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EN BANC

[G.R. No. L-36142. March 31, 1973.]


JOSUE JAVELLANA, Petitioner, v. 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, v. 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, v. 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, 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, v. THE HONORABLE SECRETARY OF NATIONAL DEFENSE, THE
HONORABLE BUDGET COMMISSIONER, THE HONORABLE AUDITOR GENERAL, Respondents.
Ramon A. Gonzales for petitioner Josue Javellana.
Lorenzo M. Taada & Associates for petitioners Vidal Tan, Et. Al.
Taada, Salonga, Ordoez, Rodrigo, Sanidad Roxas Gonzales and Arroyo for petitioners
Gerardo Roxas, Et. Al.
Joker P. Arroyo and Rogelio B. Padilla for petitioner Eddie Monteclaro.
Raul M. Gonzales & Associates for petitioners Napoleon V. Dilag, Et. Al.
Arturo M. Tolentino for respondents Gil J. Puyat and Jose Roy.
Solicitor General Estelito P. Mendoza, Solicitor Vicente V . Mendoza and Solicitor Reynato S.
Puno for other respondents.
RESOLUTION
CONCEPCION, J.:
The above entitled five (5) cases are a sequel of cases G.R. Nos. L-35925, L-35929, L35940, 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
The factual setting thereof is set forth in the decision rendered, from which We
quote:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"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. L35925, 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 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. L-35940), by Eddie B. Monteclaro
against the Commission on Elections and the Treasurer of the Philippines (Case G.R. No L35941), and by Sedfrey A. Ordoez, Et. Al. against the National Treasurer and the
Commission on Elections (Case G.R. No. L-35942); 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. L35965), 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 (oclock) 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. L-35979 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 appropriate funds therefor, which Congress
unquestionably could do, particularly in view of the formal postponement of the plebiscite
by the President reportedly after consultation with, among others, the leaders of
Congress and the Commission on Elections the Court deemed it more imperative to
defer its final action on these cases.
"In the afternoon of January 12, 1973, the petitioners in Case G.R. No. L-35948 filed an
urgent motion, praying that said case be decided as soon as possible, preferably not
later than January 15, 1973. It was alleged in said motion, inter alia.
6. That the President subsequently announced the issuance of Presidential Decree No. 86
organizing the so-called Citizens Assemblies, to be consulted on certain public questions
[Bulletin Today, January 1, 1973];
7. That thereafter it was later announced that "the Assemblies will be asked if they favor
or oppose
" [1] The New Society;
" [2] Reforms instituted under Martial Law;
" [3] The holding of a plebiscite on proposed new Constitution and when (the tentative new
dates given following postponement of the plebiscite from the original date of January 15
are February 19 and March 5);
" [4] The opening of the regular session on January 22 in accordance with the existing
Constitution despite Martial Law." [Bulletin Today, January 3, 1973.]
8. That it was later reported that the following are to be the forms of the questions to be
asked to the Citizens Assemblies:
" [1] Do you approve of the New Society?
" [2] Do you approve of the reform measures under martial law?
" [3] Do you think that Congress should meet again in regular session?
" [4] How soon would you like the plebiscite on the new Constitution to be held?" [Bulletin
Today, January 5, 1973].
9. That the voting by the so-called Citizens Assemblies was announced to take place
during the period from January 10 to January 15, 1973;
10. That on January 10, 1973, it was reported that one more question would be added to
the four (4) questions previously announced, and that the forms of the questions would be
as follows:
" [1] Do you like the New Society?
" [2] Do you like the reforms under martial law?
" [3] Do you like Congress again to hold sessions?
" [4] Do you like the plebiscite to be held later?

" [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?
" [2] Do you approve of the New Constitution?
" [3] Do you want a plebiscite to be called to ratify the new Constitution?
" [4] Do you want the elections to be held in November, 1973 in accordance with the
provisions of the 1935 Constitution?
" [5] If the elections would not be held, when do you want the next elections to be called?
" [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 "A1", 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.
QUESTION No. 4
We are sick and tired of too frequent elections. We are fed up with politics, of so many
debates and so much expenses.
QUESTION No. 5
Probably a period of at least seven (7) years moratorium on elections will be enough for
stability to be established in the country, for reforms to take root and normalcy to return.
QUESTION No. 6
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."cralaw virtua1aw library
Attention is respectfully invited to the comments on "Question No. 3," which reads:
"QUESTION No. 3
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."cralaw virtua1aw library
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;
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;
17. That the fait accompli would consist in the supposed expression of the people
approving the proposed Constitution;
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 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;
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.
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 L35942, 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;
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:
[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
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."cralaw virtua1aw library
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 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:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library
[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:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE PHILIPPINES


PROCLAMATION NO. 1102
ANNOUNCING THE RATIFICATION BY THE FILIPINO PEOPLE OF THE CONSTITUTION
PROPOSED BY THE 1971 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION.
WHEREAS, the Constitution proposed by the nineteen hundred seventy-one Constitutional
Convention is subject to ratification by the Filipino people;
WHEREAS, Citizens Assemblies were created in barrios, in municipalities and in
districts/wards in chartered cities pursuant to Presidential Decree No. 86, dated December
31, 1972, composed of all persons who are residents of the barrio, district or ward for at
least six months, fifteen years of age or over, citizens of the Philippines and who are
registered in the list of Citizen Assembly members kept by the barrio, district or ward
secretary;
WHEREAS, the said Citizens Assemblies were established precisely to broaden the base of
citizen participation in the democratic process and to afford ample opportunity for the
citizenry to express their views on important national issues;
WHEREAS, responding to the clamor of the people and pursuant to Presidential Decree No.
86-A, dated January 5, 1973, the following questions were posed before the Citizens
Assemblies or Barangays: Do you approve of the New Constitution? Do you still want a
plebiscite to be called to ratify the new Constitution?
WHEREAS, fourteen million nine hundred seventy-six thousand five hundred sixty-one
(14,976,561) members of all the Barangays (Citizens Assemblies) voted for the adoption of
the proposed Constitution, as against seven hundred forty-three thousand eight hundred
sixty-nine (743,869) who voted for its rejection; while on the question as to whether or not
the people would still like a plebiscite to be called to ratify the new Constitution, fourteen
million two hundred ninety-eight thousand eight hundred fourteen (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;
WHEREAS, since the referendum results show that more than ninety-five (95) per cent of
the members of the Barangays (Citizens Assemblies) are in favor of the new Constitution,
the Katipunan ng Mga Barangay has strongly recommended that the new Constitution
should already be deemed ratified by the Filipino people;
NOW, THEREFORE, I, FERDINAND E. MARCOS, President of the Philippines, by virtue of the
powers in me vested by the Constitution, do hereby certify and proclaim 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 WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the Republic
of the Philippines to be affixed.
Done in the City of Manila, this 17th day of January, in the year of Our Lord, nineteen
hundred and seventy-three.
(Sgd.) FERDINAND E. MARCOS
President of the Philippines
By the President:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library
ALEJANDRO MELCHOR
Executive Secretary
"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 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 Presidents 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.

"a. Justices Makalintal, Castro, Fernando, Teehankee, Makasiar, Esguerra and myself are of
the opinion that the question of validity of said Proclamation has not been properly raised
before the Court, which, accordingly, should not pass upon such question.
"b. Justice Barredo holds that the issue on the constitutionality of Proclamation No. 1102
has been submitted to and should be determined by the Court, and that the purported
ratification of the Proposed Constitution . . . based on the referendum among Citizens
Assemblies falls short of being in strict conformity with the requirements of Article XV of
the 1935 Constitution, but that such unfortunate drawback notwithstanding, considering
all other related relevant circumstances, . . . the new Constitution is legally recognizable
and should be recognized as legitimately in force.

"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."cralaw virtua1aw library

"c. Justice Zaldivar maintains unqualifiedly that the Proposed Constitution has not been
ratified in accordance with Article XV of the 1935 Constitution, and that, accordingly, it has
no force and effect whatsoever.

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:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"7. On the question whether or not these cases should be dismissed, Justices Makalintal,
Castro, Barredo, Makasiar, Antonio and Esguerra voted in the affirmative, for the reasons
set forth in their respective opinions. Justices Fernando, Teehankee, and the writer similarly
voted, except as regards Case No. L-35948 as to which they voted to grant to the
petitioners therein a reasonable period of time within which to file appropriate pleadings
should they wish to contest the legality of Presidential Proclamation No. 1102. Justice
Zaldivar favors the granting of said period to the petitioners in said Case No. L-35948 for
the aforementioned purpose, but he believes, in effect, that the Court should go farther
and decide on the merits everyone of the cases under consideration."cralaw virtua1aw
library

"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 L35948, 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:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"d. Justice Antonio feels that the Court is not competent to act on the issue whether the
Proposed Constitution has been ratified by the people or not, in the absence of any
judicially discoverable and manageable standards, since the issue poses a question of
fact.

Accordingly, the Court acting in conformity with the position taken by six (6) of its
members, 1 with three (3) members dissenting, 2 with respect to G.R. No. L-35948, only,
and another member 3 dissenting, as regards all of the cases dismissed the same,
without special pronouncement as to costs.
The Present Cases
Prior thereto, or on January 20, 1973, Josue Javellana filed Case G.R. No. L-36142 against
the Executive Secretary and the Secretaries of National Defense, Justice and Finance, to
restrain said respondents "and their subordinates or agents, from implementing any of the
provisions of the proposed Constitution not found in the present Constitution referring
to that of 1935. The petition therein, filed by Josue Javellana, as a "Filipino citizen, and a
qualified and registered voter" and as "a class suit, for himself, and in behalf of all citizens
and voters similarly situated," was amended on or about January 24, 1973. After reciting in
substance the facts set forth in the decision in the plebiscite cases, Javellana alleged that
the President had announced "the immediate implementation of the New Constitution, thru
his Cabinet, respondents including," and that the latter "are acting without, or in excess of
jurisdiction in implementing the said proposed Constitution" upon the ground: "that the
President, as Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, 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."cralaw
virtua1aw library
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 socalled Citizens Assemblies on January 10, 1973 to January 15, 197 , as stated in and by
virtue of Proclamation No. 1102 signed and issued by the President of the Philippines" ;
that "the alleged creation of the Citizens Assemblies as instrumentalities for the
ratification of the Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines" is inherently illegal and
palpably unconstitutional; that respondents Senate President and Senate President Pro
Tempore "have unlawfully refrained and continue to refrain from and/or unlawfully
neglected and continue to neglect the performance of their duties and functions as such
officers under the law and the Rules of the Senate" quoted in the petition; that because of

events supervening the institution of the plebiscite cases, to which reference has been
made in the preceding pages" the Supreme Court dismissed said cases on January 22,
1973, by a majority vote, upon the ground that the petitions therein had become moot and
academic; that the alleged ratification of the 1972 (1973) Constitution "is illegal,
unconstitutional and void and . . . can not have superseded and revoked the 1935
Constitution," for the reasons specified in the petition as amended; that, by acting as they
did, the respondents and their "agents, representatives and subordinates . . . have
excluded the petitioners from an office to which" they "are lawfully entitled" ; that
"respondents Gil J. Puyat and Jose Roy have unlawfully refrained from convening the
Senate for its 8th session, assuming general jurisdiction over the Session Hall and the
premises of the Senate and . . . continue such inaction up to this time and . . . a writ of
mandamus is warranted in order to compel them to comply with the duties and functions
specifically enjoined by law" ; and that "against the above mentioned unlawful acts of the
respondents, the petitioners have no appeal nor other speedy and adequate remedy in the
ordinary course of law except by invoking the equitable remedies of mandamus and
prohibition with the provisional remedy of preliminary mandatory injunction."cralaw
virtua1aw library
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 above-mentioned 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."cralaw virtua1aw library
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 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."cralaw virtua1aw library
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."cralaw
virtua1aw library
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. L-36142, 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."cralaw
virtua1aw library
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.
Writers Personal Opinion
I
Alleged academic futility of further proceedings in G.R. No. L-36165.
This defense or theory, set up by counsel for respondents Gil J. Puyat and Jose Roy in G.R.
No. L-36165, and, also, by the Solicitor General, is predicated upon the fact that, in Our
decision in the plebiscite cases, Mr. Justice Barredo expressed the view that the 1935
Constitution had "pro tanto passed into history" and "been legitimately supplanted by the
Constitution now in force by virtue of Proclamation No. 1102 . . ." ; that Mr. Justice Antonio
did not feel "that this Court is competent to act" in said cases "in the absence of any
judicially discoverable and manageable standards" and because "the access to relevant
information is insufficient to assure the correct determination of the issue," apart from the
circumstance that "the new constitution has been promulgate and great interests have
already arisen under it" and that the political organ of the Government has recognized its
provisions; whereas, Mr. Justice Esguerra had postulated that" (w)ithout any competent

evidence . . . about the circumstances attending the holding" of the referendum or


plebiscite" thru the Citizens Assemblies, he "cannot say that it was not lawfully held" and
that, accordingly, he assumed "that what the proclamation (No. 1102) says on its face is
true and until overcome by satisfactory evidence" he could not "subscribe to the claim that
such plebiscite was not held accordingly" ; and that he accepted "as a fait accompli that
the Constitution adopted (by the 1971 Constitutional Convention) on November 30, 1972,
has been duly ratified."cralaw virtua1aw library
Counsel for respondents Gil J. Puyat and Jose Roy goes on to say that, under these
circumstances, "it seems remote or improbable that the necessary eight (8) votes under
the 1935 Constitution, and much less the ten (10) votes required by the 1972 (1973)
Constitution, can be obtained for the relief sought in the Amended Petition" in G.R. No. L36165.
I am unable to share this view. To begin with, Mr. Justice Barredo announced publicly, in
open court, during the hearing of these cases, that he was and is willing to be convinced
that his aforementioned opinion in the plebiscite cases should be reconsidered and
changed. In effect, he thus declared that he had an open mind in connection with the
cases at bar, and that in deciding the same he would not necessarily adhere to said
opinion if the petitioners herein succeeded in convincing him that their view should be
sustained.
Secondly, counsel for the aforesaid respondents had apparently assumed that, under the
1935 Constitution, eigth (8) votes are necessary to declare invalid the contested
Proclamation No. 1102. I do not believe that this assumption is borne out by any provision
of said Constitution. Section 10 of Article VIII thereof reads:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"All cases involving the constitutionality of a treaty or law shall be heard and decided by
the Supreme Court in banc, and no treaty or law may be declared unconstitutional without
the concurrence of two thirds of all the members of the Court."cralaw virtua1aw library
Pursuant to this section, the concurrence of two thirds of all the Members of the Supreme
Court is required only to declare a "treaty or law" unconstitutional. Construing said
provision, in a resolution dated September 16, 1949, then Chief Justice Moran, voicing the
unanimous view of the Members of this Court, postulated:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
". . . There is nothing either in the Constitution or in the Judiciary Act requiring the vote of
eight Justices to nullify a rule or regulation or an executive order issued by 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 twothirds (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:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"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
II
Does the issue on the validity of Proclamation No. 1102 partake of the nature of a political,
and, hence, non-justiciable question?
The Solicitor General maintains in his comment the affirmative view and this is his main
defense. In support thereof, he alleges that "petitioners would have this Court declare as
invalid the New Constitution of the Republic" from which he claims "this Court now
derives its authority" ; that "nearly 15 million of our body politic from the age of 15 years
have mandated this Constitution to be the New Constitution and the prospect of unsettling
acts done in reliance on it caution against interposition of the power of judicial review" ;
that "In the case of the New Constitution, the government has been recognized in
accordance with the New Constitution" ; that "the countrys foreign relations are now being
conducted in accordance with the new charter" ; that "foreign governments have taken
note of it" ; that the "plebiscite cases" are "not precedents for holding questions regarding
proposal and ratification justiciable" ; and that "to abstain from judgment on the ultimate
issue of constitutionality is not to abdicate duty."cralaw virtua1aw library
At the outset, it is obvious to me that We are not being asked to "declare" the new
Constitution invalid. What petitioners dispute is the theory that it has been validly ratified

by the people, especially that they have done so in accordance with Article XV of the 1935
Constitution. The petitioners maintain that the conclusion by the Chief Executive in the
dispositive portion of Proclamation No. 1102 is not borne out by the whereases preceding
the same, as the predicates from which said conclusion was drawn; that the plebiscite or
"election" required in said Article XV has not been held; that the Chief Executive has not
authority, under the 1935 Constitution, to dispense with said election or plebiscite; that
the proceedings before the Citizens Assemblies did not constitution and may not be
considered as such plebiscite; that the facts of record abundantly show that the
aforementioned Assemblies could not have been held throughout the Philippines from
January 10 to January 15, 1973; and that, in any event, the proceedings in said Assemblies
are null and void as an alleged ratification of the new Constitution proposed by the 1971
Constitutional Convention, not only because of the circumstances under which said
Assemblies had been created and held, but, also, because persons disqualified to vote
under Article V of the Constitution were allowed to participate therein, because the
provisions of our Election Code were not observed in said Assemblies, because the same
were not held under the supervision of the Commission on Elections, in violations of
section 2 of Article X of the 1935 Constitution, and because the existence of Martial Law
and General Order No. 20, withdrawing or suspending the limited freedom to discuss the
merits and demerits of said proposed Constitution, impaired the peoples freedom in
voting thereon, particularly, a viva voce, as it was done in many instances, as well as their
ability to have a reasonable knowledge of the contents of the document on which they
were allegedly called upon to express their views.
Referring now more specifically to the issue on whether the new Constitution proposed by
the 1971 Constitutional Convention has been ratified in accordance with the provisions of
Article XV of the 1935 Constitution is a political question or not, I do not hesitate to state
that the answer must be in the negative. Indeed, such is the position taken by this Court,
17 in an endless line of decisions, too long to leave any room for possible doubt that said
issue is inherently and essentially justiciable. Such, also, has been the consistent position
of the courts of the United States of America, whose decisions have a persuasive effect in
this jurisdiction, our constitutional system in the 1935 Constitution being patterned after
that of the 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 ofhabeas 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 nonjusticiability 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.25cralaw:red
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:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"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.
x
x
x
". . . 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 v. 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 v.
Mills, 69 Fed. 852, 16 C.C.A. 516, 30 L.R.A. 90; Fletcher v. 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 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."cralaw virtua1aw library
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 Luthers 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 secession from England Rhode Island retained its form of
government under a British Charter, making only such alterations, by acts of the
Legislature, as were necessary to adapt it to its subsequent condition as an independent
state. It was under this form of government when Rhode Island joined other American
states in the Declaration of Independence and, by subsequently ratifying the Constitution
of the United States, became a member of the Union. In 1843, it adopted a new
Constitution.
Prior thereto, however, many citizens had become dissatisfied with the charter
government. Memorials addressed by them to the Legislature having failed to bring about
the desired effect, meetings were held and associations formed by those who belonged
to this segment of the population which eventually resulted in a convention called for
the drafting of a new Constitution to be submitted to the people for their adoption or
rejection. The convention was not authorized by any law of the existing government. The
delegates to such convention framed a new Constitution which was submitted to the
people. Upon the return of the votes cast by them, the convention declared that said
Constitution had been adopted and ratified by a majority of the people and became the
paramount law and Constitution of Rhode Island.
The charter government, which was supported by a large number of citizens of the state,
contested, however, the validity of said proceedings. This notwithstanding, one Thomas W.
Dorr, who had been elected governor under the new Constitution of the rebels, prepared to
assert authority by force of arms, and many citizens assembled to support him.
Thereupon, the charter government passed an Act declaring the state under Martial Law
and adopted measures to repel the threatened attack and subdue the rebels. This was the
state of affairs when the defendants, who were in the military service of the charter
government and were to arrest Luther, for engaging in the support of the rebel
government which was never able to exercise any authority in the state broke into his
house.
Meanwhile, the charter government had taken measures to call its own convention to
revise the existing form of government. Eventually, a new constitution was drafted by a
convention held under the authority of the charter government, and thereafter was
adopted and ratified by the people." (T)he times and places at which the votes were to be
persons who were to be given, the receive and return them qualifications of the voters
having all been previously authorized and provided for by law passed by the charter
government," the latter formally surrendered all of its power to the new government,

established under its authority, in May 1843, which had been in operation uninterruptedly
since then.
About a year before, or in May 1842, Dorr, at the head of a military force, had made an
unsuccessful attempt to take possession of the state arsenal in Providence, but he was
repulsed, and, after an "assemblage of some hundreds of armed men under his command
at Chepatchet in the June following which dispersed upon approach of the troops of the old
government, no further effort was made to establish" his government.." . . until the
Constitution of 1843" adopted under the auspices of the charter government "went
into operation, the charter government continued to asset its authority and exercise its
powers and to enforce obedience throughout the state . . ."cralaw virtua1aw library
Having offered to introduce evidence to prove that the constitution of the rebels had been
ratified by the majority of the people, which the Circuit Court rejected, apart from
rendering judgment for the defendants, the plaintiff took the case for review to the Federal
Supreme Court which affirmed the action of the Circuit Court,
stating:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"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.
"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

10

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 revised Constitution proposed by the 1971 Constitutional
Convention and now alleges that it has been ratified by the people.
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:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"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 . . ."cralaw virtua1aw library
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 Powells 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.

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
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 nonpolitical in nature, and that it is not only subject to judicial inquiry, but, also, that it is the
Courts bounden duty to decide such question.
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
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."cralaw virtua1aw library
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."cralaw virtua1aw library

After an exhaustive analysis of the cases on this subject, the Court


concluded:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

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."cralaw virtua1aw library

"The authorities are thus practically uniform in holding that whether a constitutional

Besides adopting substantially some of the grounds relied upon by the petitioners in the

11

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 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.
1. What is the procedure prescribed by the 1935 Constitution for its amendment?
Under section 1 of Art. XV of said Constitution, three (3) steps are essential,
namely:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library
1. That the amendments to the Constitution be proposed either by Congress or by a
convention called for that purpose, "by a vote of three-fourths of all the Members of the
Senate and the House of Representatives voting separately," but "in joint session
assembled" ;
2. That such amendments be "submitted to the people for their ratification" at an
"election" ; and
3. That such amendments be "approved by a majority of the votes cast" in said election.
Compliance with the first requirement is virtually conceded, although the petitioners in L36164 question the authority of the 1971 Constitutional Convention to incorporate certain
provisions into the draft of the new or revised Constitution The main issue in these five (5)
cases hinges, therefore, on whether or not the last two (2) requirements have been
complied with.
2. Has the contested draft of the new or revised Constitution been "submitted to the
people for their ratification" conformably to Art. XV of the Constitution?
In this connection, other provisions of the 1935 Constitution concerning "elections" must,
also, be taken into account, namely, section 1 of Art. V and Art. X of said Constitution. The
former reads:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"Section 1. Suffrage may be exercised by male citizens of the Philippines not otherwise
disqualified by law, who are twenty-one years of age or over and are able to read and
write, and who shall have resided in the Philippines for one year and in the municipality
wherein they propose to vote for at least six months preceding the election. The National
Assembly shall extend the right of suffrage to women, if in a plebiscite which shall be held
for that purpose within two years after the adoption of this Constitution, not less than
three hundred thousand women possessing the necessary qualifications shall vote
affirmatively on the question."cralaw virtua1aw library
Sections 1 and 2 of Art. X of the Constitution ordain in part:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"Section 1. There shall be an independent Commission on Elections composed of a
Chairman and two other Members to be appointed by the President with the consent of the
Commission on Appointments, who shall hold office for a term of nine years and may not
be reappointed . . .
"x
x
x
"Sec. 2. The Commission on Elections shall have exclusive charge of the enforcement and
administration of all laws relative to the conduct of elections and shall exercise all other
functions which may be conferred upon it by law. It shall decide, save those involving the

right to vote, all administrative questions, affecting 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.
"x
x
x" 39
a. Who may vote in a plebiscite under Art. V of the Constitution?
Petitioners maintain that section 1 of Art. V of the Constitution is a limitation upon the
exercise of the right of suffrage. They claim that no other persons than "citizen of the
Philippines not otherwise disqualified by law, who are twenty-one years of age or over and
are able to read and write, and who shall have resided in the Philippines for one year and
in the municipality wherein they propose to vote for at least six months preceding the
election," may exercise the right of suffrage in the Philippines. Upon the other hand, the
Solicitor General contends that said provision merely guarantees the right of suffrage to
persons possessing the aforementioned qualifications and none of the disqualifications,
prescribed by law, and that said right may be vested by competent authorities in persons
lacking some or all of the aforementioned qualifications, and possessing some of the
aforesaid disqualifications. In support of this view, he invokes the permissive nature of the
language " (s)uffrage may be exercised" used in section 1 of Art. V of the Constitution,
and the provisions of the Revised Barrio Charter, Republic Act No. 3590, particularly
sections 4 and 6 thereof, providing that citizens of the Philippines "eighteen years of age
or over," who are registered in the list of barrio assembly members, shall be members
thereof and may participate as such in the plebiscites prescribed in said Act.
I cannot accept the Solicitor Generals theory. Art. V of the Constitution declares who may
exercise the right of suffrage, so that those lacking the qualifications therein prescribed
may not exercise such right. This view is borne out by the records of the Constitutional
Convention that drafted the 1935 Constitution. Indeed, section 1 of Art. V of the 1935
Constitution was largely based on the report of the committee on suffrage of the
Convention that drafted said Constitution, which report was, in turn, "strongly influenced
by the election laws then in force in the Philippines . . ." 40 Said committee had
recommended: 1) "That the right of suffrage should be exercised only by male citizens of
the Philippines." 2) "That it should be limited to those who could read and write." 3) "That
the duty to vote should be made obligatory." It appears that the first recommendation was
discussed extensively in the Convention, and that, by way of compromise, it was
eventually agreed to include, in section 1 of Art. V of the Constitution, the second sentence
thereof imposing upon the National Assembly, established by the original Constitution
instead of the bicameral Congress subsequently created by amendment of said
Constitution the duty to "extend the right of suffrage to women, if in a plebiscite to be
held for that purpose within two years after the adoption of this Constitution, not less than
three hundred thousand women possessing the necessary qualifications shall vote
affirmatively on the question." 41
The third recommendation on "compulsory" voting was, also, debated upon rather
extensively, after which it was rejected by the Convention. 42 This accounts, in my
opinion, for the permissive language used in the first sentence of said Art. V. Despite some
debates on the age qualification amendments having been proposed to reduce the
same to 18 or 20, which were rejected, and the residence qualification, as well as the
disqualifications to the exercise of the right of suffrage 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

12

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.
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."cralaw virtua1aw library
I believe, however, that the apparent conflict should be resolved in favor of the 21-year-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

13

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:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"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."cralaw virtua1aw library
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 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 Vice-President, 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
office; nor shall they, directly or indirectly, be financially interested in any contract with the
Government or any subdivision or instrumentality thereof." 63 Thus, the framers of the
amendment to the original Constitution of 1935 endeavored to do everything possible to
protect and insure the independence of each member of the Commission.
With respect to the functions thereof as a body, section 2 of said Art. X ordains that" (t)he
Commission on Elections shall have exclusive charge of the enforcement and
administration of all laws relative to the conduct of elections," apart from such other
"functions which may be conferred upon it by law." It further provides that the Commission
"shall decide, save those involving the right to vote, all administrative questions, affecting
elections, including the determination of the number and location of polling places, and
the appointment of election inspectors and of other election officials." And, to forestall
possible conflicts or frictions between the Commission, on the one hand, and the other
offices or agencies of the executive department, on the other, said section 2 postulates
that" (a)ll 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." Not satisfied with this, it declares, in effect, that" (t)he
decisions, orders, and rulings of the Commission" shall not be subject to review, except by
the Supreme Court.
In accordance with the letter and spirit of said Art. X of the Constitution, Rep. Act No. 6388,
otherwise known as Election Code of 1971, implements the constitutional powers of the
Commission on Elections and grants additional powers thereto, some of which are

14

enumerated in sections 5 and 6 of said Act, quoted below. 64 Moreover, said Act contains,
inter alia, detailed provisions regulating contributions and other (corrupt) practices; the
establishment of election precincts; the designation and arrangement of polling places,
including voting booths, to protect the secrecy of the ballot; the formation of lists of voters,
the identification and registration of voters, the proceedings therefor, as well as for the
inclusion in, or exclusion or cancellation from said list and the publication thereof; the
establishment of municipal, provincial and national files of registered voters; the
composition and appointment of boards of election inspectors; the particulars of the official
ballots to be used and the precautions to be taken to insure the authenticity thereof; the
procedure for the casting of votes; the counting of votes by boards of inspectors; the rules
for the appreciation of ballots and the preparation and disposition of election returns; the
constitution and operation of municipal, provincial and national boards of canvassers; the
representation of political parties and/or their candidates in each election precinct; the
proclamation of the results, including, in the case of election of public officers, election
contests; and the jurisdiction of courts of justice in cases of violations of the provisions of
said Election Code and penalties for such violations.
Few laws may be found with such a meticulous and elaborate set of provisions aimed at
"insuring free, orderly, and honest elections," as envisaged in section 2 of Art. X of the
Constitution. Yet, none of the foregoing constitutional and statutory provisions was
followed by the so-called Barangays or Citizens Assemblies. And no reasons have been
given, or even sought to be given therefor. In many, if not most, instances, the elections
were held a viva voce, thus depriving the electorate of the right to vote secretly one of
the most fundamental and critical features of our election laws from time immemorial
particularly at a time when the same was of utmost importance, owing to the existence of
Martial Law.
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 . . ."cralaw virtua1aw library
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, and must be subordinate to the
constitutional power of the Commission on Elections to exercise its "exclusive" authority
over the "enforcement and administration of all laws relative to the conduct of elections,"
if the proceedings in the Assemblies would partake of the nature of an "election" or
plebiscite for the ratification or rejection of the proposed Constitution.
We are told that Presidential Decree No. 86 was further amended by Presidential Decree
No. 86-B, dated January 7, 1973, ordering "that important national issues shall from time to
time be referred to the Barangays (Citizens Assemblies) for resolution in accordance with
Presidential Decree No. 86-A dated January 5, 1973 and that the initial referendum shall
include the matter of ratification of the Constitution proposed by the 1971 Constitutional
Convention" and that" (t)he Secretary of the Department of Local Governments and
Community Development shall insure the implementation of this order." As in the case of
Presidential Decrees Nos. 86 and 86-A, the foregoing directives do not necessarily exclude
the exercise of the powers vested by the 1935 Constitution in the Commission on
Elections, even if the Executive had the authority to repeal Art. X of our Fundamental Law
which he does not possess. Copy of Presidential Decree No. 86-B is appended hereto as
Annex B hereof.
The point is that, such of the Barrio Assemblies as were held took place without the
intervention of the Commission on Elections, and without complying with the provisions of
the Election Code of 1971 or even of those of Presidential Decree No. 73. What is more,
they were held under the supervision of the very officers and agencies of the Executive
Department sought to be excluded therefrom by Art. X of the 1935 Constitution. Worse
still, said officers and agencies of the Executive Department, who had been publicly urged
and ostensibly promised to work for the ratification of the proposed revised Constitution
would be favored thereby, owing to the practically indefinite extension of their respective
terms of office in consequence of section 9 of the Transitory Provisions, found in Art. XVII of
the proposed Constitution, without any elections therefor. And the procedure therein
mostly followed is such that there is no reasonable means of checking the accuracy of the
returns filed by the officers who conducted said plebiscites. This is another patent violation
of Art. X of the Constitution which can hardly be sanctioned. And, since the provisions of

