution until the same are duly ratified by the people, it necessarily
follows that the acts of convention, its officers and members are not immune from
attack on constitutional grounds. The present Constitution is in full force and effect
in its entirety and in everyone of its parts, the existence of the Convention
notwithstanding, and operates even within the walls of that assembly. While it is
indubitable that in its internal operation and the performance of its task to propose
amendments to the Constitution it is not subject to any degree of restraint or
control by any other authority than itself, it is equally beyond cavil that neither the
Convention nor any of its officers or members can rightfully deprive any person of
life, liberty or property without due process of law, deny to anyone in this country
the equal protection of the laws or the freedom of speech and of the press in
disregard of the Bill of Rights of the existing Constitution. Nor, for that matter, can
such Convention validly pass any resolution providing for the taking of private
CONSTI 1
historical origin and development there. has been set at rest by
popular acquiescence for a period of more than one and half centuries.
In our case, this moderating power is granted, if not expressly, by clear
implication from section 2 of Article VIII of our Constitution.
"The Constitution is a definition of the powers or government. Who is to
determine the nature, scope and extent of such powers? The
Constitution itself has provided for the instrumentality of the judiciary
as the rational way. And when the judiciary mediates to allocate
constitutional boundaries, it does not assert any superiority over the
other departments; it does not in reality nullify or invalidate an act of
the legislature, but only asserts the solemn and sacred obligation
assigned to it by the Constitution to determine conflicting claims of
authority under the Constitution and to establish for the parties in an
actual controversy the rights which that instrument secures and
guarantees to them. This is in truth all that is involved in what is
termed 'judicial supremacy' which properly is the power of judicial
review under the Constitution. Even then, this power of judicial review
is limited to actual cases and controversies to be exercised after full
opportunity of argument by the parties, and limited further to the
constitutional question raised or the very lis mota presented. Any
attempt at abstraction could only lead to dialectics and barren legal
questions and to strike conclusions unrelated to actualities. Narrowed
as its functions is in this manner the judiciary does not pass upon
questions of wisdom, justice or expediency of legislation. More than
that, courts accord the presumption of constitutionality to legislative
enactments, not only because the legislature is presumed to abide by
the Constitution but also because the judiciary in the determination of
actual cases and controversies must reflect the wisdom and justice of
the people as expressed through their representatives in the executive
and legislative departments of the government.
"But much as we might postulate on the internal checks of power
provided in our Constitution, it ought not the less to be remembered
that. in the language of James Madison, the system itself is not 'the
chief palladium of constitutional liberty.. the people who are authors of
this blessing must also be its guardians.. their eyes must be ever ready
to mark, their voices to pronounce. . . aggression on the authority of
their Constitution.' In the last and ultimate analysis then, must the
success of our government in the unfolding years to come be tested in
the crucible of Filipino minds and hearts than in consultation rooms and
court chambers.
"In the case at bar, the National Assembly has by resolution (No. 8) of
December 3, 1935, confirmed the election of the herein petitioner to
the said body. On the other hand. the Electoral Commission has by
resolution adopted on December 9, 1935, fixed said date as the last
day for the filing of protests against the election, returns and
qualifications of members of the National Assembly; notwithstanding
the Previous confirmations made by the National Assembly as
aforesaid. If, as contended by the petitioner, the resolution of the
National Assembly has the effect of cutting off the power of the
Electoral Commission to entertain protests against the election, returns
and qualifications of members of the National Assembly, submitted
after December 3, 1935 then the resolution of the Electoral
CONSTI 1
reason, and authority, we are clearly of the opinion that upon the
admitted facts of the present case, this court has jurisdiction over the
Electoral Commission and the subject matter of the present
controversy for the purpose of determining the character, scope and
extent of the constitutional grant to the Electoral Commission as 'the
sole judge of all contests relating to the election, returns and
qualifications of the members of the National Assembly."
As the Chief Justice has made it clear in Gonzales, like Justice Laurel did
in Angara, these postulates just quoted do not apply only to conflicts of authority
between the three existing regular departments of the government but to all such
conflicts between and among these departments, or, between any of them, on the
one hand, and any other constitutionally created independent body, like the
electoral tribunals in Congress, the Comelec and the constituent assemblies
constituted by the House of Congress, on the other. We see no reason of logic or
principle whatsoever, and none has been convincingly shown to Us by any of the
respondents and intervenors, why the same ruling should not apply to the present
Convention, even if it is an assembly of delegates elected directly by the people,
since at best, as already demonstrated, it has been convened by authority of and
under the terms of the present Constitution.
Accordingly, We are left with no alternative but to uphold the jurisdiction of the
Court over the present case. It goes without saying that We do this not because the
Court is superior to the Convention or that the Convention is subject to the control
of the Court, but simply because both the Convention and the Court are subject to
the Constitution and the rule of law, and "upon principle, reason and authority," per
Justice Laurel, supra, it is within the power, as it is the solemn duty of the Court,
under the existing Constitution to resolve the issues in which petitioner,
respondents and intervenors have joined in this case.
II
The issue of jurisdiction thus resolved, We come to the crux of the petition. Is it
within the powers of the Constitutional Convention of 1971 to order, on its own fiat.
the holding of a plebiscite for the ratification of the proposed amendment reducing
to eighteen years the age for the exercise of suffrage under Section 1 of Article V of
the Constitution proposed in the Convention's Organic Resolution No. 1 in the
manner and form provided for in said resolution and the subsequent implementing
acts and resolution of the Convention?
At the threnold, the environmental circumstances of this case demand the most
accurate and unequivocal statement of the real issue which the Court is called upon
to resolve. Petitioner has very clearly stated that he is not against the constitutional
extension of the right of suffrage to the eighteen-year-olds, as a matter of fact, he
has advocated or sponsored in Congress such a proposal, and that, in truth, the
herein petition is not intended by him to prevent that the proposed amendment
here involved be submitted to the people for ratification, his only purpose in filing
the petition being to comply with his sworn duty to prevent, whenever he can, any
violation of the Constitution of the Philippines even if it is committed in the course
of or in connection with the most laudable undertaking. Indeed, as the Court sees it,
the specific question raised in this case is limited solely and only to the point of
whether or not it is within the power of the Convention to call for a plebiscite for the
ratification by the people of the constitutional amendment proposed in the
abovequoted Organic Resolution No. 1, in the manner and form provided in said
resolution as well as in the subsequent implementing actions and resolution of the
Convention and its officers, at this juncture of its proceedings, when, as it is a
matter of common knowledge and judicial notice, it is not set to adjourn sine
die, and is, in fact, still in the preliminary stages of considering other reforms or
amendments affecting other parts of the existing Constitution; and, indeed, Organic
Resolution No. 1 itself expressly provides that the amendment therein proposed
"shall be without prejudice to other amendments that will be proposed in the future
by the 1971 Constitutional Convention on other portions of the amended section or
on other portions of the entire Constitution." In other words, nothing that the Court
may say or do in this case should be understood as reflecting, in any degree or
means, the individual or collective stand of the members of the Court on the
fundamental issue of whether or not the eighteen-year-olds should be allowed to
vote, simply because that issue is not before Us now. There should be no doubt in
the mind of anyone that, once the Court finds it constitutionally permissible, it will
not hesitate to do its part so that the said proposed amendment may be presented
to the people for their approval or rejection.
Withal, the Court rests securely in the conviction that the fire and enthusiasm of the
youth have not blinded them to the absolute necessity, under the fundamental
principles of democracy to which the Filipino people is committed, of adhering
always to the rule of law. Surely, their idealism, sincerity and purity of purpose
cannot permit any other line of conduct or approach in respect of the problem
before Us. The Constitutional Convention of 1971 itself was born, in a great
measure, because of the pressure brought to bear upon the Congress of the
Philippines by various elements of the people, the youth in particular, in their
incessant search for a peaceful and orderly means of bringing about meaningful
changes in the structure and bases of the existing social and governmental
institutions, including the provisions of the fundamental law related to the wellbeing and economic security of the underprivileged classes of our people as well as
those concerning the preservation and protection of our natural resources and the
national patrimony, as an alternative to violent and chaotic ways of achieving such
lofty ideals. In brief, leaving aside the excesses of enthusiasm which at times have
justifiably or unjustifiably marred the demonstrations in the streets, plazas and
campuses, the youth of the Philippines, in general, like the rest of the people, do
not want confusion and disorder, anarchy and violence; what they really want are
law and order, peace and orderliness, even in the pursuit of what they strongly and
urgently feel must be done to change the present order of things in this Republic of
ours. It would be tragic and contrary to the plain compulsion of these perspectives,
if the Court were to allow itself in deciding this case to be carried astray by
considerations other than the imperatives of the rule of law and of the applicable
provisions of the Constitution. Needless to say, in a larger measure than when it
binds other departments of the government or any other official or entity, the
Constitution imposes upon the Court the sacred duty to give meaning and vigor to
the Constitution, by interpreting and construing its provisions in appropriate cases
with the proper parties and by striking down any act violative thereof. Here, as in all
other cases, We are resolved to discharge that duty.
During these times when most anyone feels very strongly the urgent need for
constitutional reforms, to the point of being convinced that meaningful change is
the only alternative to a violent revolution, this Court would be the last to put any
obstruction or impediment to the work of the Constitutional Convention. If there are
respectable sectors opining that it has not been called to supplant the existing
Constitution in its entirety, since its enabling provision, Article XV, from which the
Convention itself draws life expressly speaks only of amendments which shall form
part of it, which opinion is not without persuasive force both in principle and in
logic, the seemingly prevailing view is that only the collective judgment of its
members as to what is warranted by the present condition of things, as they see it,
40
CONSTI 1
can limit the extent of the constitutional innovations the Convention may propose,
hence the complete substitution of the existing constitution is not beyond the ambit
of the Convention's authority. Desirable as it may be to resolve this grave
divergence of views, the Court does not consider this case to be properly the one in
which it should discharge its constitutional duty in such premises. The issues raised
by petitioner, even those among them in which respondents and intervenors have
joined in an apparent wish to have them squarely passed upon by the Court do not
necessarily impose upon Us the imperative obligation to express Our views thereon.
The Court considers it to be of the utmost importance that the Convention should
be untrammelled and unrestrained in the performance of its constitutionally
assigned mission in the manner and form it may conceive best, and so the Court
may step in to clear up doubts as to the boundaries set down by the Constitution
only when and to the specific extent only that it would be necessary to do so to
avoid a constitutional crisis or a clearly demonstrable violation of the existing
Charter. Withal, it is a very familiar principle of constitutional law that constitutional
questions are to be resolved by the Supreme Court only when there is no
alternative but to do it, and this rule is founded precisely on the principle of respect
that the Court must accord to the acts of the other coordinate departments of the
government, and certainly, the Constitutional Convention stands almost in a unique
footing in that regard.
In our discussion of the issue of jurisdiction, We have already made it clear that the
Convention came into being by a call of a joint session of Congress pursuant to
Section 1 of Article XV of the Constitution, already quoted earlier in this opinion. We
reiterate also that as to matters not related to its internal operation and the
performance of its assigned mission to propose amendments to the Constitution,
the Convention and its officers and members are all subject to all the provisions of
the existing Constitution. Now We hold that even as to its latter task of proposing
amendments to the Constitution, it is subject to the provisions of Section 1 of
Article XV. This must be so, because it is plain to Us that the framers of the
Constitution took care that the process of amending the same should not be
undertaken with the same ease and facility in changing an ordinary legislation.
Constitution making is the most valued power, second to none, of the people in a
constitutional democracy such as the one our founding fathers have chosen for this
nation, and which we of the succeeding generations generally cherish. And because
the Constitution affects the lives, fortunes, future and every other conceivable
aspect of the lives of all the people within the country and those subject to its
sovereignty, every degree of care is taken in preparing and drafting it. A
constitution worthy of the people for which it is intended must not be prepared in
haste without adequate deliberation and study. It is obvious that correspondingly,
any amendment of the Constitution is of no less importance than the whole
Constitution itself, and perforce must be conceived and prepared with as much care
and deliberation. From the very nature of things, the drafters of an original
constitution, as already observed earlier, operate without any limitations, restraints
or inhibitions save those that they may impose upon themselves. This is not
necessarily true of subsequent conventions called to amend the original
constitution. Generally, the framers of the latter see to it that their handiwork is not
lightly treated and as easily mutilated or changed, not only for reasons purely
personal but more importantly, because written constitutions are supposed to be
designed so as to last for some time, if not for ages, or for, at least, as long as they
can be adopted to the needs and exigencies of the people, hence, they must be
insulated against precipitate and hasty actions motivated by more or less passing
political moods or fancies. Thus, as a rule, the original constitutions carry with them
limitations and conditions, more or less stringent, made so by the people
themselves, in regard to the process of their amendment. And when such
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and aspirations of the people, on the other. It is inconceivable how a constitution
worthy of any country or people can have any part which is out of tune with its
other parts.
A constitution is the work of the people thru its drafters assembled by them for the
purpose. Once the original constitution is approved, the part that the people play in
its amendment becomes harder, for when a whole constitution is submitted to
them, more or less they can assume its harmony as an integrated whole, and they
can either accept or reject it in its entirety. At the very least, they can examine it
before casting their vote and determine for themselves from a study of the whole
document the merits and demerits of all or any of its parts and of the document as
a whole. And so also, when an amendment is submitted to them that is to form part
of the existing constitution, in like fashion they can study with deliberation the
proposed amendment in relation to the whole existing constitution and or any of its
parts and thereby arrive at an intelligent judgment as to its acceptability.
This cannot happen in the case of the amendment in question. Prescinding already
from the fact that under Section 3 of the questioned resolution, it is evident that no
fixed frame of reference is provided the voter, as to what finally will be concomitant
qualifications that will be required by the final draft of the constitution to be
formulated by the Convention of a voter to be able to enjoy the right of suffrage,
there are other considerations which make it impossible to vote intelligently on the
proposed amendment, although it may already be observed that under Section 3, if
a voter would favor the reduction of the voting age to eighteen under conditions he
feels are needed under the circumstances, and he does not see those conditions in
the ballot nor is there any possible indication whether they will ever be or not,
because Congress has reserved those for future action, what kind of judgment can
he render on the proposal?
But the situation actually before Us is even worse. No one knows what changes in
the fundamental principles of the constitution the Convention will be minded to
approve. To be more specific, we do not have any means of foreseeing whether the
right to vote would be of any significant value at all. Who can say whether or not
later on the Convention may decide to provide for varying types of voters for each
level of the political units it may divide the country into. The root of the difficulty in
other words, lies in that the Convention is precisely on the verge of introducing
substantial changes, if not radical ones, in almost every part and aspect of the
existing social and political order enshrined in the present Constitution. How can a
voter in the proposed plebiscite intelligently determine the effect of the reduction of
the voting age upon the different institutions which the Convention may establish
and of which presently he is not given any idea?
We are certain no one can deny that in order that a plebiscite for the ratification of
an amendment to the Constitution may be validly held, it must provide the voter
not only sufficient time but ample basis for an intelligent appraisal of the nature of
the amendment per seas well as its relation to the other parts of the Constitution
with which it has to form a harmonious whole. In the context of the present state of
things, where the Convention has hardly started considering the merits of
hundreds, if not thousands, of proposals to amend the existing Constitution, to
present to the people any single proposal or a few of them cannot comply with this
requirement. We are of the opinion that the present Constitution does not
contemplate in Section 1 of Article XV a plebiscite or "election" wherein the people
are in the dark as to frame of reference they can base their judgment on. We reject
the rationalization that the present Constitution is a possible frame of reference, for
the simple reason that intervenors themselves are stating that the sole purpose of
the proposed amendment is to enable the eighteen year olds to take part in the
election for the ratification of the Constitution to be drafted by the Convention. In
brief, under the proposed plebiscite, there can be, in the language of Justice
Sanchez, speaking for the six members of the Court in Gonzales, supra, "no proper
submission"
III
The Court has no desire at all to hamper and hamstring the noble work of the
Constitutional Convention. Much less does the Court want to pass judgment on the
merits of the proposal to allow these eighteen years old to vote. But like the
Convention, the Court has its own duties to the people under the Constitution which
is to decide in appropriate oases with appropriate parties whether or not the
mandates of the fundamental law are being complied with. In the best light God has
given Us, we are of the conviction that in providing for the questioned plebiscite
before it has finished, and separately from, the whole draft of the constitution it has
been called to formulate, the Convention's Organic Resolution No. 1 and all
subsequent acts of the Convention implementing the same violate the condition in
Section 1, Article XV that there should only be one "election" or plebiscite for the
ratification of all the amendments the Convention may propose. We are not denying
any right of the people to vote on the proposed amendment; We are only holding
that under Section 1, Article XV of the Constitution, the same should be submitted
to them not separately from but together with all the other amendments to be
proposed by this present Convention.
IN VIEW OF ALL THE FOREGOING, the petition herein is granted. Organic Resolution
No. 1 of the Constitutional Convention of 1971 and the implementing acts and
resolutions of the Convention, insofar as they provide for the holding of a plebiscite
on November 8, 1971, as well as the resolution of the respondent Comelec
complying therewith (RR Resolution No. 695) are hereby declared null and void. The
respondents Comelec, Disbursing Officer, Chief Accountant and Auditor of the
Constitutional Convention are hereby enjoined from taking any action in compliance
with the said organic resolution. In view of the peculiar circumstances of this case,
the Court declares this decision immediately executory. No costs.
||| (Tolentino v. COMELEC, G.R. No. L-34150, [October 16, 1971], 149 PHIL 1-40)
CONSTI 1
Two suits for Prohibition were filed assailing the validity of the Batasang Pambansa
Resolution Nos. 28, 104 and 106 proposing constitutional amendments. After
hearing and oral argument. the Supreme Court dismissed both petitions, reiterating
the effectivity of the present Constitution and upholding the validity of the
questioned resolutions, the Interim Batasang Pambansa, by a majority vote, having
the power to propose amendments for ratification by the sovereign people.
Petition dismissed.
SYLLABUS
1. CONSTITUTIONAL LAW; 1973 CONSTITUTION; FORCE AND APPLICABILITY
THEREOF SETTLED IN THE CASE OF JAVELLANA v. EXECUTIVE SECRETARY. The
case of Javellana v. The Executive Secretary, L-36142, March 31,1973, made
manifest that as of January 17, 1973, the present Constitution came into force and
effect. With such a pronouncement by the Supreme Court and with the recognition
of the cardinal postulate that what the Supreme Court says is not only entitled to
respect but must also be obeyed, a factor for instability was removed. Thereafter,
as a matter of law, all doubts were resolved. The 1973 Constitution is the
fundamental law.
2. ID.; INTERIM BATASANG PAMBANSA; POWER TO PROPOSE AMENDMENTS TO
THE CONSTITUTION BY MAJORITY VOTE. One of the powers of the Interim
Batasang Pambansa is precisely that of proposing amendments. The 1973
Constitution in its Transitory Provisions vested the Interim National Assembly with
the power to propose amendments upon special call by the Prime Minister by a vote
of the majority of its members to be ratified in accordance with the Article on
Amendments.
3. ID.;
ID.;
ID.;
AMENDMENTS
MAY
INCLUDE
REVISION.
In
Del
Rosarios v. Commission on Elections, L-32476, Oct. 20,1970, it was held: ". . . The
fact that the present Constitution may be revised and replaced with a new one . . .
is no argument against the validity of the law because 'amendment' includes the
'revision' or total overhaul of the entire Constitution. At any rate, whether
the Constitution is merely amended in part or revised or totally changed would
become immaterial the moment the same is ratified by the sovereign people. There
is here the adoption of the principle so well-known in American decisions as well as
legal texts that a constituent body can propose anything but conclude nothing.
4. ID.; ID.; ID.; ONLY MAJORITY VOTE NEEDED TO PROPOSE AMENDMENTS. The
Interim Batasang Pambansa, sitting as a constituent body, can propose
amendments. In that capacity, only a majority vote is needed. It would be an
indefensible proposition to assert that the three-fourth votes required when it sits
as a legislative body applies as well when it has been convened as the agency
through which amendments could be proposed. That is not a requirement as far as
constitutional convention is concerned. It is not a requirement either when, as in
this case, the Interim Batasang Pambansa exercises its constituent power to
propose amendments.
5. ID.; ID.; ID.; PEOPLE ADEQUATELY INFORMED OF THE PROPOSED AMENDMENTS
EMBODIED IN THE QUESTIONED RESOLUTIONS. The three questioned resolutions,
Nos. 28, 104 and 106, were approved by the Interim Batasang Pambansa sitting as
a constituent assembly on Feb. 5 and 27, 1981. In the Batasang Pambansa Blg. 22,
the date of the plebiscite is set for April 7, 1981. It is thus within the 90-day period
provided by the Constitution. As for the people being adequately informed, it
cannot be denied that this time, as in the 1980 Occena opinion where the
amendment restored to seventy the retirement age of members of the judiciary, the
2. ID.; ID.; ID.; INTERIM NATIONAL ASSEMBLY, THE AGENCY VESTED WITH THE
POWER TO PROPOSE AMENDMENTS. Under the prevailing doctrine of Tolentinovs.
Comelec (L-34150, Oct. 16, 1971, 41 SCRA 702 and Resolution denying motion for
reconsideration dated Nov. 4, 1971) the proposed amendments to be valid must
come from the constitutional agency vested with the constituent power to do so,
i.e. in the Interim National Assembly provided in the Transitory Article XVII which
would then have to be convened and not from the executive power as vested in the
(Prime Minister) from whom such constituent power has been withheld.
3. ID.; ID.; AMENDMENT CREATING THE INTERIM BATASANG PAMBANSA INVALID.
In Hidalgo vs. Marcos (80 SCRA 530[1977]) Justice Teehankee restated, that under
the controlling doctrine of Tolentino (41 SCRA 702), the October 1976 constitutional
amendments which created the Interim Batasang Pambansa in lieu of the Interim
National Assembly were invalid since as ruled by the Court therein, constitutional
provisions on amendments "dealing with the procedure or manner of amending the
fundamental law are binding upon the Convention and the other departments of the
government (and) are no less binding upon the people" and "the very idea of
departing from the fundamental law is anachronistic in the realm of
constitutionalism and repugnant to the essence of the rule of law". The proposed
amendments at bar having been adopted by the Interim Batasang Pambansa as the
fruit of the invalid October, 1976 amendments must necessarily suffer from the
same congenital infirmity.
4. ID.; ID.; PLEBISCITE FOR THE RATIFICATION THEREOF; DATE SET FOR THE
PLEBISCITE SHORT OF REQUIRED PERIOD. Justice Teehankee reiterates his stand
in Sanidad(73 SCRA 333 [1976]) that the doctrine of fair and proper submission first
enunciated by a simple majority of six Justices (of an eleven-member Court prior to
the 1973 Constitution which increased the official composition of the Court to
fifteen) in Gonzales vs. Comelec (21 SCRA 774) and subsequently officially adopted
by the required constitutional two-thirds majority vote of the Court (of eight votes,
then) in Tolentino is fully applicable in the case at bar. The three resolutions
proposing complex, complicated and radical amendments of our very structure of
government were considered and approved by the Interim Batasang Pambansa
sitting as a constituent assembly on February 27, 1981. It set the date of the
plebiscite for thirty-nine days later on April 7, 1981 which is totally inadequate and
43
CONSTI 1
far short of the ninety-day period fixed by the Constitution for submittal to the
people to "sufficiently inform them of the amendments to be voted upon, to
conscientiously deliberate thereon and to express their will in a genuine manner."
5. ID.; ID.; ID.; AMENDMENTS MUST BE PROPERLY LAID TO THE PEOPLE.
"The Constitution can only be amended by the people expressing themselves
according to the procedure ordained by the Constitution. Therefore, amendments
must be fairly laid before the people for their blessing or spurning. The people are
not to be mere rubber stamps. They are not to vote blindly. They must be afforded
ample opportunity to mull over the original provisions, compare them with the
proposed amendments, and try to reach a conclusion as the dictates of their
conscience suggest, free from the incubus of extraneous or possibly insidious
influences. We believe the word 'submitted' can only mean that the government,
within its maximum capabilities, should strain every effort to inform every citizen of
the provisions to be amended, and the proposed amendments and the meaning,
nature and effects thereof. . . . What the Constitution in effect directs is that the
government, in submitting an amendment for ratification, should put every
instrumentality or agency within its structural framework to enlighten the people,
educate them with respect to their act of ratification or rejection. For, as we have
earlier stated, one thing is submission and another is ratification. There must be fair
submission, intelligent consent or rejection. If with all these safeguards the people
still approve the amendments no matter how prejudicial it is to them, then so be it.
For the people decree their own fate." (Gonzales vs. Comelec, Sanchez, J., separate
opinion, 21 SCRA 774).
DECISION
FERNANDO, C.J p:
The challenge in these two prohibition proceedings against the validity of three
Batasang Pambansa Resolutions 1 proposing constitutional amendments, goes
further than merely assailing their alleged constitutional infirmity. Petitioners
Samuel Occena and Ramon A. Gonzales, both members of the Philippine Bar and
former delegates to the 1971 Constitutional Convention that framed the
present Constitution, are suing as taxpayers. The rather unorthodox aspect of these
petitions is the assertion that the 1973 Constitution is not the fundamental law, the
Javellana 2 ruling to the contrary notwithstanding. To put it at its mildest, such an
approach has the arresting charm of novelty but nothing else. It is in fact self
defeating, for if such were indeed the case, petitioners have come to the wrong
forum. We sit as a Court duty-bound to uphold and apply that Constitution. To
contend otherwise as was done here would be, quite clearly, an exercise in futility.
Nor are the arguments of petitioners cast in the traditional form of constitutional
litigation any more persuasive. For reasons to be set forth, we dismiss the petitions.
The suits for prohibition were filed respectively on March 6 3 and March 12,
1981. 4 On March 10 and 13 respectively, respondents were required to answer
each within ten days from notice. 5 There was a comment on the part of the
respondents. Thereafter, both cases were set for hearing and were duly argued on
March 26 by petitioners and Solicitor General Estelito P. Mendoza for respondents.
With the submission of pertinent data in amplification of the oral argument, the
cases were deemed submitted for decision. LLpr
It is the ruling of the Court, as set forth at the outset, that the petitions must be
dismissed.
CONSTI 1
intensively and extensively discussed at the Interim Batasang Pambansa, as well as
through the mass media, it cannot, therefore, be said that our people are unaware
of the advantages and disadvantages of the proposed amendment." 17
(2) Petitioners would urge upon us the proposition that the amendments proposed
are so extensive in character that they go far beyond the limits of the authority
conferred on the Interim Batasang Pambansa as successor of the Interim National
Assembly. For them, what was done was to revise and not to amend. It suffices to
quote from the opinion of Justice Makasiar, speaking for the Court, in Del
Rosario v. Commission on Elections 18 to dispose of this contention. Thus: "3. And
whether the Constitutional Convention will only propose amendments to
the Constitution or entirely overhaul the present Constitution and propose an
entirely new Constitution based on an ideology foreign to the democratic system, is
of no moment; because the same will be submitted to the people for ratification.
Once ratified by the sovereign people, there can be no debate about the validity of
the new Constitution. 4. The fact that the present Constitution may be revised and
replaced with a new one . . . is no argument against the validity of the law because
'amendment' includes the 'revision' or total overhaul of the entire Constitution. At
any rate, whether the Constitution is merely amended in part or revised or totally
changed would become immaterial the moment the same is ratified by the
sovereign people." 19 There is here the adoption of the principle so well-known in
American decisions as well as legal texts that a constituent body can propose
anything but conclude nothing. 20 We are not disposed to deviate from such a
principle not only sound in theory but also advantageous in practice. LibLex
(3) That leaves only the questions of the vote necessary to propose amendments as
well as the standard for proper submission. Again, petitioners have not made out a
case that calls for a judgment in their favor. The language of
the Constitution supplies the answer to the above questions. The Interim Batasang
Pambansa, sitting as a constituent body, can propose amendments. In that
capacity, only a majority vote is needed. It would be an indefensible proposition to
assert that the three-fourth votes required when it sits as a legislative body applies
as well when it has been convened as the agency through which amendments could
be proposed. That is not a requirement as far as a constitutional convention is
concerned. It is not a requirement either when, as in this case, the InterimBatasang
Pambansa exercises its constituent power to propose amendments. Moreover, even
on the assumption that the requirement of three-fourth votes applies, such
extraordinary majority was obtained. It is not disputed that Resolution No. 1
proposing an amendment allowing a natural-born citizen of the Philippines
naturalized in a foreign country to own a limited area of land for residential
purposes was approved by the vote of 122 to 5; Resolution No. 2 dealing with the
Presidency, the Prime Minister and the Cabinet, and the National Assembly by a
vote of 147 to 5 with 1 abstention; and Resolution No. 3 on the amendment to the
Article on the Commission on Elections by a vote of 148 to 2 with 1 abstention.
Where then is the alleged infirmity? As to the requisite standard for a proper
submission, the question may be viewed not only from the standpoint of the period
that must elapse before the holding of the plebiscite but also from the standpoint of
such amendments having been called to the attention of the people so that it could
not plausibly be maintained that they were properly informed as to the proposed
changes. As to the period, the Constitution indicates the way the matter should be
resolved. There is no ambiguity to the applicable provision: "Any amendment to, or
revision of, this Constitution shall be valid when ratified by a majority of the votes
cast in a plebiscite which shall be held not later than three months after the
approval of such amendment or revision." 21 The three resolutions were approved
by the Interim Batasang Pambansa sitting as a constituent assembly on February 5
45
CONSTI 1
The Court ruled, first, by a unanimous vote, that no grave abuse of discretion could
be attributed to the public respondent COMELEC in dismissing the petition filed by
PIRMA therein, it appearing that it only complied with the dispositions in the
Decision of this Court in G.R. No. 127325, promulgated on March 19, 1997, and its
Resolution of June 10, 1997.
The Court next considered the question of whether there was need to resolve the
second issue posed by the petitioners, namely, that the Court re-examine its ruling
as regards R.A. 6735. On this issue, the Chief Justice and six (6) other members of
the Court, namely, Regalado, Davide, Romero, Bellosillo, Kapunan and Torres, JJ.,
voted that there was no need to take it up. Vitug, J., agreed that there was no need
for re-examination of said second issue since the case at bar is not the proper
vehicle for that purpose. Five (5) other members of the Court, namely, Melo, Puno,
Francisco, Hermosisima and Panganiban, JJ., opined that there was need for such a
re-examination. Justices Davide, Bellosillo, Vitug, Kapunan, Francisco and
Panganiban wrote separate opinions which are hereto attached.
WHEREFORE, the petition is DISMISSED.
||| (PIRMA v. COMELEC, G.R. No. 129754, [September 23, 1997])
RESOLUTION
Gentlemen:
Quoted hereunder, for your information, is a resolution of the Court En
Banc dated SEPTEMBER 23, 1997.
G.R. No. 129754 (People's Initiative for Reform, Modernization and Action (PIRMA),
et al., etc. vs. The Commission on Elections, et al.)
The Court NOTED the reply to petitioners' comment filed by Intervenor Joker P.
Arroyo, dated September 22, 1997. The Court then deliberated on the petition in
relation to the comments and other pleadings on record, and thereafter voted on
the issues thereunder arising.
46
CONSTI 1
in his capacity as President of the Senate; and Senator JOSE ROY, in his capacity as
President Pro Tempore of the Senate, respondents.
[G.R. No. L-36236. March 31, 1973.]