15

this article form part of the fundamental scheme set forth in the 1935 Constitution, as
amended, to insure the "free, orderly, and honest" expression of the peoples will, the
aforementioned violation thereof renders null and void the contested proceedings or
alleged plebiscite in the Citizens Assemblies, insofar as the same are claimed to have
ratified the revised Constitution proposed by the 1971 Constitutional Convention.." . . (a)ll
the authorities agree that the legal definition of an election, as well as that which is usually
and ordinarily understood by the term, is a choosing or a selection by those having a right
to participate (in the selection) of those who shall fill the offices, or of the adoption or
rejection of any public measures affecting the territory involved. 15 Cyc. 279; Lewis v.
Boynton, 25 Colo. 486, 55 Pac. 732; Saunders v. Haynes, 13 Cal. 145; Seaman v.
Baughman, 82 Iowa 216, 47 N.W. 1091, 11 L.R.A. 354; State v. Hirsh, 125 Ind. 207, 24 N.E.
1062, 9 L.R.A. 170; Bouviers Law Dictionary." 68
IV
Has the proposed Constitution aforementioned been approved by a majority of the people
in the Citizens Assemblies allegedly held throughout the Philippines?
Respondents maintain the affirmative, relying upon Proclamation No. 1102, the validity of
which is precisely being contested by petitioners herein. Respondents claim that said
proclamation is "conclusive" upon this Court, or is, at least, entitled 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. . . ."cralaw virtua1aw library
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."cralaw virtua1aw library
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."cralaw
virtua1aw library

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 President of the National Association or Federation,
whereupon Mr. Cruz, acting in a ceremonial capacity, reported said results (tabulated by
the Department of Local Governments and Community Development) to the Chief
Executive, who, accordingly, issued Proclamation No. 1102.
The record shows, however, that Mr. Cruz was not even a member of any barrio council
since 1972, 80 that he could not possibly have been a member on January 17, 1973, of a
municipal association of presidents of barrio or ward citizens assemblies, much less of a
Provincial, City or National Association or Federation of Presidents of any such provincial or
city associations.
Secondly, at the conclusion of the hearing of these cases on February 16, 1973, and in the
resolution of this Court of the same date, the Solicitor General was asked to submit,
together with his notes on his oral argument, a true copy of the aforementioned report of
Mr. Cruz to the President and of the" (p)roclamation, decree, instruction, order, regulation
or circular, if any, creating or directing or authorizing the creation, establishment or
organization" of said municipal, provincial and national associations, but neither a copy of
said alleged report to the President, nor a copy of any said" (p)roclamation, decree,
instruction, order, regulation or circular," has been submitted to this Court. In the absence
of said report," (p)roclamation, decree, instruction," etc., Proclamation No. 1102 is devoid
of any factual and legal foundation. Hence, the conclusion is set forth in the dispositive
portion of said Proclamation No. 1102, to the effect that the proposed new or revised
Constitution had been ratified by the majority of the votes cast by the people, cannot
possibly have any legal effect or value.
The theory that said proclamation is "conclusive" upon the Court is clearly untenable. If it
were, acts of the Executive and those of Congress could not possibly be annulled or
invalidated by courts of justice. Yet, such is not the case. In fact, even a resolution of
Congress declaring that a given person has been elected President or Vice-President of the
Philippines as provided in the Constitution 69 is not conclusive upon the courts. It is no
more than prima facie evidence of what is attested to by said resolution. 70 If assailed
directly in appropriate proceedings, such as an election protest, if and when authorized by
law, as it is in the Philippines, the Court may receive evidence and declare, in accordance
therewith, who was duly elected to the office involved. 71 If prior to the creation of the
Presidential Electoral Tribunal, no such protest could be filed, it was not because the
resolution of Congress declaring those had been elected President or Vice-President was
conclusive upon courts of justice, but because there was no law permitting the filing of
such protest and declaring what court or body would hear and decide the same. So, too, a
declaration to the effect that a given amendment to the Constitution or revised or new

16

Constitution has been ratified by a majority of the votes cast therefor, may be duly
assailed in court and be the object of judicial inquiry, in direct proceedings therefor such
as the cases at bar and the issue raised therein may and should be decided in
accordance with the evidence presented.
The case of In re McConaughy 72 is squarely in point. "As the Constitution stood from the
organization of the state" of Minnesota "all taxes were required to be raised under the
system known as the general property tax. Dissatisfaction with the results of this method
and the development of more scientific and satisfactory methods of raising venue induced
the Legislature to submit to the people an amendment to the Constitution which provided
merely that taxes shall be uniform upon the same class of subjects. This proposed
amendment was submitted at the general election held in November, 1906, and in due
time it was certified by the state canvassing board and proclaimed by the Governor as
having been legally 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."cralaw virtua1aw library
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."cralaw virtua1aw library
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 citizens
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 alleged substantial
compliance with the requirements thereof partakes of the nature of a defense set up by
the other respondents in these cases, the burden of proving such defense which, if true,
should be within their peculiar knowledge is clearly on such respondents. Accordingly, if
despite the extensive notes and documents submitted by the parties herein, the members
of the Court do not know or are not prepared to say whether or not the majority of the
people or of those who took part in the Citizens Assemblies have assented to the
proposed Constitution, the logical step would be to give due course to these cases, require
the respondents to file their answers, and the plaintiffs their reply, and, thereafter, to
receive the pertinent evidence and then proceed to the determination of the issues raised
thereby. Otherwise, we would be placing upon the petitioners the burden of disproving a
defense set up by the respondents, who have not so far established the truth of such
defense.
Even more important, and decisive, than the foregoing is the circumstance that there is
ample reason to believe that many, if not most, of the people did not know that the
Citizens Assemblies were, at the time they were held, plebiscites for the ratification or
rejection of the proposed Constitution. Hence, in Our decision in the plebiscite cases, We
said, inter alia:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"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 the 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, he
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 appropriate funds therefor, which Congress
unquestionably could do, particularly in view of the formal postponement of the plebiscite
by the President reportedly after consultation with, among others, the leaders of
Congress and the Commission on Elections the Court deemed it more imperative to
defer its final action on these cases."cralaw virtua1aw library
And, apparently, the parties in said cases entertained the same belief, for, on December
23, 1972 four (4) days after the last hearing of said cases 76 the President
announced the postponement of the plebiscite scheduled by Presidential Decree No. 73 to
be held on January 15, 1973, after consultation with the Commission on Elections and the

17

leaders of Congress, owing to doubts on the sufficiency of the time available to translate
the proposed Constitution into some local dialects and to comply with some pre-electoral
requirements, as well as to afford the people a reasonable opportunity to be posted on the
contents and implications of said transcendental document. On January 7, 1973, General
Order No. 20 was issued formally, postponing said plebiscite "until further notice." How can
said postponement be reconciled with the theory that the proceedings in the 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.

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:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

And, this belief is further bolstered up by the questions propounded in the Citizens
Assemblies, namely:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"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 . . .

" [1] Do you like the New Society?


" [2] Do you like the reforms under martial law?
" [3] Do you like Congress again to hold sessions?
" [4] Do you like the plebiscite to be held later?
" [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 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

". . . 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.
"x
x
x
". . . 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.

". . . 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."cralaw virtua1aw library
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."cralaw virtua1aw library
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 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

18

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."cralaw virtua1aw library
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 peoples 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. The "Governor of the State in swearing fidelity to it and proclaiming it, as directed
thereby" ;
2. The "Legislature in its formal official act adopting a joint resolution, July 15, 1902,
recognizing the Constitution ordained by the Convention . . ." ;
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. The "judiciary in taking the oath prescribed thereby to support it and by enforcing its
provisions . . ." ; and
5. The "people in their primary capacity by peacefully accepting it and acquiescing in it, by
registering as voters under it to the extent of thousands throughout the State, and by
voting, under its provisions, at a general election for their representatives in the Congress
of the United States."cralaw virtua1aw library
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) days after the issuance of Proclamation No.
1102.
It is further alleged that a majority of the members of our House of Representatives and

19

Senate have acquiesced in the new or revised Constitution, by filing written statements
opting to serve in the Ad Interim Assembly established in the Transitory Provisions of said
Constitution. Individual acts of recognition by members of our legislature, as well as of
other collegiate bodies under the government, are invalid as acts of said legislature or
bodies, unless its members have performed said acts in session duly assembled, or unless
the law provides otherwise, and there is no such law in the Philippines. This is a wellestablished principle of Administrative Law and of the Law of Public Officers, and no
plausible reason has been adduced to warrant departure therefrom. 81
Indeed, if the members of Congress were generally agreeable to the proposed
Constitution, why did it become necessary to padlock its premises to prevent its meeting
in session on January 22, 1973, and thereafter as provided in the 1935 Constitution? It is
true that, theoretically, the members of Congress, if bent on discharging their functions
under said Constitution, could have met in any other place, the building in which they
perform their duties being immaterial to the legality of their official acts. The force of this
argument is, however, offset or dissipated by the fact that, on or about December 27,
1972, immediately after a conference between the Executive, on the one hand, and
members of Congress, on the other, some of whom expressed the wish to meet in session
on January 22, 1973, as provided in the 1935 Constitution, a Daily Express columnist
(Primitivo Mijares) attributed to Presidential Assistant Guillermo de Vega a statement to the
effect that" certain members of the Senate appear to be missing the point in issue when
they reportedly insisted on taking up first the question of convening Congress." The Daily
Express of that date, 82 likewise, headlined, on its front page, a "Senatorial Plot Against
Martial Law Government Disclosed." Then, in its issue of December 29, 1972, the same
paper imputed to the Executive an appeal "to diverse groups involved in a conspiracy to
undermine" his powers "under martial law to desist from provoking a constitutional crisis . .
. which may result in the exercise by me of authority I have not exercised."cralaw
virtua1aw library
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 peoples 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? 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

20

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 has been legitimately supplanted by the Constitution
in force by virtue of Proclamation 1102." 86 When the petitions at bar were filed, the same
three (3) members of the Court, consequently, voted for the dismissal of said petitions.
The majority of the members of the Court did not share, however, either view, believing
that the main question that arose before the rendition of said judgment had not been
sufficiently discussed and argued as the nature and importance thereof demanded.
The parties in the cases at bar were accordingly given every possible opportunity to do so
and to elucidate on and discuss said question. Thus, apart from hearing the parties in oral
argument for five (5) consecutive days morning and afternoon, or a total of exactly 26
hours and 31 minutes their respective counsel filed extensive notes on their oral
arguments, as well as on such additional arguments as they wished to submit, and reply
notes or memoranda, in addition to rejoinders thereto, aside from a sizeable number of
documents in support of their respective contentions, or as required by the Court. The
arguments, oral and written, submitted have been so extensive and exhaustive, and the
documents filed in support thereof so numerous and bulky, that, for all intents and
purposes, the situation is as if disregarding forms the petitions had been given due
course and the cases had been submitted for decision.
Accordingly, the majority of the members of the Court believe that they should express
their views on the aforementioned issues as if the same were being decided on the merits,
and they have done so in their individual opinions attached hereto. Hence, the resume of
the votes east and the tenor of the resolution, in the last pages hereof, despite the fact
that technically the Court has not, as yet, formally given due course to the petitions
herein.
And, now, here are my views on the reliefs sought by the parties.
In L-36165, it is clear that we should not issue the writ of mandamus prayed for against Gil
J. Puyat and Jose Roy, as President and President Pro Tempore respectively of the Senate, it
being settled in our jurisdiction, based upon the theory of separation of powers, that the
judiciary will not issue such writ to the head of a co-equal department, like the
aforementioned officers of the Senate.

In all other respects and with regard to the other respondents in said case, as well as in
eases L-36142, L-36164, L-36236 and L-36283, my vote is that the petitions therein should
be given due course, there being more than prima facie showing that the proposed
Constitution has not been ratified in accordance with Article XV of the 1935 Constitution,
either strictly, or substantially, or has been acquiesced in by the people or a majority
thereof; that said proposed Constitution is not in force and effect; and that the 1935
Constitution is still the Fundamental Law of the Land, without prejudice to the submission
of said proposed Constitution to the people at a plebiscite for its ratification or rejection in
accordance with Articles V, X and XV of the 1935 Constitution and the provisions of the
Revised Election Code in force at the time of such plebiscite.
Perhaps others would feel that my position in these cases overlooks what they might
consider to be the demands of "judicial statesmanship," whatever may be the meaning of
such phrase. I am aware of this possibility, if not probability; but "judicial statesmanship,"
though consistent with Rule of Law, cannot prevail over the latter. Among consistent ends
or consistent values, there always is a hierarchy, a rule of priority.
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 Courts 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:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library
1. Is the issue of the validity of Proclamation No. 1102 a justiciable, or political and
therefore non-justiciable, question?
2. Has the Constitution proposed by the 1971 Constitutional Convention been ratified
validly (with substantial, if not strict, compliance) conformably to the applicable
constitutional and statutory provisions?
3. Has the aforementioned proposed Constitution been acquiesced in (with or without valid
ratification) by the people?
4. Are petitioners entitled to relief? and
5. Is the aforementioned proposed Constitution in force?
The results of the voting, premised on the individual views expressed by the members of

21

the Court in their respective opinions and/or concurrences, are as follows:chanrob1es


virtual 1aw library
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
peoples 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, Antonio and Esguerra, or three (3) members of the Court hold that the issue is
political and "beyond the ambit of judicial inquiry."cralaw virtua1aw library
2. On the second question of validity of the ratification, Justices Makalintal, Zaldivar,
Castro, Fernando, Teehankee and myself, or six (6) members of the Court also hold that
the Constitution proposed by the 1971 Constitutional Convention was not validly ratified in
accordance with Article XV, section 1 of the 1935 Constitution, which provides only one
way for ratification, i.e., "in an election or plebiscite held in accordance with law and
participated in only by qualified and duly registered voters." 87
Justice Barredo qualified his vote, stating that" (A)s to whether or not the 1973
Constitution has been validly ratified pursuant to Article XV, I still maintain that in the light
of traditional concepts regarding the meaning and intent of said Article, the referendum in
the Citizens Assemblies, specially in the manner the votes therein were cast, reported and
canvassed, falls short of the requirements thereof. In view, however, of the fact that I have
no means of refusing to recognize as a judge that factually there was voting and that the
majority of the votes were for considering as approved the 1973 Constitution without the
necessity of the usual form of plebiscite followed in past ratifications, I am constrained to
hold that, in the political sense, if not in the orthodox legal sense, the people may be
deemed to have cast their favorable votes in the belief that in doing so they did the part
required of them by Article XV, hence, it may be said that in its political aspect, which is
what counts most, after all, said Article has been substantially complied with, and, in
effect, the 1973 Constitution has been constitutionally ratified."cralaw virtua1aw library
Justices Makasiar, Antonio and Esguerra, or three (3) members of the Court hold that under
their view there has been in effect substantial compliance with the constitutional
requirements for valid ratification.
3. On the third question of acquiescence by the Filipino people in the aforementioned
proposed Constitution, no majority vote has been reached by the Court.
Four (4) of its members, namely, Justices Barredo, Makasiar, Antonio and Esguerra hold
that "the people have already accepted the 1973 Constitution." 88
Two (2) members of the Court, namely, Justice Zaldivar and myself hold that there can be
no free expression, and there has even been no expression, by the people qualified to vote
all over the Philippines, of their acceptance or repudiation of the proposed Constitution
under Martial Law. Justice Fernando states that" (I)f it is conceded that the doctrine stated
in some American decisions to the effect that independently of the validity of the
ratification, a new Constitution once accepted or acquiesced in by the people must be

accorded recognition by the Court, I am not at this stage prepared to state that such
doctrine calls for application in view of the shortness of time that has elapsed and the
difficulty of ascertaining what is the mind of the people in the absence of the freedom of
debate that is a concomitant feature of martial law."cralaw virtua1aw library
Three (3) members of the Court express their lack of knowledge and/or competence to rule
on the question. Justices Makalintal and Castro are joined by Justice Teehankee in their
statement that "Under a regime of martial law, with the free expression of opinions
through the usual media vehicles restricted, (they) have no means of knowing, to the point
of judicial certainty, whether the people have accepted the Constitution." 89
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:chanrob1es
virtual 1aw library
Four (4) members of the Court, namely, Justices Barredo, Makasiar, Antonio and Esguerra
hold that it is in force by virtue of the peoples 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.
Makalintal, Castro, Barredo, Makasiar, Antonio and Esguerra, JJ., concur.
Concepcion, C.J., dissents.
Zaldivar, J., dissents in line with the personal opinion of the Chief Justice, and also dissents
in a separate opinion.
Fernando, J., dissents in conformity with the personal views of the Chief Justice, except as
to such portions thereof on which he expresses his own thoughts as set forth in his
dissenting opinion.
Teehankee, J., dissents in conformity with the Chief Justices personal opinion and files a

22

separate dissent.
ANNEX A
PERTINENT PORTIONS OF THE MINNESSOTA SUPREME COURT DECISION ON THE CASE IN
RE McCONAUGHY
"(a) An examination of the decisions shows that the courts have almost uniformly
exercised the authority to determine the validity of the proposal, submission, or ratification
of constitutional amendments. It has been judicially determined whether a proposed
amendment received the constitutional majority of votes (Dayton v. St. Paul, 22 Minn. 400;
Rice v. Palmer, 78 Ark. 432, 96 S.W. 396; Bott v. Wurtz, 63 N.J. Law, 289, 43 Atl. 744, 881,
45 L.R.A. 251; State v. Foraker, 46 Ohio St. 677, 23 N.E. 491; 6 L.R.A. 422; Tecumseh
National Bank v. Saunders, 51 Neb. 801, 71 N.W. 779; Green v. State Board, 5 Idaho, 130,
47 Pac. 259, 95 Am. St. Rep. 169; In re Denny, 156 Ind. 104, 59 N.E. 359, 51 L.R.A. 722;
Knight v. Shelton [C.C.] 134 Fed. 423); whether a proposed amendment is a single
amendment, within the constitutional requirement that every amendment must be
separately submitted (State v. Powell, 77 Miss. 543, 27 South. 927; Gabbert v. Chicago,
etc., R. Co., 171 Mo. 84, 70 S.W. 891; State v. Timme, 54 Wis. 318,11 N.W. 785; In re
Denny, 156 Ind. 104, 59 N.E. 359, 51 L.R.A. 722; Lobaugh v. Cook, 127 Iowa, 181,102 N.W.
1121; People v. Sours, 31 Colo. 369, 74 Pac. 167,102 Am. St. Rep. 34; State v. Board, 34
Mont. 426, 87 Pac. 450; State v. Winnett [Neb.] 110 N.W. 1113, 10 L.R.A. [N.S.] 149);
whether the failure to enter the resolution of submission upon the legislative journals
invalidates the amendment (Koehler v. Hill, 60 Iowa, 543, 14 N.W. 738,15 N.W. 609;
Oakland Paving Co. v. Hilton, 69 Cal. 479,11 Pac. 3; West v. State, 50 Fla. 154, 39 South.
412; Durfee v. Harper, 22 Mont. 354, 56 Pac. 582; State v. Tufly, 19 Nev. 391, 12 Pac. 835,
3 Am. St. Rep. 895); whether the description of the amendment and the form of the ballot
are sufficient (Rugsell v. Croy, 164 Mo. 69, 63 S.W. 849; State v. Winnett [ Neb.] 110 N.W.
1113, 10 L.R.A. [N.S.] 149; Murphy Chair Co. v. Attorney General [Mich.] 112 N.W. 127);
whether the method of submission is sufficient (Lovett v. Ferguson, 10 S.D. 44, 71 N.W.
765; Russell v. Croy, 164 Mo. 69, 63 S.W. 849); whether the publication of the amendment
or of a notice relative to it is sufficient (Com. v. Griest, 196 Pa. 396, 46 Atl. 505, 50 L.R.A.
568; Russell v. Croy, 164 Mo. 69, 63 S.W. 849); whether the submission may be as well by
resolution as by a legislative act approved by the executive (Com. v. Griest, 196 Pa. 396,
46 Atl. 505, 50 L.R.A. 568; Warfield v. Vandiver, 101 Md. 78, 60 Atl. 538; Edward v. Lesueur,
132 Mo. 410, 33 S.W. 1130, 31 L.R.A. 815; Hays v. Hays, 5 Idaho, 154, 47 Pac. 732; State v.
Dahl, 6 N.D. 81, 68 N.W. 418, 34 L.R.A. 97); at what election the amendment must be
submitted (People v. Curry, 130 Cal. 82, 62 Pac. 516).
"In Rich v. Board of Canvassers, 100 Mich. 458, 59 N.W. 183, the court said: It is
contended that the determination of the question whether an amendment to the
Constitution has been carried involves the exercise of political, and not judicial, power. If
this be so, it follows that the promulgation of any purported amendment by the executive
or any executive department is final, and that the action cannot be questioned by the
judiciary; but, with reference to the conditions precedent to submitting a proposed
amendment to a vote of the people, it has been repeatedly held, by courts of the highest
respectability, that it is within the power of the judiciary to inquire into the question, even
in a collateral proceeding. . . . It is to be noted that under section 1 of article 20 of the
Constitution of the state no amendment can become a part of the Constitution until
ratified by a vote of the people. One prerequisite is equally as essential as the other. The
amendment must first receive the requisite majority in the Legislature, and afterwards be
adopted by the requisite vote . . . It is the fact of a majority vote which makes the
amendment a part of the Constitution.

"In considering the cases it is necessary to note whether in the particular case the court
was called upon to determine between rival governments, or whether the Legislature, or
some board or official, had legally performed the duty imposed by the Constitution or
statutes. In re State v. McBride, 4 Mo. 303, 29 Am. Dec. 636, it was held that the General
Assembly, under the power granted by the Constitution, could change the Constitution
only in the manner prescribed by it, and that it was the duty of the court to determine
whether all prerequisites had been complied with. In Collier v. Frierson, 24 Ala. 100, it was
held that a Constitution can be changed only by the people in convention or in a mode
described by the Constitution itself, and that if the latter mode is adopted every requisite
of the Constitution must be observed.It has been said, says the court, that certain acts
are to be done, certain requisitions are to be observed, before a change can be effected;
but to what purpose are these acts required, or these requisitions enjoined, if the
Legislature or any other department of the government can dispense with them. To do so
would be to violate the instrument which they are sworn to support; and every principle of
public law and sound constitutional policy requires the court to pronounce against every
amendment which is shown not to have been made in accordance with the rules
prescribed by the fundamental law.
"In State v. Swift, 69 Ind. 505, it was said that: The people of a state may form an original
Constitution, or abrogate an old one and form a new one, at any time, without any political
restriction, except the Constitution of the United States; but if they undertake to add an
amendment, by the authority of legislation to a Constitution already in existence, they can
do it only by the method pointed out by the Constitution to which the amendment is
added. The power to amend a Constitution by legislative action does not confer the power
to break it, any more than it confers the power to legislate on any other subject contrary to
its prohibitions. So, in State v. Timme, 54 Wis. 318, 11 N.W. 785, it was held that no
amendments can be made to the Constitution of the state without a compliance with the
provisions thereof, both in the passage of such amendment by the Legislature and the
manner of submitting it to the people. The courts have not all agreed as to the strictness
of compliance which should be required.
"In the Prohibition and Amendment Case, 24 Kan. 100, the court determined judicially
whether an amendment to the Constitution had been legally adopted. After approving the
statement quoted from Collier v. Frierson, supra, that we entertain no doubt that, to
change the Constitution in any other mode than by a convention, every requisite which is
demanded by the instrument itself must be observed, and the omission of any one is fatal
to the amendment, the court held that, as substance of right is grander and more potent
than methods of form, there had been substantial compliance with the constitutional
requirement that a proposed amendment to the Constitution must be entered at length on
the legislative journal. It appears that the joint resolution making a submission simply
provided that a proposition should be submitted to the electors at the general election of
1880. It did not declare that the machinery of the general election law should control, or
that any particular officers or board would receive, count, or canvass the votes cast. But
the existing election machinery was adequate, and the votes were received, counted, and
canvassed, and the result declared as fully as though it had been in terms so ordered.
These methods had been followed in the adoption of previous amendments, and it was
held that, conceding the irregularity of the proceedings of the Legislature and the doubtful
scope of the provisions for the election, yet in view of the very uncertainty of such
provisions, the past legislative history of similar propositions, the universal prior
acquiescence in the same forms of procedure, and the popular and unchallenged
acceptance of the legal pendency before the people of the question of the amendment for

23

decision, and in view of the duty cast upon the court of taking judicial knowledge of
anything affecting the existence and validity of any law or portion of the Constitution, it
must be adjudged that the proposed amendment became part of the Constitution. The
effect was to hold that a provision of the Constitution requiring the proposed amendment
to be entered in full on the journals was directory, and not mandatory. This liberal view was
approved in State v. Winnett (Neb.) 110 N.W. 1113, 10 L.R.A. (N.S.) 149, and People v.
Sours, 31 Colo. 369, 74 Pac. 167, 102 Am. St. Rep. 34. But it has not been universally
accepted.
"In Oakland Paving Co. v. Hilton, 69 Cal. 479, 11 Pac. 3, the court, in commenting upon the
Kansas case said: The reasoning by which the learned court reached the conclusion it did
is not based on any sound legal principles, but contrary to them. Neither the argument nor
the conclusion can command our assent or approval. The argument is illogical, and based
on premises which are without any sound foundation, and rests merely on assumption.
See, also, the well-considered case of Kadderly v. Portland, 44 Or. 118, 74 Pac. 710, 75 Pac.
222. All these cases concede the jurisdiction of the court to determine whether, in
submitting a proposed amendment to the people, the Legislature legally observed the
constitutional provisions as to the manner of procedure. In Livermore v. Waite, 102 Cal.
113, 36 Pac. 424, 25 L.R.A. 312, the court, at the instance of a citizen and a taxpayer,
restrained the Secretary of State from taking steps to submit to the people a proposed
amendment to the Constitution agreed to by the Legislature on the ground that the
Legislature had not acted in conformity with the Constitution and that the proposed
amendment was of such a character that it could not properly become a part of the
Constitution. The Supreme Court of Colorado, in People v Sours, supra, refused to exercise
this authority.
"The entire question received elaborate consideration in Koehler v. Hill, 60 Iowa, 543, 14
N.W. 738, 15 N.W. 609. The amendment, which concededly had been adopted by the
people, had not, before its submission, been entered in full upon the legislative journals, as
required by the Constitution, and it was held that this was a material variance in both form
and substance from the constitutional requirements, and that the amendment did not,
therefore, become a part of the Constitution. As to the claim that the question was
political, and not judicial, it was said that, while it is not competent for courts to inquire
into the validity of the Constitution and the form of government under which they
themselves exist, and from which they derive their powers, yet, where the existing
Constitution prescribes a method for its own amendment, an amendment thereto, to be
valid, must be adopted in strict conformity to that method; and it is the duty of the courts
in a proper case, when an amendment does not relate to their own power or functions, to
inquire whether, in the adoption of the amendment, the provisions of the existing
Constitution have been observed, and, if not, to declare the amendment invalid and of no
force. This case was followed in State v. Brookhart, 113 Iowa, 250, 84 N.W. 1064.
"In University v. McIver, 72 N.C.?6, the question whether a proposed amendment to the
Constitution had been legally adopted was treated as a judicial question. By the
Constitution a proposed amendment was required to be approved by two Legislatures
before its submission to the people. In this instance a bill was passed which contained 17
amendments. The next Legislature rejected 9 and adopted 8 of these amendments, and
submitted them to the people. The majority of the people voted for their adoption; but it
was contended that the Constitution contemplated and required that the same bill and the
same amendments, without change, should be approved by both Legislatures, and that it
did not follow that, because the second Legislature adopted separately 8 out of the 17
amendments adopted by the first Legislature, it would have adopted the 17, or any of

them, if they had been voted upon by the second in the form adopted by the first body.
The substance of the contention was that there had not been a concurrence of the two
Legislatures on the same amendments, according to the letter and spirit of the
Constitution. The court held that the power of the Legislature in submitting amendments
could not be distinguished from the powers of the convention, and that, as the people had
spoken and ratified the amendments, they became a part of the Constitution.
"In Westinghausen v. People, 44 Mich. 265, 6 N.W. 641, it was held that prior to 1876 a
proposed amendment to the Constitution could not be submitted to the people at any
other than a general election; but, as the amendment under consideration had been
submitted after the Constitution had been changed, it had been legally submitted and
adopted.
"In State v. Powell, 77 Miss. 543, 27 South. 927, the question whether an amendment to
the Constitution had been legally submitted and adopted by the people was held to be
judicial, and not political, in its nature. The amendment under consideration changed the
Constitution by providing for an elective, instead of an appointive, judiciary. It was
contended that the amendments had been improperly submitted, and not adopted by a
majority of the qualified voters voting at the election, as required by the Constitution. The
law did not direct how the result of the election should be determined. The Legislature by
joint resolution recited that the election had been duly held throughout the state, and, as it
appeared from the returns made to the Secretary of State, that 21,169 votes were cast in
favor of, and 8,643 votes against, the amendment, it resolved that said amendment be,
and hereby is, inserted into the Constitution of the state of Mississippi as a part of the
Constitution. In fact, the amendment was not submitted in the manner prescribed by the
Constitution, and it did not receive a majority of all the qualified voters voting at the
election. It was argued that the rules prescribed by the Constitution are all for the
guidance of the Legislature, and from the very nature of the thing the Legislature must be
the exclusive judge of all questions to be measured or determined by these rules. Whether
the question be political, and certainly a legislative one, or judicial, to be determined by
the courts, this section of rules, not only of procedure, but of final judgment as well,
confides to the separate magistracy of the legislative department full power to hear,
consider, and adjudge that question. The Legislature puts the question to the qualified
electors. The qualified electors answer back to the Legislature. "If it shall appear" to the
Legislature that its question has been answered in the affirmative, the amendment is
inserted and made a part of the Constitution. The Governor and the courts have no
authority to speak at any stage of the proceedings between the sovereign and the
Legislature, and when the matter is thus concluded it is closed, and the judiciary is as
powerless to interfere as the executive. But it was held that the question whether the
proposition submitted to the voters constituted one, or more than one, amendment,
whether the submission was according to the requirements of the Constitution, and
whether the proposition was in fact adopted, were all judicial, and not political,
questions.We do not, said Chief Justice Whitfield, seek a jurisdiction not imposed upon us
by the Constitution. We could not, if we would, escape the exercise of that jurisdiction
which the Constitution has imposed upon us. In the particular instance in which we are
now acting, our duty to know what the Constitution of the state is, and in accordance with
our oaths to support and maintain it in its integrity, imposed on us a most difficult and
embarrassing duty, one which we have not sought, but one which, like all others, must be
discharged.
"In Bott v. Wurtz, 63 N.J. Law, 289, 43 Atl. 744, 881, 46 L.R.A. 251, it was held that it was
the duty of the judicial department of the government to determine whether the legislative

24

department or its officers had observed the constitutional injunctions in attempting to


amend the Constitution, and to annul their acts if they had not done so. The case is an
interesting and well-considered one. The Constitution provided the manner in which
proposed amendments should be submitted to the people, but did not provide a method
for canvassing the votes. The Legislature, having agreed to certain proposed amendments,
passed an act for submitting the same to the people. This statute provided for the
transmission to the Secretary of State of certificates showing the result of the voting
throughout the state, and made it the duty of the Governor at the designated time to
summon four or more Senators, who, with the Governor, should constitute a board of state
canvassers to canvass and estimate the votes for and against each amendment. This
board was to determine and declare which of the proposed amendments had been
adopted and to deliver a statement of the results to the Secretary of State, and any
proposed amendment, which by said certificate and determination of the board of
canvassers shall appear to have received in its favor the majority of all the votes cast in
the state for and against said proposed amendment, shall from the time of filing such
certificate be and become an amendment to and a part of the Constitution of the state;
and it shall be the duty of the Governor of the state forthwith, after such a determination,
to issue a proclamation declaring which of the said proposed amendments have been
adopted by the people. This board was required to file a statement of the result of the
election, and the Governor to issue his proclamation declaring that the amendment had
been adopted and become a part of the Constitution. At the instance of a taxpayer the
Supreme Court allowed a writ ofcertiorari to remove into the court for review the
statement of the results of the election made by the canvassing board, in order that it
might be judicially determined whether on the facts shown in that statement the board
had legally determined that the proposed amendment had been adopted. The Supreme
Court decided that the concurrence of the board of state canvassers and the executive
department of the government in their respective official functions placed the subjectmatter beyond the cognizance of the judicial department of the state. The Court of
Appeals, after a full review of the authorities, reversed this decision, and held that the
questions were of a judicial nature, and properly determinable by the court on their merits.
Mr. Justice Dixon, after stating the facts, said: It thus becomes manifest that there was
present in the Supreme Court, and is now pending in this court, every element tending to
maintain jurisdiction over the subject-matter, unless it be true, as insisted, that the judicial
department of the government has not the right to consider whether the legislative
department and its agencies have observed constitutional injunctions in attempting to
amend the Constitution, and to annul their acts in case that they have not done so. That
such a proposition is not true seems to be indicated by the whole history of jurisprudence
in this country. The court, after considering the case on the merits, held that the proper
conclusion had been drawn therefrom, and that the amendment in question was legally
submitted and adopted.

that noncompliance therewith renders the adoption of an amendment of no effect."cralaw


virtua1aw library

"The recent case of Rice v. Palmer, 78 Ark. 432, 96 S.W. 396, presented the identical
question which we have under consideration. In reference to the contention that the
Constitution intended to delegate to the Speaker of the House of Representatives the
power to determine whether an amendment had been adopted, and that the question was
political, and not judicial, the court observed: The argument has often been made in
similar cases to the courts, and it is found in many dissenting opinions; but, with probably
a few exceptions, it is not found in any prevailing opinion.

The preliminary question before this Court was whether or not the petitioners had made
out a sufficient prima facie case in their petitions to justify their being given due course.
Considering on the one hand the urgency of the matter and on the other hand its
transcendental importance, which suggested the need for hearing the side of the
respondents before that preliminary question was resolved, We required them to submit
their comments on the petitions. After the comments were filed We considered them as
motions to dismiss so that they could be orally argued. As it turned out, the hearing lasted
five days, morning and afternoon, and could not have been more exhaustive if the
petitions had been given due course from the beginning.

"In State v. Tooker, 15 Mont. 8, 37 Pac. 840, 25 L.R.A. 560, it was held that the
constitutional requirement of publication of a proposed constitutional provision for three
months prior to the election at which it is to be submitted to the people is mandatory and

ANNEX B
MALACAANG
MANILA
BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE PHILIPPINES
PRESIDENTIAL DECREE NO. 86-B
Defining Further the Role of Barangays (Citizens Assemblies)
WHEREAS, since their creation pursuant to Presidential Decree No. 86 dated December 31,
1972, the Barangays (Citizens Assemblies) have petitioned the Office of the President to
submit to them for resolution important national issues;
WHEREAS, one of the questions persistently mentioned refers to the ratification of the
Constitution proposed by the 1971 Constitutional Convention;
WHEREAS, on the basis of the said petitions, it is evident that the people believe that the
submission of the proposed Constitution to the Citizens Assemblies or Barangays should be
taken as a plebiscite in itself in view of the fact that freedom of debate has always been
limited to the leadership in political, economic and social fields, and that it is now
necessary to bring this down to the level of the people themselves through the Barangays
or Citizens Assemblies;
NOW, THEREFORE, I, FERDINAND E. MARCOS, President of the Philippines, by virtue of the
powers in me vested by the Constitution, do hereby order that important national issues
shall from time to time be referred to the Barangays (Citizens Assemblies) for resolution in
accordance with Presidential Decree No. 86-A dated January 5, 1973 and that the initial
referendum shall include the matter of ratification of the Constitution proposed by the
1971 Constitutional Convention.
The Secretary of the Department of Local Government and Community Development shall
insure the implementation of this Order.
Done in the City of Manila, this 7th day of January in the year of Our Lord, nineteen
hundred and seventy-three.
(SGD.) FERDINAND E. MARCOS
By the President:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library
(SGD.) ALEJANDRO MELCHOR
Executive Secretary
MAKALINTAL and CASTRO, JJ., :chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

The major thrust of the petitions is that the act of the Citizens Assemblies as certified and

25

proclaimed by the President on January 17, 1973 (Proclamation No 1102) was not an act of
ratification, let alone a valid one, of the proposed Constitution, because it was not in
accordance with the existing Constitution (of 1935) and the Election Code of 1971. Other
grounds are relied upon by the petitioners in support of their basic proposition, but to our
mind they are merely subordinate and peripheral.
Article XV, Section 1, of the 1935 Constitution provides that amendments (proposed either
by Congress in joint session or by a Convention called by it for the purpose) "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." At the time that
Constitution was approved by the Constitutional Convention on February 8, 1935, and
ratified in a plebiscite held on the following May 14, the word "election" had already a
definite meaning in our law and jurisprudence. It was not a vague and amorphous concept,
but a procedure prescribed by statute for ascertaining the peoples choices among
candidates for public offices, or their will on important matters submitted to them,
pursuant to law, for approval. It was in this sense that the word was used by the framers in
Article XV (also in Articles VI and VII), and in accordance with such procedure that
plebiscites were held to ratify the very same Constitution in 1935 as well as the
subsequent amendments thereto, thus: in 1939 (Ordinance appended to the Constitution);
1940 (establishment of a bicameral legislature; eligibility of the President and the Vice
President for re election: creation of the Commission of Elections); 1947 (Parity
Amendment); and 1967 (increase in membership of the House of Representatives and
eligibility of members of Congress to run for the Constitutional Convention without
forfeiture of their offices).
The Election Code of 1971, in its Section 2, states that "all elections of public officers
except barrio officials and plebiscites shall be conducted in the manner provided by this
Code." This is a statutory requirement designed, as were the other election laws previously
in force, to carry out the constitutional mandate relative to the exercise of the right of
suffrage, and with specific reference to the term "plebiscites," the provision of Article XV
regarding ratification of constitutional amendments.
The manner of conducting elections and plebiscites provided by the Code is spelled out in
other sections thereof. Section 99 requires that qualified voters be registered in a
permanent list, the qualifications being those set forth in Article V, Section 1, of the 1935
Constitution on the basis of age (21), literacy and residence. These qualifications are
reiterated in Section 101 of the Election Code. Section 102 enumerates the classes of
persons disqualified to vote. Succeeding sections prescribe the election paraphernalia to
be used, the procedure for registering voters, the records of registration and the custody
thereof, the description and printing of official ballots, the actual casting of votes and their
subsequent counting by the boards of inspectors, the rules for appreciation of ballots, and
then the canvass and proclamation of the results.
With specific reference to the ratification of the 1972 draft Constitution, several additional
circumstances should be considered:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library
(1) This draft was prepared and approved by a Convention which had been convened
pursuant to Resolution No. 2 passed by Congress on March 16, 1967, which
provides:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"Sec. 7. The amendments proposed by the Convention shall be valid and considered part
of the Constitution when approved by a majority of the votes cast in an election at which
they are submitted to the people for their ratification pursuant to Article XV of the

Constitution."cralaw virtua1aw library


(2) Article XVII, Section 16, of the draft itself states:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"Sec. 16. This Constitution shall take effect immediately upon its ratification by a majority
of the votes cast in a plebiscite called for the purpose and, except as herein provided, shall
supersede the Constitution of nineteen hundred and thirty-five and all amendments
thereto."cralaw virtua1aw library
The same procedure is prescribed in Article XVI, Section 2, for the ratification of any future
amendment to or revision of the said Constitution.
(3) After the draft Constitution was approved by the Constitutional Convention on
November 30, 1972 the said body adopted Resolution No. 5843, proposing "to President
Ferdinand E. Marcos that a decree be issued calling a plebiscite for the ratification of the
proposed New Constitution on such appropriate date as he shall determine and providing
for the necessary funds therefor." Pursuant to said Resolution the President issued Decree
No. 73 on the same day, calling a plebiscite to be held on January 15, 1973, at which the
proposed Constitution "shall be submitted to the people for ratification or rejection." The
Decree had eighteen (18) sections in all, prescribing in detail the different steps to be
taken to carry out the process of ratification, such as: (a) publication of the proposed
Constitution in English and Pilipino; (b) freedom of information and discussion; (c)
registration of voters: (d) appointment of boards of election inspectors and designation of
watchers in each precinct; (e) printing of official ballots; (f) manner of voting to insure
freedom and secrecy thereof; (g) canvass of plebiscite returns; and (h) in general,
compliance with the provisions of the Election Code of 1971, with the Commission on
Elections exercising its constitutional and statutory powers of supervision of the entire
process.
There can hardly be any doubt that in everybodys view from the framers of the 1935
Constitution through all the Congresses since then to the 1971 Constitutional Convention
amendments to the Constitution should be ratified in only one way, that is, in an
election or plebiscite held in accordance with law and participated in only by qualified and
duly registered voters. Indeed, so concerned was this Court with the importance and
indispensability of complying with the mandate of the (1935) Constitution in this respect
that in the recent case of Tolentino v. Commission on Elections, No. L-34150, October 16,
1971 (41 SCRA 702), a resolution of the (1971) Constitutional Convention submitting a
proposed amendment for ratification to a plebiscite to be held in November 1971 was
declared null and void. The amendment sought to reduce the voting age from twenty-one
to eighteen years and was approved by the Convention for submission to a plebiscite
ahead of and separately from other amendments still being or to be considered by it, so as
to enable the youth to be thus enfranchised to participate in the plebiscite for the
ratification of such other amendments later. This Court held that such separate submission
was violative of Article XV, Section 1, of the Constitution, which contemplated that "all the
amendments to be proposed by the same Convention must be submitted to the people in
a single election or plebiscite." * Thus a grammatical construction based on a singular,
instead of plural, rendition of the word "election" was considered a sufficient ground to rule
out the plebiscite which had been called to ratify a proposed amendment in accordance
with the procedure and under all the safeguards provided in the Election Law.
In the cases now before Us what is at issue is not merely the ratification of just one
amendment, as in Tolentino v. COMELEC, but the ratification of an entire charter setting up
a new form of government; and the issue has arisen not because of a disputed
construction of one word or one provision in the 1935 Constitution but because no election

26

or plebiscite in accordance with that Constitution and with the Election Code of 1971 was
held for the purpose of such ratification.
The Citizens Assemblies which purportedly ratified the draft Constitution were created by
Presidential Decree No. 86 dated December 31, 1972, "to broaden the base of citizen
participation in the democratic process and to afford ample opportunities for the citizenry
to express their views on important national issues." The Assemblies "shall consist of all
persons who are residents of the barrio, district or ward for at least six months, fifteen
years of age or over, citizens of the Philippines and who are registered in the lists of
Citizen Assembly members kept by the barrio, district or ward secretary." By Presidential
Decree No. 86-A, dated January 5, 1973, the Assemblies were convened for a referendum
between January 10 and 15, to "consider vital national issues now confronting the country,
like the holding of the plebiscite on the new Constitution, the continuation of martial rule,
the convening of Congress on January 22, 1973, and the holding of elections in November
1973."cralaw virtua1aw library
On January 5, 1973 the newspapers came out with a list of four questions to be submitted
to the Citizens Assemblies, the fourth one being as follows: "How soon would you like the
plebiscite on the new Constitution to be held?" It should be noted in this connection that
the President had previously announced that he had ordered the postponement of the
plebiscite which he had called for January 15, 1973 (Presidential Decree No. 73) for the
ratification of the draft Constitution, and that he was considering two new dates for the
purpose February 19 or March 5; that he had ordered that the registration of voters
(pursuant to Decree No. 73) be extended to accommodate new voters; and that copies of
the new Constitution would be distributed in eight dialects to the people. (Bulletin Today,
December 24, 1972.)
On January 10, 1973 it was reported that one more question would be added to the original
four which were to be submitted to the Citizens Assemblies. The question concerning the
plebiscite was reworded as follows: "Do yon like the plebiscite to be held later?" The
implication, it may likewise be noted, was that the Assemblies should express their views
as to when the plebiscite should be held, not as to whether or not it should be held at all.
The next day, January 11, it was reported that six additional questions would be submitted,
namely:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"(1) Do you approve of the citizens assemblies as the base of popular government to
decide issues of national interest?
"(2) Do you approve of the new Constitution?
"(3) Do you want a plebiscite to be called to ratify the new Constitution?
"(4) Do you want the elections to be held in November, 1973 in accordance with the
provisions of the 1935 Constitution?
"(5) If the elections would not be held, when do you want the next elections to be called?
"(6) Do you want martial law to continue?" [Bulletin Today, January 11, 1973: Italics
supplied].
Appended to the six additional questions above quoted were the suggested answers,
thus:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"COMMENTS ON
QUESTION No. 1
In order to broaden the base of citizens 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
If the Citizens Assemblies approve of the New Constitution, then the new Constitution
should be deemed ratified.
The vote of the Citizens Assemblies should already be considered the plebiscite on the
New Constitution.
QUESTION No. 4
We are sick and tired of too frequent elections. We are fed up with politics, of so many
debates and so much expenses.
QUESTION No. 5
Probably a period of at least seven (7) years moratorium on elections will be enough for
stability to be established in the country, for reforms to take root and normalcy to return.
QUESTION No. 6
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 program 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."cralaw virtua1aw library
So it was that on January 11, 1973, the second day of the purported referendum, the
suggestion was broached, for the first time, that the plebiscite should be done away with
and a favorable vote by the Assemblies deemed equivalent to ratification. This was done,
not in the questionnaire itself, but in the suggested answer to question No. 3. Strangely,
however, it was not similarly suggested that an unfavorable vote be considered as
rejection.
There should be no serious dispute as to the fact that the manner in which the voting was
conducted in the Citizens Assemblies, assuming that such voting was held, was not within
the intendment of Article XV, Section 1, of the 1935 Constitution nor in accordance with
the Election Code of 1971. The referendum can by no means be considered as the
plebiscite contemplated in Section 2 of said Code and in Article XVII, Section 16, of the
draft Constitution itself, or as the election intended by Congress when it passed Resolution
No. 2 on March 16, 1967 calling a Convention for the revision of the 1935 Constitution. The
Citizens Assemblies were not limited to qualified, let alone registered, voters, but included
all citizens from the age of fifteen, and regardless of whether or not they were illiterates,
feeble-minded, or ex-convicts * these being the classes of persons expressly disqualified
from voting by Section 102 of the Election Code. In short, the constitutional and statutory
qualifications were not considered in the determination of who should participate. No
official ballots were used in the voting; it was done mostly by acclamation or open show of
hands. Secrecy, which is one of the essential features of the election process, was not
therefore observed. No set of rules for counting the votes or of tabulating them and
reporting the figures was prescribed or followed. The Commission on Elections, which is
the constitutional body charged with the enforcement and administration of all laws
relative to the conduct of elections, took no part at all, either by way of supervision or in
the assessment of the results.
It has been suggested that since according to Proclamation No. 1102 the overwhelming
majority of all the members of the Citizens Assemblies had voted for the adoption of the
proposed Constitution there was a substantial compliance with Article XV, Section 1, of the
1935 Constitution and with the Election Code of 1971. The suggestion misses the point
entirely. It is of the essence of a valid exercise of the right of suffrage that not only must a

27

majority or plurality of the voters carry the day but that the same must be duly
ascertained in accordance with the procedure prescribed by law. In other words the very
existence of such majority or plurality depends upon the manner of its ascertainment, and
to conclude that it exists even if it has not been ascertained according to law is simply to
beg the issue, or to assume the very fact to be established. Otherwise no election or
plebiscite could be questioned for non-compliance with the provisions of the Election Law
as long as it is certified that a majority of the citizens had voted favorably or adversely on
whatever it was that was submitted to them to vote upon.
However, a finding that the ratification of the draft Constitution by the Citizens Assemblies,
as certified by the President in Proclamation No. 1102, was not in accordance with the
constitutional and statutory procedure laid down for the purpose does not quite resolve the
questions raised in these cases. Such a finding, in our opinion, is on a matter which is
essentially justiciable, that is, within the power of this Court to inquire into. It imports
nothing more than a simple reading and application of the pertinent provisions of the 1935
Constitution, of the Election Code and of other related laws and official acts. No question of
wisdom or of policy is involved. But from this finding it does not necessarily follow that this
Court may justifiably declare that the Constitution has not become. effective, and for that
reason give due course to these petitions or grant the writs herein prayed for. The
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, are relevant and unavoidable.
Several theories have been advanced respectively by the parties. The petitioners lay stress
on the invalidity of the ratification process adopted by the Citizens Assemblies and on that
premise would have this Court grant the reliefs they seek. The respondents represented by
the Solicitor General, whose theory may be taken as the official position of the
Government, challenge the jurisdiction of this Court on the ground that the questions
raised in the petitions are political and therefore non-justiciable, and that in any case
popular acquiescence in the new Constitution and the prospect of unsettling acts done in
reliance thereon should caution against interposition of the power of judicial review.
Respondents Gil J. Puyat and Jose Roy (in L 36165) in their respective capacities as
President and President Pro Tempore of the Senate of the Philippines, and through their
counsel, Senator Arturo Tolentino, likewise invoke the political question doctrine, but on a
ground not concurred in by the Solicitor General, namely, that "the approval of the 1973
Constitution by the people was made under a revolutionary government, in the course of a
successful political revolution, which was converted by act of the people to the present de
jure government under the 1973 Constitution."cralaw virtua1aw library
Heretofore, constitutional disputes which have come before this Court for adjudication
proceeded on the assumption, conceded by all, that the Constitution was in full force and
effect, with the power and authority of the entire Government behind it; and the task of
this Court was simply to determine whether or not the particular act or statute that was
being challenged contravened some rule or mandate of that Constitution. The process
employed was one of interpretation and synthesis. In the cases at bar there is no such
assumption: the Constitution (1935) has been derogated and its continued existence as
well as the validity of the act of derogation is the issue. The legal problem posed by the
situation is aggravated by the fact that the political arms of the Government the
Executive Departments and the two Houses of Congress have accepted the new
Constitution as effective: the former by organizing themselves and discharging their
functions under it, and the latter by convening on January 22, 1973 or at any time
thereafter, as ordained by the 1935 Constitution, and in the case of a majority of the

members by expressing their option to serve in the Interim National Assembly in


accordance with Article XVII, Section 2, of the 1973 Constitution. *
The theory advanced by Senator Tolentino, as counsel for respondents Puyat and Roy, may
be taken up and restated at some length if only because it would constitute, if sustained,
the most convenient ground for the invocation of the political-question doctrine. In support
of his theory, Senator Tolentino contends that after President Marcos declared martial law
on September 21, 1972 (Proclamation No. 1081) he established a revolutionary
government when he issued General Order No. 1 the next day, wherein he proclaimed
"that I shall govern the nation and direct the operation of the entire government, including
all its agencies and instrumentalities, in my capacity, and shall exercise all the powers and
prerogatives appurtenant and incident to my position as such Commander-in-Chief of all
the Armed Forces of the Philippines." By this order, it is pointed out, the Commander-inChief of the Armed Forces assumed all the powers of government executive, legislative,
and judicial; and thereafter proceeded to exercise such powers by a series of Orders and
Decrees which amounted to legislative enactments not justified under martial law and, in
some instances, trenched upon the domain of the judiciary, by removing from its
jurisdiction certain classes of cases, such as "those involving the validity, legality, or
constitutionality of Proclamation No. 1081, or of any decree, order or act issued,
promulgated or performed by me or by my duly designated representative pursuant
thereto." (General Order No. 3 as amended by General Order No. 3-A, dated September 24,
1972.) The ratification by the Citizens Assemblies, it is averred, was the culminating act of
the revolution, which thereupon converted the government into a de jure one under the
1973 Constitution.
If indeed it be accepted that the Citizens Assemblies had ratified the 1973 Constitution and
that such ratification as well as the establishment of the government thereunder formed
part of a revolution, albeit peaceful, then the issue of whether or not that Constitution has
become effective and, as a necessary corollary, whether or not the government
legitimately functions under it instead of under the 1935 Constitution, is political and
therefore non- judicial in nature. Under such a postulate what the people did in the Citizens
Assemblies should be taken as an exercise of the ultimate sovereign power. If they had
risen up in arms and by force deposed the then existing government and set up a new
government in its place, there could not be the least doubt that their act would be political
and not subject to judicial review but only to the judgment of the same body politic act, in
the context just set forth, is based on realities. If a new government gains authority and
dominance through force, it can be effectively challenged only by a stronger force; no
judicial dictum can prevail against it. We do not see that the situation would be any
different, as far as the doctrine of judicial review is concerned, if no force had been
resorted to and the people, in defiance of the existing Constitution not peacefully because
of the absence of any appreciable opposition, ordained a new Constitution and succeeded
in having the government operate under it. Against such a reality there can be no
adequate judicial relief; and so courts forbear to take cognizance of the question but leave
it to be decided through political means.
The logic of the political-question doctrine is illustrated in a statement of the U.S. Supreme
Court in a case relied upon, curiously enough, by the Solicitor General, who disagrees with
the revolutionary government theory of Senator Tolentino. The case involved the issue of
which of two opposing governments struggling for supremacy in the State of Rhode Island
was the lawful one. The issue had previously come up in several other cases before the
courts of the State, which uniformly held that the inquiry belonged to the political power
and not to the judicial. Commenting on the ruling thus arrived at, the U.S. Supreme Court

28

said: "And if a State court should enter upon the inquiry proposed in this case, and should
come to the conclusion that the government under which it acted had been put aside and
displaced by an opposing government, it would cease to be a court, and incapable of
pronouncing a judicial decision upon the question it undertook to try. If it decides at all as a
court, it necessarily affirms the existence and authority of the government under which it
is exercising judicial power." In other words, since the court would have no choice but to
decide in one way alone in order to be able to decide at all, the question could not be
considered proper for judicial determination.
It should be noted that the above statement from Luther v. Borden would be applicable in
the cases at bar only on the premise that the ratification of the Constitution was a
revolutionary act and that the government now functioning under it is the product of such
revolution. However, we are not prepared to agree that the premise is justified.
In the first place, with specific reference to the questioned ratification, several significant
circumstances may be noted. (1) The Citizens Assemblies were created, according to
Presidential Decree No. 86, "to broaden the base of citizen participation in the democratic
process and to afford ample opportunities for the citizenry to express their views on
important national issues." (2) The President announced, according to the Daily Express of
January 2, 1973, that "the referendum will be in the nature of a loose consultation with the
people." (3) The question, as submitted to them on the particular point at issue here, was
"Do you approve of the Constitution?" (4) President Marcos, in proclaiming that the
Constitution had been ratified, stated as follows:" (S)ince the referendum results show that
more than ninety-five (95) per cent of the members of the Barangays (Citizens Assemblies)
are in favor of the new Constitution, the Katipunan ng mga Barangay has strongly
recommended that the new Constitution should already be deemed ratified by the Filipino
people." (5) There was not enough time for the Citizens Assemblies to really familiarize
themselves with the Constitution, much less with the many other subjects that were
submitted to them. In fact the plebiscite planned for January 15, 1973 under Presidential
Decree No. 73 had been postponed to an indefinite date, the reasons for the
postponement being, as attributed to the President in the newspapers, that "there was
little time to campaign for or against ratification" (Daily Express, Dec. 22, 1972); that he
would base his decision (as to the date of the plebiscite) on the compliance by the
Commission (on Elections) on the publication requirement of the new Charter and on the
position taken by national leaders" (Daily Express, Dec. 23, 1972); and that "the
postponement would give us more time to debate on the merits of the Charter." (Bulletin
Today, Dec. 24, 1972.)

The circumstances above enumerated lead us to the conclusion


that the Citizens Assemblies could not have understood the
referendum to be for the ratification of the Constitution, but only
for the expression of their views on a consultative basis. Indeed, if
the expression of those views had been intended as an act of
ratification (or of rejection as a logical corollary) there would
have been no need for
e Katipunan ng mga Barangay to recommend that the
Constitution should already be deemed ratified, for

recommendation imports recognition of some higher authority in


whom the final decision rests.
But then the President, pursuant to such recommendation, did
proclaim that the Constitution had been ratified and had come
into effect. The more relevant consideration, therefore, as far as
we can see, should be as to what the President had in mind in
convening the Citizens Assemblies, submitting the Constitution to
them and proclaiming that the favorable expression of their views
was an act of ratification. In this respect subjective factors, which
defy judicial analysis and adjudication, are necessarily involved.
In positing the problem within an identifiable frame of reference we find no need to
consider whether or not the regime established by President Marcos since he declared
martial law and under which the new Constitution was submitted to the Citizens
Assemblies was a revolutionary one. The pivotal question is rather whether or not the
effectivity of the said Constitution by virtue of Presidential Proclamation No. 1102, upon
the recommendation of the Katipunan ng mga Barangay, was intended to be definite and
irrevocable, regardless of non-compliance with the pertinent constitutional and statutory
provisions prescribing the procedure for ratification. We must confess that after
considering all the available evidence and all the relevant circumstances we have found no
reasonably reliable answer to the question. On one hand we read, for instance, the
following public statements of the President:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library
Speaking about the proclamation of martial law, he said:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"I reiterate what I have said in the past: there is no turning back for our people.
"We have committed ourselves to this revolution. We have pledged to it our future, our
fortunes, our lives, our destiny. We have burned our bridges behind us. Let no man
misunderstand the strength of our resolution." (A Report to the National, Jan. 7, 1913.)
On the occasion of the signing of Proclamation No. 1102 on January 17, 1973, President
said the following, among other things:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
". . . We can, perhaps delimit the power of the people to speak on legal matters, on
justiciable matters, on matters that may come before the experts and interpreters of the
law. But we cannot disqualify the people from speaking on what we and the people
consider purely political matters especially those that affect the fundamental law of the
land.
". . . The political questions that were presented to the people are exactly those that refer
to the form of government which the people want . . . The implications of disregarding the
peoples will are too awesome to be even considered. For if any power in government
should even dare to disregard the peoples will there would be valid ground for
revolt."cralaw virtua1aw library
". . . Let it be known to everybody that the people have spoken and they will no longer
tolerate any attempt to undermine the stability of their Republic; they will rise up in arms
not in revolt against the Republic but in protection of the Republic which they have
installed. It is quite clear when the people say, we ratify the Constitution, that they mean

29

they will not discard, the Constitution."cralaw virtua1aw library

Republic and reform our society . . .

On January 19, 1973 the Daily Express published a statement of the President made the
day before, from which the following portion is quoted:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"I have had to use this constitutional power in order that we may not completely lose the
civil rights and freedom which we cherish . . .

". . . the times are too grave and the stakes too high for us to permit the customary
concessions to traditional democratic process to hold back our peoples clear and
unequivocal resolve and mandate to meet and overcome the extraordinary challenges
presented by these extraordinary times."cralaw virtua1aw library

". . . We are against the wall. We must now defend the Republic with the stronger powers
of the Constitution."cralaw virtua1aw library

On the same occasion of the signing of Proclamation No. 1102 the President made pointed
reference to "the demand of some of our citizens . . . that when all other measures should
fail, that the President be directed to organize and establish a Revolutionary Government,"
but in the next breath added: ". . . if we do ratify the Constitution how can we speak of a
Revolutionary Government? They cannot be compatible . . ." "(I)t is my feeling," he said,
"that the Citizens Assemblies which submitted this recommendation merely sought to
articulate their impatience with the status quo that has brought about anarchy, confusion
and misery to the masses . . ." The only alternatives which the President clearly implied by
the foregoing statements were the ratification of the new Constitution and the
establishment of a revolutionary government, the latter being unnecessary, in his opinion,
because precisely the Constitution had been ratified. The third obvious alternative was
entirely ruled out, namely, a return to the 1935 Constitution, for it was the status quo
under that Constitution that had caused "anarchy, confusion and misery." The message
seems clear: rather than return to such status quo, he would need the recommendation of
the Citizens Assemblies to establish a revolutionary government, because that would be
the only other way to carry out the reforms he had envisioned and initiated reforms
which, in all fairness and honesty, must be given credit for the improved quality of life in
its many aspects, except only in the field of civil liberties.

In the report of an interview granted by the President to the Newsweek Magazine


(published in the issue of January 29, 1973), the following appears:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"x
x
x
"Q. Now that you have gotten off the constitutional track, wont you be in serious trouble if
you run into critical problems with your programs?

If there is any significance, both explicit and implicit, and certainly unmistakable, in the
foregoing pronouncements, it is that the step taken in connection with the ratification of
the Constitution was meant to be irreversible, and that nothing anyone could say would
make the least difference. And if this is a correct and accurate assessment of the situation,
then we would say that since it has been brought about by political action and is now
maintained by the government that is in undisputed authority and dominance, the matter
lies beyond the power of judicial review.
On the other hand, by avowals no less significant if not so emphatic in terms, President
Marcos has professed fealty to the Constitution. In "Todays Revolution: Democracy" he
says:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"I believe, therefore, in the necessity of Revolution as an instrument of individual and
social change . . . but that in a democratic society, revolution is of necessity,
constitutional, peaceful, and legal."cralaw virtua1aw library
In his TV address of September 23, 1972, President Marcos told the
nation:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"I have proclaimed martial law in accordance with the powers vested in the President by
the Constitution of the Philippines.
"x
x
x
"I repeat, this is not a military takeover of civil government functions. The Government of
the Republic of the Philippines which was established by our people in 1946 continues.
"x
x
x
"I assure you that I am utilizing this power vested in me by the Constitution to save the

(Vital Documents, pp. 1-12; Italics supplied)

"A. I have never gotten off the constitutional track. Everything I am doing is in accordance
with the 1930 Constitution. The only thing is that instead of 18 year olds voting, we have
allowed 15-year-olds the night to vote. But the 15-year-olds of today are high school
students, if not graduates, and they are better informed than my contemporaries at that
age. On the matter of whether it is constitutional to proclaim martial law, it is
constitutional because the Constitution provides for it in the event of invasion,
insurrection, rebellion or immediate danger thereof. We may quarrel about whether what
we have gone through is sufficient cause to proclaim martial law but at the very least there
is a danger of rebellion because so many of our soldiers have been killed. You must
remember this (martial law provision) was lifted from the American legislation that was the
fundamental law of our country.
"x
x
x"
In the light of this seeming ambivalence, the choice of what course of action to pursue
belongs to the President We have earlier made reference to subjective factors on which
this Court, to our mind, is in no position to pass judgment. Among them is the Presidents
own assessment of the will of the people as expressed through the Citizens Assemblies
and of the importance of the 1973 Constitution to the successful implementation of the
social and economic reforms he has started or envisioned. If he should decide that there is
no turning back, that what the people recommended through the Citizens Assemblies, as
they were reported to him, demanded that the action he took pursuant thereto be final and
irrevocable, then judicial review is out of the question.
In articulating our view that the procedure of ratification that was followed was not in
accordance with the 1935 Constitution and related statutes, we have discharged our sworn
duty as we conceive it to be. The President should now perhaps decide, if he has not
already decided, whether adherence to such procedure is weighty enough a consideration,
if only to dispel any cloud of doubt that may now and in the future shroud the nations
Charter.
In the deliberations of this Court one of the issues formulated for resolution is whether or
not the new Constitution, since its submission to the Citizens Assemblies, has found
acceptance among the people, such issue being related to the political question theory
propounded by the respondents. We have not tarried on the point at all since we find no
reliable basis on which to form a judgment. Under a regime of martial law, with the free
expression of opinions through the usual media vehicles restricted, we have no means of
knowing, to the point of judicial certainty, whether the people have accepted the
Constitution. In any event, we do not find the issue decisive insofar as our vote in these
cases is concerned. To interpret the Constitution that is judicial. That the Constitution
should be deemed in effect because of popular acquiescence that is political, and

30

therefore beyond the domain of judicial review.