EDDIE B. MONTECLARO, [personally and in his capacity President of the National
Press Club of the Philippines], petitioner, vs, THE EXECUTIVE SECRETARY, THE
SECRETARY OF PUBLIC INFORMATION, THE AUDITOR GENERAL, THE BUDGET
COMMISSIONER & THE NATIONAL TREASURER, respondent.
[G.R. No. L-36283. March 31, 1973.]
NAPOLEON V. DILAG, ALFREDO SALAPANTAN, JR., LEONARDO ASODISEN, JR., and
RAUL M. GONZALEZ, petitioners, vs. THE HONORABLE SECRETARY OF NATIONAL
DEFENSE, THE HONORABLE BUDGET COMMISSIONER, THE HONORABLE AUDITOR
GENERAL, respondents.
RESOLUTION
CONCEPCION, J p:
The above entitled five (5) cases are a sequel of cases G.R. Nos. L-35925, L-35929,
L-35940, L-35941, L-35942, L-35948, L-35953, L-35961, L-35965 and L-35979,
decided on January 22, 1973, to which We will hereafter refer collectively plebiscite
cases.
Background of the Plebiscite Cases
[G.R. No. L-36142. March 31, 1973.]
JOSUE JAVELLANA, petitioner, vs. THE EXECUTIVE SECRETARY, THE
SECRETARY OF NATIONAL DEFENSE, THE SECRETARY OF JUSTICE and THE
SECRETARY OF FINANCE, respondents.
[G.R. No. L-36164. March 31, 1973.]
VIDAL TAN, J. ANTONIO ARANETA, ALEJANDRO ROCES, MANUEL CRUDO, ANTONIO U.
MIRANDA, EMILIO DE PERALTA and LORENZO M. TAADA, petitioners, vs. THE
EXECUTIVE SECRETARY, THE SECRETARY OF FINANCE, THE SECRETARY OF JUSTICE,
THE SECRETARY OF LAND REFORM, THE SECRETARY OF NATIONAL DEFENSE, THE
AUDITOR GENERAL, THE BUDGET COMMISSIONER, THE CHAIRMAN OF
PRESIDENTIAL COMMISSION ON REORGANIZATION, THE TREASURER OF THE
PHILIPPINES, THE COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS and THE COMMISSIONER OF CIVIL
SERVICE, respondents.
[G.R. No. L-36165. March 31, 1973.]
GERARDO ROXAS, AMBROSIO PADILLA, JOVITO R. SALONGA, SALVADOR H. LAUREL,
RAMON V. MITRA, JR. and EVA ESTRADA-KALAW, petitioners, vs. ALEJANDRO
MELCHOR, in his capacity as Executive Secretary; JUAN PONCE ENRILE, in his
capacity as Secretary of National Defense; General ROMEO ESPINO, in his capacity
as Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces of the philippines; CONSTANCIO E.
CASTAEDA, in his capacity as Secretary of General Services; Senator GIL J. PUYAT,
The factual setting thereof is set forth in the decision rendered, from which We
quote:
"On March 16, 1967, Congress of the Philippines passed Resolution No. 2, which was
amended by Resolution No. 4 of said body, adopted on June 17, 1969, calling a
convention to propose amendments to the Constitution of the Philippines. Said
Resolution No. 2, as amended, was implemented by Republic Act No. 6132,
approved on August 24, 1970, pursuant to the provisions of which the election of
delegates to said Convention was held on November 10, 1970, and the, 1971
Constitutional Convention began to perform its functions on June 1, 1971. While the
Convention was in session on September 21, 1972, the President issued
Proclamation No. 1081 placing the entire Philippines under Martial Law. On
November 29, 1972, the Convention approved its Proposed Constitution of the
Republic of the Philippines. The next day, November 30, 1972, the President of the
Philippines issued Presidential Decree No. 73, 'submitting to the Filipino people for
ratification or rejection the Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines proposed
by the 1971 Constitutional Convention, and appropriating funds therefor,' as well as
setting the plebiscite for said ratification or rejection of the Proposed Constitution
on January 15, 1973.
"Soon after, or on December 7, 1972, Charito Planas filed, with this Court, Case G.R.
No. L-35925, against the Commission on Elections, the Treasurer of the Philippines
and the Auditor General, to enjoin said 'respondents or their agents from
implementing Presidential Decree No. 73, in any manner, until further orders of the
Court,' upon the grounds, inter alia that said Presidential Decree 'has no force and
effect as law because the calling . . . of such plebiscite, the setting of guidelines for
47
CONSTI 1
the conduct of the same, the prescription of the ballots to be used and the question
to be answered by the voters, and the appropriation of public funds for the purpose,
are, by the Constitution, lodged exclusively in Congress . . .,' and 'there is no proper
submission to the people of said Proposed Constitution set for January 15, 1973,
there being no freedom of speech, press and assembly, and there being sufficient
time to inform the people of the contents thereof.'
"Substantially identical actions were filed, on December 8, 1972, by Pablo C.
Sanidad against the Commission on Elections (Case G.R. No. L-35929); on
December 11, 1972, by Gerardo Roxas, et al., against the Commission on Elections,
Director of Printing, the National Treasurer and the Auditor General (Case G.R. L35940), by Eddie B. Monteclaro against the Commission on Elections and the
Treasurer of the Philippines (Case G.R. No L-35941), and by Sedfrey A. Ordoez, et
al. against the National Treasurer and the Commission on Elections (Case G.R. No. L35942); on December 12, 1972, by Vidal Tan, et al., against the Commission on
Elections, the Treasurer of the Philippines, the Auditor General and the Director of
Printing (Case G.R. No. L-35948), and by Jose W. Diokno and Benigno S. Aquino
against the Commission on Elections (Case G R No. L-35953); on December 14,
1972, by Jacinto Jimenez against the Commission on Elections, the Auditor General,
the Treasurer of the Philippines and the Director of the Bureau of Printing (Case G.R.
No. L-35961), and by Raul M. Gonzales against the Commission on Elections, the
Budget Commissioner, the National Treasurer and the Auditor General (Case G.R.
No. L-35965), and on December 16, 1972, by Ernesto C. Hidalgo against the
Commission on Elections, the Secretary of Education, the National Treasurer and the
Auditor General (Case G.R. No. L-35979).
"In all these cases, except the last (G.R. No. L-35979), the respondents were
required to file their answers 'not later than 12:00 (o'clock) noon of Saturday,
December 16, 1972.' Said cases were, also, set for hearing and partly heard on
Monday, December 18, 1972, at 9:30 a.m. The hearing was continued on December
19, 1972. By agreement of the parties, the aforementioned last case G.R. No. L35979 was, also, heard, jointly with the others, on December 19, 1972. At the
conclusion of the hearing, on that date, the parties in all of the aforementioned
cases were given a short period of time within which 'to submit their notes on the
points they desire to stress.' Said notes were filed on different dates, between
December 21, 1972, and January 4, 1973.
"Meanwhile, or on December 17, 1972, the President had issued an order
temporarily suspending the effects of Proclamation No. 1081, for the purpose of
free and open debate on the Proposed Constitution. On December 23, the President
announced the postponement of the plebiscite for ratification or rejection of the
Proposed Constitution. No formal action to this effect was taken until January 7,
1973, when General Order No. 20 was issued, directing 'that the plebiscite
scheduled to be held on January 15, 1973 be postponed until further notice.' Said
General Order No. 20, moreover, 'suspended in the meantime' the 'order of
December 17, 1972, temporarily suspending the effects of Proclamation No. 1081
for purposes of free and open debate on the proposed Constitution.'
"In view of these events relative to the postponement of the aforementioned
plebiscite, the Court deemed it fit to refrain, for the time being, from deciding the
aforementioned cases, for neither the date nor the conditions under which said
plebiscite would be held were known or announced officially. Then, again, Congress
was, pursuant to the 1935 Constitution, scheduled to meet in regular session on
January 22, 1973, and since the main objection to Presidential Decree No. 73 was
that the President does not have the legislative authority to call a plebiscite and
CONSTI 1
"[5]Do you like the way President Marcos is running the affairs of the government?"
[Bulletin Today, January 10, 1973; additional question italics.]
'11.That on January 11, 1973, it was reported that six (6) more questions would be
submitted to the so called Assemblies:
"[1]Do you approve of the citizens assemblies as the base of popular government to
decide issues of national interests?
We want President Marcos to continue with Martial Law. We want him to exercise his
powers with more authority. We want him to be strong and firm so that he can
accomplish all his reform programs and establish normalcy in the country. If all
other measures fail, we want President Marcos to declare a revolutionary
government along the lines of the new Constitution without the ad interim
Assembly."
"[4]Do you want the elections to be held in November, 1973 in accordance with the
provisions of the 1935 Constitution?
'Attention is respectfully invited to the comments on "Question No. 3," which reads:
"[5]If the elections would not be held, when do you want the next elections to be
called?
"QUESTION No. 3
"[6]Do you want martial law to continue?" [Bulletin Today, January 11, 1973; italics
supplied.]
'12.That according to reports, the returns with respect to the six (6) additional
questions quoted above will be on a form similar or identical to Annex "A" hereof;
'13. That attached to page 1 of Annex "A" is another page which we marked as
Annex "A-1", and which reads:
"COMMENTS ON
QUESTION No. 1
In order to broaden the base of citizen participation in government.
QUESTION No. 2
But we do not want the Ad Interim Assembly to be convoked. Or if it is to be
convened at all, it should not be done so until after at least seven (7) years from
the approval of the New Constitution by the Citizens Assemblies.
QUESTION No. 3
The vote of the Citizens Assemblies should already be considered the plebiscite on
the Constitution.
If the Citizens Assemblies approve of the Constitution, then the new Constitution
should be deemed ratified.
The vote of the Citizens Assemblies should be considered the plebiscite on the New
Constitution.
If the Citizens Assemblies approve of the New Constitution, then the new
Constitution should be deemed ratified."
This, we are afraid, and therefore allege, is pregnant with ominous possibilities.
'14.That, in the meantime, speaking on television and over the radio, on January 7,
1973, the President announced that the limited freedom of debate on the proposed
Constitution was being withdrawn and that the proclamation of martial law and the
orders and decrees issued thereunder would thenceforth strictly be enforced [Daily
Express, January 8, 1973];
'15.That petitioners have reason to fear, and therefore state, that the question
added in the last list of questions to be asked to the Citizens Assemblies, namely:
"Do you approve of the New Constitution?"
in relation to the question following it:
"Do you still want a plebiscite to becalled to ratify the new Constitution?"
would be an attempt to by-pass and short-circuit this Honorable Court before which
the question of the validity of the plebiscite on the proposed Constitution is now
pending;
QUESTION No. 4
'16.That petitioners have reason to fear, and therefore allege, that if an affirmative
answer to the two questions just referred to will be reported then this Honorable
Court and the entire nation will be confronted with a fait accompli which has been
attained in a highly unconstitutional and undemocratic manner;
We are sick and tired of too frequent elections. We are fed up with politics, of so
many debates and so much expenses.
'17.That the fait accompli would consist in the supposed expression of the people
approving the proposed Constitution;
QUESTION No. 5
'18.That, if such event would happen, then the case before this Honorable Court
could, to all intents and purposes, become moot because, petitioners fear, and they
49
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therefore allege, that on the basis of such supposed expression of the will of the
people through the Citizens Assemblies, it would be announced that the proposed
Constitution, with all its defects, both congenital and otherwise, has been ratified;
'4.That the proceedings of the so-called Citizens' Assemblies are illegal, null and
void particularly insofar as such proceedings are being made the basis of a
supposed consensus for the ratification of the proposed Constitution because:
'19.That, in such a situation, the Philippines will be facing a real crisis and there is
likelihood of confusion if not chaos, because then, the people and their officials will
not know which Constitution is in force.
[a]The elections contemplated in the Constitution, Article XV, at which the proposed
constitutional amendments are to be submitted for ratification, are elections at
which only qualified and duly registered voters are permitted to vote, whereas, the
so called Citizens' Assemblies were participated in by persons 15 years of age and
older, regardless of qualifications or lack thereof, as prescribed in the Election Code;
[b]Elections or plebiscites for the ratification of constitutional amendments
contemplated in Article XV of the Constitution have provisions for the secrecy of
choice and of vote, which is one of the safeguards of freedom of action, but votes in
the Citizens' Assemblies were open and were cast by raising hands;
[c]The Election Code makes ample provisions for free, orderly and honest elections,
and such provisions are a minimum requirement for elections or plebiscites for the
ratification of constitutional amendments, but there were no similar provisions to
guide and regulate proceedings of the so called Citizens' Assemblies;
[d]It is seriously to be doubted that, for lack of material time, more than a handful
of the so called Citizens' Assemblies have been actually formed, because the
mechanics of their organization were still being discussed a day or so before the
day they were supposed to begin functioning
'20.That the crisis mentioned above can only be avoided if this Honorable Court will
immediately decide and announce its decision on the present petition;
'21.That with the withdrawal by the President of the limited freedom of discussion
on the proposed Constitution which was given to the people pursuant to See. 3 of
Presidential Decree No. 73, the opposition of respondents to petitioners' prayer that
the proposed plebiscite be prohibited has now collapsed and that a free plebiscite
can no longer be held.'
"At about the same time, a similar prayer was made in a 'manifestation' filed by the
petitioners in L-35949, 'Gerardo Roxas, et al, v. Commission on Elections, et al.,' and
L-35942, 'Sedfrey Ordoez, et al. v. The National Treasurer, et al.'
"The next day, January 13, 1973, which was a Saturday, the Court issued a
resolution requiring the respondents in said three (3) cases to comment on said
'urgent motion' and 'manifestation,' 'not later that Tuesday noon, January 16, 1973.'
Prior thereto, or on January 15, 1973, shortly before noon, the petitioners in said
Case G.R. No. L-35948 filed a 'supplemental motion for issuance of restraining order
and inclusion of additional respondents,' praying
'. . . that a restraining order be issued enjoining and restraining respondent
Commission on Elections, as well as the Department of Local Governments and its
head, Secretary Jose Roo; the Department of Agrarian Reforms and its head,
Secretary Conrado Estrella; the National Ratification Coordinating Committee and
its Chairman, Guillermo de Vega; their deputies, subordinates and substitutes, and
all other officials and persons who may be assigned such task, from collecting,
certifying, and announcing and reporting to the President or other officials
concerned, the so-called Citizens' Assemblies referendum results allegedly obtained
when they were supposed to have met during the period comprised between
January 10 and January 15, 1973, on the two questions quoted in paragraph 1 of
this Supplemental Urgent Motion.'
"In support of this prayer, it was alleged
'3.That petitioners are now before this Honorable Court in order to ask further that
this Honorable Court issue a restraining order enjoining herein respondents,
particularly respondent Commission on Elections as well as the Department of Local
Governments and its head, Secretary Jose Roo; the Department of Agrarian
Reforms and its head, Secretary Conrado Estrella; the National Ratification
Coordinating Committee and its Chairman, Guillermo de Vega; and their deputies,
subordinates and/or substitutes, from collecting certifying, announcing and
reporting to the President the supposed Citizens' Assemblies referendum results
allegedly obtained when they were supposed to have met during the period
between January 10 and January 15, 1973, particularly on the two questions quoted
in paragraph 1 of this Supplemental Urgent Motion;
'Provincial governors and city and municipal mayors had been meeting with barrio
captains and community leaders since last Monday [January 8, 1973] to thresh out
the mechanics in the formation of the Citizens' Assemblies and the topics for
discussion.' [Bulletin Today, January 10, 1973].
'It should be recalled that the Citizens' Assemblies were ordered formed only at the
beginning of the year [Daily Express, January 1, 1973], and considering the lack of
experience of the local organizers of said assemblies, as well as the absence of
sufficient guidelines for organization, it is too much to believe that such assemblies
could be organized at such a short notice.
'5.That for lack of material time, the appropriate amended petition to include the
additional officials and government agencies mentioned in paragraph 3 of this
Supplemental Urgent Motion could not be completed because, as noted in the
Urgent Motion of January 12, 1973, the submission of the proposed Constitution to
the Citizens' Assemblies was not made known to the public until January 11, 1973.