We therefore vote not to give due course to the instant petitions.
Separate Opinions
BARREDO, J.:
As far as I am concerned, I regard the present petitions as no more than mere reiterations
of the Supplemental Petitions filed by Counsel Lorenzo M. Taada on January 15, 1973 in
the so called Plebiscite Cases decided by this Court on January 22, 1973. Of course, there
are amplifications of some of the grounds previously alleged, and in the course of the
unprecedented five day hearing that was held from February 12 to 16 last, more extensive
and illuminating arguments were heard by Us, but, in my estimation, and with due
recognition of the sincerity, brilliance and eloquence of counsels, nothing more cogent and
compelling than what had already been previously presented by Counsel Taada is before
Us now. Accordingly, I cannot see any reason why I should change the position I took in
regard to the earlier cases. I reiterate, therefore, the vote I cast when these petitions were
initially considered by the Court, namely, to dismiss them.
In view, however, of the transcendental importance of the issues before the Court and the
significance to our people and in history of the individual stands of the members of the
Court in relation to said issues and to the final outcome of these cases, and considering
that I reserved before the filing of a more extended opinion, I will take this opportunity to
explain further why I hold that the 1973 Constitution is already in force, if only to clarify
that apart from the peoples right of revolution to which I made pointed reference in my
previous opinion, r can see now, after further reflection, that the vote of the people in the
referendum in the Citizens Assemblies held on January 10 to 15, 1973, upon the result of
which Proclamation 1102 is based, may be viewed more importantly as a political act than
as a purely legal one, with the result that such vote to consider the 1973 Constitution as
ratified without the necessity of holding a plebiscite in the form followed in the previous
ratification plebiscites in 1935 of the Constitution itself, 1937 of womens suffrage, 1939 of
the amendments to the Ordinance Appended to the Constitution, 1940 of the reelection of
the President, the bicameral legislature and the Commission on Elections, 1947 of the
parity amendments and 1967, rejecting the proposed increase in the members of the
House of Representatives and eligibility of members of Congress to the Constitutional
Convention, may be deemed as a valid ratification substantially in compliance with the
basic intent of Article XV of the 1935 Constitution. If indeed this explanation may be
considered as a modification of my rationalization then, I wish to emphasize that my
position as to the fundamental issue regarding the enforceability of the new Constitution is
even firmer now than ever before. As I shall elucidate anon, paramount considerations of
national import have led me to the conviction that the best interests of all concerned
would be best served by the Supreme Court holding that the 1973 Constitution is now in
force, not necessarily as a consequence of the revolutionary concept previously suggested
by me, but upon the ground that as a political, more than as a legal, act of the people, the
result of the referendum may be construed as a compliance with the substantiality of
Article XV of the 1935 Constitution.
I.
The facts that gave rise to these proceedings are historical and well known. Generally,
they may be taken judicial notice of. They revolve around the purported ratification of the
Constitution of 1973 declared in Proclamation 1102 issued by the President on January 17,
1973.
Pursuant to a joint resolution of the Congress sitting as a constituent assembly approved
on March 16, 1967, delegates to a constitutional convention to propose amendments to
the Constitution of 1935 were elected in accordance with the implementing law, Republic
Act 6132, on November 10, 1970. Known as the Constitutional Convention of 1971, the

assembly began its sessions on June 1, 1971. After encountering a lot of difficulties, due to
bitter rivalries over important positions and committees and an incomprehensible fear of
overconcentrating powers in their officers, the delegates went about their work in
comparatively slow pace, and by the third quarter of 1972 had finished deliberations and
second-reading voting only on an insignificant number of proposals until September 21,
1972, when the President, not altogether unexpectedly, yet abruptly, issued Proclamation
1081 declaring martial law throughout the country. An attempt was made to have the
Convention recessed until after the lifting of martial law, and not long after the motion of
Delegate Kalaw to such effect was turned down, the activities within the assembly shifted
to high gear. As if unmindful of the arrest and continued detention of several of its
members, the convention gathered swift momentum in its work, and on November 30,
1972, it approved by overwhelming vote the draft of a complete constitution, instead of
mere specific amendments of particular portions of the Constitution of 1935. Needless to
say, before martial law was declared, there was full and unlimited coverage of the
workings in the convention by the mass media. At the same time, public debates and
discussions on various aspects of proposed amendments were not uncommon.
Earlier, on November 22, 1972, the Convention had approved Resolution No. 5843
proposing "to President Ferdinand E. Marcos that a decree be issued calling a plebiscite for
the ratification of the proposed new Constitution on such appropriate date as he shall
determine and providing for the necessary funds there for." Acting under this authority, on
December 1, 1972, the President issued Presidential Decree No. 73 submitting the draft
constitution for ratification by the people at a plebiscite set for January 15, 1973. This
order contained provisions more or less similar to the plebiscite laws passed by Congress
relative to the past plebiscites held in connection with previous proposed amendments.
In connection with the plebiscite thus contemplated, General Order No. 17 was issued
ordering and enjoining the authorities to allow and encourage public and free discussions
on the proposed constitution. Not only this, subsequently, under date of December 17,
1972, the President ordered the suspension of the effects of martial law and lifted the
suspension of the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus insofar as activities connected with
the ratification of the draft constitution were concerned. These two orders were not,
however, to last very long. On January 7, 1973, the President, invoking information related
to him that the area of public debate and discussion he had opened by his previous orders
was being taken advantage of by subversive elements to defeat the purposes for which
they were issued and to foment public confusion, withdrew said orders and enjoined full
and stricter implementation of martial law.
In the meantime, the President had issued on December 31, 1972 Presidential Decree No.
86 creating Citizens Assemblies "so as to afford ample opportunities for the citizenry to
express their views on important national issues" and one of the questions presented to
said assemblies was: "Do you like the plebiscite on the proposed Constitution to be held
later" So, in the same order of January 7, 1973, General Order No. 20, the President
ordered, "that the plebiscite scheduled to be held on January 15, 1973, be postponed until
further notice."cralaw virtua1aw library
In the meanwhile also, on January 5, 1973, the President issued Presidential Decree No. 86A providing as follows:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"PRESIDENTIAL DECREE NO. 86-A
STRENGTHENING AND DEFINING THE ROLE OF BARANGAYS (CITIZENS ASSEMBLIES)
WHEREAS, on the basis of preliminary and initial reports from the field as gathered from
barangays (citizens assemblies) that have so far been established, the people would like to
decide for themselves questions or issues, both local and national, affecting their day to
day lives and their future;

31

WHEREAS, the barangays (citizens assemblies) would like themselves to be the vehicle for
expressing the views of the people on important national issues;
WHEREAS, such barangays (citizens assemblies) desire that they be given legal status and
due recognition as constituting the genuine, legitimate and valid expression of the popular
will; and
WHEREAS, the people would like the citizens assemblies to conduct immediately a
referendum on certain specified questions such as the ratification of the new Constitution,
continuance of martial law, the convening of Congress on January 22, 1973, and the
elections in November 1973 pursuant to the 1935 Constitution.
NOW, THEREFORE, I, FERDINAND E. MARCOS, President of the Philippines, by virtue of the
powers vested in me by the constitution as Commander-in-Chief of all Armed Forces of the
Philippines, do hereby declare as part of the law of the land the following:chanrob1es
virtual 1aw library
1. The present barangays (citizens assemblies) are created under Presidential Decree No.
86 dated December 31, 1972, shall constitute the base for citizen participation in
governmental affairs and their collective views shall be considered in the formulation of
national policies or programs and, wherever practicable, shall be translated into concrete
and specific decision;
2. Such barangays (citizens assemblies) shall consider vital national issues now
confronting the country, like the holding of the plebiscite on the new Constitution, the
continuation of martial rule, the convening of Congress on January 22, 1973, and the
holding of elections in November 1973, and others in the future, which shall serve as guide
or basis for action or decision by the national government;
3. The barangays (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, pursuant to the express will of the people as
reflected in the reports gathered from the many thousands of barangays (citizens
assemblies) throughout the country.
4. This Decree shall take effect immediately.
Done in the City of Manila, this 5th day of January, in the year of Our Lord, nineteen
hundred and seventy three."cralaw virtua1aw library
And on January 7, 1973, this was followed by Presidential Decree No. 86-B reading
thus:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"PRESIDENTIAL DECREE NO. 86-B
DEFINING FURTHER THE ROLE OF BARANGAYS (CITIZENS ASSEMBLIES)
WHEREAS, since their creation pursuant to Presidential Decree No. 86 dated December 31,
1972, the Barangays (Citizens Assemblies) have petitioned the Office of the President to
submit to them for resolution important national issues;
WHEREAS, one of the questions persistently mentioned refers to the ratification of the
Constitution proposed by the 1971 Constitutional Convention;
"WHEREAS, on the basis of the said petitions, it is evident that the people believe that the
submission of the proposed Constitution to the Citizens Assemblies or Barangays should be
taken as a plebiscite in itself in view of the fact that freedom of debate has always been
limited to the leadership in political, economic and social fields, and that it is now
necessary to bring this down to the level of the people themselves through the Barangays
or Citizens Assemblies;

NOW THEREFORE, I, FERDINAND E. MARCOS, President of the Philippines, by virtue of the


powers in me vested by the Constitution, do hereby order that important national issues
shall from time to time be referred to the Barangays (Citizens Assemblies) for resolution in
accordance with Presidential Decree No. 86-A dated January 5, 1973 and that the initial
referendum shall include the matter of ratification of the Constitution proposed by the
1971 Constitutional Convention.
The Secretary of the Department of Local Governments and Community Development shall
insure the implementation of this Order.
Done in the City of Manila, this 7th day of January in the year of Our Lord, nineteen
hundred and seventy three."cralaw virtua1aw library
And so it was that by January 10, 1973, when the Citizens Assemblies thus created started
the referendum which was held from said date to January 15, 1973, the following questions
were submitted to them:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"(1) Do you like the New Society?
(2) Do you like the reforms under martial law?
"(3) Do you like Congress again to hold sessions?
"(4) Do you like the plebiscite to be held later?
"(5) Do you like the way President Marcos is running the affairs of the government?."cralaw
virtua1aw library but on January 11, 1973, six questions were added as
follows:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"(1) Do you approve of the citizens assemblies as the base of popular government to
decide issues of national interests?
(2) Do you approve of the new Constitution?
(3) Do you want a plebiscite to be called to ratify the new Constitution?
"(4) Do you want the elections to be held in November, 1973 in accordance with the
provisions of the 1935 Constitution?
"(5) If the elections would not be held, when do you want the next elections to be called?
"(6) Do you want martial law to continue?"
It is not seriously denied that together with the questions, the voters were furnished
"comments" on the said questions more or less suggestive of the answer desired. It may
be assumed that the said "comments" came from official sources, albeit specifically
unidentified. As petitioners point out, the most relevant of these "comments" were the
following:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"COMMENTS ON
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
New Constitution.
If the Citizens Assemblies approve of the new Constitution, then the new Constitution
should be deemed ratified"
The Solicitor General claims, and there seems to be no showing otherwise, that the results
of the referendum were determined in the following manner:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"Thereafter, the results of the voting were collated and sent to the Department of Local

32

Governments. The transmission of the results was made by telegram, telephone, the
provincial government SSB System in each province connecting all towns; the SSB
communication of the PACD connecting most provinces; the Department of Public
Information Network System; the Weather Bureau Communication System connecting
provincial capitals and the National Civil Defense Network connecting all provincial
capitals. The certificates of results were then flown to Manila to confirm the previous
figures received by the aforementioned means of transmission. The certificates of results
tallied with the previous figures taken with the exception of few cases of clerical errors.
"The Department adopted a system of regionalizing the receiving section of the Citizens
Assemblies operation at the Department wherein the identity of the barrio and the
province was immediately given to a staff in charge of each region. Every afternoon at
2:00 oclock, the 11 regions submitted the figures they received from the field to the
central committee to tabulate the returns. The last figures were tabulated at 12 midnight
of January 16, 1973 and early morning of January 17, 1973 and were then communicated
to the President by the Department of Local Governments."cralaw virtua1aw library

"NOW, THEREFORE, I, FERDINAND E. MARCOS, President of the Philippines, by virtue of the


powers in me vested by the Constitution, do hereby certify and proclaim that the
Constitution proposed by the nineteen hundred and seventy-one (1971) Constitutional
Convention has been ratified by an overwhelmingly 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 WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the Republic of
the Philippines to be affixed.
Done in the City of Manila, this 17th day of January, in the year of Our Lord, nineteen
hundred and seventy-three."cralaw virtua1aw library

WHEREAS, fourteen million nine hundred seventy six thousand five hundred sixty one
(14,976,561) members of all the Barangays (Citizens Assemblies) voted for the adoption of
the proposed Constitution, as against seven hundred forty-three thousand eight hundred
sixty nine (743,869) who voted for its rejection; while on the question as to whether or not
the people would still like a plebiscite to be called to ratify the new Constitution, fourteen
million two hundred ninety eight thousand eight hundred fourteen (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;

The first attempt to question the steps just enumerated taken by the President was in the
so called Plebiscite Cases, ten in number, which were filed by different petitioners during
the first half of December 1972. 1 Their common target then was Presidential Decree No.
73, but before the said cases could be decided, the series of moves tending in effect to
make them moot and academic insofar as they referred exclusively to the said Presidential
Decree began to take shape upon the issuance of Presidential Decree No. 86-A, quoted
above. And when Presidential Decree No. 86-B, also above quoted, was issued and the six
additional questions which were first publicized on January 11, 1973 were known, together
with the "comments", petitioners sensed that a new and unorthodox procedure was being
adopted to secure approval by the people of the new Constitution, hence Counsel Taada,
not being satisfied with the fate of his urgent motion for early decision of the above ten
cases dated January 12, 1973, filed on January 15, 1973, his supplemental motion seeking
the prohibition against and injunction of the proceedings going on. Principal objective was
to prevent that the President be furnished the report of the results of the referendum and
thereby disable him from carrying out what petitioners were apprehensively foreseeing
would be done the issuance of some kind of proclamation, order or decree, declaring
that the new Constitution had been ratified. Reacting swiftly, the Court resolved on the
same day, January 15, which was Monday, to consider the supplemental motion as a
supplemental petition and to require the respondents to answer the same the next
Wednesday, January 17th, before the hour of the hearing of the petition which was set for
9:30 oclock in the morning of that day. The details of what happened that morning form
part of the recital of facts in the decision rendered by this Court in the ten cases on
January 22, 1973 and need not be repeated here. Suffice it to state now that before the
hearing could be closed and while Counsel Taada was still insisting on his payer for
preliminary injunction or restraining order, the Secretary of Justice arrived and personally
handed to the Chief Justice a copy of Proclamation 1102 which had been issued at about
11:00 oclock that same morning. In other words, the valiant and persistent efforts of
petitioners and their counsels were overtaken by adverse developments, and in the mind
of the majority of the members of the Court, the cases had become academic. For my part,
I took the view that even on the basis of the supplemental petition and the answer thereto
filed by respondents, the Court could already decide on the fundamental issue of the
validity of Proclamation 1102, as Justices Zaldivar, Antonio and Esguerra also believed,
inasmuch as Counsel Taadas pleading and argument had anticipated its issuance, but
the majority felt it was not ready to resolve the matter, for lack, according to them, of full
ventilation, and so, the decision reserved to petitioners the filing of the "appropriate"
cases, evidently, the present ones.

WHEREAS, since the referendum results show that more than ninety five (95) percent of
the members of the Barangays (Citizens Assemblies) are in favor of the New Constitution,
the Katipunan ng Mga Barangay has strongly recommended that the new Constitution
should already be deemed ratified by the Filipino people;

II.
At the threshold, I find myself confronted by a matter which, although believed to be
inconsequential by my learned brethren, I strongly feel needs special attention. I refer to
the point raised by Counsel Arturo M. Tolentino for respondents Gil J. Puyat and Jose Roy,

The development culminated in the issuance by the President of Proclamation 1102 on


January 17, 1978. Said proclamation reads:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"PROCLAMATION NO. 1102 ANNOUNCING THE RATIFICATION BY THE FILIPINO PEOPLE OF
THE CONSTITUTION PROPOSED BY THE 1971 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION.
WHEREAS, the Constitution proposed by the nineteen hundred seventy-one Constitutional
Convention is subject to ratification by the Filipino people;
"WHEREAS, Citizens Assemblies were created in barrios in municipalities and in
districts/wards in chartered cities pursuant to Presidential Decree No. 6, dated December
31, 1972, composed of all persons who are residents of the barrio, district or ward for at
least six months, fifteen years of age or over, citizens of the Philippines and who are
registered in the list of Citizen Assembly members kept by the barrio, district or ward
secretary;
WHEREAS, the said Citizens Assemblies were established precisely to broaden the base of
citizen participation in the democratic process and to afford ample opportunity for the
citizenry to express their views on important national issues;
WHEREAS, responding to the clamor of the people and pursuant to Presidential Decree No.
86-A, dated January 5, 1973, the following questions were posed before Citizens
Assemblies or Barangays: Do you approve of the New Constitution? Do you still want a
plebiscite to be called to ratify the new Constitution?

33

who have been sued as President and President Pro Tempore of the Senate, to the effect
that the change in the composition of the Supreme Court provided for in the 1973
Constitution, from the 11-man tribunal under the 1935 Constitution to a 15-man Court,
makes of these cases which were filed after January 17, 1973, the date when Proclamation
1102 declared the new Constitution as ratified, political in nature and beyond our
jurisdiction. The main consideration submitted in this connection is that inasmuch as the
number of votes needed for a decision of this Court has been increased from six to eight in
ordinary cases and from eight to ten for the declaration of unconstitutionality of a treaty,
executive agreement 2 or law, the Court would have to resolve first as a prejudicial
question whether the Court is acting in these cases as the 15-man or the 11-man Court, in
which event, it would be faced with the dilemma that if it acts either as the former or as
the latter, it would be prejudging the very matter in issue one way or the other, and, in
effect, it would be choosing between two constitutions, which is a political determination
not within the Courts competence.
While I agree that the problem is at first blush rather involved, I do not share the view that
the premises laid down by counsel necessarily preclude this Court from taking a definite
stand on whether the Court is acting in these cases as the 15-man or the 11-man Court. I
feel very strongly that the issue should not be ignored or dodged, if only to make the world
know that the Supreme Court of the Philippines is never incognizant of the capacity in
which it is acting, much less lacking in courage or wisdom to resolve an issue that relates
directly to its own composition. What a disgrace it would be to admit that this Supreme
Court does not know, to use a common apt expression, whether it is fish or fowl. Withal,
scholars and researchers who might go over our records in the future will inevitably
examine minutely how each of us voted and upon what considerations we have
individually acted, and, indeed, doubts may arise as to whether or not, despite the general
result we might announce, there had been the requisite number of votes for a valid
collegiate action.
For instance, it may be argued that the present cases do not involve an issue of
unconstitutionality, hence, if we are acting as the 11-man Court, only six votes would
suffice to declare Proclamation 1102 ineffective, and if upon analysis of our respective
opinions it should be inferable therefrom that six of us have considered the matter before
the Court as justiciable and at the same time have found the procedure of ratification
adopted in Presidential Decrees 86A and 86-B and related orders of the President as not
being in conformity with Article XV of the old Constitution, a cloud would exist as to the
efficacy of the dispositive portion of Our decision dismissing these cases, even if we have
it understood that by the vote of six justices in favor of such dismissal, We intended to
mean that the implementation or enforcement of the new Constitution now being done
could continue
Be that as it may, I am against leaving such an important point open to speculation. By
nature I am averse to ambiguity and equivocation, and as a member of the Supreme
Court, the last thing I should knowingly countenance is uncertainty as to the juridical
significance of any decision of the Court which is precisely being looked upon as the haven
in which doubts are supposed to be authoritatively dispelled. Besides, from the very nature
of things, one thing is indubitably beyond dispute we cannot act in both capacities of a
15-man and an 11-man Court at the same time, in like manner that it is inconceivable that
the 1935 and 1973 Constitution can be considered by Us as both in force. Our inescapable
duty is to make a choice between them, according to what law and other considerations
inherent to our function dictate. I cannot bear the thought that someone may someday say
that the Supreme Court of the Philippines once decided a case without knowing the basis
of its authority to act or that it was ever wanting in judicial courage to define the same.
Accordingly, with full consciousness of my limitations but compelled by my sense of duty

and propriety to straighten out this grave issue touching on the capacity in which the
Court is acting in these cases, I hold that we have no alternative but to adopt in the
present situation the orthodox rule that when the validity of an act or law is challenged as
being repugnant to a constitutional mandate, the same is allowed to have effect until the
Supreme Court rules that it is unconstitutional. Stated differently, We have to proceed on
the assumption that the new Constitution is in force and that We are acting in these
present cases as the 15-man Supreme Court provided for therein. Contrary to counsels
contention, there is here no prejudgment for or against any of the two constitutions. The
truth of the matter is simply that in the normal and logical conduct of governmental
activities, it is neither practical nor wise to defer the course of any action until after the
courts have ascertained their legality, not only because if that were to be the rule, the
functioning of government would correspondingly be undesirably hesitative and
cumbersome, but more importantly, because the courts must at the first instance accord
due respect to the acts of the other departments, as otherwise, the smooth running of the
government would have to depend entirely on the unanimity of opinions among all its
departments, which is hardly possible, unless it is assumed that only the judges have the
exclusive prerogative of making and enforcing the law, aside from being its sole
interpreter, which is contrary to all norms of juridical and political thinking. To my
knowledge, there is yet no country in the world that has recognized judicial supremacy as
its basic governmental principle, no matter how desirable we might believe the idea to be.
Indeed, it is not hard to visualize the difficulty if not absurdity of Our acting on the
assumption that this Court is still functioning under the 1935 Constitution. It is undeniable
that the whole government, including the provincial, municipal and barrio units and not
excluding the lower courts up to the Court of Appeals, is operating under the 1973
Constitution. Almost daily, presidential orders and decrees of the most legislative
character affecting practically every aspect of governmental and private activity as well as
the relations between the government and the citizenry are pouring out from Malacaang
under the authority of said Constitution. On the other hand, taxes are being exacted and
penalties in connection therewith are being imposed under said orders and decrees.
Obligations have been contracted and business and industrial plans have been and are
being projected pursuant to them. Displacements of public officials and employees in big
numbers are going on in obedience to them. For the ten justices of the Supreme Court to
constitute an island of resistance in the midst of these developments, which even
unreasoning obstinacy cannot ignore, much less impede, is unimaginable, let alone the
absurd and complicated consequences such a position entails in the internal workings
within the judiciary amount its different components, what with the lower courts
considering such orders and decrees as forming part of the law of the land in making their
orders and decisions, whereas the Supreme Court is holding, as it were, their effectivity at
bay if it is not being indifferent to or ignoring them.
It is suggested that the President, being a man of law, is committed to abide by the
decision of the Supreme Court, and if the Court feels that it cannot in the meantime
consider the enforcement of the new Constitution, he can wait for its decision. Accepting
the truth of this assertion, it does not necessarily follow that by this attitude of the
President, he considers the Supreme Court as still operating under the Old Constitution.
Quite on the contrary, it is a fact that he has given instructions for the payment of the
justices in accordance with the rate fixed in the New Constitution. Not only that, his official
alter ego, the Secretary of Justice, has been shoving to this Court, since January 18, 1973,
all matters related to the administrative supervision of the lower courts which by the new
charter has been transferred from the Department of Justice to the Supreme Court, and as
far as I know, the President has not countermanded the Secretarys steps in that direction.
That, on the other hand, the President has not augmented the justices of the Court to
complete the prescribed number of fifteen is, in my appraisal, of no consequence,
considering that with the presence of ten justices who are in the Court now, there is a

34

working quorum, and the addition of new justices cannot in anyway affect the voting on
the constitutional questions now before Us because, while there are sufficient justices to
declare by their unanimous vote the illegality of Proclamation 1102, the votes of the
justices to be added would only be committed to upholding the same, since they cannot by
any standard be expected to vote against the legality of the very Constitution under which
they would be appointed.
Moreover, what makes the premise of presumptive validity preferable and, even
imperative, is that We are dealing here with a whole constitution that radically modifies or
alters not only the form of our government from presidential to parliamentary but also
other constitutionally based institutions vitally affecting all levels of society. It is, to my
mind, unrealistic to insist on that, fundamentally, the 1973 Constitution is the same 1935
Constitution. with a few improvements. A cursory perusal of the former should convince
anyone that it is in essence a new one. While it does retain republicanism as the basic
governmental tenet, the institutional changes introduced thereby are rather radical and its
social orientation is decidedly more socialistic, just as its nationalistic features are
somewhat different in certain respects. One cannot but note that the change embraces
practically every part of the old charter, from its preamble down to its amending and
effectivity clauses, involving as they do the statement of general principles, the citizenship
and suffrage qualifications, the articles on the form of government, the judiciary
provisions, the spelling out of the duties and responsibilities not only of citizens but also of
officers of the government and the provisions on the national economy as well as the
patrimony of the nation, not to mention the distinctive features of the general provisions.
What is more, the transitory provisions notably depart from traditional and orthodox views
in that, in general, the powers of government during the interim period are more or less
concentrated in the President, to the extent that the continuation or discontinuance of
what is now practically a one-man-rule, is even left to his discretion. Notably, the express
ratification of all proclamations, orders, decrees and acts previously issued or done by the
President, obviously meant to encompass those issued during martial law, is a
commitment to the concept of martial law powers being implemented by president
Marcos, in defiance of traditional views and prevailing jurisprudence, to the effect that the
Executives power of legislation during a regime of martial law is all inclusive and is not
limited to the matters demanded by military necessity. In other words, the new
constitution unlike any other constitution countenances the institution by the executive of
reforms which normally is the exclusive attribute of the legislature.
Withal, the best proofs that by its expressed and implied intent, the Constitution of 1973 is
a new one, are that (1) Section 16 of its Article XVII which provides that this constitution
shall "supersede the Constitution of nineteen hundred and thirty-five and all amendments
thereto" and (2) its transitory provisions expressly continue the effectivity of existing laws,
offices and courts as well as the tenure of all incumbent officials, not adversely affected by
it, which would have been unnecessary if the old constitution were being merely amended.
The new Constitution, in its Section 10, Article XVII, provides that" (T)he incumbent
members of the Judiciary (which include the Chief Justice and Associate Justices of the
Supreme Court) may continue in office (under the new constitution) until they reach the
age of seventy years, etc." By virtue of the presumptive validity of the new charter, all of
Us form part of the 15-man-Court provided for therein and, correspondingly, We have in
legal contemplation, ceased in the meanwhile to be members of the 11-man-Court in the
1935 Constitution. Should the Court finally decide that the new Constitution is invalid, then
We would automatically revert to our positions in the 11-man Court, otherwise, We would
just continue to be in our membership in the 15 man-Court, unless We feel We cannot in
conscience accept the legality of its existence. On the other hand, if it is assumed that We
are still the 11-man-Court and it happens that Our collective decision is in favor of the new
constitution, it would be problematical for any dissenting justice to consider himself as

included automatically in the 15-man-Court, since that would be tantamount to accepting


a position he does not honestly believe exists.
III
In brief, the main contention of the petitioners is that Proclamation 1102 is invalid because
the ratification of the 1973 Constitution it purports to declare as having taken place as a
result of the referendum above-referred to is ineffective. Since it cannot be said on the
basis of the said referendum that said Constitution has been "approved by a majority of
the votes cast at an election" in the manner prescribed by Article XV of the Constitution of
1935. More specifically, they maintain that the word "election" in the said Article has
already acquired a definite accepted meaning out of the consistent holding in the past of
ratification plebiscites, and accordingly, no other form of ratification can be considered
contemplated by the framers of the Old Constitution than that which had been followed in
1935, 1937, 1939, 1940, 1946 and 1967, the last three or four of which were held under
the supervision of the Commission on Elections. Furthermore, they emphatically deny the
veracity of the proclaimed results of the referendum because, according to them the
referendum was a farce and its results were manufactured or prefabricated, considering
that Mr. Francisco Cruz, who is supposed to have submitted the final report to the
President, which served as basis for Proclamation 1102, had no official authority to render
the same, and it is inconceivable and humanly impossible for anyone to have been able to
gather, tabulate and canvass the 15 million votes allegedly reported within the short
period of time employed. Of course, they also contend that in any event, there was no
proper submission because martial law per se creates constructive duress which deprives
the voters of the complete freedom needed for the exercise of their right of choice and
actually, there was neither time nor opportunity for real debate before they voted.
On the other hand, the position of the Solicitor General as counsel for the respondents is
that the matter raised in the petitions is a political one which the courts are not supposed
to inquire into, and, anyway, there has been a substantial compliance with Article XV of
the 1935 Constitution, inasmuch as, disregarding unessential matters of form, the
undeniable fact is that the voting in the referendum resulted in the approval by the people
of the New Constitution.
I need not dwell at length on these variant positions of the parties. In my separate opinion
in the Plebiscite Cases, I already made the observation that in view of the lack of solemnity
and regularity in the voting as well as in the manner of reporting and canvassing
conducted in connection with the referendum, I cannot say that Article XV of the Old
Constitution has been complied with, albeit I held that nonetheless, the Constitution of
1973 is already in force. In order, however, to make myself clearer on some relevant
points, I would like to add a few considerations to what I have already said in the former
cases.
In my opinion in those cases, the most important point I took into account was that in the
face of the Presidential certification through Proclamation 1102 itself that the New
Constitution has been approved by a majority of the people and having in mind facts of
general knowledge which I have taken judicial notice of, I am in no position to deny that
the result of the referendum was as the President had stated. I can believe that the figures
referred to in the proclamation may not be accurate, but I cannot say in conscience that all
of them are manufactured or prefabricated, simply because I saw with my own eyes that
people did actually gather and listen to discussions, if brief and inadequate for those who
are not abreast of current events and general occurrences, and that they did vote. I
believe I can safely say that what I have seen have also been seen by many others
throughout the country and unless it can be assumed, which honestly, I do not believe to
be possible, that in fact there were actually no meetings held and no voting done in more
places than those wherein there were such meetings and votings, I am not prepared to

35

discredit entirely the declaration that there was voting and that the majority of the votes
were in favor of the New Constitution. If in fact there were substantially less than 14
million votes of approval, the real figure, in my estimate, could still be significant enough
and legally sufficient to serve as basis for a valid ratification.
It is contended, however, that the understanding was that the referendum among the
Citizens Assemblies was to be in the nature merely of a loose consultation and not an
outright submission for purposes of ratification. I can see that at the outset, when the first
set of questions was released, such may have been the idea. It must not be lost sight of,
however, that if the newspaper reports are to be believed, and I say this only because
petitioners would consider the newspapers as the official gazettes of the administration,
the last set of six questions were included precisely because the reaction to the idea of
mere consultation was that the people wanted greater direct participation, thru the
Citizens Assemblies, in decision-making regarding matters of vital national interest. Thus,
looking at things more understandingly and realistically, the two questions emphasized by
counsel, namely, (1) Do you approve of the New Constitution? and (2) Do you want a
plebiscite to be called to ratify the new Constitution? should be considered no longer as
loose consultations but as direct inquiries about the desire of the voters regarding the
matters mentioned. Accordingly, I take it that if the majority had expressed disapproval of
the new Constitution, the logical consequence would have been the complete
abandonment of the idea of holding any plebiscite at all. On the other hand, it is very plain
to see that since the majority has already approved the new Constitution, a plebiscite
would be superfluous. Clear as these rationalizations may be, it must have been thought
that if the holding of a plebiscite was to be abandoned, there should be a direct and
expressed desire of the people to such effect in order to forestall as much as possible any
serious controversy regarding the non-holding of the plebiscite required by the letter of
Section 16 of Article XVII, the effectivity clause, of the new Constitution. Oddly enough, the
"comments" accompanying the questions do strongly suggest this view. And as it turned
out, the majority found no necessity in holding a plebiscite.
In connection with the question, Do you approve of the New Constitution? capital is being
made of the point that as so framed, the thrust of the said question does not seek an
answer of fact but of opinion. It is argued that it would have been factual were it worded
categorically thus Do you approve the New Constitution? The contention would have
been weighty were it not unrealistic. I remember distinctly that the observation regarding
the construction of the subject question was not originally made by any of the talented
counsels for petitioners. It came from Mr. Justice Fred Ruiz Castro whose mastery of the
English language can rightly be the cause of envy of even professors of English. None of
the other members of the Court, as far as I can recall, ever noticed how the said question
is phrased, or if anyone of Us did, I am not aware that he gave it more than passing
attention. What I mean is that if neither any of the distinguished and learned counsels nor
any member of the Court understood the said question otherwise than calling for a factual
answer instead of a mere opinion, how could anyone expect the millions of unlettered
members of the Citizens Assemblies to have noticed the point brought out by Justice
Castro? Truth to tell, I myself did not realize the difference until Justice Castro gave it
emphasis. Besides, reading the question in the light of the accompanying "comment"
corresponding to it in particular, I am certain that any one who answered the same
understood it in no other sense than a direct inquiry as to whether or not, as a matter of
fact, he approves the New Constitution, and naturally, his affirmative answer must be
taken as a categorical vote of approval thereof, considering, particularly, that according to
the reported result of the referendum said answer was even coupled with the request that
the President defer the convening of the Interim National Assembly.
It is also contended that because of this reference in the answer to that question to the
deferment of the convening of the interim assembly, the said answer is at best a

conditional approval not proper nor acceptable for purposes of a ratification plebiscite. The
contention has no basis. In the interest of accuracy, the additional answer proposed in the
pertinent "comment" reads as follows: "But we do not want the Ad Interim Assembly to be
convoked etc." On the assumption that the actual answer, as reported, was of similar
tenor, it is not fair to ascribe to it the imposition of a condition. At the most, the intention is
no more than a suggestion or a wish.
As regards said "comments", it must be considered that after martial law was declared, the
circumstances surrounding the making of the Constitution acquired a different and more
meaningful aspect, namely, the formation of a new society. From the point of view of the
President and on the basis of intelligence reports available to him, the only way to meet
the situation created by the subversive elements was to introduce immediately effective
reforms calculated to redeem the people from the depth of retrogression and stagnation
caused by rampant graft and corruption in high places, influence peddling, oligarchic
political practices, private armies, anarchy, deteriorating conditions of peace and order,
the social inequalities widening the gap between the rich and the poor, and many other
deplorable long standing maladies crying for early relief and solution. Definitely, as in the
case of the rebellious movement that threatened the Quirino Administration, the remedy
was far from using bullets alone. If a constitution was to be approved as an effective
instrument towards the eradication of such grave problems, it had to be approved without
loss of time and sans the cumbersome processes that, from the realistic viewpoint, have in
the past obstructed rather than hastened the progress of the people. Stated otherwise, in
the context of actualities, the evident objective in having a new constitution is to establish
new directions in the pursuit of the national aspirations and the carrying out of national
policies. Only by bearing these considerations in mind can the "comments" already
referred to be properly appreciated. To others said "comments" may appear as evidence of
corruption of the will of those who attended the assemblies, but actually, they may also be
viewed in the same light as the sample ballots commonly resorted to in the elections of
officials, which no one can contend are per se means of coercion. Let us not forget that the
times are abnormal, and prolonged dialogue and exchange of ideas are not generally
possible, nor practical, considering the need for faster decisions and more resolute action.
After all voting on a whole new constitution is different from voting on one, two or three
specific proposed amendments, the former calls for nothing more than a collective view of
all the provisions of the whole charter, for necessarily, one has to take the good together
with the bad in it. It is rare for anyone to reject a constitution only because of a few
specific objectionable features, no matter how substantial, considering the ever present
possibility that after all it may be cured by subsequent amendment. Accordingly, there was
need to indicate to the people the paths open to them in their quest for the betterment of
their conditions, and as long as it is not shown that those who did not agree to the
suggestions in the "comments" were actually compelled to vote against their will, I am not
convinced that the existence of said "comments" should make any appreciable difference
in the courts appraisal of the result of the referendum.
I must confess that the fact that the referendum was held during martial law detracts
somehow from the value that the referendum would otherwise have had. As I intimated,
however, in my former opinion, it is not fair to condemn and disregard the result of the
referendum barely because of martial law per se. For one thing, many of the objectionable
features of martial law have not actually materialized, if only because the implementation
of martial law since its inception has been generally characterized by restraint and
consideration, thanks to the expressed wishes of the President that the same be made
"Philippine style", which means without the rigor that has attended it in other lands and
other times. Moreover, although the restrictions on the freedom of speech, the press and
movement during martial law do have their corresponding adverse effects on the area of
information which should be open to a voter, in its real sense what "chills" his freedom of
choice and mars his exercise of discretion is the suspension of the privilege of the writ

36

of habeas corpus. The reason is simply that a man may freely and correctly vote even if
the needed information he possesses as to the candidates or issues being voted upon is
more or less incomplete, but when he is subject to arrest and detention without
investigation and without being informed of the cause thereof, that is something else
which may actually cause him to cast a captive vote. Thus it is the suspension of the writ
of habeas corpus accompanying martial law that can cause possible restraint on the
freedom of choice in an election held during martial law. It is a fact, however, borne by
history and actual experience, that in the Philippines, the suspension of the privilege of the
writ of habeas corpus has never produced any chilling effect upon the voters, since it is
known by all that only those who run afoul of the law, saving inconsequential instances,
have any cause for apprehension in regard to the conduct by them of the normal activities
of life. And so it is recorded that in the elections of 1951 and 1971, held while the privilege
of writ of habeas corpus was under suspension, the Filipino voters gave the then
opposition parties overwhelming if not sweeping victories, in defiance of the respective
administrations that ordered the suspensions.
At this juncture, I think it is fit to make it clear that I am not trying to show that the result
of the referendum may be considered as sufficient basis for declaring that the New
Constitution has been ratified in accordance with the amending clause of the 1935
Constitution. I reiterate that in point of law, I find neither strict nor substantial compliance.
The foregoing discussion is only to counter, if I may, certain impressions regarding the
general conditions obtaining during and in relation to the referendum which could have in
one way or another affected the exercise of the freedom of choice and the use of
discretion by the members of the Citizens Assemblies, to the end that as far as the same
conditions may be relevant in my subsequent discussions of the acceptance by the people
of the New Constitution they may also be considered.
IV
It is my sincere conviction that the Constitution of 1973 has been accepted or adopted by
the people. And on this premise, my considered opinion is that the Court may no longer
decide these cases on the basis of purely legal considerations. Factors which are non-legal
but nevertheless ponderous and compelling cannot be ignored, for their relevancy is
inherent in the issue itself to be resolved.
In my opinion in the Plebiscite Cases, I joined my colleagues in holding that the question of
whether or not there was proper submission under Presidential Decree No. 73 is justiciable,
and I still hold that the propriety of submission under any other law or in any other form is
constitutionally a fit subject for inquiry by the courts. The ruling in the decided cases relied
upon by petitioners are to this effect. In view, however, of the factual background of the
cases at bar which include ratification itself, it is necessary for me to point out that when it
comes to ratification, I am persuaded that there should be a boundary beyond which the
competence of the courts no longer has any reason for being, because the other side is
exclusively political territory reserved for their own dominion by the people.
The main basis of my opinion in the previous cases was acceptance by the people. Others
may feel there is not enough indication of such acceptance in the record and in the
circumstances the Court can take judicial notice of. For my part, I consider it unnecessary
to be strictly judicial in inquiring into such fact. Being personally aware, as I have already
stated, that the Citizens Assemblies did meet and vote, if irregularly and crudely, it is not
for me to resort, for the purposes of these cases, to judicial tape and measure, to find out
with absolute precision the veracity of the total number of votes actually cast. After all, the
claims that upon a comparison of conflicting reports, cases of excess votes may be found,
even if extrapolated will not, as far as I can figure out, suffice to overcome the outcome
officially announced. Rather than try to form a conclusion out of the raw evidence before
Us which the parties did not care to really complete, I feel safer by referring to the results

announced in the proclamation itself. Giving substantial allowances for possible error and
downright manipulation, it must not be overlooked that, after all, their having been
accepted and adopted by the President, based on official reports submitted to him in due
course of the performance of duty of appropriate subordinate officials, has elevated them
to the category of an act of a coordinate department of the government which under the
principle of separation of powers is clothed with presumptive correctness or at least
entitled to a high degree of acceptability, until overcome by better evidence, which in
these cases does not exist. In any event, considering that due to the unorthodoxy of the
procedure adopted and the difficulty of an accurate checking of all the figures, I am unable
to conceive of any manageable means of acquiring information upon which to predicate a
denial, I have no alternative but to rely on what has been officially declared. At this point, I
would venture to express the feeling that if it were not generally conceded that there has
been sufficient showing of the acceptance in question, by this time, there would have been
already demonstrative and significant indications of a rather widespread, if not organized
resistance in one form or another. Much as they are to be given due recognition as
magnificent manifestations of loyalty and devotion to principles, I cannot accord to the
filing of these cases as indicative enough of the general attitude of the people.
It is true that in the opinion I had the privilege of penning for the Court in Tolentino v.
Comelec, 41 SCRA 702, I made strong and unequivocal pronouncements to the effect that
any amendment to the Constitution of 1935, to be valid, must appear to have been made
in strict conformity with the requirements of Article XV thereof. What is more, that decision
asserted judicial competence to inquire into the matter of compliance or non compliance
as a justiciable matter. I still believe in the correctness of those views and I would even
add that I sincerely feel it reflects the spirit of the said constitutional provision. Without
trying to strain any point, however, I submit the following considerations in the context of
the peculiar circumstances of the cases now at bar, which are entirely different from those
in the backdrop of the Tolentino rulings I have referred to.
1. Consider that in the present case what is involved is not just an amendment or a
particular provision of an existing Constitution; here, it is, as I have discussed earlier
above, an entirely new Constitution that is being proposed. This important circumstance
makes a great deal of difference.
No less than counsel Tolentino for herein respondents Puyat and Roy, who was himself the
petitioner in the case I have just referred to is, now inviting Our attention to the exact
language of Article XV and suggesting that the said Article may be strictly applied to
proposed amendments but may hardly govern the ratification of a new Constitution. It is
particularly stressed that the Article specifically refers to nothing else but "amendments to
this Constitution" which if ratified "shall be valid as part of this Constitution." Indeed, how
can a whole new constitution be by any manner of reasoning an amendment to any other
constitution and how can it, if ratified, form part of such other constitution? In fact, in the
Tolentino case I already somehow hinted this point, when I made reference in the
resolution denying the motion for reconsideration to the fact that Article XV must be
followed "as long as any amendment is formulated and submitted under the aegis of the
present Charter." Said resolution even added." (T)his is not to say that the people may not,
in the exercise of their inherent revolutionary powers, amend the Constitution or
promulgate an entirely new one otherwise."cralaw virtua1aw library
It is not strange at all to think that the amending clause of a constitution should be
confined in its application only to proposed changes in any part of the same constitution
itself, for the very fact that a new constitution is being adopted implies a general intent to
put aside the whole of the old one, and what would be really incongrous is the idea that in
such an eventuality, the new Constitution would subject its going into effect to any
provision of the constitution it is to supersede, to use the language precisely of Section 6,

37

Article XVII, the effectivity clause, of the New Constitution. My understanding is that
generally, constitutions are self-born, they very rarely, if at all, come into being, by virtue
of any provision of another constitution. 3 This must be the reason why every constitution
has its own effectivity clause, so that if, the Constitutional Convention had only anticipated
the idea of the referendum and provided for such a method to be used in the ratification of
the New Constitution, I would have had serious doubts as to whether Article XV could have
had priority of application.
2. When an entirely new constitution is proposed to supersede the existing one, we cannot
but take into consideration the forces and the circumstances dictating the replacement.
From the very nature of things, the proposal to ordain a new constitution must be viewed
as the most eloquent expression of a peoples resolute determination to bring about a
massive change of the existing order, a meaningful transformation of the old society and a
responsive reformation of the contemporary institutions and principles. Accordingly, should
any question arise as to its effectivity and there is some reasonable indication that the new
charter has already received in one way or another the sanction of the people, I would hold
that the better rule is for the courts to defer to the peoples judgment, so long as they are
convinced of the fact of their approval, regardless of the form by which it is expressed,
provided it be reasonably feasible and reliable. Otherwise stated, in such instances, the
courts should not bother about inquiring into compliance with technical requisites, and as
a matter of policy should consider the matter non-justiciable.
3. There is still another circumstance which I consider to be of great relevancy. I refer to
the ostensible reaction of the component elements, both collective and individual, of the
Congress of the Philippines. Neither the Senate nor the House of Representatives has been
reported to have even made any appreciable effort or attempt to convene as they were
supposed to do under the Constitution of 1935 on January 22, 1973 for the regular session.
It must be assumed that being composed of experienced, knowledgeable and courageous
members, it would not have been difficult for said parliamentary bodies to have conceived
some ingenious way of giving evidence of their determined adherence to the Constitution
under which they were elected. Frankly, much as I admire the efforts of the handful of
senators who had their picture taken in front of the padlocked portals of the Senate
chamber, I do not feel warranted to accord such act as enough token of resistance. As
counsel Tolentino has informed the court, there was noting to stop the senators and the
congressmen to meet in any other convenient place and somehow officially organize
themselves in a way that can logically be considered as a session, even if nothing were
done than to merely call the roll and disperse. Counsel Tolentino even pointed out that if
there were not enough members to form a quorum, any smaller group could have ordered
the arrest of the absent members. And with particular relevance to the present cases, it
was not constitutionally indispensable for the presiding officers to issue any call to the
members to convene, hence the present prayers for mandamus have no legal and factual
bases. And to top it all, quite to the contrary, the records of the Commission on Elections
show that at least 15 of 24 senators and over 95 out of less than 120 members of the
House of Representatives, have officially and in writing exercised the option given to them
to join the Interim National Assembly under the New Constitution, thereby manifesting
their acceptance of the new charter.
Now, having these facts in mind, and it being obvious that of the three great departments
of the government under the 1935 Constitution, two, the Executive and the Legislative,
have already accepted the New Constitution and recognized its enforceability and
enforcement, I cannot see how this Supreme Court can by judicial fiat hold back the
political developments taking place and for the sake of being the guardian of the
Constitution and the defender of its integrity and supremacy make its judicial power
prevail against the decision of those who were duly chosen by the people to be their
authorized spokesmen and representatives. It is not alone the physical futility of such a

gesture that concerns me. More than that, there is the stark reality that the Senators and
the Congressmen, no less than the President, have taken the same oath of loyalty to the
Constitution that we, the Justices, have taken and they are, therefore, equally bound with
Us to preserve and protect the Constitution. If as the elected representatives of the people,
they have already opted to accept the New Constitution as the more effective instrument
for the fulfillment of the national destiny, I really wonder if there is even any idealistic
worth in Our desperately clinging by Ourselves alone to Our sworn duty vis-a-vis the 1935
Constitution. Conscious of the declared objectives of the new dispensation and cognizant
of the decisive steps being taken, with the least loss of time, towards their
accomplishment, I cannot but feel apprehensive that instead of serving the best interests
of our people, which to me is in reality the real meaning of our oath of office, the Court
might be standing in the way of the very thing our beloved country needs to retrieve its
past glory and greatness. In other words, it is my conviction that what these cases demand
most of all is not a decision demonstrative of our legal erudition and Solomonic wisdom,
but an all rounded judgment resulting from the consideration of all relevant circumstances,
principally the political, or, in brief, a decision more political than legal, which a court can
render only by deferring to the apparent judgment of the people and the announcement
thereof by the political departments of the government and declaring the matter nonjusticiable.
4. Viewed from the strictly legal angle and in the light of judicial methods of
ascertainment, I cannot agree with the Solicitor General that in the legal sense, there has
been at least substantial compliance with Article XV of the 1935 Constitution, but what I
can see is that in a political sense, the answers to the referendum questions were not
given by the people as legal conclusions. I take it that when they answered that by their
signified approval of the New Constitution, they do not consider it necessary to hold a
plebiscite, they could not have had in mind any intent to do what was constitutionally
improper. Basically accustomed to proceed along constitutional channels, they must have
acted in the honest conviction that what was being done was in conformity with prevailing
constitutional standards. We are not to assume that the sovereign people were indulging in
a futile exercise of their supreme political right to choose the fundamental charter by
which their lives, their liberties and their fortunes shall be safeguarded. In other words, we
must perforce infer that they meant their decision to count, and it behooves this Court to
render judgment herein in that context. It is my considered opinion that viewed
understandingly and realistically, there is more than sufficient ground to hold that, judged
by such intent and, particularly, from the political standpoint, the ratification of the 1973
Constitution declared in Proclamation 1102 complies substantially with Article XV of the
1935 Charter, specially when it is considered that the most important element of the
ratification therein contemplated is not in the word "election", which conceivably can be in
many feasible and manageable forms but in the word "approved" which may be said to
constitute the substantiality of the whole article, so long as such approval is reasonably
ascertained. In the last analysis, therefore, it can be rightly said, even if only in a broad
sense, that the ratification here in question was constitutionally justified and justifiable.
5. Finally, if any doubt should still linger as to the legitimacy of the New Constitution on
legal grounds, the same should be dispelled by viewing the situation in the manner
suggested by Counsel Tolentino and by the writer of this opinion in his separate opinion,
oft-referred to above, in the Plebiscite Cases that is, as an extra constitutional exercise
by the people, under the leadership of President Marcos, of their inalienable right to
change their fundamental charter by any means they may deem appropriate, the moment
they are convinced that the existing one is no longer responsive to their fundamental,
political and social needs nor conducive to the timely attainment of their national destiny.
This is not only the teaching of the American Declaration of Independence but is indeed, a
truth that is self-evident. More, it should be regarded as implied in every constitution that
regardless of the language of its amending clause, once the people have given their

38

sanction to a new charter, the latter may be deemed as constitutionally permissible even
from the point of view of the preceding constitution. Those who may feel restrained to
consider this view out of respect to the import of Tolentino v. Comelec, supra., would be
well advised to bear in mind that that case was decided in the context of submission, not
of accomplished ratification.
V
The language of the disputed amending clause of the 1935 Constitution should not be
deemed as the be all and end all of the nation. More important than even the Constitution
itself, with all its excellent features, are the people living under it their happiness, their
posterity and their national destiny. There is nothing that cannot be sacrificed in the
pursuit of these objectives, which constitute the totality of the reasons for national
existence. The sacred liberties and freedoms enshrined in it and the commitment and
consecration thereof to the forms of democracy we have hitherto observed are mere
integral parts of this totality; they are less important by themselves.
What seems to me to be bothering many of our countrymen now is that by denying the
present petitions, the Court would be deemed as sanctioning, not only the deviations from
traditional democratic concepts and principles but also the qualified curtailment of
individual liberties now being practiced, and this would amount, it is feared, to a
repudiation of our oath to support and defend the Constitution of 1935. This is certainly
something one must gravely ponder upon. When I consider, however, that the President,
the Vice President, the members of both Houses of Congress, not to speak of all executive
departments and bureaus under them, as well as all the lower courts, including the Court
of Appeals, have already accepted the New Constitution as an instrument of a meaningful
nationwide-all-level change in our government and society purported to make more
realistic and feasible, rather than idealistic and cumbersomely deliberative, the attainment
of our national aspirations, I am led to wonder, whether or not we, as members of the
Supreme Court are being true to our duty to our people by refusing to follow suit and to
accept the realities of the moment, despite our being convinced of the sincerity and
laudableness of their objectives, only because we feel that by the peoples own act of
ratifying the Constitution of 1935, they have so encased themselves within its provisions
and may, therefore, no longer take measures to redeem themselves from the situation
brought about by the deficiencies of the old order, unless they act in strict conformity
therewith. I cannot believe that any people can be so stifled and enchained. In any event, I
consider it a God-given attribute of the people to disengage themselves, if necessary, from
any covenant that would obstruct their taking what subsequently appears to them to be
the better road to the promotion and protection of their welfare. And once they have made
their decision in that respect, whether sophisticatedly or crudely, whether in legal form or
otherwise, certainly, there can be no court or power on earth that can reverse them.
I would not be human if I should be insensitive to the passionate and eloquent appeals of
Counsels Taada and Salonga that these cases be decided on the basis of conscience. That
is exactly what I am doing. But if counsel mean that only by granting their petitions can
this Court be worthily the bulwark of the peoples faith in the government, I cannot agree,
albeit my admiration and respect are all theirs for their zeal and tenacity, their industry
and wisdom, their patriotism and devotion to principle. Verily, they have brought out
everything in the Filipino that these cases demand.
In times of national emergencies and crises, not arising from foreign invasion, we need not
fear playing opposite roles, as long as we are all animated by sincere love of country and
aim exclusively at the attainment of the national destiny. Our heroes of the past, Rizal,
Bonifacio, Aguinaldo, Antonio Luna, Mabini and so also with our patriots of the recent
generations, Quezon, Osmea, Roxas, Laurel and Recto, to mention only some of them,
had their differences of views and they did not hesitate to take diametrically opposing

sides that even reached tragic proportions, but all of them are admired and venerated.
It is my faith that to act with absolute loyalty to our country and people is more important
than loyalty to any particular precept or provision of the Constitution or to the Constitution
itself. My oath to abide by the Constitution binds me to whatever course of action I feel
sincerely is demanded by the welfare and best interests of the people.
In this momentous juncture of our history, what is imperative is national unity. May God
grant that the controversies the events leading to these cases have entailed will heal after
the decision herein is promulgated, so that all of us Filipinos may forever join hands in the
pursuit of our national destiny.
IN VIEW OF ALL THE FOREGOING, I vote to dismiss all these petitions for mandamus and
prohibition without costs.
MAKASIAR, J.:

Assuming, without conceding, that Article XV of the 1935 Constitution prescribes a


procedure for the ratification of constitutional amendments or of a new Constitution and
that such procedure was no complied with, the validity of Presidential Proclamation No.
1102 is a political, not a justiciable, issue; for it is inseparably or inextricably linked with
and strikes at, because it is decisive of, the validity of the ratification and adoption of, as
well as acquiescence of the people in, the 1973 Constitution and the legitimacy of the
government organized and operating thereunder. And being political, it is beyond the
ambit of judicial inquiry, tested by the definition of a political question enunciated in
Taada, Et. Al. v. Cuenco, Et. Al. (103 Phil. 1051), aside from the fact that this view will not
do violence to rights vested under the new Constitution, to international commitments
forged pursuant thereto and to decisions rendered by the judicial as well as quasi-judicial
tribunals organized and functioning or whose jurisdiction has been altered by the 1973
Constitution and by the government established thereunder, and will dissipate any
confusion in the minds of the citizenry, who have been obeying the mandates of the new
Constitution, as well as exercising the rights and performing the obligations defined by the
new Constitution, and decrees and orders issued in implementation of the same and
cooperating with the administration in the renovation of our social, economic and political
system as re-structured by the 1973 Constitution and by the implementing decrees and
orders (see Miller v. Johnson, 18 SW 522, 522-526, 1892).
In 1957, Mr. Chief Justice Roberto Concepcion, then Associate Justice, in behalf as the
court, defined a political question as one which, under the Constitution, is "to be decided
by the people in their sovereign capacity, or in regard to which full discretionary authority
had been delegated to the Legislature or Executive branch of the government." (Taada,
Et. Al. v. Cuenco, Et Al., supra).
Article XV of the 1935 Constitution provides: "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 ratification." Under Article XV of the 1935
Constitution, the power to propose constitutional amendments is vested in Congress or in
a constitutional convention; while the power to ratify or reject such proposed amendments
or new Constitution is reserved by the sovereign people. The nullification of Proclamation
No. 1102 would inevitably render inoperative the 1973 Constitution, which is in fact the
express prayer of the petitioners in G.R. No. L-36164. Regardless of the modality of
submission or ratification or adoption even if it deviates from or violates the procedure
delineated there for by the old Constitution once the new Constitution is ratified,
adopted and/or acquiesced in by the people or ratified even by a body or agency not duly

39

authorized there for but is subsequently adopted or recognized by the people and by the
other official organs and functionaries of the government established under such a new
Constitution, this Court is precluded from inquiring into the validity of such ratification,
adoption or acquiescence and of the consequent effectivity of the new Constitution. This is
as it should be in a democracy, for the people are the repository of all sovereign powers as
well as the source of all governmental authority (Pole v. Gray, 104 SO 2nd 841 [1958]).
This basic democratic concept is expressly restated in Section 1 of Article II of the
Declaration of Principles of the 1935 and 1973 Constitutions, thus: "Sovereignty resides in
the people and all government authority emanates from them."cralaw virtua1aw library
The legality of the submission is no longer relevant; because the ratification, adoption
and/or acquiescence by the people cures any infirmity in its submission or any other
irregularities therein which are deemed mandatory before submission as they are
considered merely directory after such ratification or adoption or acquiescence by the
people. As Mr. Justice Brewer, then of the Kansas State Supreme Court and later Associate
Justice of the Federal Supreme Court, stated in re Prohibitory Amendment Cases (24
Kansas 700 & 710, Reprint 499, 506): "The two important, vital elements of the
Legislature, and a majority of the popular vote. Beyond these, other provisions are mere
machineries and forms. They may not be disregarded, because by them certainty as to the
essential is secured. But they are not themselves the essentials." (Cited in Lark en v.
Gronna, 285 N W 59, 61-64, 1939).
This was the ruling by the American Supreme Court in the 1939 case of Coleman v. Miller
(307 U.S. 433, 83 L.ed. 1385), where Chief Justice Hughes, speaking for the majority,
stated that:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
". . . Thus the political departments of the government dealt with the effect of both
previous rejection and attempted withdrawal and determined that both were ineffectual in
the presence of an actual ratification . . . This decision by the political departments of the
Government as to the validity of the adoption of the Fourteenth amendment has been
accepted.
"We think that in accordance with this historic precedent the question of the efficacy of
ratifications by state legislatures, in the light of previous rejection or attempted
withdrawal, should be regarded as a political question pertaining to the political
departments, with the ultimate authority in the Congress in the exercise of its control over
the promulgation of the adoption of the amendment."cralaw virtua1aw library
This view was likewise emphasized by Mr. Justice Black in his concurring opinion, in which
Mr. Justices Roberts, Frankfurter, and Douglas join, thus:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"The Constitution grants Congress exclusive power to control submission of constitutional
amendments. Final determination by Congress that ratification by three-fourths of the
States has taken place is conclusive upon the courts. In the exercise of that power
Congress, of course, is governed by the Constitution. However, whether submission,
intervening procedure or Congressional determination of ratification conforms to the
commands of the Constitution, calls for decisions by a political department of questions
of a type which this Court has frequently designated political. And decision of a political
question by the political department to which the Constitution has committed it
conclusively binds the judges, as well as all other officers, citizens and subjects of . . .
government. Proclamation under authority of Congress that an amendment has been
ratified via carry with it a solemn assurance by the Congress that ratification has taken
place as the Constitution commands. Upon this assurance a proclaimed amendment must
be accepted as a part of the Constitution, leaving to the judiciary its traditional authority of
interpretation. To the extent that the Courts opinion in the present case even impliedly

assumes a power to make judicial interpretation of the exclusive constitutional authority of


Congress over submission and ratification of amendments, we are unable to agree . . ."
(American Constitutional Issues, by Pritchett, 1962 Ed., p. 44).
The doctrine in the aforesaid case of Coleman v. Miller was adopted by Our Supreme Court
in toto in Mabanag v. Lopez Vito (78 Phil. 1).
The ruling in the cases of Gonzales v. Comelec, Et. Al. (L-28224, Nov. 29, 1967, 21 SCRA
774) and Tolentino v. Comelec, Et. Al. (L-34150, Oct. 16, 1971, 41 SCRA 702) on which
petitioners place great reliance that the courts may review the propriety of a submission
of a proposed constitutional amendment before the ratification or adoption of such
proposed amendment by the sovereign people, hardly applies to the cases at bar; because
the issue involved in the aforesaid cases refers to only the propriety of the submission of a
proposed constitutional amendment to the people for ratification, unlike the present
petitions, which challenge inevitably the validity of the 1973 Constitution after its
ratification or adoption thru acquiescence by the sovereign people. As heretofore stated, it
is specious and pure sophistry to advance the reasoning that the present petitions pray
only for the nullification of the 1973 Constitution and the government operating
thereunder.
It should be stressed that even in the Gonzales case, supra, We held
that:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"Indeed, the power to amend the Constitution or to propose amendments thereto is not
included in the general grant of legislative powers to Congress. It is part of the inherent
powers of the people as the repository of sovereignty in a republicans state, such as
ours to make, and hence, to amend their own Fundamental Law. Congress may propose
amendments to the Constitution merely because the same explicitly grants such power.
Hence, when exercising the same, it is said that Senators ad Members of the House of
Representatives act, not as members of Congress, but as component elements of a
constituent assembly. When acting as such, the members of Congress derive their
authority from the Constitution, unlike the people, when performing the same function, for
their authority does not emanate from the Constitution they are the source of all powers
of government including the Constitution itself." (21 SCRA 787)
WE did not categorically and entitle overturn the doctrine in Mabanag v. Lopez Vito (78
Phil. 1) that both the proposal to amend and the ratification of such a constitutional
amendment are political in nature forming as they do the essential parts of one political
scheme the amending process. WE merely stated therein that the force of the ruling in
the said case of Mabanag v. Lopez Vito has been weakened by subsequent cases. Thus, We
pronounced therein.
"It is true that in Mabanag v. Lopez Vito, 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 us. Chief Accountant of the Senate, Avelino v. Cuenco, Taada v.
Cuenco, and Macias v. Commission on Elections. In the first, we held that the Officers and
employees of the Senate Electoral Tribunal are 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

40

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 of
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." (21 SCRA pp.
785-786);

a resolution requesting the Congress of the Confederation to pass a resolution providing


that the Federal Constitution should be submitted to elected state conventions and if
ratified by the conventions in nine (9) states, not necessarily in all thirteen (13) states, the
said Constitution shall take effect.
Thus, history Professor Edward Earle Mead of Princeton University recorded that

In short, the issue whether or not a resolution of Congress before 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 consistent with the
stand taken in Mabanag v. Lopez Vito, the latter should be deemed modified accordingly."
(p. 787, Italics supplied.)

"It would have been a counsel of perfection to consign the new Constitution to the tender
mercies of the legislatures of each and all of the 13 states. Experience clearly indicated
that ratification then would have had the some chance as the scriptural camel passing thru
the eye of a needle. It was therefore determined to recommend to Congress that the new
Constitution be submitted to conventions as in the several states specially elected to pass
upon it and that, furthermore, the new government should go into effect if and when it
should be ratified by nine of the thirteen states . . ." (The Federalist, Modern Library Ed.,
1937, Introduction by Edward Earle Mead, pp. viii-ix; Italics supplied).

In the Tolentino case, supra, We reiterated the foregoing comments (41 SCRA 703-714).