But be that as it may, the said additional officials and agencies may be properly
included in the petition at bar because:
[a]The herein petitioners have prayed in their petition for the annulment not only of
Presidential Decree No. 73, but also of "any similar decree, proclamation, order or
instruction."
so that Presidential Decree No. 86, insofar at least as it attempts to submit the
proposed Constitution to a plebiscite by the so-called Citizens' Assemblies, is
properly in issue in this case, and those who enforce, implement, or carry out the
said Presidential Decree No. 86, and the instructions incidental thereto clearly fall
within the scope of this petition;
[b]In their petition, petitioners sought the issuance of a writ of preliminary
injunction restraining not only the respondents named in the petition but also their
"agents" from implementing not only Presidential Decree No. 73, but also "any
other similar decree, order, instruction, or proclamation in relation to the holding of
a plebiscite on January 15, 1973 for the purpose of submitting to the Filipino people
50
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for their ratification or rejection the 1972 Draft or proposed Constitution approved
by the Constitutional Convention on November 30, 1972"; and finally,
[c]Petitioners prayed for such other relief which may be just and equitable. [p. 39,
Petition].
'Therefore, viewing the case from all angles, the officials and government agencies
mentioned in paragraph 3 of this Supplemental Urgent Motion, can lawfully he
reached by the processes of this Honorable Court by reason of this petition,
considering, furthermore, that the Commission on Elections has under our laws the
power, among others, of:
"(a)Direct and immediate supervision and control over national, provincial, city,
municipal and municipal district officials required by law to perform duties relative
to the conduct of elections on matters pertaining to the enforcement of the
provisions of this Code . . ." [Election Code of 1971, Sec. 3].
'6.That unless the petition at bar is decided immediately and the Commission on
Elections, together with the officials and government agencies mentioned in
paragraph 3 of this Supplemental Urgent Motion are restrained or enjoined from
collecting, certifying, reporting or announcing to the President the results of the
alleged voting of the so-called Citizens' Assemblies, irreparable damage will be
caused to the Republic of the Philippines, the Filipino people, the cause of freedom
and democracy, and the petitioners herein because:
[a]After the result of the supposed voting on the questions mentioned in paragraph
1 hereof shall have been announced, a conflict will arise between those who
maintain that the 1935 Constitution is still in force, on the one hand, and those who
will maintain that it has been superseded by the proposed Constitution, on the
other, thereby creating confusion, if not chaos;
[b]Even the jurisdiction of this Court will be subject to serious attack because the
advocates of the theory that the proposed Constitution has been ratified by reason
of the announcement of the results of the proceedings of the so-called Citizens'
Assemblies will argue that, General Order No. 3, which shall also be deemed ratified
pursuant to the Transitory Provisions of the proposed Constitution, has placed
Presidential Decree Nos. 73 and 86 beyond the reach and jurisdiction of this
Honorable Court.'
"On the same date January 15, 1973 the Court passed a resolution requiring
the respondents in said case G.R. No. L-35948 to file 'file an answer to the said
motion not later than 4 P.M., Tuesday, January 16, 1973,' and setting the motion for
hearing 'on January 17, 1973, at 9:30 a.m.' While the case was being heard, on the
date last mentioned, at noontime, the Secretary of Justice called on the writer of
this opinion and said that, upon instructions of the President, he (the Secretary of
Justice) was delivering to him (the writer) a copy of Proclamation No. 1102, which
had just been signed by the President. Thereupon, the writer returned to the
Session Hall and announced to the Court, the parties in G.R. No. L-35948
inasmuch as the hearing in connection therewith was still going on and the public
there present that the President had, according to information conveyed by the
Secretary of Justice, signed said Proclamation No. 1102, earlier that morning.
Thereupon, the writer read Proclamation No. 1102 which is of the following tenor:
"Such is the background of the cases submitted for Our determination. After
admitting some of the allegations made in the petition in L-35948 and denying the
51
'ALEJANDRO MELCHOR
'Executive Secretary'
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other allegations thereof, respondents therein alleged in their answer thereto, by
way of affirmative defenses: 1) that the 'questions raised' in said petition 'are
political in character'; 2) that 'the Constitutional Convention acted freely and had
plenary authority to propose not only amendments but a Constitution which would
supersede the present Constitution' as that 'the President's call for a plebiscite and
the appropriation of funds for this purpose are valid'; 4) that 'there is not an
improper submission' and there can be a plebiscite under Martial Law'; and 5) that
the 'argument that the Proposed Constitution is vague and incomplete, makes an
unconstitutional delegation of power, includes a referendum on the proclamation of
Martial Law and purports to exercise judicial power' is 'not relevant and . . . without
merit.' Identical defenses were set up in the other cases under consideration.
"Immediately after the hearing held on January 17, 1973, or since the afternoon of
that date, the Members of the Court have been deliberating on the aforementioned
cases and, after extensive discussions on the merits thereof, have deemed it best
that each Member write his own views thereon and that thereafter the Chief Justice
should state the result or the votes thus cast on the points in issue. Hence, the
individual views of my brethren in the Court are set forth in the opinions attached
hereto, except that, instead of writing their separate opinions, some Members have
preferred to merely concur in the opinion of one of our colleagues."
Then the writer of said decision expressed his own opinion on the issues involved
therein, after which he recapitulated the views of the Members of the Court, as
follows:
"1.There is unanimity on the justiciable nature of the issue on the legality of
Presidential Decree No. 73.
"2.On the validity of the decree itself, Justices Makalintal, Castro, Fernando,
Teehankee, Esguerra and myself, or six (6) Members of the Court, are of the opinion
that the issue has become moot and academic, whereas Justices Barredo, Makasiar
and Antonio voted to uphold the validity of said Decree.
"3.On the authority of the 1971 Constitutional Convention to pass the proposed
Constitution or to incorporate therein the provisions contested by the petitioners in
L-35948, Justices Makalintal, Castro, Teehankee and Esguerra opine that the issue
has become moot and academic. Justices Fernando, Barredo, Makasiar, Antonio and
myself have voted to uphold the authority of the Convention.
"4.Justice Fernando, likewise, expressed the view that the 1971 Constitutional
Convention had authority to continue in the performance of its functions despite the
proclamation of Martial Law. In effect, Justices Barredo, Makasiar and Antonio hold
the same view.
"5.On the question whether the proclamation of Martial Law affected the proper
submission of the proposed Constitution to a plebiscite, insofar as the freedom
essential therefor is concerned Justice Fernando is of the opinion that there is a
repugnance between the election contemplated under Art. XV of the 1935
Constitution and the existence of Martial Law, and would, therefore, grant the
petitions were they not moot and academic. Justices Barredo, Antonio and Esguerra
are of the opinion that issue involves questions of fact which cannot be
predetermined, and that Martial Law per se does not necessarily preclude the
factual possibility of adequate freedom for the purposes contemplated.
"6.On Presidential Proclamation No. 1102, the following views were expressed:
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is without authority to create the Citizens Assemblies"; that the same "are without
power to approve the proposed Constitution . . ."; "that the President is without
power to proclaim the ratification by the Filipino people of the proposed
Constitution"; and "that the election held to ratify the proposed Constitution was
not a free election, hence null and void."
Similar actions were filed, on January 23, 1973, by Vidal Tan, J. Antonio Araneta,
Alejandro Roces, Manuel Crudo, Antonio U. Miranda, Emilio de Peralta and Lorenzo
M. Taada against the Executive Secretary, the Secretaries of Finance Justice, Land
Reform, and National Defense, the Auditor General, Budget Commissioner, the
Chairman of the Presidential Commission on Reorganization, the Treasurer of the
Philippines, the Commission on Elections and the Commissioner of Civil Service 4 ;
on February 3, 1973, by Eddie Monteclaro, personally and as President of the
National Press Club of the Philippines, against the Executive Secretary, the
Secretary of Public Information, the Auditor General, Budget Commissioner and the
National Treasurer 5 ; and on February 12, 1973, by Napoleon V. Dilag, Alfredo
Salapantan, Jr., Leonardo Asodisen, Jr. and Raul M. Gonzales, 6 against the
Executive Secretary, the Secretary of National Defense, the Budget Commissioner
and the Auditor General.
Likewise, on January 23, 1973, Gerardo Roxas, Ambrosio Padilla, Jovito R. Salonga,
Salvador H. Laurel, 7 Ramon V. Mitra, Jr. and Eva Estrada-Kalaw, the first as "duly
elected Senator and Minority Floor Leader of the Senate," and the others as "duly
elected members" thereof, filed Case G.R. No. L-36165, against the Executive
Secretary, the Secretary of National Defense, the Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces
of the Philippines, the Secretary of General Services, the President and the
President Pro Tempore of the Senate. In their petition as amended on January 26,
1973 petitioners Gerardo Roxas, et al. allege, inter alia, that the term of office of
three (3) of the aforementioned petitioners 8 would expire en December 31, 1975,
and that of the others 9 on December 31, 1977; that pursuant to our 1935
Constitution, "which is still in force," Congress of the Philippines "must convene for
its 8th Session on Monday, January 22, 1973, at 10:00 A.M., which is the regular
customary hour of its opening session"; that "on said day, from 10:00 A.M. up to the
afternoon," said petitioner "along with their other colleagues, were unlawfully
prevent from using the Senate Session Hall, the same having be closed by the
authorities in physical possession and control of the Legislative Building'; that "(a)t
about 5:00 to 6:00 P.M. of the said day, the premises of the entire Legislative
Building were ordered cleared by the same authorities, and no one was allowed to
enter and have access to said premises"; that "(r)espondent Senate President Gil J.
Puyat and, in his absence, respondent President Pro Tempore Jose Roy were asked
by petitioning Senators to perform their duties under the law and the Rules of the
Senate, but unlawfully refrained and continue to refrain from doing so"; that the
petitioners "are ready and willing to perform their duties as duly elected members
of the Senate of the Philippines," but respondents Secretary of National Defense,
Executive Secretary and Chief of Staff, "through their agents and representatives,
are preventing petitioners from performing their duties as duly elected Senators of
the Philippines"; that "the Senate premises in the Congress of the Philippines
Building . . . are occupied by and are under the physical control of the elements of
military organizations under the direction of said respondents"; that, as per "official
reports, the Department of General Services . . . is now the civilian agent in custody
of the premises of the Legislative Building"; that respondents "have unlawfully
excluded and prevented, and continue to so exclude and prevent" the petitioners
from the performance of their sworn duties, invoking the alleged approval of the
1972 (1973) Constitution of the Philippines by action of the so-called Citizens'
Assemblies on January 10, 1973 to January 15, 197 ', as stated in and by virtue of
Premised upon the foregoing allegations, said petitioners prayed that, "pending
hearing on the merits, a writ of preliminary mandatory injunction be issued ordering
the respondents Executive Secretary, the Secretary of National Defense, the Chief
of Staff of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, and the . . . Secretary of General
Services, as well as all their agents, representatives and subordinates to vacate the
premises of the Senate of the Philippines and to deliver physical possession of the
same to the President of the Senate or his authorized representative"; and that
"after hearing, judgment be rendered declaring null and void Proclamation No. 1102
. . . and any order, decree, or proclamation having the same import and objective,
issuing the writs of prohibition and mandamus, as prayed for against the abovementioned respondents, and making the writ of injunction permanent; and that a
writ of mandamus be issued against the respondents Gil J. Puyat and Jose Roy
directing them to comply with their duties and functions as President and President
Pro Tempore, respectively, of the Senate of the Philippines, as provided by law and
the Rules of the Senate."
Required to comment on the above-mentioned petitions and/or amended petitions,
respondents filed, with the leave of Court first had and obtained, a consolidated
comment on said petitions and/or amended petitions, a consolidated comment on
said petitions and/or amended petitions, alleging that the same ought to have been
dismissed outright; controverting petitioners' allegations concerning the alleged
lack or impairment of the freedom of the 1971 Constitutional Convention to approve
the proposed Constitution, its alleged lack of authority to incorporate certain
contested provisions thereof, the alleged lack of authority of the President to create
and establish Citizens' Assemblies "for the purpose of submitting to them the
matter of ratification of the new Constitution," the alleged "improper or inadequate
53
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submission of the proposed constitution," the "procedure for ratification
adopted . . . through the Citizens Assemblies"; and maintaining that: 1) "(t)he Court
is without jurisdiction to act on these petitions"; 2) the questions raised therein are
"political in character and therefore non-justiciable"; 3) "there was substantial
compliance with Article XV of the 1935 Constitution"; 4) "(t)he Constitution was
properly submitted to the people in a free, orderly and honest election"; 5)
"Proclamation No. 1102, certifying the results of the election, is conclusive upon the
courts"; and 6) "(t)he amending process outlined in Article XV of the 1935
Constitution is not exclusive of other modes of amendment."
Respondents Puyat and Roy, in said Case G.R. No. L-36165, filed their separate
comment therein, alleging that "(t)he subject matter" of said case "is a highly
political question which, under the circumstances, this . . . Court would not be in a
position to act upon judicially," and that, in view of the opinions expressed by three
members of this Court in its decision in the plebiscite cases, in effect upholding the
validity of Proclamation No. 1102, "further proceedings in this case may only be an
academic exercise in futility."
On February 5, 1973, the Court issued a resolution requiring respondents in L 36236
to comment on the petition therein not later than Saturday, February 10, 1973, and
setting the case for hearing on February 12, 1973, at 9:30 a.m. By resolution dated
February 7, 1973, this Court resolved to consider the comments of the respondents
in cases G.R. Nos. L-36142, L-36161, L-36165, as motions to dismiss the petitions
therein, and to set said cases for hearing on the same date and time as L-36236.
On that date, the parties in G.R. No. L-36283 10 agreed that the same be, likewise,
heard, as it was, in fact, heard jointly with the aforementioned cases G.R. Nos. L36142, L-36164, L-36165 and L 36236. The hearing, which began on February 12,
shortly after 9:30 a.m., was continued not only that after but, also, on February 13,
14, 15 and 16, morning and afternoon, after which the parties were granted up to
February 24, 1973, noon, within which to submit their notes arguments and
additional arguments, as well as the documents required of them or whose
presentation was reserved by them. The same resolution granted the parties until
March 1, 1973, to reply to the notes filed by their respective opponents. Counsel for
the petitioners in G.R. Nos. L-36164 and L-36165 filed their aforementioned notes
on February 24, 1973, on which date the Solicitor General sought an extension of
time up to March 3, 1973, within which to file his notes, which was granted, with the
understanding that said notes shall include his reply to the notes already filed by
the petitioners in G.R. Nos. L-36164 and L-36165. Counsel for the petitioners,
likewise, moved and were granted an extension of time, to expire on March 10,
1973, within which to file, as they did, their notes in reply to those submitted by the
Solicitor General on March 3, 1973. On March 21, 1973, petitioners in l-36165 filed a
"Manifestation and Supplemental Rejoinder," whereas the Office of the Solicitor
General submitted in all these cases a "Rejoinder to Petitioners' Replies."
After deliberating on these cases, the members of the Court agreed that each would
write his own opinion and serve a copy thereof on his colleagues, and this they did.
Subsequently, the Court discussed said opinions and votes were cast thereon. Such
individual opinions are appended hereto.
Accordingly, the writer will first express his personal opinion on the issues before
the Court. After the exposition of his aforesaid opinion, the writer will make,
concurrently with his colleagues in the Court, a resume of summary of the votes
cast by them in these cases.