Historian Samuel Eliot Morison similarly recounted:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

The inevitable consequence therefore is that the validity of the ratification or adoption of
or acquiescence by the people in the 1973 Constitution, remains a political issue removed
from the jurisdiction of this Court to review.

"The Convention, anticipating that the influence of many state politicians would be
Antifederalist, provided for ratification of the Constitution by popularly elected conventions
in each state. Suspecting that Rhode Island, at least, would prove recalcitrant, it declared
that the Constitution would go into effect as soon as nine states ratified. The convention
method had the further advantage that judges, ministers, and others ineligible to state
legislatures, could be elected to a convention. The nine-state provision was, of course,
mildly revolutionary. But the Congress of the Confederation, still sitting in New York to
carry on federal government until relieved, formally submitted the new constitution to the
states and politely faded out before the first presidential inauguration." (The Oxford
History of the Am. People, by Samuel Eliot Morison, 1965 ed., p. 312).

for which reason We concluded

One more word about the Gonzales and Tolentino cases. Both primarily stressed on the
impropriety of the submission of a proposed constitutional amendment. Courts do not deal
with propriety or wisdom or absence of either of an official act or of a law. Judicial power
concerns only with the legality or illegality, constitutionality or unconstitutionality of an
act; it inquires into the existence of power or lack of it. Judicial wisdom is not to be pitted
against the wisdom of the political department of the government.
The classic example of an illegal submission that did not impair the validity of the
ratification or adoption of a new Constitution is the case of the Federal Constitution of the
United States. It should be recalled that the thirteen (13) original states of the American
Union which succeeded in liberating themselves from England after the revolution which
began on April 19, 1775 with the skirmish at Lexington, Massachusetts and ended with the
surrender of General Cornwall is at Yorktown, Virginia, on October 19, 1781 (Encyclopedia
Brit., Vol. I, 1933 Ed., p. 776) adopted their Articles of Confederation and Perpetual
Union, that was written from 1776 to 1777 and ratified on March 1, 1781 (Encyclopedia
Brit., Vol. II, 1966 Ed., p. 525). About six years thereafter, the Congress of the
Confederation passed a resolution on February 21, 1787 calling for a Federal Constitutional
Convention" for the sole and express purpose of revising the articles of confederation . . ."
(Appendix I, The Federalist, Modern Library ed., p. 577, Italics supplied).
The Convention convened at Philadelphia on May 14, 1787. Article XIII of the Articles of
Confederation and Perpetual Union stated specifically:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"The articles of this confederation shall be inviolably observed by every state, and the
union shall be perpetual; nor shall any alteration at any time hereafter be made in any of
them; unless such alteration be agreed to in a congress of the united states, and be
afterwards confirmed by the legislatures of every statute." (See the Federalist, Appendix II,
Modern Library Ed., 1937, p.584; Italics supplied.)
But the foregoing requirements prescribed by the Articles of Confederation and Perpetual
Union for the alteration and for the ratification of the Federal Constitution as drafted by the
Philadelphia Convention were not followed. Fearful that the said Federal Constitution would
not be ratified by the state legislatures as prescribed, the Philadelphia Convention adopted

And so the American Constitution was ratified by nine (9) states on June 21, 1788 and by
the last four states on May 29, 1790 (12 C.J. p. 679 footnote, 16 C.J.S. 27 by the state
conventions and not by all thirteen (13) state legislatures as required by Article XIII of the
Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union aforequoted and in spite of the fact that
the Federal Constitution as originally adopted suffers from two basic infirmities, namely,
the absence of a bill of rights and of a provision affirming the power of judicial review.
The liberties of the American people were guaranteed by subsequent amendments to the
Federal Constitution. The doctrine of judicial review has become part of American
constitutional law only by virtue of a judicial pronouncement by Chief Justice Marshall in
the case of Marbury v. Madison (1803, 1 Cranch 137).
Until this date, no challenge has been launched against the validity of the ratification of
the American Constitution, or against the legitimacy of the government organized and
functioning thereunder.
In the 1946 case of Wheeler v. Board of Trustees (37 SE 2nd 322, 326-330), which
enunciated the principle that the validity of a new or revised Constitution does not depend
on the method of its submission or ratification by the people, but on the fact of fiat or
approval or all option or acquiescence by the people, which fact of ratification or adoption
or acquiescence is all that is essential, the Court cited precisely the case of the irregular
revision and ratification by state conventions of the Federal Constitution,
thus:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"No case identical in its facts with the case now under consideration has been called to our
attention, and we have found none. We think that the principle which we apply in the

41

instant case was very clearly applied in the creation of the constitution of the United
States. The convention created by a resolution of Congress had authority to do one thing,
and one only, to wit, amend the articles of confederation. This they did not do, but
submitted to the sovereign power, the people, a new constitution. In this manner was the
constitution of the United States submitted to the people and it became operative as the
organic law of this nation when it had been properly adopted by the people.
"Pomeroys Constitutional Law, p. 55, discussing the convention that formulated the
constitution of the United States, has this to say: The convention proceeded to do, and did
accomplish, what they were not authorized to do by a resolution of Congress that called
them together. That resolution plainly contemplated amendments to the articles of
confederation, to be submitted to and passed by the Congress, and afterwards ratified by
all the State legislatures, in the manner pointed out by the existing organic law. But the
convention soon became convinced that any amendments were powerless to effect a cure;
that the disease was too deeply seated to be reached by such tentative means. They saw
that the system they were called to improve must be totally abandoned, and that the
national idea must be re-established at the center of their political society. It was objected
by some members, that they had no power, no authority, to construct a new government.
They had no authority, if their decisions were to be final; and no authority whatever, under
the articles of confederation, to adopt the course they did. But they knew that their labors
were only to be suggestions; and that they as well as any private individuals, and any
private individuals as well as they, had a right to propose a plan of government to the
people for their adoption. They were, in fact, a mere assemblage of private citizens, and
their work had no more binding sanction than a constitution drafted by Mr. Hamilton in his
office, would have had. The people, by their expressed will, transformed this suggestion,
this proposal, into an organic law, and the people might have done the same with a
constitution submitted to them by a single citizen.
x
x
x
". . . When the people adopt a completely revised or new Constitution, the framing or
submission of the instrument is not what gives it binding force and effect. The fiat of the
people, and only the that of the people, can breathe life into a constitution.
x
x
x
". . . We do not hesitate to say that a court is never justified in placing by implication a
limitation upon the sovereign. This would be an authorized exercise of sovereign power by
the court. In State v. Swift, 69 Ind. 505, 519, the Indiana Supreme Court said: The people
of a State may form an original constitution, or abrogate an old one and form a new one,
at any time, without any political restriction except the constitution of the United States; . .
." (37 SE 327-328, 329, Italics supplied.)
In the 1903 case of Weston v. Ryan, the Court held:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"It remains to be said that if we felt at liberty to pass upon this question, and were
compelled to hold that the act of February 23, 1887, is unconstitutional and void, it would
not, in our opinion, by any means follow that the amendment is not a part of our state
Constitution. In the recent case of Taylor v. Commonwealth (Va.) 44 S.E. 754, the Supreme
Court of Virginia hold that their state Constitution of 1902, having been acknowledged and
accepted by the officers administering the state government, and by the people, and being
in force without opposition, must be regarded as an existing Constitution, irrespective of
the question as to whether or not the convention which promulgated it had authority so to
do without submitting it to a vote of the people. In Brittle v. People, 2 Neb. 198, is a similar
holding as to certain provisions of the Nebraska Constitution of 1886, which were added by
the Legislature at the requirement of Congress, though never submitted to the people for
their approval." (97 NW 349-350;Italics supplied).

Against the decision in the Wheeler case, supra, confirming the validity of the ratification
and adoption of the American Constitution, in spite of the fact that such ratification was a
clear violation of the prescription on alteration and ratification of the Articles of
Confederation and Perpetual Union, petitioners in G.R. No. L-36165 dismissed this most
significant historical fact by calling the Federal Constitution of the United States as a
revolutionary one, invoking the opinion expressed in Vol. 16, Corpus Juris Secundum, p. 27,
that it was a revolutionary constitution because it did not obey the requirement that the
Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union can be amended only with the consent of all
thirteen (13) state legislatures. This opinion does not cite any decided case, but merely
refers to the footnotes on the brief historical account of the United States Constitution on
p. 679 of Vol. 12, CJS. Petitioners, on p. 18 of their main Notes, refer US to pp. 270-316 of
the Oxford History of the American People, 1965 Ed. by Samuel Eliot Morison, who
discusses the Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union in Chapter XVIII captioned
"Revolutionary Constitution Making, 1775 1781" (pp. 270-281). In Chapter XX on "The
Creative Period in Politics, 1785-1788," Professor Morison delineates the generals of the
Federal Constitution, but does not refer to it even implicitly as a revolutionary constitution
(pp. 297-316). However, the Federal Constitution may be considered revolutionary from
the view point of McIver if the term revolution is understood in "its wider sense to embrace
decisive changes in the character of government, even though they do not involve the
violent overthrow of an established order, . . ." (R.M. MacIver, The Web of Government,
1965 ed., p. 203).
It is rather ridiculous to refer to the American Constitution as a revolutionary constitution.
The Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union that was in force from July 12, 1776 to
1788, forged as it was during the war of independence was a revolutionary constitution of
the thirteen (13) states. In the existing Federal Constitution of the United States which was
adopted seven (7) or nine (9) years after the thirteen (13) states won their independence
and long after popular support for the government of the Confederation had stabilized was
not a product of a revolution. The Federal Constitution was a "creation of the brain and
purpose of man" in an era of peace. It can only be considered revolutionary in the sense
that it is a radical departure from its predecessor, the Articles of Confederation and
Perpetual Union.
It is equally absurd to affirm that the present Federal Constitution of the United States is
not the successor to the Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union. The fallacy of the
statement is so obvious that no further refutation is needed.
As heretofore stated, the issue as to the validity of Proclamation No. 1102 strikes at the
validity and enforceability of the 1973 Constitution and of the government established and
operating thereunder. Petitioners pray for a declaration that the 1973 Constitution is
inoperative (L-36164). If Proclamation No. 1102 is nullified, then there is no valid
ratification of the 1973 Constitution and the inevitable conclusion is that the government
organized and functioning thereunder is not a legitimate government.
That the issue of the legitimacy of a government is likewise political and not justiciable,
had long been decided as early as the 1849 case of Luther v. Borden (7 How. 1, 12 L.ed.,
581), affirmed in the 1900 case of Taylor v. Beckham (178 U.S. 548, 44 L.ed. 1187) and reenunciated in 1912 in the case of Pacific States Telephone and Telegraph Company v.
Oregon (223 U.S. 118, 133-151, 56 L.ed. 377-386). Because it reaffirmed the
pronouncements in both Borden and Beckham cases, it is sufficient for us to quote the
decision in Pacific States Telephone and Telegraph Co., supra, penned by Mr. Chief Justice
White, who restated:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"In view of the importance of the subject, the apparent misapprehension on one side and

42

seeming misconception on the other, suggested by the argument as to the full significance
of the previous doctrine, we do not content ourselves with a mere citation of the cases, but
state more at length than we otherwise would the issues and the doctrine and the doctrine
expounded in the leading and absolutely controlling case Luther v. Borden, 7 How. 1, 12
L. ed 581.
x
x
x
". . . On this subject it was said (p. 38):jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"For, if this court is authorized to enter upon this inquiry, as proposed by the plaintiff, and
it should be decided that the charter government had no legal existence during the period
of time above mentioned, if it had been annulled by the adoption of the opposing
government, then the laws passed by its legislature during that time were nullities; its
taxes wrongfully collected; its salaries and compensation to its officers illegally paid; its
public accounts improperly settled; and the judgments and sentences of its courts in civil
and criminal cases null and void, and the officers who carried their decisions into operation
answerable as trespassers, if not in some cases as criminals.
x
x
x
"The fourth section of the fourth article of the Constitution of the United States shall
guarantee to every state in the Union a republican form of government, and shall protect
each of them against invasion; and on the application of the Legislature or of the Executive
(when the legislature cannot be convened) against domestic violence.
"Under this article of the Constitution it rests with Congress to decide what government is
the established one in a state. For, as the United State guarantee to each state a
republican government, Congress must necessarily decide what government is established
in the state before it can determine whether it is republican or not. And when the senators
and representatives of a state are admitted into the councils of the Union, the authority of
the government under which they are appointed, as well as its republican character, is
recognized by the proper constitutional authority. And its decision is binding on every other
department of the government, and could not be questioned in a judicial tribunal. It is true
that the contest in this case did not last long enough to bring the matter to this issue; and
as no senators or representatives were elected under the authority of the government of
which Mr. Dorr was the head, Congress was not called upon to decide the controversy. Yet
the right to decide is placed there, and not in the courts.
x
x
x
". . . We do not stop to cite other cases which indirectly or incidentally refer to the subject,
but conclude by directing attention to the statement by the court, speaking through Mr.
Chief Justice Fuller, in Taylor v. Beckham, 178 U.S. 548, 44 L.ed. 1187, 20 Sup. Ct. Rep.
890, 1009, where, after disposing of a contention made concerning the 14th Amendment,
and coming to consider a proposition which was necessary to be decided concerning the
nature and effect of the guaranty of S 4 of article 4, it was said (p.
578):jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"But it is said that the 14th Amendment must be read with S 4 of article 4, of the
Constitution, providing that the United States shall guarantee to every state in this Union
a republican form of government, and shall protect each of them against invasion; and on
application of the legislature, or the Executive (when the legislature cannot be convened),
against domestic violence.
x

"It was long ago settled that the enforcement of this guaranty belonged to the political
department. Luther v. Borden, 7 How. 1,12 L.ed. 581. In that case it was held that the
question, which of the two opposing governments of Rhode Island, namely, the charter
government or the government established by a voluntary convention, was the legitimate
one, was a question for the determination of the political department; and when that
department had decided, the courts were bound to take notice of the decision and follow it

x
x
x
"As the issues presented, in their very essence, are, and have long since by this court
been, definitely determined to be political and governmental, and embraced within the
scope of the powers conferred upon Congress, and not, therefore, within the reach of
judicial power, it follows that the case presented is not within our jurisdiction, and the writ
of error must therefore be, and it is, dismissed for want of jurisdiction." (223 U.S. pp. 142151; Italics supplied).
Even a constitutional amendment that is only promulgated by the Constitutional
Convention without authority there for and without submitting the same to the people for
ratification, becomes valid, when recognized, accepted and acted upon by the Chief of
State an a other government functionaries as well as by the people. In the 1903 case of
Taylor v. Commonwealth (44 SE 754-755), the Court ruled:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"The sole ground urged in support of the contention that the Constitution proclaimed in
1902 is invalid is that it was ordained and promulgated by the convention without being
submitted for ratification or rejection by the people of the commonwealth.
"The Constitution of 1902 was ordained and proclaimed by a convention duly called by
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 the Governor in swearing fidelity to it and
proclaiming it, as directed thereby; by the Legislature in its formal official act adopting a
joint resolution, July 15, 1902, recognizing the Constitution ordained by the convention
which assembled in the city of Richmond on the 12th day of June, 1901, as the
Constitution of Virginia; by 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; but the judiciary in taking the oath prescribed thereby to support it, and by
enforcing its provisions; and by the people in their primary capacity by peacefully
accepting it and acquiescing in it, by registering as voters under it to the extent of
thousands throughout the state, and by voting, under its provisions, at a general election
for their representatives in the Congress of the United States." (p. 755).
The Court in the Taylor case above-mentioned further said:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"While constitutional procedure for adoption or proposal to amend the constitution must be
duly followed, without omitting any requisite steps, courts should uphold amendment,
unless satisfied that the constitution was violated in submitting the proposal . . . Substance
more than form must be regarded in considering whether the complete constitutional
system or submitting the proposal to amend the constitution was observed."cralaw
virtua1aw library
In the 1925 case of Taylor v. King (130 A 407, 408 410), the Court
stated:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"There may be technical error in the manner in which a proposed amendment is adopted
or in its advertisement, act, yet if followed, unobjected to, by approval of the electors, it

43

becomes part of the Constitution. Legal complaints to the submission may be made prior
to taking the vote but, if once sanctioned, the amendment is embodied therein and cannot
be attacked, either directly or collaterally, because of any mistake antecedent thereto.
Even though it be submitted at an improper time, it is effective for all purposes when
accepted by the majority. Armstrong v. King, 281 Pa. 207, 126 A. 263." (130 A 409).
Even if the act of the Constitutional Convention is beyond its authority, such act becomes
valid upon ratification or adoption or acquiescence by the people. Thus, in the 1905 case
of Ex parte Birmingham and A.R. Company (42 SO pp. 118 & 123), the Alabama Supreme
Court upheld this principle and stated that: "The authorities are almost uniform that this
ratification of an unauthorized act by the people (and the people are the principal in this
instance) renders the act valid and binding."cralaw virtua1aw library
It has likewise been held that it is not necessary that voters ratifying the new Constitution
are registered in the book of voters; it is enough that they are electors voting on the new
Constitution. (Bott v. Wurts, 40 A 740 [1899]; 45 LRA 251, Italics supplied).
In the 1956 case of Thomson v. Peoples State Bank (75 NW 2nd 370, 375), the Supreme
Court of Wisconsin ruled that "irregularity in the procedure for the submission of the
proposed constitutional amendment will not defeat the ratification by the people."cralaw
virtua1aw library
Again, in the 1958 case of Swaim v. Tuscaloosa County (103 SO 2nd 769), the Alabama
Supreme Court pronounced that "the irregularity in failing to publish the proposed
constitutional amendment once in each of the 4 calendar weeks next preceding the
calendar week in which the election was held or once in each of the 7-day periods
immediately preceding the day of the election as required by the Constitution, did not
invalidate the amendment which was ratified by the people."cralaw virtua1aw library
The same principle was reiterated in 1961 by the Mississippi Supreme Court in Barnes, Et.
Al. v. Ladner (131) SO 2nd 458, 462), where the admitted irregularities or illegalities
committed in the procedure for submission of the proposed constitutional amendment to
the people for ratification consisted of:" (a) the alleged failure of the county election
commissioners of the several counties to provide a sufficient. number of ballot boxes
secured by good and substantial locks, as provided by Section 3249, Code of 1942, Rec.,
to be used in the holding of the special election on the constitutional amendment, and (b)
the alleged failure of the State Election Commissioners to comply with the requirements of
Code Sections 3204 and 3205 in the appointment of election commissioners in each of the
82 counties. The irregularities complained of, even if proved, were not such irregularities
as would have invalidated the election." (Italics supplied; see also Sylvester v. Tindall, 8 SO
2nd 892; 154 Fla. 663).
Even prior to the election in November, 1970 of delegates to the Constitutional Convention
and during the deliberations of the Constitutional Convention from June 1, 1971 until
martial law was proclaimed on Sept. 21, 1972, the salient reforms contained in the 1973
Constitution which have long been desired by the people, had been thoroughly discussed
in the various committees of the Constitutional Convention, on the floor of the convention
itself, in civic forums and in all the media of information. Many of the decrees promulgated
by the Chief Executive from Sept. 22, 1972 to Jan. 17, 1973 implement some of the
reforms and had been ratified in Sec. 3(2) of Article XVII of the Constitution.
Petitioners cannot safely state that during martial law the majority of the people cannot
freely vote for these reforms and are not complying with the implementing decrees
promulgated by the President.

Free election is not inevitably incompatible with martial law. We had free elections in 1951
and 1971 when the opposition won six out of eight senatorial seats despite the suspension
of the privileges of the writ of habeas corpus (see Lansang v. Garcia, Et Al., Dec. 14, 1971,
42 SCRA 448), which suspension implies constraint on individual freedom as the
proclamation of martial law. In both situations, there is no total blackout of human rights
and civil liberties.
All the local governments, dominated either by Nacionalistas or Liberals, as well as officials
of the Legislative and Executive branches of the government elected and/or appointed
under the I935 Constitution have either recognized or are now functioning under the 1973
Constitution, aside from the fact of its ratification by the sovereign people through the
Citizens Assemblies. Ninety-five (95) of a total of one hundred ten (110) members of the
House of Representatives including the Speaker and the Speaker Pro Tempore as well as
about eleven (11) Congressmen who belong to the Liberal Party and fifteen (15) of a total
of twenty-four (24) senators including Liberal senators Edgar U. Ilarde and John Osmea
opted to serve in the Interim Assembly, according to the certification of the Commission on
Elections dated February 19, 1973 (Annex Rejoinder-3 to Consolidated Rejoinder of
petitioners in L-36165). Only the five (5) petitioners in L-36165 close their eyes to a fait
accompli. All the other functionaries recognize the new government and are performing
their duties and exercising their powers under the 1973 Constitution, including the lower
courts. The civil courts, military tribunals and quasi-judicial bodies created by presidential
decrees have decided some criminal, civil and administrative cases pursuant to such
decrees. The foreign ambassadors who were accredited to the Republic of the Philippines
before martial law continue to serve as such in our country; while two new ambassadors
have been accepted by the Philippines after the ratification of the 1973 Constitution on
January 17, 1973. Copies of the 1973 Constitution had been furnished the United Nations
Organization and practically all the other countries with which the Philippines has
diplomatic relations. No adverse reaction from the United Nation or from the foreign states
has been manifested. On the contrary, our permanent delegate to the United Nations
Organization and our diplomatic representatives abroad appointed before martial law
continue to remain in their posts and are performing their functions as such under the
1973 Constitution.
Even the Commission on Elections is now implementing the provisions of the 1973
Constitution by requiring all election registrars to register 18-year olds and above whether
literates or not, who are qualified electors under the 1973 Constitution (see pars. 1-A(c),
(d), & (e) of Annex A to Notes of respondents Puyat and Roy in L 36165).
In brief, it cannot be said that the people are ignoring the 1973 Constitution and the
government which is enforcing the same for over 10 weeks now. With the petitioners
herein, secessionists, rebels and subversives as the only possible exceptions, the rest of
the citizenry are complying with the decrees, orders and circulars issued by the incumbent
President implementing the 1973 Constitution
Of happy relevance on this point is the holding in Miller v. Johnson 18 SW
522):jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"If a set of men, not selected by the people according to the forms of law, were to
formulate an instrument and declare it the constitution, it would undoubtedly be the duty
of the courts to declare its work a nullity. This would be revolution, and this the courts of
the existing government must resist until they are overturned by power, and a new
government established. The convention, however, was the offspring of law. The
instrument which we are asked to declare invalid as a constitution has been made and
promulgated according to the forms of law. It is a matter of current history that both the
executive and legislative branches of the government have recognized its validity as a

44

constitution, and are now daily doing so. Is the question, therefore, one of a judicial
characters It is our undoubted duty, if a statute be unconstitutional, to so declare it; also, if
a provision of the state constitution be in conflict with the federal constitution, to hold the
former invalid. But this is a very different case. It may be said, however, that, for every
violation of or non-compliance with the law, there should be a remedy in the courts. This is
not, however, always the case. For instance, the power of a court as to the acts of other
departments of the government is not an absolute one, but merely to determine whether
they have kept within constitutional limits, it is a duty, rather than a power. The judiciary
cannot compel a co-equal department to perform a duty. It is responsible to the people;
but if it does act, then, when the question is properly presented, it is the duty of the court
to say whether it has conformed to the organic law. While the judiciary should protect the
rights of the people with great care and jealousy, because this is its duty, and also
because, in times of great popular excitement, it is usually their last resort, yet it should at
the same time be careful to overstep the proper bounds of its power, as being perhaps
equally dangerous; and especially where such momentous results might follow as would be
likely in this instance, if the power of the judiciary permitted, and its duty required, the
overthrow of the work of the convention.
"After the American Revolution the state of Rhode Island retained its colonial character as
its constitution, and no law existed providing for the making of a new one. In 1841 public
meetings were held, resulting in the election of a convention to form a new one, to be
submitted to a popular vote. The convention framed one, submitted it to a vote, and
declared it adopted. Elections were held for state officers, who proceeded to organize a
new government. The charter government did not acquiesce in these proceedings, and
finally declared the state under martial law. It called another convention, which in 1843
formed a new constitution. Whether the charter government, or the one established by the
voluntary convention, was the legitimate one, was uniformly held by the courts of the state
not to be a judicial, but a political, question; and, the political department having
recognized the one, it was held to be the duty of the judiciary to follow its decision. The
Supreme Court of the United States, in Luther v. Borden, 7 How. 1, while not expressly
deciding the principle, as it held the federal court, yet in the argument approves it, and in
substance says that where the political department has decided such a matter the
judiciary should abide by it.
"Let us illustrate the difficulty of a court deciding the question: Suppose this court were to
hold that the convention, when it reassembled, had no power to make any material
amendment, and that such as were made are void by reason of the people having
theretofore approved the instrument Then, next, this court must determine what
amendments were material; and we find the court, in effect, making a constitution. This
would be arrogating sovereignty to itself. Perhaps the members of the court might differ as
to what amendments are material, and the result would be confusion and anarchy. One
judge might say that all the amendments, material and immaterial, were void; another,
that the convention had then the implied power to correct palpable errors, and then the
Court might differ as to what amendments are material. If the instrument as ratified by the
people could not be corrected or altered at all or if the court must determine what changes
were material, then the instrument, as passed upon by the people or as fixed by the court
could be lacking a promulgation by the convention; and, if this be essential, then the
question would arise, what constitution are we now living under, and what is the organic
law of the state? A suggestion of these matters shows what endless confusion and harm to
the state might and likely would arise. If, through error of opinion, the convention
exceeded its powers, and the people are dissatisfied, they have ample remedy, without
the judiciary being asked to overstep the proper limits of its power. The instrument
provides for amendment and change. If a wrong has been done, it can, and the proper way
in which it should be remedied, is by the people acting as a body politic. It is not a
question of whether merely an amendment to a constitution, made without calling a

convention, has been adopted, as required by that constitution. If it provides how it is to be


done, then, unless the manner be followed, the judiciary, as the interpreter of that
constitution, will declare the amendment invalid. Koehler v. Hill, 60 Iowa, 54.3,14 N.W. Rep.
738, and 15 N.W. Rep. 609; State v. Tuffy, 19 Nev. .391, 12 Pac. Rep. 835. But it is a case
where a new constitution has been formed and promulgated according to the forms of law.
Great interests have already arisen under it; important rights exist by virtue of it; persons
have been convicted of the highest crimes known to the law, according to its provisions;
the political power of the government has in many ways recognized it; and, under such
circumstances, it is our duty to treat and regard it as a valid constitution, and now the
organic law of our commonwealth.
"We need not consider the validity of the amendments made after the convention
reassembled. If the making of them was in excess of its powers, yet, as the entire
instrument has been recognized as valid in the manner suggested, it would be equally an
abuse of power by the judiciary and violative of the rights of the people, who can and
properly should remedy the matter, if not to their liking, if it were to declare the
instrument of a portion invalid, and bring confusion and anarchy upon state." (Italics
supplied).
If this Court inquires into the validity of Proclamation No. 1102 and consequently of the
adoption of the 1973 Constitution, it would be exercising a veto power on the act of the
sovereign people, of whom this Court is merely an agent, which to say the least, would be
anomalous. This Court cannot dictate to our principal, the sovereign people, as to how the
approval of the new Constitution should be manifested or expressed. The sovereign people
have spoken and we must abide by their decision, regardless of our notion as to what is
the proper method of giving assent to the new Charter. In this respect, WE cannot presume
to know better than the incumbent Chief Executive, who, unlike the members of this Court,
only last January 8, 1973, We affirmed in Osmea v. Marcos (Pres. Election Contest No. 3,
Jan. 8, 1973), was re-elected by the vote of over 5 million electors in 1969 for another term
of four years until noon of December 30, 1973 under the 1935 Constitution. This Court, not
having a similar mandate by direct fiat from the sovereign people, to execute the law and
administer the affairs of government, must restrain its enthusiasm to sally forth into the
domain of political action expressly and exclusively reserved by the sovereign people
themselves.
The people in Article XV of the 1935 Constitution did not intend to tie their hands to a
specific procedure for popular ratification of their organic law. That would be incompatible
with their sovereign character of which We are reminded by Section 1, of Article II of both
the 1935 and the 1973 Constitutions.
The Opinion of Judge Thomas McIntire Cooley that the sovereign people cannot violate the
procedure for ratification which they themselves define in their Constitution, cannot apply
to a unitary state like the Republic of the Philippines. His opinion expressed in 1868 may
apply to a Federal State like the United States, in order to secure and preserve the
existence of the Federal Republic of the United States against any radical innovation
initiated by the citizens of the fifty (50) different states of the American Union, which
states may be jealous of the powers of the Federal government presently granted by the
American Constitution. This dangerous possibility does not obtain in the case of our
Republic.
Then again, Judge Cooley advanced the aforesaid opinion in 1868 when he wrote his opus
"Constitutional Limitations." * (Vol. 6, Encyclopedia Brit., 1969 ed. pp. 445-446). It is
possible that, were he live today, in a milieu vastly different from 1868 to 1898, he might
have altered his views on the matter.

45

Even if conclusiveness is to be denied to the truth of the declaration by the President in


Proclamation No. 1102 that the people through their Citizens Assemblies had
overwhelmingly approved the new Constitution, due regard to a separate, coordinate and
co-equal branch of the government demands adherence to the presumption of correctness
of the Presidents declaration. Such presumption is accorded under the law and
jurisprudence to officials in the lower levels of the Executive branch; there is no over-riding
reason to deny the same to the Chief of State as head of the Executive Branch. WE cannot
reverse the rule on presumptions, without being presumptuous, in the face of the
certifications by the Office of the Secretary of the Department of Local Government and
Community Development. (Annexes 1, to 1-E, Annexes 2 to 2-O to the compliance with
manifestation filed by the Solicitor General on behalf of the respondents public officers
dated March 7,1973). There is nothing in the record that contradicts, much less overthrow
the results of the referendum as certified. Much less are We justified in reversing the
burden of proof by shifting it from the petitioners to the respondents. Under the rules on
pleadings, the petitioners have the duty to demonstrate by clear and convincing evidence
their claim that the people did not ratify through the Citizens Assemblies nor adopt by
acquiescence the 1973 Constitution. And petitioners have failed to do so.
No member of this Tribunal is justified in resolving the issues posed by the cases at bar on
the basis of reports relayed to him from private sources which could be biased and
hearsay, aside from the fact that such reports are not contained in the record.
Proclamation No. 1102 is not just an ordinary act of the Chief Executive. It is a well-nigh
solemn declaration which announces the highest act of the sovereign people their
imprimatur to the basic Charter that shall govern their lives hereafter may be for
decades, if not for generations.
Petitioners decry that even 15-year olds, ex-convicts and illiterates were allowed to vote in
the Citizens Assemblies, despite their admission that the term "Filipino people" in the
preamble as well as "people" in Sections 1 and 5 of Article II of the 1935 Constitution and
in Section 1(3) of Article III of the Bill of Rights includes all Filipino citizens of all ages, of
both sexes, whether literate or illiterate, whether peaceful citizens, rebels, secessionists,
convicts or ex-convicts. Without admitting that ex-convicts voted in the referendum, about
which no proof was even offered, these sectors of our citizenry, whom petitioners seem to
regard with contempt or derision and whom petitioners would deny their sovereign right to
pass upon the basic Charter that shall govern their lives and the lives of their progenies,
are entitled as much as the educated, the law abiding, and those who are 21 years of age
or above to express their conformity or non-conformity to the proposed Constitution,
because their stake under the new Charter is not any less than the stake of the more
fortunate among us. As a matter of fact, these citizens, whose juridical personality or
capacity to act is limited by age, civil interdiction or ignorance deserve more solicitude
from the State than the rest of the citizenry. In the ultimate analysis, the inclusion of those
from 15 years up to below 21 years old, the ex-convicts and the ignorant, is more
democratic as it broadens the base of democracy and therefore more faithful to the
express affirmation in Section 1 of Article II of the Declaration of Principles that
"sovereignty resides in the people and all government authority emanates from
them."cralaw virtua1aw library
Moreover, ex-convicts granted absolute pardon are qualified to vote. Not all ex-convicts
are banned from voting. Only those who had been sentenced to at least one year
imprisonment are disenfranchised but they recover their right of suffrage upon expiration
of ten years after service of sentence (Sec. 102, 1971 Rev. Elec. Code). Furthermore, exconvicts and imbeciles constitute a very negligible number in any locality or barrio,
including the localities of petitioners.
Included likewise in the delegated authority of the President, is the prerogative to proclaim

the results of the plebiscite or the voting the Citizens Assemblies. Petitioners deny the
accuracy or correctness of Proclamation No. 1102 that the 1973 Constitution was ratified
by the overwhelming vote of close to 15 million citizens because there was no official
certification as to the results of the same from the Department of Local Governments. But
there was such certification as per Annexes 1 to 1-A to the Notes submitted by the Solicitor
General as counsel for respondents public officers. This should suffice to dispose of this
point. Even in the absence of such a certification, in much the same way that in passing
laws, Congress or the legislative body is presumed to be in possession of the facts upon
which such laws are predicated (Justice Fernando, The Power of Judicial Review, 1967 Ed.,
pp. 112-113, citing Lorenzo v. Dir., etc., [1927] 50 Phil. 595 and OGonmore, et al: v.
Hartford, etc., [1931] 282 U.S. 251), it should likewise be presumed that the President was
in possession of the facts upon which Proclamation No. 1102 was based. This presumption
is further strengthened by the fact that the Department of Local Governments, the
Department of National Defense and the Philippine Constabulary as well as the Bureau of
Posts are all under the President, which offices, as his alter ego, are presumptively acting
for and in behalf of the President and their acts are valid until disapproved or reprobated
by the President (Planas v. Gil, 67 Phil. 62, Villena v. Secretary of Interior, 67 Phil. 451). To
deny the truth of the proclamation of the President as to the overwhelming majority vote
in the Citizens Assemblies in favor of the new Constitution, is to charge the President with
falsification, which is a most grievous accusation. Under the rules of pleadings and
evidence, the petitioners have the burden of proof by preponderance of evidence in civil
cases and by proof beyond reasonable doubt in criminal prosecutions, where the accused
is always presumed to be innocent. Must this constitutional right be reversed simply
because the petitioners all assert the contrary? Is the rule of law they pretend to invoke
only valid as long as it favors them?
The presumption of regularity in the performance of official functions is accorded by the
law and jurisprudence to acts of public officers whose category in the official hierarchy is
very much lower than that of the Chief of State. What reason is there to withhold such a
presumption in favor of the President? Does the fact that the President belong to the party
in power and that four (4) of the five (5) senators who are petitioners in L-36165 belong to
the opposition party, justify a discrimination against the President in matters of this
nature? Unsupported as their word is by any credible and competent evidence under the
rules of evidence, must the word of the petitioners prevail over that of the Chief Executive,
because they happen to be former senators and delegates to the Constitutional
Convention? More than any of the petitioners herein in all these cases, the incumbent
President realizes that he risks the wrath of his people being visited upon him and the
adverse or hostile verdict of history; because of the restrictions on the civil liberties of his
people, inevitable concomitants of martial law, which necessarily entail some degree of
sacrifice on the part of the citizenry. Until the contrary is established or demonstrated,
herein petitioners should grant that the Chief Executive is motivated by what is good for
the security and stability of the country, for the progress and happiness of the people. All
the petitioners herein cannot stand on the proposition that the rights under the 1935
Constitution are absolute and invulnerable to limitations that may be needed for the
purpose of bringing about the reforms for which the petitioners pretend to be clamoring for
and in behalf of the people. The five (5) petitioners in L-36165 and four (4) of the seven (7)
petitioners in L-36164 were all participants in the political drama of this country since
1946. They are witness to the frustrations of well-meaning Presidents who wanted to effect
the reforms, especially for the benefit of the landless and the laboring class how politics
and political bargaining had stymied the effectuation of such reforms thru legislation. The
eight (8) petitioners in L-36164 and L-36165 may not have participated in the systematic
blocking of the desired reforms in Congress or outside of it; but the question may be asked
as to what exactly they did to support such reforms. For the last seven (7) decades since
the turn of the century, for the last thirty-five (35) years since the establishment of the
Commonwealth government in 1935 and for the last twenty seven (27) years since the

46

inauguration of the Republic on July 4, 1946, no tangible substantial reform had been
effected, funded and seriously implemented, despite the violent uprisings in the thirties,
and from 1946 to 1952, and the violent demonstrations of recent memory. Congress and
the oligarchs acted like ostriches, "burying their heads in timeless sand." Now the hopes
for the long-awaited reforms to be effected within a year or two are brighter. It would seem
therefore to be the duty of everyone including herein petitioners to give the present
leadership the opportunity to institute and carry out the needed reforms as provided for in
the new or 1973 Constitution and thru the means prescribed in that same Constitution.
As stated in Wheeler v. Board of Trustees, "a court is never justified in placing by
implication a limitation upon the sovereign."cralaw virtua1aw library
This Court in the Gonzales and Tolentino cases transcended its proper sphere and
encroached upon the province exclusively reserved to and by the sovereign people. This
Court did not pay heed to the principle that the courts are not the fountain spring of all
remedies for all wrongs. WE cannot presume that we alone can speak with wisdom as
against the judgment of the people on the basic instrument which affects their very lives.
WE cannot determine what is good for the people or what ought to be their fundamental
law. WE can only exercise the power delegated to Us by the sovereign people, to apply or
interpret the Constitution and the laws for the benefit of the people, not against them nor
to prejudice them. WE cannot perform an act inimical to the interest of Our principal, who
at any time may directly exercise their sovereign power of ratifying a new Constitution in
the manner convenient to them
It is pertinent to ask whether the present Supreme Court can function under the 1935
Constitution without being a part of the government established pursuant thereto. Unlike
in the Borden case, supra, where there was at least another government claiming to be the
legitimate organ of the state of Rhode Island (although only on paper as it had no
established organ except Dorr who represented himself to be its head; in the cases at bar
there is no other government distinct from and maintaining a position against the existing
government headed by the incumbent Chief Executive. (See Taylor v. Commonwealth,
supra). There is not even a rebel government duly organized as such even only for
domestic purposes, let alone a rebel government engaged in international negotiations. As
heretofore stated, both the executive branch and the legislative branch established under
the 1935 Constitution had been supplanted by the government functioning under the 1973
Constitution as of January 17, 1973. The vice president elected under the 1935
Constitution does not asset any claim to the leadership of the Republic of the Philippines.
Can this Supreme Court legally exist without being part of any government?
Brilliant counsel for petitioners in L-36165 has been quite extravagant in his appraisal of
Chief Justice Roger Brooke Taney whom he calls the "hero of the American Bar," because
during the American civil war he apparently had the courage to nullify the proclamation of
President Lincoln suspending the privileges of the writ of habeas corpus in Ex parte
Merryman (Federal Case No. 9487 [1861]). But who exactly was Chief Justice Roger Brooke
Taney? The Editorial Board of Vol. 21 of the Encyclopedia Brit., 1966 ed. (pp. 778-779,
1969 ed., pp. 654-657), briefly recounts that he was born in 1777 in Calvert County,
Maryland, of parents who were landed aristocrats as well as slave owners. Inheriting the
traditional conservatism of his parents who belonged to the landed aristocracy, Taney
became a lawyer in 1799, practiced law and was later appointed Attorney General of
Maryland. He also was a member of the Maryland state legislature for several terms. He
was a leader of the Federalist Party, which disintegrated after the war of 1812, compelling
him to join the Democratic Party of Andrew Jackson, also a slave owner and landed
aristocrat, who later appointed him first as Attorney General of the United States, then
Secretary of the Treasury and in 1836 Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court to
succeed Chief Justice John Marshall, in which position he continued for 28 years until he

died on October 21, 1864. His death "went largely unnoticed and unregretted." Because he
himself was a slave owner and a landed aristocrat, Chief Justice Taney sympathized with
the Southern States and, even while Chief Justice, hoped that the Southern States would
be allowed to secede peacefully from the Union. That he had no sympathy for the Negroes
was revealed by his decision in Dred Scott v. Sandford (19 How. 398 [1857]) where he
pronounced that the American Negro is not entitled to the rights of an American citizen
and that his status as a slave is determined by his returning to a slave state. Once can
therefore discern his hostility towards President Lincoln when he decided Ex parte
Merryman, which animosity to say the least does not befit a judicial mind. Such a man
could hardly be spoken of as a hero of the American Bar, least of all of the American
nation. The choice of heroes should not be expressed indiscriminately just to embellish
ones rhetoric.
Distinguished counsel in L-36165 appears to have committed another historical error,
which may be due to his rhetorical in the Encyclopedia Britannica (Vol. 9, 1969 ed., pp.
508-509) to this effect. On the contrary, Encyclopedia Britannica (Vol. 17, Encyclopedia
Brit., 1966 & 1969 eds., 732-733), refers to Marshal Henri Philippe Petain as the genuine
hero or "Saviour of Verdun" ; because he held Verdun against the 1916 offensive 0f the
German army at the cost of 350,000 of his French soldiers, who were then demoralized
and plotting mutiny. Certainly, the surviving members of the family of Marshal Petain
would not relish the error. And neither would the members of the clan of Marshal Foch
acknowledge the undeserved accolade, although Marshal Foch has a distinct place in
history on his own merits. The foregoing clarification is offered in the interest of true
scholarship and historical accuracy, so that the historians, researchers and students may
not be led astray or be confused by esteemed counsels eloquence and mastery of the
spoken and written word as well as by his eminence as law professor, author of law books,
political leader, and member of the newly integrated Philippine Bar.
It is quite intriguing why the eminent counsel and co-petitioner in L-36164 did not address
likewise his challenge to the five (5) senators who are petitioners in L-36165 to also act as
"heroes and idealists," to defy the President by holding sessions by themselves alone in a
hotel or in their houses if they can muster a quorum or by causing the arrest of other
senators to secure a quorum and thereafter remove respondents Puyat and Roy (Avelino,
Et. Al. v. Cuenco, Et. Al. [1949] 83 Phil. 17), if they believe most vehemently in the justice
and correctness of their position that the 1973 Constitution has not been validly ratified,
adopted or acquiesced in by the people since January 18, 1973 until the present. The
proclaimed conviction of petitioners in L 36165 on this issue would have a ring of
credibility, if they proceeded first to hold a rump session outside the legislative building;
because it is not unreasonable to demand or to exact that he who exhorts others to be
brave must first demonstrate his own courage. Surely, they will not affirm that the mere
filing of their petition in L-36165 already made them "heroes and idealists." The challenge
likewise seems to insinuate that the members of this Court who disagree with petitioners
views are materialistic cowards or mercenary fence-sitters. The Court need not be
reminded of its solemn duty and how to perform it. WE refuse to believe that petitioners
and their learned as well as illustrious counsels, scholars and liberal thinkers that they are,
do not recognize the sincerity of those who entertain opinions that clash with their own.
Such an attitude does not sit well with the dictum that "We can differ without being
difficult; we can disagree without being disagreeable," which distinguished counsel in L
36165 is wont to quote.
WE reserve the right to prepare an extensive discussion of the other points raised by
petitioners, which We do not find now necessary to deal with in view of Our opinion on the
main issue.
IN VIEW OF THE FOREGOING, ALL THE PETITIONS IN THESE FIVE CASES SHOULD BE

47

DISMISSED.
MAKASIAR, J.:
Pursuant to Our reservation, We now discuss the other issues raised by the petitioners.
II
EVEN IF ISSUE IS JUSTICIABLE, PEOPLES RATIFICATION, ADOPTION OR ACQUIESCENCE
CREATES STRONG PRESUMPTION OF VALIDITY OF 1973 CONSTITUTION.
As intimated in the aforecited cases, even the courts, which affirm the proposition that the
question as to whether a constitutional amendment or the revised or new Constitution has
been validly submitted to the people for ratification in accordance with the procedure
prescribed by the existing Constitution, is a justiciable question, accord all the presumption
of validity to the constitutional amendment or the revised or new Constitution after the
government officials or the people have adopted or ratified or acquiesced in the new
Constitution or amendment, although there was an illegal or irregular or no submission at
all to the people. (Collier v. Gray, 4th Dec. Dig. 935 [1934]; Hammond v. Clark, 71 SE 479,
482-483; People v. Sours, 31 Colo. 369, 74 Pac. 167, 102 Am. St. Rep. 34; Thompson v.
Winneth, 78 Neb. 379, 110 NW 1113, 10 L.R.A. [N.S.] 149; State v. Laylin, 69 Ohio St. Rep.
1, 68 NE 574; Weston v. Ryan, 70 Neb. 211, 97 NW 347; Combs v. State, 81 Ga. 780, 8 SE
318; Woodward v. State, 103 Ga. 496, 30 SE 522; Corre v. Cooney, 70 Mont. 355, 225 P
1007, 1009). As late as 1971, the courts stressed that the constitutional amendment or the
new Constitution should not be condemned "unless in our judgment its nullity is manifest
beyond reasonable doubt" (1971 case of Moore v. Shanahan, 486 Pac. 2d 506, 207 Karl. 1,
645; and the 1956 case of Tipton v. Smith, Et Al., supra).
Mr. Justice Enrique M. Fernando, speaking for the Court, pronounced that the presumption
of constitutionality must persist in the absence of factual foundation of record to overthrow
such presumption (Ermita-Malate Hotel, etc. v. City Mayor, L-24698, July 31, 1967, 20 SCRA
849).
III
CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION CO-EQUAL WITH AND INDEPENDENT OF CONGRESS,
EXECUTIVE AND JUDICIARY.
The Constitutional Convention is co-ordinate and co-equal with, as well as independent of,
the three grand departments of the Government, namely, the legislative, the executive
and the judicial. As a fourth separate and distinct branch, to emphasize its independence,
the Convention cannot be dictated to by either of the other three departments as to the
content as well as form of the Charter that it proposes. It enjoys the same immunity from
interference or supervision by any of the aforesaid branches of the Government in its
proceedings, including the printing of its own journals (Taada and Fernando, Constitution
of the Philippines, 1952 ed., Vol. I, pp. 8-9; Malcolm and Laurel, Phil. Const. Law, p. 22;
Frantz v. Autry, 91 Pac. 193). Implicit in that independence, for the purpose of maintaining
the same unimpaired and in order that its work will not be frustrated, the Convention has
the power to fix the date for the plebiscite and to provide funds therefor. To deny the
Convention such prerogative, would leave it at the tender mercy of both legislative and
executive branches of the Government. An unsympathetic Congress would not be disposed
to submit the proposed Constitution drafted by the Constitutional Convention to the people
for ratification, much less appropriate the necessary funds therefor. That could have been
the fate of the 1973 Constitution, because the same abolished the Senate by creating a
unicameral National Assembly to be presided by a Prime Minister who wields both
legislative and executive powers and is the actual Chief Executive, for the President
contemplated in the new Constitution exercises primarily ceremonial prerogatives. The
new Constitution likewise shortened abruptly the terms of the members of the present

Congress (whose terms end on December 31, 1913, 1975 and 1977) which provides that
the new Constitution shall take effect immediately upon its ratification (Sec. 16, Article
XVII, 1973 Constitution). The fact that Section 2 of the same Article XVII secures to the
members of Congress membership in the interim National Assembly as long as they opt to
serve therein within thirty (30) days after the ratification of the proposed Constitution,
affords them little comfort; because the convening of the interim National Assembly
depends upon the incumbent President (under Sec. 3[1], Art. XVII, 1973 Constitution).
Under the foregoing circumstances, the members of Congress, who were elected under the
1935 Constitution, would not be disposed to call a plebiscite and appropriate funds
therefor to enable the people to pass upon the 1973 Constitution, ratification of which
means their elimination from the political scene. They will not provide the means for their
own liquidation.
Because the Constitutional Convention, by necessary implication as it is indispensable to
its independence and effectiveness, possesses the power to call a plebiscite and to
appropriate funds for the purpose, it inescapably must have the power to delegate the
same to the President, who, in the estimation of the Convention can better determine the
appropriate time for such a referendum as well as the amount necessary to effect the
same, for which reason the Convention thru Resolution No. 29 approved on November 22,
1972, which superseded Resolution No. 5843 adopted on November 16, 1972, proposed to
the President "that a decree be issued calling a plebiscite for the ratification of the
proposed new Constitution on such appropriate date as he shall determine and providing
for the necessary funds therefor, . . .," after stating in its "whereas" clauses that the 1971
Constitutional Convention is expected to complete its work by the end of November, 1972,
that the urgency of instituting reforms rendered imperative the early approval of the new
Constitution, and that the national and local leaders desire that there be continuity in the
immediate transition from the old to the new Constitution.
If Congress can legally delegate to the Chief Executive or his subaltern the power to
promulgate subordinate rules and regulations to implement the law, this authority to
delegate implementing rules should not be denied to the Constitutional Convention, a coequal body.
Apart from the delegation to the Chief Executive of the power to call a plebiscite and to
appropriate funds therefor by the Constitutional Convention thru its Resolution No. 29, the
organization of the Citizens Assemblies for consultation on national issues, is
comprehended within the ordinance-making power of the President under Section 63 of
the Revised Administrative Code, which expressly confers on the Chief Executive the
power to promulgate administrative acts and commands touching on the organization or
mode of operation of the government or re-arranging or re-adjusting any district, division
or part of the Philippines "or disposing of issues of general concern . . ." (Italics supplied).
Hence, as consultative bodies representing the localities including the barrios, their
creation by the President thru Presidential Decree No. 86 of December 31, 1972, cannot be
successfully challenged.
The employment by the President of these Citizens Assemblies for consultation on the
1973 Constitution or on whether there was further need of a plebiscite thereon, both
issues of national concern is still within the delegated authority reposed in him by the
Constitutional Convention as aforesaid.
It should be noted that Resolution No. 29, which superseded Resolution No. 5843, does not
prescribe that the plebiscite must be conducted by the Commission on Elections in
accordance with the provisions of the 1971 Revised Election Code. If that were the
intention of the Constitutional Convention in making the delegation, it could have easily
included the necessary phrase for the purpose, some such phrase like "to call a plebiscite

48

to be supervised by the Commission on Elections in accordance with the provisions of the


1971 Revised Election Code (or with existing laws)." That the Constitutional Convention
omitted such phrase, can only mean that it left to the President the determination of the
manner by which the plebiscite should be conducted, who shall supervise the plebiscite,
and who can participate in the plebiscite. The fact that said Resolution No. 29 expressly
states "that copies of this resolution as approved in plenary session be transmitted to the
President of the Philippines and the Commission on Elections for implementation," did not
in effect designate the Commission on Elections as supervisor of the plebiscite. The copies
of said resolution that were transmitted to the Commission on Elections at best serve
merely to notify the Commission on Elections about said resolution, but not to direct said
body to supervise the plebiscite. The calling as well as conduct of the plebiscite was left to
the discretion of the President, who, because he is in possession of all the facts funnelled
to him by his intelligence services, was in the superior position to decide when the
plebiscite shall be held, how it shall be conducted and who shall oversee it.

appropriating arm of the government, could conceivably make use of such authority to
compel the Convention to submit to its wishes, on pain of being rendered financially
distraught. The President then, if performing his role as its agent, could be held as not
devoid of such competence." (pp. 2-3, concurring opinion of J. Fernando in L-35925,
etc., Italics supplied).

It should be noted that in approving said Resolution No. 29, the Constitutional Convention
itself recognized the validity of, or validated Presidential Proclamation No. 1081 placing the
entire country under martial law by resolving to "propose to President Ferdinand E. Marcos
that a decree be issued calling a plebiscite . . ." The use of the term "decree" is significant
for the basic orders regulating the conduct of all inhabitants are issued in that form and
nomenclature by the President as the Commander in Chief and enforcer of martial law.
Consequently, the issuance by the President of Presidential Decree No. 73 on December 1,
1972 setting the plebiscite on January 15, 1973 and appropriating funds therefor pursuant
to said Resolution No. 29, is a valid exercise of such delegated authority.

Alexander Hamilton, one of the leading founders and defenders of the American
Constitution, answering the critics of the Federal Constitution, stated that: "I never expect
to see a perfect work from imperfect man. The result of the deliberations of all collective
bodies must necessarily be a compound, as well of the errors and prejudices as of the
good sense and wisdom, of the individuals of whom they are composed. The compacts
which are to embrace thirteen distinct States in a common bond of amity and union, must
necessarily be a compromise of as many dissimilar interests and inclinations. How can
perfection spring from such materials?" (The Federalist, Modern Library Ed., pp. xx-xxi).

Such delegation, unlike the delegation by Congress of the rule- making power to the Chief
Executive or to any of his subalterns, does not need sufficient standards to circumscribe
the exercise of the power delegated, and is beyond the competence of this Court to nullify.
But even if adequate criteria should be required, the same are contained in the "Whereas"
clauses of the Constitutional Convention Resolution No. 29, thus:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"WHEREAS, the 1971 Constitutional Convention is expected to complete its work of
drafting a proposed new Constitution for the Republic by the end of November, 1972;
"WHEREAS, in view of the urgency of instituting reforms, the early approval of the New
Constitution has become imperative;
"WHEREAS, it is the desire of the national and local leaders that there be continuity in the
immediate political transition from the old to the New Constitution;" (Annex "1" of Answer,
Res. No. 29, Constitutional Convention).
As Mr. Justice Fernando, with whom Messrs. Justices Barredo, Antonio and the writer
concurred in the Plebiscite Cases, stated:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
". . . Once its work of drafting has been completed, it could itself direct the submission to
the people for ratification as contemplated in Article XV of the Constitution. Here it did not
do so. With Congress not being in session, could the President, by the decree under
question, call for such a plebiscite? Under such circumstances, a negative answer certainly
could result in the work of the Convention being rendered nugatory. The view has been
repeatedly expressed in many American state court decisions that to avoid such
undesirable consequence, the task of submission becomes ministerial, with the political
branches devoid of any discretion as to the holding of an election for that purpose. Nor is
the appropriation by him of the amount necessary to be considered as offensive to the
Constitution. If it were done by him in his capacity as President, such an objection would
indeed have been formidable, not to say insurmountable. If the appropriation were made
in his capacity as agent of the Convention to assure that there be submission to the
people, then such an argument loses force. The Convention itself could have done so. It is
understandable why it should be thus. If it were otherwise, then a legislative body, the

IV
VAGUENESS OR AMBIGUITY DOES NOT INVALIDATE 1973 CONSTITUTION
(1) Petitions challenge the 1973 draft as vague and incomplete, and alluded to their
arguments during the hearings on December 18 and 19, 1972 on the Plebiscite Cases. But
the inclusion of questionable or ambiguous provisions does not affect the validity of the
ratification or adoption of the 1973 Constitution itself (Pope v. Gray, 104 SO, 2d 841; 7th
Dec. pp. 212-219, 1956-1966).

(2) The 1973 Constitution is likewise impugned on the ground that it contains provisions
which are ultra vires or beyond the power of the Constitutional Convention to propose.
This objection relates to the wisdom of changing the form of government from Presidential
to Parliamentary and including such provisions as Section 3 of Article IV, Section 15 of
Article XIV and Sections 3(2) and 12 of Article XVII in the 1973 Constitution.
Article IV
"Sec. 3. The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects
against unreasonable searches and seizures of whatever nature and for any purpose shall
not be violated, and no search warrant or warrant of arrest shall issue except upon
probable case to be determined by the judge, or such other responsible officer as may be
authorized by law, after examination under oath or affirmation of the complainant and the
witnesses he may produce, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the
persons or things to be seized."cralaw virtua1aw library
Article XIV
"Sec. 15. Any provision of paragraph one, Section fourteen, Article Eight and of this Article
notwithstanding, the Prime Minister may enter into international treaties or agreements as
the national welfare and interest may require." (Without the consent of the National
Assembly.)
Article XVII
"Sec. 3(2) All proclamations, orders, decrees, instructions, and acts promulgated, issued,
or done by the incumbent President shall be part of the law of the land, and shall remain
valid, legal, binding and effective even after lifting of martial law or the ratification of this
Constitution, unless modified, revoked, or superseded by subsequent proclamations,
orders, decrees, instructions, or other acts of the incumbent President, or unless expressly
and explicitly modified or repealed by the regular National Assembly.
x

49

"Sec. 12. All treaties, executive agreements, and contracts entered into by the
Government, or any subdivision, agency, or instrumentality thereof, including governmentowned or controlled corporations, are hereby recognized as legal, valid and binding. When
the national interest so requires, the incumbent President of the Philippines or the interim
Prime Minister may review all -contracts, concessions, permits, or other forms of privileges
for the exploration, development, exploitation, or utilization of natural resources entered
into, granted, issued or acquired before the ratification of this Constitution."cralaw
virtua1aw library

Constitution was approved on second reading on the 27th day of November, 1972 and on
third reading in the Conventions 291st plenary session on November 29,1972 and
accordingly signed on November 30, 1972 by the delegates whose signatures are
thereunder affixed. It should be recalled that Constitutional Convention President Diosdado
Macapagal was, as President of the Republic from 1962 to 1965, then the titular head of
the Liberal Party to which four (4) of the petitioners in L 36165 including their counsel,
former Senator Jovito Salonga, belong. Are they repudiating and disowning their former
party leader and benefactor?

In the Plebiscite Cases (L-35925, L-35929, L-35940, L-35942, L-35948, L-35953, L-35961, L35965, & L-35979), Chief Justice Roberto Concepcion, concurred in by Justices Fernando,
Barredo, Antonio and the writer, overruled this objection, thus:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

VI
ARTICLE XV OF 1935 CONSTITUTION DOES NOT PRESCRIBE ANY PROCEDURE FOR
RATIFICATION OF 1973 CONSTITUTION.

". . . Regardless of the wisdom and moral aspects of the contested provisions of the
proposed Constitution, it is my considered view that the Convention was legally deem fit to
propose save perhaps what is or may be insistent with what is now known, particularly
in international law, as Jus Cogens not only because the Convention exercised sovereign
powers delegated thereto by the people although insofar only as the determination of
the proposals to be made and formulated by said body is concerned but also, because
said proposals cannot be valid as part of our Fundamental Law unless and until approved
by the majority of the votes cast at an election which said proposals are submitted to the
people for their ratification, as provided in Section 1 of Article XV of the 1935
Constitution." (Pp. 11-18, Decision in L-35925, etc.).

(1) Article XV of the 1935 Constitution simply provides that "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 ratification."cralaw
virtua1aw library

This Court likewise enunciated in Del Rosario v. Comelec (L- 32476, Oct. 20, 1970, 35 SCRA
367) that the Constitutional Convention has the authority to "entirely overhaul the present
Constitution and propose an entirely new Constitution based on an ideology foreign to the
democratic system . . .; 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."cralaw virtua1aw library
Mr. Justice Fernando, concurring in the same Plebiscite Cases, cited the foregoing
pronouncement in the Del Rosario case, supra, and added: ". . . it seems to me a sufficient
answer that once convened, the area open for deliberation to a constitutional
convention . . ., is practically limitless" (citing Cf. Koehler v. Hill, 14 NW 738, 60 Iowa 543
[1883]; Hatch v. Stoneman, 6 P 734, 66 Cal. 632 [1885]; MacMillan v. Blattner, 25 NW 245,
67 Iowa 287 [1895]; State v. Powell, 27 SO 297, 77 Miss. 543 [1900]; Hammond v. Clark,
71 SE 479, 136 Ga. 313 [1911]; Hamilton v. Vaughan, 179 NW 533, 212 Mich. 31 [1920];
State v. Smith, 138 NE 881, 105 Ohio St. 570 [1922]; Looney v. Leeper, 292 P 365, 145 Okl.
202 [1930]; School District v. City of Pontiac, 247 NW 474, 262 Mich. 338 [1933]).
Mr. Justice Barredo, in his concurring opinion in said Plebiscite Cases, expressed the view
"that when the people elected the delegates to the Convention and when the delegates
themselves were campaigning, such limitation of the scope of their function and objective
was not in their minds"
V
1973 CONSTITUTION DULY ADOPTED AND PROMULGATED.
Petitioners next claim that the 1971 Constitutional Convention adjourned on November
30,1972 without officially promulgating the said Constitution in Filipino as required by
Sections 3(1) of Article XV on General Provisions of the 1973 Constitution. This claim is
without merit because their very Annex "M" is the Filipino version of the 1973 Constitution,
and, like the English version, contains the certification by President Diosdado Macapagal of
the Constitutional Convention, duly attested by its Secretary, that the proposed

But petitioners construe the aforesaid provision to read: "Such amendments shall be valid
as part of this Constitution when approved by a majority of the votes cast at an election
called by Congress at which the amendments are submitted for ratification by the qualified
electors defined in Article V hereof supervised by the Commission on Elections in
accordance with the existing election law and after such amendments shall have been
published in all the newspapers of general circulation for at least four months prior to such
election."cralaw virtua1aw library
This position certainly imposes limitation on the sovereign people, who have the sole
power of ratification, which Imposition by the Court is never justified (Wheeler v. Board of
Trustees, supra).
In effect, petitioners and their counsels are amending by a strained and tortured
construction Article XV of the 1935 Constitution. This is a clear case of usurpation of
sovereign power they do not possess through some kind of escamotage. This Court
should not commit such a grave error in the guise of judicial interpretation.
In all the cases where the court held that illegal or irregular submission, due to absence of
substantial compliance with the procedure prescribed by the Constitution and/or the law
nullifies the proposed amendment or the new Constitution, the procedure prescribed by
the state Constitution is so detailed that it specifies that the submission should be at a
general or special election, or at the election for members of the State legislature only or
of all state officials only or of local officials only, or of both state and local officials; fixes
the date of the election or plebiscite limits the submission to only electors or qualified
electors; prescribes the publication of the proposed amendment or a new Constitution for
specific period prior to the election or plebiscite, and designates the officer to conduct the
plebiscite, to canvass and to certify the results, including the form of the ballot which
should so state the substance of the proposed amendments to enable the voter to vote on
each amendment separately; or authorizes expressly the Constitutional Convention or the
legislature to determine the procedure or certain details thereof. See the State
Constitutions of Alabama [1901]; Arizona [1912]; Arkansas [1874]; Colorado [1976];
Connecticut [1818]; Florida [1887]; Georgia [1945]; Illinois [1970]; Indiana [1851]; Iowa
[1857]; Kansas [1861]; Kentucky [1891]; Louisiana [1921]; Maryland [1867];
Massachusetts [1790]; Michigan [1909]; Minnesota [1857]; Mississippi [1890]; and Missouri
[1945]).
As typical examples:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