Writer's Personal Opinion
CONSTI 1
the President. It is very significant that in the previous drafts of section 10, Article
VIII of the Constitution, 'execution order' and 'regulation' were included among
those that required for their nullification the vote of two-thirds of all the members of
the Court. But 'executive order' and 'regulation' were later deleted from the final
draft (Aruego, The Framing of the Philippine Constitution, Vol. I, pp. 495, 496), and
thus a mere majority of six members of this Court is enough to nullify them." 11
The distinction is not without reasonable foundation. The two thirds vote (eight [8]
votes) requirement, indeed, was made to apply only to treaty and law, because, in
these cases, the participation of the two other departments of the government
the Executive and the Legislative is present, which circumstance is absent in the
case of rules, regulations and executive orders. Indeed, a law(statute) passed by
Congress is subject to the approval or veto of the President, whose disapproval
cannot be overridden except by the vote of two-thirds (2/3) of all members of each
House of Congress. 12 A treaty is entered into by the President with the
concurrence of the Senate, 13 which is not required in the case of rules, regulations
or executive orders which are exclusive acts of the President. Hence, to nullify the
same, a lesser number of votes is necessary in the Supreme Court than that
required to invalidate a law or treaty.
Although the foregoing refers to rules, regulations and executive orders issued by
the President, the dictum applies with equal force to executive proclamations, like
said Proclamation No. 1102, inasmuch as the authority to issue the same is
governed by section 63 of the Revised Administrative Code, which provides:
"Administrative acts and commands of the (Governor-General) President of the
Philippines touching the organization or mode of operation of the Government or
rearranging or readjusting any of the districts, divisions, parts, or ports of the
(Philippine Islands) Philippines and all acts and commands governing the general
performance of duties by public employees or disposing of issues of general
concern shall be made effective in executive orders.
"Executive orders fixing the dates when specific laws, resolutions, or orders are to
have or cease to (have) effect and any information concerning matters of public
moment determined by law, resolution, or executive orders, may be promulgated in
an executive proclamation, with all the force of an executive order." 14
In fact, while executive orders embody administrative acts or commands of the
President, executive proclamations are mainly informative and declaratory in
character, and so does counsel for respondents Gil J. Puyat and Jose Roy maintain in
G.R. No. L-36165. 15 As consequence, an executive proclamation has no more than
"the force of an executive order," so that, for the Supreme Court to declare such
proclamation unconstitutional, under the 1935 Constitution, the same number of
votes needed to invalidate an executive order, rule of regulation namely, six (6)
votes would suffice.
As regards the applicability of the provisions of the proposed new Constitution,
approved by the 1971 Constitutional Convention, in the determination of the
question whether or not it is now in force, it is obvious that such question depends
upon whether or not the said new Constitution has been ratified in accordance with
the requirements of the 1935 Constitution, upon the authority of which said
Constitutional Convention was called and approved the proposed Constitution. It is
well settled that the matter of ratification of an amendment to the Constitution
should be settled by applying the provisions of the Constitution in force at the time
of the alleged ratification, or the old Constitution. 16
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United States. Besides, no plausible reason has, to my mind, been advanced to
warrant a departure from said position, consistently with the form of government
established under said Constitution.
Thus, in the aforementioned plebiscite cases, 18 We rejected the theory of the
respondents therein that the question whether Presidential Decree No. 73 calling a
plebiscite to be held on January 15, 1973, for the ratification or rejection of the
proposed new Constitution, was valid or not, was not a proper subject of judicial
inquiry because, they claimed, it partook of a political nature; and We unanimously
declared that the issue was a justiciable one. With identical unanimity, We
overruled the respondents' contention in the 1971 habeas corpus cases, 19
questioning Our authority to determine the constitutional sufficiency of the factual
bases of the Presidential proclamation suspending the privileges of the writ of
habeas corpus on August 21, 1971, despite the opposite view taken by this Court in
Barcelona v. Baker 20 and Montenegro v. Castaeda, 21 insofar as it adhered to the
former case, which view We, accordingly abandoned and refused to apply. For the
same reason, We did not apply and expressly modified, in Gonzales v. Commission
on Elections, 22 the political-question theory adopted in Mabanag v. Lopez Vito. 23
Hence, respondents herein urge Us to reconsider the action thus taken by the Court
and to revert to and follow the views expressed in Barcelon v. Baker and Mabanag
v. Lopez Vito. 24
The reasons adduced in support thereof are, however, substantially the same as
those given in support of the political-question theory advanced in said habeas
corpus and plebiscite cases, which were carefully considered by this Court and
found by it to be legally unsound and constitutionally untenable. As a consequence,
Our decision in the aforementioned habeas corpus cases partakes of the nature and
effect of a stare decisis, which gained added weight by its virtual reiteration in the
plebiscite cases.
The reason why the issue under consideration and other issues of similar character
are justiciable, not political, is plain and simple. One of the principal bases of the
non-justiciability of so-called political questions is the principle of separation of
powers characteristic of the Presidential system of government the functions
of which are classified or divided, by reason of their nature, into three (8)
categories, namely: 1) those involving the making of laws, which are allocated to
the legislative department; 2) those concerned mainly with the enforcement of such
laws and of judicial decisions applying and/or interpreting the same, which belong
to the executive department; and 3) those dealing with the settlement of disputes,
controversies or conflicts involving rights, duties or prerogatives that are legally
demandable and enforceable, which are apportioned to courts of justice. Within its
own sphere but only within such sphere each department is supreme and
independent of the others, and each is devoid of authority, not only to encroach
upon the powers or field of action assigned to any of the other departments, but,
also, to inquire into or pass upon the advisability or wisdom of the acts performed,
measures taken or decisions made by the other departments provided that such
acts, measures or decisions are within the area allocated thereto by the
Constitution. 25
This principle of separation of powers under the Presidential system goes hand in
hand with the system of checks and balances, under which each department is
vested by the Fundamental Law with some powers to forestall, restrain or arrest a
possible or actual misuse or abuse of powers by the other departments. Hence, the
appointing power of the Executive, his pardoning power, his veto power, his
authority to call the Legislature or Congress to special sessions and even to
prescribe or limit the object or objects of legislation that may be taken up in such
sessions, etc. Conversely, Congress or an agency or arm thereof such as the
Commission on Appointments; may approve or disapprove some appointments
made by the President, It, also, has the power of appropriation, to "define,
prescribe, and apportion the jurisdiction of the various courts," as well as that of
impeachment. Upon the other hand, under the judicial power vested by the
Constitution, the "Supreme Court and . . . such inferior courts as may be established
by law," may settle or decide with finality, not only justiciable controversies
between private individuals or entities, but, also, disputes or conflicts between a
private individual or entity, on the one hand, and an officer or branch of the
government, on the other, or between two (2) officers or branches of service, when
the latter officer or branch is charged with acting without jurisdiction or in excess
thereof or in violation of law. And so, when a power vested in said officer or branch
of the government is absolute or unqualified, the acts in the exercise of such power
are said to be political in nature, and, consequently, non-justiciable beyond judicial
review. Otherwise, courts of justice would be arrogating upon themselves a power
conferred by the Constitution upon another branch of the service to the exclusion of
the others. Hence, in Taada v. Cuenco, 26 this Court quoted with approval from In
re McConaughy, 27 the following:
"'At the threshold of the case we are met with the assertion that the questions
involved are political, and not judicial. If this is correct, the court has no jurisdiction
as the certificate of the state canvassing board would then be final, regardless of
the actual vote upon the amendment. The question thus raised is a fundamental
one; but it has been so often decided contrary to the view contended for by the
Attorney General that it would seem to be finally settled.
xxx xxx xxx
"'. . . What is generally meant, when it is said that a question is political, and not
judicial, is that it is a matter which is to be exercised by the people in their primary
political capacity, or that it has been specifically delegated to some other
department or particular officer of the government, with discretionary power to act.
See State vs. Cunningham, 81 Wis. 497, N.W. 724, 15 L.R.A. 561; In re Gunn, 50
Kan. 155; 32 Pac. 470, 948, 19 L.R.A. 519; Green vs. Mills, 69 Fed. 852, 16 C.C.A.
516, 30 L.R.A. 90; Fletcher vs. Tuttle, 151 Ill. 41 37 N.E. 683, 25 L.R.A. 143, 42 Am.
St. Rep. 220. Thus the Legislature may in its discretion determine whether it will
pass a law or submit a proposed constitutional amendment to the people. The
courts have no judicial control over such matters, not merely because they involve
political questions, but because they are matters which the people have by the
Constitution delegated to the Legislature. The Governor may exercise the powers
delegated to him, free from judicial control, so long as he observes the laws and
acts within the limits of the power conferred. His discretionary acts cannot be
controllable, not primarily because they are of a political nature, but because the
Constitution and laws have placed the particular matter under his control. But every
officer under a constitutional government must act according to law and subject to
its restrictions, and every departure therefrom or disregard thereof must subject
him to that restraining and controlling power of the people, acting through the
agency of the judiciary; for it must be remembered that the people act through
courts, as well as through the executive or the Legislature. One department is just
as representative as the other, and the judiciary is the department which is charged
with the special duty of determining the limitations which the law places upon all
official action. The recognition of this principle, unknown except in Great Britain and
America, is necessary, to "the end that the government may be one of laws and not
56
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of men" words which Webster said were the greatest contained in any written
constitutional document.' (Italics supplied.)"
and, in an attempt to describe the nature of a political question in terms, it was
hoped, understandable to the laymen, We added that ". . . the term 'political
question' connotes, in legal parlance, what it means in ordinary parlance, namely, a
question of policy" in matters concerning the government of a State, as a body
politic. "In other words, in the language of Corpus Juris Secundum (supra), it refers
to 'those questions which, under the Constitution, are to be decided by the people
in their sovereign capacity, or in regard to which full discretionary authority has
been delegated to the Legislature or executive branch of the government.' It is
concerned with issues dependent upon the wisdom, not legality, of a particular
measure."
Accordingly, when the grant of power is qualified, conditional or subject to
limitations, the issue on whether or not the prescribed qualifications or conditions
have been met, or the limitations respected, it justiciable or non-political, the crux
of the problem being one of legality or validity of the contested act, not its wisdom.
Otherwise, said qualifications, conditions or limitations particularly those
prescribed or imposed by the Constitution would be set at naught. What is more,
the judicial inquiry into such issue and the settlement thereof are the main
functions of courts of justice under the Presidential form of government adopted in
our 1935 Constitution, and the system of checks and balances, one of its basic
predicates. As a consequence, We have neither the authority nor the discretion to
decline passing upon said issue, but are under the ineluctable obligation made
particularly more exacting and peremptory by our oath, as members of the highest
Court of the land, to support and defend the Constitution to settle it. This
explains why, in Miller v. Johnson, 28 it was held that courts have a "duty, rather
than a power", to determine whether another branch of the government has "kept
within constitutional limits." Not satisfied with this postulate, the court went farther
and stressed that, if the Constitution provides how it may be amended as it is in
our 1935 Constitution "then, unless the manner is followed, the judiciary as the
interpreter of that constitution, will declare the amendment invalid." 29 In fact, this
very Court speaking through Justice Laurel, an outstanding authority on
Philippine Constitutional Law, as well as one of the highly respected and foremost
leaders of the Convention that drafted the 1935 Constitution declared, as early
as July 15, 1936, that "(i)n times of social disquietude or political excitement, the
great landmarks of the Constitution are apt to be forgotten or marred, if not entirely
obliterated. In cases of conflict, the judicial department is the only constitutional
organ which can be called upon to determine the proper allocation of powers
between the several departments" of the government. 30
The Solicitor General has invoked Luther v. Borden 31 in support of his stand that
the issue under consideration is non-justiciable in nature. Neither the factual
background of that case nor the action taken therein by the Federal Supreme Court
has any similarity with or bearing on the cases under consideration.
Luther v. Borden was an action for trespass filed by Luther with the Circuit Court of
the United States against Borden and others for having forcibly entered into
Luther's house, in Rhode Island, sometime in 1842. The defendants who were in the
military service of said former colony of England, alleged in their defense that they
had acted in obedience to the commands of a superior officer, because Luther and
others were engaged in a conspiracy to overthrow the government by force and the
state had been placed by competent authority under Martial Law. Such authority
was the charter government of Rhode Island at the time of the Declaration of
Independence, for unlike other states which adopted a new Constitution upon
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review to the Federal Supreme Court which affirmed the action of the Circuit Court,
stating:
"It is worthy of remark, however, when we are referring to the authority of State
decisions, that the trial of Thomas W. Dorr took place after the constitution of 1843
when into operation. The judges who decided that the case held their authority
under that constitution; and it is admitted on all hands that it was adopted by the
people of the State, and is the lawful and established government. It is the decision,
therefore, of a State court, whose judicial authority to decide upon the constitution
and laws of Rhode Island is not questioned by either party to this controversy,
although the government under which it acted was framed and adopted under the
sanction and laws of the charter government.
In short, the views expressed by the Federal Supreme Court in Luther v. Borden,
decided in 1849, on matters other than those referring to its power to review
decisions of a state court concerning the constitution and government of that state,
not the Federal Constitution or Government, are manifestly neither controlling, nor
even persuasive in the present cases, having as the Federal Supreme Court
admitted no authority whatsoever to pass upon such matters or to review
decisions of said state court thereon. In fact, referring to that case, the Supreme
Court of Minnesota had the following to say:
"The point, then, raised here has been already decided by the courts of Rhode
Island. The question relates, altogether, to the constitution and laws of that State;
and the well settled rule in this court is, that the courts of the United States adopt
and follow the decisions of the State courts in questions which concern merely the
constitution and laws of the State.
"Upon what ground could the Circuit Court of United States which tried this case
have departed from this rule, and disregarded and overruled the decisions of the
courts of Rhode Island? Undoubtedly the courts of the United States have certain
powers under the Constitution and laws of the United States which do not
government has been lawfully established, which the courts of State disown and
repudiate, is not one of them. Upon such a question the courts of the United States
are bound to follow the decisions of the State tribunals, and must therefore regard
the charter government as the lawful and established government during the time
of this contest." 32
It is thus apparent that the context within which the case of Luther v. Borden was
decided is basically and fundamentally different from that of the cases at bar. To
begin with, the case did not involve a federal question, but one purely municipal in
nature. Hence, the Federal Supreme Court was "bound to follow the decisions of the
State tribunals" of Rhode Island upholding the constitution adopted under the
authority of the charter government. Whatever else was said in that case
constitutes, therefore, an obiter dictum. Besides, no decision analogous to that
rendered by the State Court of Rhode Island exists in the cases at bar. Secondly, the
states of the Union have a measure of internal sovereignty upon which the Federal
Government may not encroach, whereas ours is a unitary form of government,
under which our local governments derive their authority from the national
government. Again, unlike our 1935 Constitution, the charter or organic law of
Rhode Island contained no provision on the manner, procedure or conditions for its
amendment.
Then, too, the case of Luther v. Borden hinged more on the question of recognition
of government, than on recognition of constitution, and there is a fundamental
difference between these two (2) types of recognition, the first being generally
conceded to be a political question, whereas the nature of the latter depends upon
a number of factors, one of them being whether the new Constitution in force at the
time of the purported ratification of the former, which is essentially a justiciable
question. There was, in Luther v. Borden, a conflict between two (2) rival
governments, antagonistic to each other, which is absent in the present cases.
Here, the Government established under the 1935 Constitution is the very same
government whose Executive Department has urged the adoption of the new or
"Luther v. Borden, 7 How. 1, 12 L. Ed. 581, is always cited by those who assert that
the courts have no power to determine questions of a political character. It is
interesting historically, but it has not the slightest application to the case at bar.
When carefully analyzed, it appears that it merely determines that the federal
courts will accept as final and controlling a decision of the highest court of a state
upon a question of the construction of the Constitution of the state . . ." 33
Baker v. Carr, 34 cited by respondents, involved an action to annul a Tennessee
statute apportioning the seats in the General Assembly among the counties of the
State, upon the theory that the legislation violated the equal protection clause. A
district court dismissed the case upon the ground, among others, that the issue was
a political one, but, after a painstaking review of the jurisprudence on the matter,
the Federal Supreme Court reversed the appealed decision and held that said issue
was justiciable and non-political, inasmuch as: ". . . (d)eciding whether a matter has
in any measure been committed by the Constitution to another branch of
government, or whether the action of that branch exceeds whatever authority has
been committed, is itself a delicate exercise in constitutional interpretation, and is a
responsibility of this Court as ultimate interpreter of the Constitution . . ."
Similarly, in Powell v. McCormack, 35 the same Court, speaking through then Chief
Justice Warren, reversed a decision of the Court of Appeals of New York affirming
that of a Federal District Court, dismissing Powell's action for a declaratory
judgment declaring thereunder that he whose qualifications were uncontested
had been unlawfully excluded from the 90th Congress of the U.S. Said dismissal was
predicated upon the ground, inter alia, that the issue was political, but the Federal
Supreme Court held that it was clearly a justiciable one.
The Supreme Court of Minnessota undertook a careful review of American
jurisprudence on the matter. Owing to the lucidity of its appraisal thereof, We
append the same to this opinion as Annex A thereof.
After an exhaustive analysis of the cases on this subject, the Court concluded:
"The authorities are thus practically uniform in holding that whether a constitutional
amendment has been properly adopted according to the requirements of an
existing Constitution is a judicial question. There can be little doubt that the
consensus of judicial opinion is to the effect that it is the absolute duty of the
judiciary to determine whether the Constitution has been amended in the manner
required by the Constitution, unless a special tribunal has been created to
determine the question; and even then many of the courts hold that the tribunal
cannot be permitted to illegally amend the organic law . . . " 36
58
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In the light of the foregoing, and considering that Art. XV of our 1935 Constitution
prescribes the method or procedure for its amendment, it is clear to my mind that
the question whether or not the revised Constitution drafted by the 1971
Constitutional Convention has been ratified in accordance with said Art. XV is a
justiciable one and non-political in nature, and that it is not only subject to judicial
inquiry, but, also, that it is the Court's bounden duty to decide such question.
reproduce them here. So it is, with respect to the positions taken in L-36165 by
counsel for therein respondents Gil J. Puyat and Jose Roy although more will be
said later about them and by the Solicitor General, on behalf of the other
respondents in that case and the respondents in the other cases.
The Supreme Court of the United States has meaningfully postulated that "the
courts cannot reject as 'no law suit'" because it allegedly involves a political
question "a bona fide controversy as to whether some action denominated
'political' exceeds constitutional authority.'" 37
Under section 1 of Art. XV of said Constitution, three (3) steps are essential, namely:
III
Has the proposed new or revised Constitution been ratified conformably to said Art.
XV of the 1935 Constitution?
Petitioners in L-36142 maintain the negative view, upon the ground: 1) that the
President "is without authority to create the Citizens' Assemblies" through which,
respondents maintain, the proposed new Constitution has been ratified; 2) that said
Assemblies "are without power to approve the proposed Constitution"; 3) that the
President "is without power to proclaim the ratification by the Filipino people of the
proposed Constitution"; and 4),that "the election held (in the Citizens' Assemblies)
to ratify the proposed Constitution was not a free election, hence null and void."
Apart from substantially reiterating these grounds support of said negative view,
the petitioners in L-36164 contend: 1) that the President "has no power to call a
plebiscite for the ratification or rejection" of the proposed Constitution or "to
appropriate funds for the holding of said plebiscite"; 2) that the proposed new or
revised Constitution "is vague and incomplete," as well as "contains provisions
which are beyond the powers of the 1971 Convention to enact," thereby rendering
it "unfit for . . . submission to the people;" 3) that "(t)he period of time between
November 30, 1972 when the 1972 draft was approved and January 11-15, 1973,"
when the Citizens' Assemblies supposedly ratified said draft, "was too short, worse
still, there was practically no time for the Citizens' Assemblies to discuss the merits
of the Constitution which the majority of them have not read and which they never
knew would be submitted to them for ratification until they were asked the question
'do you approve of the New Constitution?' during the said days of the voting";
and that "(t)here was altogether no freedom of discussion and no opportunity to
concentrate on the matter submitted to them when the 1972 draft was supposedly
submitted to the Citizens' Assemblies for ratification."
Petitioner in L-36236 added, as arguments in support of the negative view, that: 1)
"(w)ith a government-controlled press, there can never be a fair and proper
submission of the proposed Constitution to the people"; and 2) Proclamation No.
1102 is null and void "(i)nasmuch as the ratification process" prescribed "in the
1935 Constitution was not followed."
Besides adopting substantially some of the grounds relied upon by the petitioners in
the above mentioned cases, the petitioners in L-36283 argue that "(t)he creation of
the Citizens' Assemblies as the vehicle for the ratification of the Constitution was a
deception upon the people since the President announced the postponement of the
January 15, 1973 plebiscite to either February 19 or March 5, 1973." 38
The reasons adduced by the petitioners in L-36165 in favor of the negative view
have already been set forth earlier in this opinion. Hence, it is unnecessary to
1.What is the procedure prescribed by the 1935 Constitution for its amendment?
1.
2.
3.
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elections, including the determination of the number and location of polling places,
and the appointment of election inspectors and of other election officials. All law
enforcement agencies and instrumentalities of the Government, when so required
by the Commission, shall act as its deputies for the purpose of insuring free,
orderly, and honest elections. The decisions, orders, and rulings the Commission
shall be subject to review by the Supreme Court.
the second recommendation limiting the right of suffrage who could "read and
write" was in the language of Dr. Jose M. Aruego, one of the Delegates to said
Convention "readily approved in the Convention without any dissenting vote,"
although there was some debate on whether the Fundamental Law should specify
the language or dialect that the voter could read and write, which was decided in
the negative. 43
What is relevant to the issue before Us is the fact that the constitutional provision
under consideration was meant to be and is a grant or conferment of a right to
persons possessing the qualifications and none of the disqualifications therein
mentioned, which in turn, constitute a limitation of or restriction to said right, and
cannot, accordingly, be dispensed with, except by constitutional amendment.
Obviously, every such constitutional grant or conferment of a right is necessarily a
negation of the authority of Congress or of any other branch of the Government to
deny said right to the subject of the grant and, in this sense only, may the same
partake of the nature of a guarantee. But, this does not imply not even remotely,
that the Fundamental Law allows Congress or anybody else to vest in those lacking
the qualifications and having the disqualifications mentioned in the Constitution the
right of suffrage.
At this juncture, it is noteworthy that the committee on suffrage responsible for the
adoption of section 1 of Art. V of the Constitution was "strongly influenced by the
election laws then in force in the Philippines." Our first Election Law was Act 1582,
passed on January 9, 1907, which was partly amended by Acts 1669, 1709, 1726
and 1768, and incorporated into the Administrative Code of 1916 Act 2657 as
chapter 20 thereof, and then in the Administrative Code of 1971 Act 2711 as
chapter 18 thereof, which, in turn, was amended by Act 3387, approved on
December 3, 1927. Sections 431 and 432 of said Code of 1917, prescribing,
respectively, the qualifications for and disqualifications from voting, are quoted
below. 44 In all of these legislative acts, the provisions concerning the qualifications
of voters partook of the nature of a grant or recognition of the right of suffrage, and.
hence, of a denial thereof to those who lacked the requisite qualifications and
possessed any of the statutory disqualifications. In short, the history of section 1,
Art. V of the Constitution, shows beyond doubt that the same conferred not
guaranteed the authority to exercise the right of suffrage to persons having the
qualifications prescribed therein and none of the disqualifications to be specified in
ordinary laws and, by necessary implication, denied such right to those lacking any
of said qualifications or having any of the aforementioned disqualifications.
This view is further bolstered by the fact that the 1971 Constitutional Convention
sought the submission to a plebiscite of a "partial amendment" to said section 1 of
Art. V of the 1935 Constitution, by reducing the voting age from twenty-one (21)
years to eighteen (18) years, which, however, did not materialize on account of the
decision of this Court in Tolentino v. Commission on Elections, 45 granting the writs
of prohibition and injunction therein applied for, upon the ground that, under the
Constitution, all of the amendments adopted by the Convention should be
submitted in "an election" or a single election, not separately or in several or
distinct elections, and that the proposed amendment sought to be submitted to a
plebiscite was not even a complete but a "partial amendment" of said section 1,
which could be amended further, after its ratification had the same taken place, so
that the aforementioned partial amendment was, for legal purposes, no more than
a provisional or temporary amendment. Said partial amendment was predicated
upon the generally accepted contemporary construction that, under the 1935
Constitution, persons below twenty-one (21) years of age could not exercise the
right of suffrage, without a previous amendment of the Constitution.
60
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Upon the other hand, the question, whether 18-year-old members of barrio
assemblies may vote in barrio as plebiscites is, to say the least, a debatable one.
Indeed, there seems to be a conflict between the last paragraph of said section 6 of
Rep. Act No. 3590, 46 pursuant to which the "majority vote of all the barrio
assembly members" (which include all barrio residents 18 years of age or over, duly
registered in the list of barrio assembly members) is necessary for the approval, in
an assembly plebiscite, of "any budgetary, supplemental appropriations or special
tax ordinances," whereas, according to the paragraph preceding the penultimate
one of said section, 47 "(a)ll duly registered barrio assembly members qualified to
vote" who, pursuant to section 10 of the same Act, must be citizens "of the
Philippines, twenty-one years of age or over, able to read and write," and residents
of the barrio "during the six months immediately preceding the election, duly
registered in the list of voters" and "not otherwise disqualified . . ." just like the
provisions of the present and past election codes of the Philippines and Art. V of the
1935 Constitution "may vote in the plebiscite."
I believe, however, that the apparent conflict should be resolved in favor of the 21year-old members of the assembly, not only because this interpretation is in accord
with Art. V of the Constitution, but, also, because provisions of a Constitution
particularly of a written and rigid one, like ours are generally accorded a
mandatory status unless the intention to the contrary is manifest, which is not so
as regards said Art. V for otherwise they would not have been considered
sufficiently important to be included in the Fundamental Law of the land. 48
Besides, it would be illogical, if not absurd, to believe that Republic Act No. 3590
requires, for the most important measures for which it demands in addition to
the favorable action of the barrio council the approval of the barrio assembly
through a plebiscite, lesser qualifications than those prescribed in dealing with
ordinary measures for which such plebiscite need not be held.
It is similarly inconceivable that those who drafted the 1935 Constitution intended
section 1 of Art. V thereof to apply only to elections of public officers, not to
plebiscites for the ratification of amendments to the Fundamental Law or a revision
thereof, or of an entirely new Constitution, and to permit the legislature to require
lesser qualifications for such ratification, notwithstanding the fact that the subject
thereof is much more important if not fundamental, such as the basic changes
introduced in the draft of the revised Constitution adopted by the 1971
Constitutional Convention, which are intended to be in force permanently, or, at
least, for many decades, and to affect the way of life of the nation and,
accordingly demands greater experience and maturity on the part of the electorate
than that required for the election of public officers, 49 whose average term ranges
from 2 to 6 years.
It is admitted that persons 15 years of age or over, but below 21 years, regardless
of whether or not they possessed the other qualifications laid down in both the
Constitution and the present Election Code, 50 and of whether or not they are
disqualified under the provisions of said Constitution and Code, 51 or those of
Republic Act No. 3590, 52 have participated and voted in the Citizens' Assemblies
that have allegedly ratified the new or revised Constitution drafted by the 1971
Constitutional Convention.
In fact, according to the latest official data, the total number of registered voters 21
years of age or over in the entire Philippines, available in January 1973, was less
than 12 million. Yet, Proclamation No. 1102 states that 14,976,561 "members of all
the Barangays (Citizens Assemblies) voted for the adoption of the proposed
Constitution, as against . . . 743,869 who voted for its rejection," whereas, on the
question whether or not the people still wanted a plebiscite to be called to ratify the
new Constitution, ". . . 14,298,814 answered that there was no need for a plebiscite
and that the vote of the Barangays (Citizens Assemblies) should be considered as a
vote in a plebiscite." In other words, it is conceded that the number of people who
allegedly voted at the Citizens' Assemblies for exceeded the number of registered
voters under the Election Code in force in January 1973.
It is thus clear that the proceedings held in such Citizens' Assemblies and We
have more to say on this point in subsequent pages were fundamentally
irregular, in that persons lacking the qualifications prescribed in section 1 of Art. V
of the Constitution were allowed to vote in said Assemblies. And, since there is no
means by which the invalid votes of those less than 21 years of age can be
separated or segregated from those of the qualified voters, the proceedings in the
Citizens' Assemblies must be considered null and void. 53
It has been held that "(t)he power to reject an entire poll . . . should be
exercised . . . in a case where it is impossible to ascertain with reasonable certainty
the true vote," as where "it is impossible to separate the legal votes from the illegal
or spurious . . ." 54
In Usman v. Commission on Elections, et al., 55 We held:
"Several circumstances, defying exact description and dependent mainly on the
factual milieu of the particular controversy, have the effect of destroying the
integrity and authenticity of disputed election returns and of avoiding their prima
facie value and character. If satisfactorily proven, although in a summary
proceeding, such circumstances as alleged by the affected or interested parties,
stamp the election returns with the indelible mark of falsity and irregularity, and,
consequently, of unreliability, and justify their exclusion from the canvass."
Then, too, the 1935 Constitution requires "a majority of the votes cast" for a
proposed amendment to the Fundamental Law to be "valid" as part thereof, and the
term "votes cast" has a well-settled meaning.
"The term 'votes cast' . . . was held in Smith v. Renville County Commissioners, 65
N.W. 956, 64 Minn. 16, to have been used as an equivalent of 'ballots cast.'" 56
"The word 'cast' is defined as 'to deposit formally or officially.'" 57
"It seems to us that a vote is cast when a ballot is deposited indicating a 'choice.' . .
. The word 'cast' means 'deposit (a ballot) formally or officially . . .'
". . . In simple words, we would define a 'vote cast' as the exercise on a ballot of the
choice of the voter on the measure proposed." 58
In short, said Art. XV envisages with the term "votes cast" choices made on
ballots not orally or by raising hands by the persons taking part in plebiscites.
This is but natural and logical, for, since the early years of the American regime, we
had adopted the Australian Ballot System, with its major characteristics, namely,
uniform official ballots prepared and furnished by the Government and secrecy in
the voting, with the advantage of keeping records that permit judicial inquiry, when
necessary, into the accuracy of the election returns. And the 1935 Constitution has
been so consistently interpreted in all plebiscites for the ratification or rejection of
61
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proposed amendments thereto, from 1935 to 1967. Hence, the viva voce voting in
the Citizens' Assemblies was and is null and void ab initio.
b.How should the plebiscite be held? (COMELEC supervision indispensable; essential
requisites)
Just as essential as compliance with said Art. V of the 1935 Constitution is that of
Art. X thereof, particularly its sections 1 and 2. Indeed, section 1 provides that
"(t)here shall be an independent Commission on Elections . . ." The point to be
stressed here is the term "independent." Indeed, why was the term used?
In the absence of said constitutional provision as to the independence of the
Commission, would it have been dependent upon either Congress or the Judiciary?
The answer must be in the negative, because the functions of the Commission
"enforcement and administration" of election laws are neither legislative nor
judicial in nature, and, hence, beyond the field allocated to either Congress or
courts of justice. Said functions are by their nature essentially executive, for which
reason, the Commission would be under the "control" of the President, pursuant to
section 10, paragraph (1) of Art. VII of the Constitution, if Art. X thereof did not
explicitly declare that it (the Commission) is an "independent" body. In other words,
in amending the original 1935 Constitution, by inserting therein said Art. X, on the
Commission on Elections, the purpose was to make said Commission independent
principally of the Chief Executive.
And the reason therefor is, also, obvious. Prior to the creation of the Commission on
Elections as a constitutional organ, election laws in the Philippines were enforced by
the then Department of the Interior, through its Executive Bureau, one of the offices
under the supervision and control of said Department. The same like other
departments of the Executive Branch of the Government was, in turn, under the
control of the Chief Executive, before the adoption of the 1935 Constitution, and
had been until the abolition of said Department, sometime ago under the
control of the President of the Philippines, since the effectivity of said Fundamental
Law. Under the provisions thereof, the Executive could so use his power of control
over the Department of the Interior and its Executive Bureau as to place the
minority party at such a great, if not decisive, disadvantage, as to deprive it, in
effect, of the opportunity to defeat the political party in power, and, hence, to
enable the same to perpetuate itself therein. To forestall this possibility, the original
1935 Constitution was amended by the establishment of the Commission on
Elections as a constitutional body independent primarily of the President of the
Philippines.
The independence of the Commission was sought to be strengthened by the long
term of office of its members nine (9) years, except those first appointed 59
the longest under the Constitution, second only to that of the Auditor General 60 ;
by providing that they may not be removed from office except by impeachment,
placing them, in this respect, on the same plane as the President, the VicePresident, the Justices of the Supreme Court and the Auditor General; that they may
not be reappointed; that their salaries "shall be neither increased nor diminished
during their term of office"; that the decisions of the Commission "shall be subject
to review by the Supreme Court" only 61 ; that "(n)o pardon, parole, or suspension
of sentence for the violation of any election law may be granted without the
favorable recommendation of the Commission" 62 ; and that its chairman and
members "shall not, during their continuance in office, engage in the practice of
any profession, or intervene, directly or indirectly, in the management or control of
any private enterprise which in anyway may be affected by the functions of their
62
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In Glenn v. Gnau, 65 involving the casting of many votes, openly, without complying
with the requirements of the law pertinent thereto, it was held that the "election
officers" involved "cannot be too strongly condemned" therefor and that if they
'could legally dispense with such requirement xxx they could with equal propriety
dispense with all of them, including the one that the vote shall be by secret ballot,
or even by ballot at all . . ."
Moreover, upon the formal presentation to the Executive of the proposed
Constitution drafted by the 1971 Constitutional Convention, or on December 1,
1972, Presidential Decree No. 73 (on the validity of which was contested in the
plebiscite cases, as well as in the 1972 habeas corpus case 66 We need not, in
the cases at bar, express any opinion) was issued, calling a plebiscite, to be held on
January 15, 1973, at which the proposed Constitution would be submitted to the
people for ratification or rejection; directing the publication of said proposed
Constitution; and declaring, inter alia, that "(t)he provisions of the Election Code of
1971, insofar as they are not inconsistent" with said decree excepting those
"regarding rights and obligations of political parties and candidates" "shall apply
to the conduct of the plebiscite." Indeed, section 2 of said Election Code of 1971
provides that "(a)ll elections of public officers except barrio officials and plebiscites
shall be conducted in the manner provided by this Code." General Order No. 20,
dated January 7, 1973, postponing, until further notice, "the plebiscite scheduled to
be held on January 15, 1973," said nothing about the procedure to be followed in
the plebiscite to take place at such notice, and no other order or decree has been
brought to Our attention, expressly or impliedly repealing the provisions of
Presidential Decree No. 73, insofar as said procedure is concerned.
Upon the other hand, said General Order No. 20 expressly suspended "the
provisions of Section 3 of Presidential Decree No. 73 insofar as they allow free
public discussion of the proposed Constitution . . . temporarily suspending the
effects of Proclamation No. 1081 for the purposes of free and open debate on the
proposed Constitution . . ." This specific mention of the portions of the decrees or
orders or instructions suspended by General Order No. 20 necessarily implies that
all other portions of said decrees, orders or instructions and, hence, the
provisions of Presidential Decree No. 73 outlining the procedure to be followed in
the plebiscite for the ratification or rejection of the proposed Constitution
remained in force, assuming that said Decree is valid.
It is claimed that by virtue of Presidential Decree No. 86-A the text of which is
quoted below 67 the Executive declared, inter alia, that the collective views
expressed in the Citizens' Assemblies "shall be considered in the formulation of
national policies or programs and, wherever practicable, shall be translated into
concrete and specific decision"; that such Citizens' Assemblies "shall consider vital
national issues . . . like the holding of the plebiscite on the new Constitution . . . and
others in the future, which shall serve as guide or basis for action or decision by the
national government"; and that the Citizens' Assemblies "shall conduct between
January 10 and 15, 1973, a referendum on important national issues, including
those specified in paragraph 2 hereof, and submit the results thereof to the
Department of Local Governments and Community Development immediately
thereafter, . . ." As in Presidential Decree No. 86, this Decree No. 86-A does not and
cannot exclude the exercise of the constitutional supervisory power of the
Commission on elections or its participation in the proceedings in said Assemblies,
if the same had been intended to constitute the "election" or plebiscite required in
Art. V of the 1935 Constitution. The provision of Presidential Decree No. 86-A
directing the immediate submission of the result thereof to the Department of Local
Governments and Community Development is not necessarily inconsistent with,
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to full faith and credence, as an enrolled bill; that the proposed Constitution has
been, in fact, ratified, approved or adopted by the "overwhelming" majority of the
people; that Art. XV of the 1935 Constitution has thus been "substantially" complied
with; and that the Court should refrain from passing upon the validity of
Proclamation No. 1102, not only because such question is political in nature, but,
also, because should the Court invalidate the proclamation, the former would, in
effect, veto the action of the people in whom sovereignty resides and from whom
its powers are derived.
The major flaw in this process of rationalization is that it assumes, as a fact, the
very premise on which it is predicated, and which, moreover, is contested by the
petitioners. As the Supreme Court of Minnessota has aptly put it
". . . every officer under a constitutional government must act according to law and
subject to its restrictions, and every departure therefrom or disregard thereof must
subject him to the restraining and controlling power of the people, acting through
the agency of the judiciary; for it must be remembered that the people act through
courts, as well as through the executive or the Legislature. One department is just
as representative as the other, and the judiciary is the department which is charged
with the special duty of determining the limitations which the law places upon all
official action. . . ."
Accordingly, the issue boils down to whether or not the Executive acted within the
limits of his authority when he certified in Proclamation No. 1102 "that the
Constitution proposed by the nineteen hundred and seventy-one (1971)
Constitutional Convention has been ratified by an overwhelming majority of all of
the votes cast by the members of all the Barangays (Citizens Assemblies)
throughout the Philippines, and has thereby come into effect."
In this connection, it is not claimed that the Chief Executive had personal
knowledge of the data he certified in said proclamation. Moreover, Art. X of the
1935 Constitution was precisely inserted to place beyond the Executive the power
to supervise or even exercise any authority whatsoever over "all laws relative to the
conduct of elections," and, hence, whether the elections are for the choice or
selection of public officers or for the ratification or rejection of any proposed
amendment, or revision of the Fundamental Law, since the proceedings for the
latter are, also, referred to in said Art. XV as "elections."
The Solicitor General stated, in his argument before this Court, that he had been
informed that there was in each municipality a municipal association of presidents
of the citizens' assemblies for each barrio of the municipality; that the president of
each such municipal association formed part of a provincial or city association of
presidents of such municipal associations; that the president of each one of these
provincial or city associations in turn formed part of a National Association or
Federation of Presidents of such Provincial or City Associations; and that one
Francisco Cruz from Pasig, Rizal, as President of said National Association or
Federation, reported to the President of the Philippines, in the morning of January
17, 1973, the total result of the voting in the citizens' assemblies all over the
country from January 10 to January 15, 1973. The Solicitor General further intimated
that the said municipal associations had reported the results of the citizens'
assemblies in their respective municipalities to the corresponding Provincial
Association, which, in turn, transmitted the results of the voting in the province to
the Department of Local Governments and Community Development, which
tabulated the results of the voting in the citizens' assemblies throughout the
Philippines and then turned them over to Mr. Francisco Cruz, as President or acting
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adopted. Acting upon the assumption that the amendment had become a part of
the Constitution, the Legislature enacted statutes providing for a State Tax
Commission and a mortgage registry tax, and the latter statute, upon the same
theory, was held constitutional" by said Court. "The district court found that the
amendment had not in fact been adopted, and on this appeal" the Supreme Court
was "required to determine the correctness of that conclusion."
Referring to the effect of the certification of the State Board of Canvassers created
by the Legislature and of the proclamation made by the Governor based thereon,
the Court held: "It will be noted that this board does no more than tabulate the
reports received from the various county boards and add up and certify the results.
State v. Mason, 45 Wash. 234, 88 Pac. 126, 9 L.R.A. (U.S.) 1221. It is settled law that
the decisions of election officers, and canvassing boards are not conclusive and that
the final decision must rest with the courts, unless the law declares that the
decisions of the board shall be final" and there is no such law in the cases at bar.
". . . The correctness of the conclusion of the state board rests upon the correctness
of the returns made by the county boards and it is inconceivable that it was
intended that this statement of result should be final and conclusive regardless of
the actual facts. The proclamation of the Governor adds nothing in the way of
conclusiveness to the legal effect of the action of the canvassing board. Its purpose
is to formally notify the people of the state of the result of the voting as found by
the canvassing board. James on Const. Conv. (4th Ed.) sec. 523."
In Bott v. Wartz, 73 the Court reviewed the statement of results of the election
made by the canvassing board, in order that the true results could be judicially
determined. And so did the court in Rice v. Palmer. 74
Inasmuch as Art. X of the 1935 Constitution places under the "exclusive" charge of
the Commission on Elections, "the enforcement and administration of all laws
relative to the conduct of elections," independently of the Executive, and there is
not even a certification by the Commission in support of the alleged results of the
citizens' assemblies relied upon in Proclamation No. 1102 apart from the fact that
on January 17, 1973 neither the alleged president of the Federation of Provincial or
City Barangays nor the Department of Local Governments had certified to the
President of the alleged result of the citizen's assemblies all over the Philippines
it follows necessarily that, from a constitutional and legal viewpoint, Proclamation
No. 1102 is not even prima facie evidence of the alleged ratification of the proposed
Constitution.
Referring particularly to the cases before Us, it will be noted that, as pointed out in
the discussion of the preceding topic, the new or revised Constitution proposed by
the 1971 Constitutional Convention was not ratified in accordance with the
provisions of the 1935 Constitution. In fact, it has not even been ratified in
accordance with said proposed Constitution, the minimum age requirement therein
for the exercise of the right of suffrage being eighteen (18) years, apart from the
fact that Art. VI of the proposed Constitution requires "secret" voting, which was not
observed in many, if not most, Citizens' Assemblies. Besides, both the 1935
Constitution and the proposed Constitution require a "majority of the votes cast" in
an election or plebiscite called for the ratification of an amendment or revision of
the first Constitution or the effectivity of the proposed Constitution, and the phrase
"votes cast" has been construed to mean "votes made in writing," not orally, as it
was in many Citizens' Assemblies. 75
Even counsel for Gil J. Puyat and Jose Roy, as respondents in L-36165, asserts
openly that Art. XV of the Constitution has not been complied with, and since the
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Citizens' Assemblies scheduled to be held from January 10, to January 15, 1973,
were "plebiscites," in effect, accelerated, according to the theory of the Solicitor
General, for the ratification of the proposed Constitution? If said Assemblies were
meant to be the plebiscites or elections envisaged in Art. XV of the Constitution,
what, then, was the "plebiscite" postponed by General Order No. 20? Under these
circumstances, it was only reasonable for the people who attended such assemblies
to believe that the same were not an "election" or plebiscite for the ratification or
adoption of said proposed Constitution.
And, this belief is further bolstered up by the questions propounded in the Citizens'
Assemblies, namely:
"[1]Do you like the New Society?
Constitution. In short, the insertion of said two (2) questions apart from the other
questions adverted to above indicates strongly that the proceedings therein did
not partake of the nature of a plebiscite or election for the ratification or rejection of
the proposed Constitution.
Indeed, I can not, in good conscience, declare that the proposed Constitution has
been approved or adopted by the people in the citizens' assemblies all over the
Philippines, when it is, to my mind, a matter of judicial knowledge that there have
been no such citizens' assemblies in many parts of Manila and suburbs, not to say,
also, in other parts of the Philippines. In a letter of Governor Efren B. Pascual of
Bataan, dated January 15, 1973, to the Chief Executive, the former reported:
". . . This report includes a resume (sic) of the activities we undertook in effecting
the referendum on the eleven questions you wanted our people consulted on and
the Summary of Results thereof for each municipality and for the whole province.
". . . Our initial plans and preparations, however, dealt only on the original five
questions. Consequently, when we received an instruction on January 10 to change
the questions, we urgently suspended all scheduled Citizens' Assembly meetings on
that day and called all Mayors, Chiefs of Offices and other government officials to
another conference to discuss with them the new set of guidelines and materials to
be used.
"[5]Do you like the way President Marcos is running the affairs of the government?
[Bulletin Today, January 10, 1973; additional question italics.]
"[6]Do you approve of the citizens assemblies as the base of popular government to
decide issues of national interests?
"[7]Do you approve of the new Constitution?
"[8]Do you want a plebiscite to be called to ratify the new Constitution?
"[9]Do you want the elections to be held in November, 1973 in accordance with the
provisions of the 1935 Constitution?
"[10]If the elections would not be held, when do you want the next elections to be
called?
"[11]Do you want martial law to continue?" [Bulletin Today, January 11, 1973]
To begin with, questions nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 9, 10 and 11 are not proper in a
plebiscite for the ratification of a proposed Constitution or of a proposed
amendment thereto. Secondly, neither is the language of question No. 7 "Do you
approve of the new Constitution?" One approves "of" the act of another, which does
not need such approval for the effectivity of said act, which the first person,
however, finds to be good, wise or satisfactory. The approval of the majority of the
votes cast in a plebiscite is, however, essential for an amendment to the
Constitution to be valid as part thereof. Thirdly, if the proceedings in the Citizens'
Assemblies constituted a plebiscite, question No. 8 would have been unnecessary
and improper, regardless of whether question No. 7 were answered affirmatively or
negatively. If the majority of the answers to question No. 7 were in the affirmative,
the Constitution would have become effective and no other plebiscite could be held
thereafter in connection therewith, even if the majority of the answers to question
No. 8 were, also, in the affirmative. If the majority of the answers to question No. 7
were in the negative, neither may another plebiscite be held, even if the majority of
the answers to question No. 8 were in the affirmative. In either case, not more than
one plebiscite could be held for the ratification or rejection of the proposed
"On January 11, . . . another instruction from the top was received to include the
original five questions among those to be discussed and asked in the Citizens'
Assembly meetings. With this latest order, we again had to make modifications in
our instructions to all those managing and supervising the holding of the Citizens'
Assembly meetings throughout the province . . . Aside from the coordinators we had
from the Office of the Governor, the splendid cooperation and support extended by
almost all government officials and employees in the province, particularly of the
Department of Education, PC and PACD personnel, provided us with enough hands
to trouble shoot and implement sudden changes in the instructions anytime and
anywhere needed . . .
". . . As to our people, in general, their enthusiastic participation showed their
preference and readiness to accept this new method of government to people
consultation in shaping up government policies."
Thus, as late as January 10, 1973, the Bataan officials had to suspend "all
scheduled Citizens' Assembly meetings . . ." and call all available officials ". . . to
discuss with them the new set of guidelines and materials to be used . . ." Then, "on
January 11 . . . another instruction from the top was received to include the original
five questions among those to be discussed and asked in the Citizens' Assembly
meetings. With this latest order, we again had to make modifications in our
instructions to all those managing and supervising the holding of the Citizens'
Assembly meetings throughout the province . . . As to our people, in general, their
enthusiastic participation showed their preference and readiness to accept the new
method of government to people consultation in shaping up government policies."
This communication manifestly shows: 1) that, as late as January 11, 1973, the
Bataan officials had still to discuss not put into operation means and ways to
carry out the changing instructions from the top on how to organize the citizens'
assemblies, what to do therein and even what questions or topics to propound or
66
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touch in said assemblies; 2) that the assemblies would involve no more than
consultations or dialogues between people and government not decisions to be
made by the people; and 3) that said consultations were aimed only at "shaping up
government policies" and, hence, could not, and did not, partake of the nature of a
plebiscite for the ratification or rejection of a proposed amendment of a new or
revised Constitution for the latter does not entail the formulation of a policy of the
Government, but the making of a decision by the people on the new way of life, as
a nation, they wish to have, once the proposed Constitution shall have been
ratified.
If this was the situation in Bataan one of the provinces nearest to Manila as
late as January 11, 1973, one can easily imagine the predicament of the local
officials and people in the remote barrios in northern and southern Luzon, in the
Bicol region, in the Visayan Islands and Mindanao. In fact, several members of the
Court, including those of their immediate families and their household, although
duly registered voters in the area of Greater Manila, were not even notified that
citizens' assemblies would be held in the places where their respective residences
were located. In the Prohibition and Amendment case, 77 attention was called to
the "duty cast upon the court of taking judicial cognizance of anything affecting the
existence and validity of any law or portion of the Constitution . . ." In line with its
own pronouncement in another case, the Federal Supreme Court of the United
States stressed, in Baker v. Carr, 78 that "a court is not at liberty to shut its eyes to
an obvious mistake, when the validity of the law depends upon the truth of what is
declared."
In the light of the foregoing, I cannot see how the question under consideration can
be answered or resolved otherwise than in the negative.
V
Have the people acquiesced in the proposed Constitution?
It is urged that the present Government of the Philippines is now and has been run,
since January 17, 1973, under the Constitution drafted by the 1971 Constitutional
Convention; that the political department of the Government has recognized said
revised Constitution; that our foreign relations are being conducted under such new
or revised Constitution; that the Legislative Department has recognized the same,
and that the people, in general, have, by their acts or omissions, indicated their
conformity thereto.
As regards the so called political organs of the Government, I gather that
respondents refer mainly to the offices under the Executive Department. In a sense,
the latter performs some functions which, from a constitutional viewpoint, are
political in nature, such as in recognizing a new state or government, in accepting
diplomatic representatives accredited to our Government, and even in devising
administrative means and ways to better carry into effect Acts of Congress which
define the goals or objectives thereof, but are either imprecise or silent on the
particular measures to be resorted to in order to achieve the said goals or delegate
the power to do so, expressly or impliedly, to the Executive. This, notwithstanding,
the political organ of a government that purports to be republican is essentially the
Congress or Legislative Department. Whatever may be the functions allocated to
the Executive Department specially under a written, rigid Constitution, with a
republican system of Government like ours the role of that Department is
inherently, basically and fundamentally executive in nature to "take care that the
laws be faithfully executed," in the language of our 1935 Constitution. 79
Consequently, I am not prepared to concede that the acts of the officers and offices
of the Executive Department, in line with Proclamation No. 1102, connote a
recognition thereof or an acquiescence thereto. Whether they recognized the
proposed Constitution or acquiesce thereto or not is something that cannot legally,
much less necessarily or even normally, be deduced from their acts in accordance
therewith, because they are bound to obey and act in conformity with the orders of
the President, under whose "control" they are, pursuant to the 1935 Constitution.
They have absolutely no other choice, specially in view of Proclamation No. 1081
placing the Philippines under Martial Law. Besides, by virtue of the very decrees,
orders and instructions issued by the President thereafter, he had assumed all
powers of Government although some question his authority to do so and,
consequently, there is hardly anything he has done since the issuance of
Proclamation No. 1102, on January 17, 1973 declaring that the Constitution
proposed by the 1971 Constitutional Convention has been ratified by the
overwhelming majority of the people that he could not do under the authority he
claimed to have under Martial Law, since September 21, 1972, except the power of
supervision over inferior courts and its personnel, which said proposed Constitution
would place under the Supreme Court, and which the President has not ostensibly
exercised, except as to some minor routine matters, which the Department of
Justice has continued to handle, this Court having preferred to maintain the status
quo in connection therewith pending final determination of these cases, in which
the effectivity of the aforementioned Constitution is disputed.
Then, again, a given department of the Government cannot generally be said to
have "recognized" its own acts. Recognition normally connotes the
acknowledgment by a party of the acts of another. Accordingly, when a subordinate
officer or office of the Government complies with the commands of a superior
officer or office, under whose supervision and control he or it is, the former merely
obeys the latter. Strictly speaking, and from a legal and constitutional viewpoint,
there is no act of recognition involved therein. Indeed, the lower officer or office, if
he or it acted otherwise, would just be guilty of insubordination.
Thus, for instance, the case of Taylor v. Commonwealth 80 cited by respondents
herein in support of the theory of the people's acquiescence involved a
constitution ordained in 1902 and "proclaimed by a convention duly called by a
direct vote of the people of the state to revise and amend the Constitution of 1869.
The result of the work of that Convention has been recognized, accepted and acted
upon as the only valid Constitution of the State" by
1.
2.
2.The "Legislature in its formal official act adopting a joint resolution, July
15, 1902, recognizing the Constitution ordained by the Convention . . .";
3.
3.The "individual oaths of its members to support it, and by its having
been engaged for nearly a year, in legislating under it and putting its
provisions into operation . . .";
4.
5.
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law to desist from provoking a constitutional crisis . . . which may result in the
exercise by me of authority I have not exercised."
Note that the New Constitution of Virginia, drafted by a convention whose members
were elected directly by the people, was not submitted to the people for ratification
or rejection thereof. But, it was recognized, not by the convention itself, but by
other sectors of the Government, namely, the Governor; the Legislature not
merely by individual acts of its members, but by formal joint resolution of its two (2)
chambers; by the judiciary; and by the people, in the various ways specified above.
What is more, there was no martial law. In the present cases, none of the foregoing
acts of acquiescence was present. Worse still, there is martial law, the strict
enforcement of which was announced shortly before the alleged citizens'
assemblies. To top it all, in the Taylor case, the effectivity of the contested
amendment was not contested judicially until about one (1) year after the
amendment had been put into operation in all branches of the Government, and
complied with by the people who participated in the elections held pursuant to the
provisions of the new Constitution. In the cases under consideration, the legality of
Presidential Decree No. 73 calling a plebiscite to be held on January 15, 1973, was
impugned as early as December 7, 1972, or five (5) weeks before the scheduled
plebiscite, whereas the validity of Proclamation No. 1102 declaring on January 17,
1973, that the proposed Constitution had been ratified despite General Order No.
20, issued on January 7, 1972, formally and officially suspending the plebiscite until
further notice was impugned as early as January 20, 1973, when L-36142 was
filed, or three (3) daysafter the issuance of Proclamation No. 1102.
No matter how good the intention behind these statements may have been, the
idea implied therein was too clear and ominous for any member of Congress who
thought of organizing, holding or taking part in a session of Congress, not to get the
impression that he could hardly do so without inviting or risking the application of
Martial Law to him. Under these conditions, I do not feel justified in holding that the
failure of the members of Congress to meet since January 22, 1973, was due to
their recognition, acquiescence in or conformity with the provisions of the
aforementioned Constitution, or its alleged ratification.
For the same reasons, especially because of Proclamation No. 1081, placing the
entire Philippines under Martial Law, neither am I prepared to declare that the
people's inaction as regards Proclamation No. 1102, and their compliance with a
number of Presidential orders, decrees and/or instructions some or many of
which have admittedly had salutary effects issued subsequently thereto
amounts, constitutes or attests to a ratification, adoption or approval of said
Proclamation No. 1102. In the words of the Chief Executive, "martial law connotes
power of the gun, meant coercion by the military, and compulsion and
intimidation." 83 The failure to use the gun against those who comply with the
orders of the party wielding the weapon does not detract from the intimidation that
Martial Law necessarily connotes. It may reflect the good, reasonable and
wholesome attitude of the person who has the gun, either pointed at others,
without pulling the trigger, or merely kept in its holster, but not without warning
that he may or would use it if he deemed it necessary. Still, the intimidation is
there, and inaction or obedience of the people, under these conditions, is not
necessarily an act of conformity or acquiescence. This is specially so when we
consider that the masses are, by and large, unfamiliar with the parliamentary
system, the new form of government introduced in the proposed Constitution, with
the particularity that it is not even identical to that existing in England and other
parts of the world, and that even experienced lawyers and social scientists find it
difficult to grasp the full implications of some provisions incorporated therein.
As regards the applicability to these cases of the "enrolled bill" rule, it is well to
remember that the same refers to a document certified to the President for his
action under the Constitution by the Senate President and the Speaker of the
House of Representatives, and attested to by the Secretary of the Senate and the
Secretary of the House of Representatives, concerning legislative measures
approved by the two Houses of Congress. The argument of the Solicitor General is,
roughly, this: If the enrolled bill is entitled to full faith and credence and, to this
extent, it is conclusive upon the President and the judicial branch of the
Government, why should Proclamation No. 1102 merit less consideration than in
enrolled bill?
Before answering this question, I would like to ask the following: If, instead of being
certified by the aforementioned officers of Congress, the so-called enrolled bill were
certified by, say, the President of the Association of Sugar Planters and/or Millers of
the Philippines, and the measure in question were a proposed legislation concerning
Sugar Plantations and Mills sponsored by said Association, which even prepared the
draft of said legislation, as well as lobbied actually for its approval, for which reason
the officers of the Association, particularly, its aforementioned president whose
honesty and integrity are unquestionable were present at the deliberations in
Congress when the same approved the proposed legislation, would the enrolled bill
rule apply thereto? Surely, the answer would have to be in the negative. Why?
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Simply, because said Association President has absolutely no official authority to
perform in connection therewith, and, hence, his certification is, legally, as good as
non-existent.
Similarly, a certification, if any, of the Secretary of the Department of Local
Governments and Community Development about the tabulated results of the
voting in the Citizens' Assemblies allegedly held all over the Philippines and the
records do not show that any such certification, either to the President of the
Philippines or to the President of the Federation or National Association of
presidents of Provincial Associations of presidents of municipal associations of
presidents of barrio or ward assemblies of citizens would not, legally and
constitutionally, be worth the paper on which it is written. Why? Because said
Department Secretary is not the officer designated by law to superintend
plebiscites or elections held for the ratification or rejection of a proposed
amendment or revision of the Constitution and, hence, to tabulate the results
thereof. Worse still, it is the officer or department which, according to Article X of
the 1935 Constitution, should not and must not be allowed to participate in said
plebiscite if plebiscite there was.
After citing approvingly its ruling in United States v. Sandoval, 84 the Highest Court
of the United States declared that courts "will not stand impotent before an obvious
instance of a manifestly unauthorized exercise of power." 85
I cannot honestly say, therefore, that the people have impliedly or expressly
indicated their conformity to the proposed Constitution.
VI
Are the Parties entitled to any relief?
Before attempting to answer this question, a few words must be said about the
procedure followed in these five (5) cases. In this connection, it should be noted
that the Court has not as yet decided whether or not to give due course to the
petitions herein or to require the respondents to answer thereto. Instead, it has
required the respondents to comment on the respective petitions with three (3)
members of the Court voting to dismiss them outright and then considered the
comments thus submitted by the respondents as motions to dismiss, as well as set
the same for hearing. This was due to the transcendental nature of the main issue
raised, the necessity of deciding the same with utmost dispatch, and the main
defense set up by respondents herein, namely, the alleged political nature of said
issue, placing the same, according to respondents, beyond the ambit of judicial
inquiry and determination. If this defense was sustained, the cases could readily be
dismissed; but, owing to the importance of the questions involved, a reasoned
resolution was demanded by public interest. At the same time, respondents had
cautioned against a judicial inquiry into the merits of the issues posed on account of
the magnitude of the evil consequences, it was claimed, which would result from a
decision thereon, if adverse to the Government.
As a matter of fact, some of those issues had been raised in the plebiscite cases,
which were dismissed as moot and academic, owing to the issuance of Proclamation
No. 1102 subsequently to the filing of said cases, although before the rendition of
judgment therein. Still one of the members of the Court (Justice Zaldivar) was of the
opinion that the aforementioned issues should be settled in said cases, and he,
accordingly, filed an opinion passing upon the merits thereof. On the other hand,
three (3) members of the Court Justices Barredo, Antonio and Esguerra filed
separate opinions favorable to the respondents in the plebiscite cases, Justice
Barredo holding "that the 1935 Constitution has pro tanto passed into history and
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We must realize that the New Society has many achievements which would have
been very difficult, if not impossible, to accomplish under the old dispensation. But,
in and for the judiciary, statesmanship should not prevail over the Rule of Law.
Indeed, the primacy of the law or of the Rule of Law and faithful adherence thereto
are basic, fundamental and essential parts of statesmanship itself.
Resume of the Votes Cast and the Court's Resolution
As earlier stated, after the submittal by the members of the Court of their individual
opinions and/or concurrences as appended hereto, the writer will now make, with
the concurrence of his colleagues, a resume or summary of the votes cast by each
of them.
It should be stated that by virtue of the various approaches and views expressed
during the deliberations, it was agreed to synthesize the basic issues at bar in
broad general terms in five questions for purposes of taking the votes. It was
further agreed of course that each member of the Court would expound in his
individual opinion and/or concurrence his own approach to the stated issues and
deal with them and state (or not) his opinion thereon singly or jointly and with such
priority, qualifications and modifications as he may deem proper, as well as discuss
thereon other related issues which he may consider vital and relevant to the cases
at bar.
The five questions thus agreed upon as reflecting the basic issues herein involved
are the following:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
The results of the voting, premised on the individual views expressed by the
members of the Court in their respective opinions and/or concurrences, are as
follows:
1.On the first issue involving the political-question doctrine, Justices Makalintal,
Zaldivar, Castro, Fernando, Teehankee and myself, or six (6) members of the Court,
hold that the issue of the validity of Proclamation No. 1102 presents a justiciable
and non-political question. Justices Makalintal and Castro did not vote squarely on
this question, but, only inferentially, in their discussion of the second question.
Justice Barredo qualified his vote, stating that "inasmuch as it is claimed that there
has been approval by the people, the Court may inquire into the question of
whether or not there has actually been such an approval, and, in the affirmative,
the Court should keep its hands-off out of respect to the people's will, but, in the
negative, the Court may determine from both factual and legal angles whether or
not Article XV of the 1935 Constitution has been complied with." Justices Makasiar,
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4.On the fourth question of relief, six (6) members of the Court, namely, Justices
Makalintal, Castro, Barredo, Makasiar, Antonio and Esguerra voted to DISMISS the
petition. Justices Makalintal and Castro so voted on the strength of their view that
"(T)he effectivity of the said Constitution, in the final analysis, is the basic and
ultimate question posed by these cases to resolve which considerations other than
judicial, and therefore beyond the competence of this Court, 90 are relevant and
unavoidable." 91
Four (4) members of the Court, namely, Justices Zaldivar, Fernando, Teehankee and
myself voted to deny respondents' motion to dismiss and to give due course to the
petitions.
5.On the fifth question of whether the new Constitution of 1973 is in force:
Four (4) members of the Court, namely, Justices Barredo, Makasiar, Antonio and
Esguerra hold that it is in force by virtue of the people's acceptance thereof;
Four (4) members of the Court, namely, Justices Makalintal, Castro, Fernando and
Teehankee cast no vote thereon on the premise stated in their votes on the third
question that they could not state with judicial certainty whether the people have
accepted or not accepted the Constitution; and
Two (2) members of the Court, namely, Justice Zaldivar and myself voted that the
Constitution proposed by the 1971 Constitutional Convention is not in force;
with the result that there are not enough votes to declare that the new Constitution
is not in force.
ACCORDINGLY, by virtue of the majority of six (6) votes of Justices Makalintal,
Castro, Barredo, Makasiar, Antonio and Esguerra with the four (4) dissenting votes
of the Chief Justice and Justices Zaldivar, Fernando and Teehankee, all the
aforementioned cases are hereby dismissed. This being the vote of the majority,
there is no further judicial obstacle to the new Constitution being considered in
force and effect.
It is so ordered.
||| (Javellana v. Executive Secretary, G.R. No. L-36142, L-36164, L-36165, L-36236,
L-36283 (Resolution), [March 31, 1973])
71