50

Constitution of Alabama (1901):jgc:chanrobles.com.ph


"Article XVIII. Mode of Amending the Constitution
"Sec. 284. Legislative Proposals. Amendments may be proposed to this Constitution by the
legislature in the manner following: The proposed amendments shall be read in the house
in which they originate on three several days, and, if upon the third reading three-fifths of
all the members elected to that house shall vote in favor thereof, the proposed
amendments shall be sent to the other house, in which they shall likewise be read on three
several days, and if upon the third reading three-fifths of all the members elected to that
house shall vote in favor of the proposed amendments, the legislature shall order an
election by the qualified electors of the state upon such proposed amendments to be held
either at the general election next succeeding the session of the legislature at which the
amendments are proposed or upon another day appointed by the legislature, not less than
three months after the final adjournment of the session of the legislature at which the
amendments were proposed. Notice of such election, together with the proposed
amendments, shall be given by proclamation of the governor, which shall be published in
every county in such manner as the legislature shall direct, for at least eight successive
weeks next preceding the day appointed for such election. On the day so appointed an
election shall be held for the vote of the qualified electors of the state upon the proposed
amendments. If such election be held on the day of the general election, the officers of
such general election shall open a poll for the vote of the qualified electors upon the
proposed amendments; If it be held on a day other than that of a general election, officers
for such election shall be appointed; and the election shall be held in all things in
accordance with the law governing general elections. In all elections upon such proposed
amendments, the votes cast thereat shall be canvassed, tabulated, and returns thereof be
made to the secretary of state, and counted, in the same manner as in elections for
representatives to the legislature; and if it shall thereupon appear that a majority of the
qualified electors who voted at such election upon the proposed amendments voted in
favor of the same, such amendments shall be valid to all intents and purposes as parts of
this Constitution. The result of such election shall be made known by proclamation of the
governor. Representation in the legislature shall be based upon population, and such basis
of representation shall not be changed by constitutional amendments.
"Sec. 285. Form of ballot for amendment. Upon the ballots used at all elections provided
for in section 284 of this Constitution the substance or subject matter of each proposed
amendment shall be so printed that the nature thereof shall be clearly indicated. Following
each proposed amendment on the ballot shall be printed the word "Yes" and immediately
under that shall be printed the word "No." The choice of the elector shall be indicated by a
cross mark made by him or under his direction, opposite the word expressing his desire,
and no amendment shall be adopted unless it receives the affirmative vote of a majority of
all the qualified electors who vote at such election."cralaw virtua1aw library
Constitution of Arkansas (1874):jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"Article XIX. Miscellaneous Provisions.
"Sec. 22. Constitutional amendments. Either branch of the General Assembly at a regular
session thereof may propose amendments to this Constitution, and, if the same be agreed
to by a majority of all the members elected to each house, such proposed amendments
shall be entered on the journal with the yeas and nays, and published in at least one
newspaper in each county, where a newspaper is published, for six months immediately
preceding the next general election for Senators and Representatives, at which time the
same shall be submitted to the electors of the State for approval or rejection; and if a
majority of the electors voting at such election adopt such amendments the same shall
become a part of this Constitution; but no more than three amendments shall be proposed

or submitted at the same time. They shall be so submitted as to enable the electors to
vote on each amendment separately."cralaw virtua1aw library
Constitution of Kansas (1861):jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"Article XIV. Amendments.
"Sec. 1. Proposal of amendments; publications; elections. Propositions for the amendment
of this constitution may he made by either branch of the legislature; and if two thirds of all
the members elected to each house shall concur therein, such proposed amendments,
together with the yeas and nays, shall be entered on the journal; and the secretary of state
shall cause the same to be published in at least one newspaper in each county of the state
where a newspaper is published, for three months preceding the next election for
representatives, at which time, the same shall be submitted to the electors, for their
approval or rejection; and if a majority of the electors voting on said amendments, at said
election, shall adopt the amendments, the same shall become a part of the constitution.
When more than one amendment shall be submitted at the same time, they shall be so
submitted as to enable the electors to vote on each amendments separately; and not more
than three propositions to amend shall be submitted at the same election."cralaw
virtua1aw library
Constitution of Maryland (1867):jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"Article XIV. Amendments to the Constitution.
"Sec. 1. Proposal in general assembly; publication; submission to voters; governors
proclamation. The General Assembly may propose Amendments to this Constitution;
provided that each Amendment shall be embraced in a separate bill, embodying the
Article or Section, as the same will stand when amended and passed by three fifths of all
the members elected to each of the two Houses, by yeas and nays, to be entered on the
Journals with the proposed Amendment. The bill or bills proposing amendment or
amendments shall be published by order of the Governor, in at least two newspapers, in
each County, where so many may be published, and where not more than one may be
published, then in the newspaper, and in three newspapers published in the City of
Baltimore, once a week for four weeks immediately preceding the next ensuing general
election, at which the proposed amendment or amendments shall be submitted, in a form
to be prescribed by the General Assembly, to the qualified voters of the State for adoption
or rejection. The votes cast for and against said proposed amendment or amendments,
severally, shall be returned to the Governor, in the manner prescribed in other cases, and
if it shall appear to the Governor that a majority of the votes cast at said election on said
amendment or amendments, severally, were cast in favor thereof, the Governor shall, by
his proclamation, declare the said amendment or amendments having received said
majority of votes, to have been adopted by the people of Maryland as part of the
Constitution thereof, and thenceforth said amendment or amendments shall be part of the
said Constitution. When two or more amendments shall be submitted in manner aforesaid,
to the voters of this State at the same election, they shall be so submitted as that each
amendment shall be voted on separately."cralaw virtua1aw library
Constitution of Missouri (1945):jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"Article XII. Amending the Constitution.
"Sec. 2(b). Submission of amendments proposed by general assembly or by the initiative.
All amendments proposed by the general assembly or by the initiative shall be submitted
to the electors for their approval or rejection by official ballot title as may be provided by
law, on a separate ballot without party designation, at the next general election, or at a
special election called by the governor prior thereto, at which he may submit any of the
amendments. No such proposed amendment shall contain more than one amended and
revised article of this constitution, or one new article which shall not contain more than

51

one subject and matters properly connected therewith. If possible, each proposed
amendment shall be published once a week for two consecutive weeks in two newspapers
of different political faith in each county, the last publication to be not more than thirty nor
less than fifteen days next preceding the election. If there be but one newspaper in any
county, publication of four consecutive weeks shall be made. If a majority of the votes cast
thereon is in favor of any amendment, the same shall take effect at the end of thirty days
after the election. More than one amendment at the same election shall be so submitted
as to enable the electors to vote on each amendment separately."cralaw virtua1aw library
Article XV of the 1935 Constitution does not require a specific procedure, much less a
detailed procedure for submission or ratification. As heretofore stated, it does not specify
what kind of election at which the new Constitution shall be submitted; nor does it
designate the Commission on Elections to supervise the plebiscite. Neither does it limit the
ratification to the qualified electors as defined in Article V of the 1935 Constitution. Much
less does it require the publication of the proposed Constitution for any specific period
before the plebiscite nor does it even insinuate that the plebiscite should be supervised in
accordance with the existing election law.
(2) As aforequoted, Article XV does not indicate the procedure for submission of the
proposed Constitution to the people for ratification. It does not make any reference to the
Commission on Elections as the body that shall supervise the plebiscite. And Article XV
could not make any reference to the Commission on Elections because the original 1935
Constitution as ratified on May 14, 1935 by the people did not contain Article X on the
Commission on Elections, which article was included therein pursuant to an amendment by
the National Assembly proposed only about five (5) years later on April 11, 1940,
ratified by the people on June 18, 1940 and approved by the President of the United States
on December 2, 1940 (see Sumulong v. Commission, 70 Phil. 703, 713, 715; Gonzales, Phil.
Const. Law, 1966 ed., p. 13). So it cannot be said that the original framers of the 1935
Constitution as ratified on May 14, 1935 intended that a body known as the Commission
on Elections should be the one to supervise the plebiscite, because the Commission on
Elections was not in existence then as it was created only by Commonwealth Act No. 607
approved on August 22, 1940 and amended by Commonwealth Act No. 657 approved on
June 21, 1941 (see Taada & Carreon, Political Law of the Philippines, Vol. I, 1961 ed., pp.
475-476; Sumulong v. Commission, 170 Phil. 703, 708-715; 73 Phil. 288, 290-300; Taada
& Fernando, Constitution of the Philippines, 1953 ed., Vol. I, p. 5, Vol. II, pp. 11-19).
Because before August, 1940 the Commission on Elections was not yet in existence, the
former Department of Interior (now Department of Local Governments and Community
Development) supervised the plebiscites on the 1937 amendment on womans suffrage,
the 1939 amendment to the Ordinance appended to the 1935 Constitution (TydingsKocialkowski Act of the U.S. Congress) and the three 1940 amendments on the
establishment of a bicameral Congress, the re-election of the President and the VicePresident, and the creation of the Commission on Elections (ratified on June 18, 1940). The
supervision of said plebiscites by the then Department of Interior was not axiomatic, but
by virtue of an express authorization in Commonwealth Act Nos. 34, 49 and 517.
If the National Assembly then intended that the Commission on Elections should also
supervise the plebiscite for ratification of constitutional amendments or revision, it should
have likewise proposed the corresponding amendment to Article XV by providing therein
that the plebiscite on amendments shall be supervised by the Commission on Elections.
3) If the framers of the 1935 Constitution and the people in ratifying the same on May 14,
1935 wanted that only the qualified voters under Article V of the 1935 Constitution should
participate in the referendum on any amendment or revision thereof, they could have
provided the same in 1935 or in the 1940 amendment by just adding a few words to Article

XV by changing the last phrase to "submitted for ratification to the qualified electors as
defined in Article V hereof," or some such similar phrases.
Then again, the term "people" in Article XV cannot be understood to exclusively refer to
the qualified electors under Article V of the 1935 Constitution; because the said term
"people" as used in several provisions of the 1935 Constitution, does not have a uniform
meaning. Thus in the preamble, the term "Filipino people" refers to all Filipino citizens of all
ages of both sexes. In Section 1 of Article II on the Declaration of Principles, the term
"people" in whom sovereignty resides and from whom all government authority emanates,
can only refer also to Filipino citizens of ail ages and of both sexes. But in Section 5 of the
same Article II on social justice, the term "people" comprehends not only Filipino citizens
but also all aliens residing in the country of all ages and of both sexes. Likewise, that is the
same connotation of the term "people" employed in Section 1(3) of Article III on the Bill of
Rights concerning searches and seizures.
When the 1935 Constitution wants to limit action or the exercise of a right to the
electorate, it does so expressly as in the case of the election of senators and congressmen.
Section 2, Article VI expressly provides that the senators "shall be chosen at large by the
qualified electors of the Philippines as may be provided by law." Section 5 of the same
Article VI specifically provides that congressmen shall "be elected by the qualified
electors." The only provision that seems to sustain the theory of petitioners that the term
"people" in Article XV should refer to the qualified electors as defined in Article V of the
1935 Constitution is the provision that the President and Vice-President shall be elected
"by direct vote of the people." (Sec. 2 of Art. VII of the 1935 Constitution). But this alone
cannot be conclusive as to such construction; because of the explicit provisions of Sections
2 and 5 of Article VI, which specifically prescribes that the senators and congressmen shall
be elected by the qualified electors.
As aforesaid, most of the constitutions of the various states of the United States,
specifically delineate in detail the procedure of ratification of amendments to or revision of
state Constitutions and expressly require ratification by qualified electors, not by the
generic term "people."
The proposal submitted to the Ozamis Committee on the Amending Process of the 1934-35
Constitutional Convention, specified that the amendment shall be submitted to qualified
electors for ratification. This proposal was not accepted, indicating that the 1934-35
Constitutional Convention did not intend to limit the term "people" in Article XV of the
1935 Constitution to qualified electors only. As above demonstrated, the 1934-35
Constitutional Convention limits the use of the term "qualified electors" to elections of
public officials. It did not want to tie the hands of succeeding or future constitutional
conventions as to who should ratify the proposed amendment or revision.
(4) It is not exactly correct to opine that Article XV of the 1935 Constitution on
constitutional amendment contemplates the automatic applicability of election laws to
plebiscites on proposed constitutional amendments or revision.
The very phraseology of the specific laws enacted by the National Assembly and later by
Congress, indicates that there is need of a statute expressly authorizing the application of
the election laws to plebiscites of this nature. Thus, Com. Act No. 34 on the womans
suffrage amendment enacted on September 30, 1936, consists of 12 sections and, aside
from providing that "there shall be held a plebiscite on Friday, April 30, 1937, on the
question of womans suffrage . . . and that said amendment shall be published in the
Official Gazette in English and Spanish for three consecutive issues at least fifteen (15)
days prior to said election, . . . and shall be posted in a conspicuous place in its municipal
and provincial office building and in its polling place not later than April 22, 1937" (Sec. 12,

52

Com. Act No. 34), specifies that the provisions of the Election Law regarding the holding of
a special election, insofar as said provisions are not in conflict with it, should apply to the
said plebiscite (Sec. 3, Com. Act No. 34); and that the votes cast according to the returns
of the board of inspectors shall be counted by the National Assembly (Sec. 10, Com. Act
No. 34).
The election laws then in force before 1938 were found in Sections 392-483 of the Revised
Administrative Code.
Sec. 1 of Com. Act No. 357, the previous Election Code enacted on August 22, 1938, makes
it expressly applicable to plebiscites. Yet the subsequent laws, namely, Com. Act Nos. 492
and 517 and Rep. Act No.?3 calling for the plebiscite on the constitutional amendments in
1939, 1940 and 1946, including the amendment creating the Commission on Elections,
specifically provided that the provisions of the existing election law shall apply to such
plebiscites insofar as they are not inconsistent with the aforesaid Com. Act Nos. 492 and
517, as well as Rep. Act No. 73. Thus
Commonwealth Act No. 492, enacted on September 19, 1939, calling for a plebiscite on
the proposed amendments to the Constitution adopted by the National Assembly on
September 15, 1939, consists of 8 sections and provides that the proposed amendments
to the Constitution adopted in Resolution No. 39 on September 15, 1939 "shall be
submitted to the Filipino people for approval or disapproval at a general election to be held
throughout the Philippines on Tuesday, October 24, 1939" ; that the amendments to said
Constitution proposed in "Res. No. 38, adopted on the same date, shall be submitted at the
following election of local officials," (Sec. 1, Com. Act No. 492); that the said amendments
shall be published in English and Spanish in three consecutive issues of the Official Gazette
at least ten (10) days prior to the election; that copies thereof shall be posted not later
than October 20, 1939 (Sec. 2, Com. Act No. 492); that the election shall be conducted
according to the provisions of the Election Code insofar as the same may be applicable;
that within thirty (30) days after the election, the Speaker of the National Assembly shall
request the President to call a special session of the Assembly for the purpose of
canvassing the returns and certify the results thereof (Sec. 6, Com. Act No. 492).
Commonwealth Act No. 617, consisting of 11 sections, was approved on April 25,1940 and
provided, among others: that the plebiscite on the constitutional amendments providing
for a bicameral Congress, re- election of the President and Vice-President, and the creation
of a Commission on Elections shall be held at a general election on June 18, 1940 (Sec. 1);
that said amendments shall be published in three consecutive issues of the Official Gazette
in English and Spanish at least 20 days prior to the election and posted in every local
government office building and polling place not later than May 18, 1940 (Sec. 2); that the
election shall be conducted in conformity with the Election Code insofar as the same may
be applicable (Sec. 3); that copies of the returns shall be forwarded to the Secretary of
National Assembly and the Secretary of Interior (Sec. 7); and that the National Assembly
shall canvass the returns and certify the results at a special session to be called by the
President (Sec. 8).
Republic Act No. 73 approved on October 21, 1946 calling for a plebiscite on the parity
amendment consists of 8 sections and provides that the Amendment "shall be submitted
to the people, for approval or disapproval, at a general election which shall be held on
March 11, 1947, in accordance with the provisions of this Act" (Sec. 1, R.A. No. 73); that
the said amendment shall be published in English and Spanish in three consecutive issues
of the Official Gazette at least 20 days prior to the election; that copies of the same shall
be posted in a conspicuous place and in every polling place not later than February 11,
1947 (Section 2, R.A. No. 73); that the provisions of Com. Act No. 357 (Election Code) and
Com. Act No. 657 creating the Commission on Elections, shall apply to the election insofar

as they are not inconsistent with this Act (Sec. 3, R.A. No. 73); and that within 30 days
after the election, the Senate and House of Representatives shall hold a joint session to
canvass the returns and certify the results thereof (Section 6, R.A. No. 73).
From the foregoing provisions, it is patent that Article XV of the 1935 Constitution does not
contemplate nor envision the automatic application of the election law; and even at that,
not all the provisions of the election law were made applicable because the various laws
aforecited contain several provisions which are inconsistent with the provisions of the
Revised Election Code (Com. Act No. 357). Moreover, it should be noted that the period for
the publication of the copies of the proposed amendments was about 10 days, 15 days or
20 days, and for posting at least 4 days, & days or 30 days.
Republic Acts Nos. 180 and 6388 likewise expressly provide that the Election Code shall
apply to plebiscites (Sec. 2, R.A. No. 180, as amended, and Section 2, Rep. Act No. 6388).
If the Election Code ipso facto applies to plebiscites under Article XV of the 1935
Constitution, there would be no need for Congress to expressly provide therefor in the
election laws enacted after the inauguration of the Commonwealth government under the
1935 Constitution.
(5) Article XV of the 1935 Constitution does not specify who can vote and how they shall
vote. Unlike the various State Constitutions of the American Union (with few exceptions),
Article XV does not state that only qualified electors can vote in the plebiscite. As aboveintimated, most of the Constitutions of the various states of the United States provide for
very detailed amending process and specify that only qualified electors can vote at such
plebiscite or election.
Congress itself, in enacting Republic Act No. 3590, otherwise known as the Barrio Charter,
which was approved on June 17, 1967 and superseded Republic Act No. 2370, expanded
the membership of the barrio assembly to include citizens who are at least 18 years of
age, whether literate or not, provided they are also residents of the barrio for at least 6
months (Sec. 4, R.A. No. 3590).
"Sec. 4. The barrio assembly. The barrio assembly shall consist of all persons who are
residents of the barrio for at least six months, eighteen years of age or over, citizens of the
Republic of the Philippines and who are duly registered in the list of barrio assembly
members kept by the Barrio Secretary.
"The barrio assembly shall meet at least once a year to hear the annual report of the
barrio counsel concerning the activities and finances of the barrio.
"It shall meet also at the case of the barrio council or upon written petition of at least OneTenth of the members of the barrio assembly.
"No meeting of the barrio assembly shall take place unless notice is given one week prior
to the meeting except in matters involving public safety or security in which case notice
within a reasonable time shall be sufficient. The barrio captain, or in his absence, the
councilman acting as barrio captain, or any assembly member selected during the
meeting, shall act as presiding officer at all meetings of the barrio assembly. The barrio
secretary or in his absence, any member designated by the presiding officer to act as
secretary shall discharge the duties of secretary of the barrio assembly.
"For the purpose of conducting business and taking any official action in the barrio
assembly, It is necessary that at least one-fifth of the members of the barrio assembly be
present to constitute a quorum. All actions shall require a majority vote of these present at

53

the meeting there being a quorum.


"Sec. 5. Powers of the barrio assembly. The powers of the barrio assembly shall be as
follows:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"a. To recommend to the barrio council the adoption of measures for the welfare of the
barrio;
"b. To decide on the holding of a plebiscite as provided for in Section 6 of this Act;
"c. To act on budgetary and supplemental appropriations and special tax ordinances
submitted for its approval by the barrio council; and
"d. To bear the annual report council concerning the activities and finances of the
assembly.
"Sec. 6. Plebiscite. A plebiscite may be held in the barrio when authorized by a majority
vote of the members present in the barrio assembly, there being a quorum, or when called
by at least four members of the barrio council; Provided, however, That no plebiscite shall
be held until after thirty days from its approval by either body, and such plebiscite has
been given the widest publicity in the barrio, stating the date, time, and place thereof, the
questions or issues to be decided, action to be taken by the voters, and such other
information relevant to the holding of the plebiscite.
"All duly registered barrio assembly members qualified to vote may vote in the plebiscite.
Voting procedures may be made either in writing as in regular election, and/or declaration
by the voters to the board of election tellers. The board of election tellers shall be the
same board envisioned by section 8, paragraph 2 of this Act, in case of vacancies in this
body, the barrio council may fill the same.
"A plebiscite may be called to decide on the recall of any member of the barrio council. A
plebiscite shall be called to approve any budgetary, supplemental appropriations or special
tax ordinances.
"For taking action on any of the above enumerated measures, majority vote of all the
barrio assembly members registered in the list of barrio secretary is necessary.
x
x
x
"Sec. 10. Qualifications of voters and candidates. Every citizen of the Philippines,
twenty-one years of age or over, able to read and write, who has been a resident of the
barrio during the six months immediately preceding the election, duly registered in the list
of voters kept by the barrio secretary, who is not otherwise disqualified, may vote or be a
candidate in the barrio elections.
"The following persons shall not be qualified to vote:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"a. Any person who has been sentenced by final judgment to suffer one year or more of
imprisonment, within two years after service of his sentence;
"b. Any person who has violated his allegiance to the Republic of the Philippines; and
"c. Insane or feeble-minded persons."cralaw virtua1aw library
All these barrio assembly members, who are at least 18 years of age, although illiterate,
may vote at the plebiscite on the recall of any member of the barrio council or on any
budgetary, supplemental appropriation, or special tax ordinances, a valid action on which
requires "a majority vote of all of the barrio assembly members registered in the list of the
barrio secretary" (par. 5, Sec. 6, R.A. No. 3590). Such plebiscite may be authorized by a

majority vote of the members present in the barrio assembly, there being a quorum (par.
1, Sec. 6).
However, in the case of election of barrio officials, only Filipino citizens, who are at least 21
years of age, able to read and write, residents of the barrio during the 6 months
immediately preceding the election and duly registered in the list of voters kept by the
barrio secretary, not otherwise disqualified, may vote (Sec. 10, R.A. No. 3590).
Paragraph 2 of Section 6 likewise authorizes open voting as it provides that "voting
procedures may be made xxx either in writing as in regular elections, and/or declaration
by the voters to the board of election tellers."cralaw virtua1aw library
That said paragraph 2 of Section 6 provides that "all duly registered barrio assembly
members qualified to vote may vote in the plebiscite," cannot sustain the position of
petitioners in G.R. No. L- 36165 that only those who are 21 years of age or above and who
possess all other qualifications of a voter under Section 10 of R.A. No. 3590, can vote on
the plebiscites referred to in Section 6; because paragraph 3 of Section 6 does not
expressly limit the voting to those with the qualifications under Section 10 as said Section
6 does not distinguish between those who are 21 or above on the one hand and those 18
or above but below 21 on the other, and whether literate or not, to constitute a quorum of
the barrio assembly.
Consequently, on questions submitted for plebiscite, all the registered members of the
barrio assembly can vote as long as they are 18 years of age or above; and that only those
who are 21 years of age or over and can read and write, can vote in the elections of barrio
officials.
Otherwise there was no sense in extending membership in the barrio assembly to those
who are at least 18 years of age, whether literate or not Republic Act No. 3590 could
simply have restated Section 4 of Republic Act No. 2370, the old Barrio Charter, which
provided that only those who are 21 and above can be members of the barrio assembly.
Counsels Salonga and Taada as well as all the petitioners in L- 36165 and two of the
petitioners in L-36164 participated in the enactment of Republic Act No. 3590 and should
have known the intendment of Congress in expanding the membership of the barrio
assembly to include all those 18 years of age and above, whether literate or not.
If Congress in the exercise of its ordinary legislative power, not as a constituent assembly,
can include 18-years old as qualified electors for barrio plebiscites, this prerogative can
also be exercised by the Chief Executive as delegate of the Constitutional Convention in
regard to the plebiscite on the 1973 Constitution.
As heretofore stated, the statement by the President in Presidential Proclamation No. 1102
that the 1973 Constitution was overwhelmingly ratified by the people through the Citizens
Assemblies in a referendum conducted from January 10 to 15, 1973, should be accorded
the presumption of correctness; because the same was based on the certification by the
Secretary of the Department of Local Government and Community Development who
tabulated the results of the referendum all over the country. The accuracy of such
tabulation and certification by the said Department Secretary should likewise be
presumed; because it was done in the regular performance of his official functions aside
from the fact that the act of the Department Secretary, as an alter ego of the President, is
presumptively the act of the President himself unless the latter disapproves or reprobates
the same (Villena v. Secretary of Interior, 67 Phil. 451). The truth of the certification by the
Department Secretary and the Chief Executive on the results of the referendum, is further
strengthened by the affidavits and certifications of Governor Isidro Rodriguez of Rizal,

54

Mayor Norberto S. Amoranto of Quezon City and Councilor Eduardo T. Paredes of Quezon
City.
The procedure for the ratification of the 1937 amendment on woman suffrage, the 1939
amendment to the ordinance appended to the 1935 Constitution, the 1940 amendments
establishing the bicameral confess, creating the Commission on Elections and providing for
two consecutive terms for the President, and the 1947 parity amendment, cannot be
invoked; because those amendments were proposed by the National Assembly as
expressly authorized by Article V of the 1935 Constitution respecting woman suffrage and
as a constituent assembly in all the other amendments aforementioned and therefore as
such, confess had also the authority to prescribe the procedure for the submission of the
proposed amendments to the 1935 Constitution.
In the cases at bar, the 1973 Constitution was proposed by an independent Constitutional
Convention, which as heretofore discussed, has the equal power to prescribe the modality
for the submission of the 1973 Constitution to the people for ratification or delegate the
same to the President of the Republic.
The certification of Governor Isidro Rodriguez of Rizal and Mayor Norberto Amoranto could
be utilized as the basis for the extrapolation of the Citizens Assemblies in all the other
provinces, cities and municipalities in all the other provinces, cities and municipalities, and
the affirmative votes in the Citizens Assemblies resulting from such extrapolation would
still constitute a majority of the total votes cast in favor of the 1973 Constitution.
As claimed by petitioners in L-36165, against the certification of the Department of Local
Government and Community Development that in Rizal there were 1,126,000 Yes votes
and 100,310 No votes, the certification of Governor Isidro Rodriguez of Rizal, shows only
614,157 Yes votes as against 292,530 No votes. In Cavite province, there were 249,882 Yes
votes against 12,269 No votes as disclosed in Annex 1-A of respondents Compliance (the
certification by the Department of Local Government and Community Development), while
the alleged certification of Governor Lino Bocalan of Cavite shows only 126,163 Yes votes
and 5,577 No votes. If such a ratio is extended by way of extrapolation to the other
provinces, cities and towns of the country, the result would still be an overwhelming vote
in favor of the 1973 Constitution.
The alleged certification by Governor Lino Bocalan of Cavite, is not true; because in his
duly acknowledged certification dated March 16, 1973, he states that since the declaration
of martial law and up to the present time, he has been under house arrest in his residence
in Urdaneta Village, Makati, Rizal; that he never participated in the conduct of the Citizens
Assemblies on January 10 to 15, 1973 in the province of Cavite; that the acting chairman
and coordinator of the Citizens Assemblies at that time was Vice-Governor Dominador
Camerino; and that he was shown a letter for his signature during the conduct of the
Citizens Assemblies, which he did not sign but which he referred to Vice-Governor
Camerino (Annex 1-Rejoinder of the Sol. Gen. dated March 20, 1973).
Mayor Pablo Cuneta likewise executed an affidavit dated March 16, 1973 stating that on
January 15, 1973, he caused the preparation of a letter addressed to Secretary Jose Roo
of the Department of Local Government and Community Development showing the results
of the referendum in Pasay City; that on the same day, there were still many Citizens
Assemblies holding referendum in Pasay City, for which reason he did not send the
aforesaid letter pending submittal of the other results from the said Citizens Assemblies;
and that in the afternoon of January 15, 1973, he indorsed the complete certificate of
results on the referendum in Pasay City to the Office of the President (Annex 5-Rejoinder of
Sol. Gen. dated March 20, 1973).

Pablo F. Samonte, Assistant City Treasurer and Officer in Charge of Pasay City also issued
an affidavit dated March 15, 1973 stating that a certain Atty. Delia Sutton of the Salonga
Law Office asked him for the results of the referendum; that he informed her that he had in
his possession unsigned copies of such results which may not be considered official as
they had then no knowledge whether the original thereof had been signed by the mayor;
and that in spite of his advice that said unsigned copies were not official, she requested
him if she could give her the unofficial copies thereof, which he gave in good faith (Annex
C-Rejoinder to the Sol. Gen.).
There were 118,010 Yes votes as against 5,588 No votes in the Citizens Assemblies of
Quezon city (Annex V to Petitioners Notes in L-36165). The fact that a certain Mrs.
Remedio Gutierrez, wife of alleged barrio treasurer Faustino Gutierrez, of barrio South
Triangle, Quezon City, states that "as far as we know, there has been no Citizens
Assembly meeting in our Area, particularly in January of this year," does not necessarily
mean that there was no such meeting in said barrio; for she may not have been notified
thereof and as a result she was not able to attend said meeting. Much less can it be a basis
for the claim that there was no meeting at all in the other barrios of Quezon City. The
barrio captain or the secretary of the barrio assembly could have been a credible witness.
Councilor Eduardo T. Paredes, chairman of the Secretariat of Quezon City Ratification and
Coordinating Council, certified on March 12, 1973 that as such chairman he was in charge
of the compilation and tabulation of the results of the referendum among the Citizens
Assemblies in Quezon City based on the results submitted to the Secretariat by the
different Citizens Assemblies; but many results of the referendum were submitted direct
to the national agencies having to do with such activity and all of which he has no
knowledge, participation and control (Annex 4 Rejoinder of the Sol. Gen.).
Governor Isidro Rodriguez of Rizal issued a certification dated March 16, 1973 that he
prepared a letter to the President dated January 15, 1973 informing him of the results of
the referendum in Rizal, in compliance with the instruction of the National Secretariat to
submit such letter 2 or 3 days from January 10 to show the trend of voting in the Citizens
Assemblies; that the figures 614,157 and 292,530 mentioned in said letter were based on
the certificates of results in his possession as of January 14, 1973, which results were
made the basis of the computation of the percentage of voting trend in the province; that
his letter was never intended to show the final or complete result in the referendum in the
province as said referendum was then still going on from January 14-17, 1973, for which
reason the said letter merely stated that it was only a "summary result; and that after
January 15, 1973, he sent to the National Secretariat all the certificates of results in 26
municipalities of Rizal for final tabulation (Annex 3-Rejoinder of the Sol. Gen.; Italics
supplied).
Lydia M. Encarnacion, acting chief of the Records Section, Department of Local
Government and Community Development, issued a certificate dated March 16, 1973 that
she was shown xerox copies of unsigned letters allegedly coming from Governor Lino
Bocalan dated January 15, 1973 and marked "Rejoinder Annex Cavite" addressed to the
President of the Philippines through the Secretary of the Department of Local Government
and Community Development and another unsigned letter reportedly from Mayor Pablo
Cuneta dated January 15, 1973 and marked "Rejoinder Annex Pasay City" addressed to the
Secretary of the Department of Local Government and Community Development; that both
xerox copies of the unsigned letters contain figures showing the results of the referendum
of the Citizens Assemblies in those areas; and that the said letters were not received by
her office and that her records do not show any such documents received by her office
(Annex 2-Rejoinder of the Sol. Gen.).
Thus it would seem that petitioners in L-36165 have attempted to deceive this Court by

55

representing said unsigned letters and/or certificates as duly signed and/or containing the
complete returns of the voting in the Citizens Assemblies.
The observation We made with respect to the discrepancy between the number of Yes
votes and No votes contained in the summary report of Governor Rodriguez of Rizal as well
as those contained in the alleged report of Governor Lino Bocalan of Cavite who
repudiated the same as not having been signed by him for he was then under house
arrest, on the one hand, and the number of votes certified by the Department of Local
Government and Community Development, on the other, to the effect that even assuming
the correctness of the figures insisted on by counsel for petitioners in L-36165, if the same
were extrapolated and applied to the other provinces and cities of the country, the Yes
votes would still be overwhelmingly greater than the No votes, applies equally to the
alleged discrepancy between the figures contained in the certification of the Secretary of
the Department of Local Government and Community Development and the figures
furnished to counsel for petitioners in L-36165 concerning the referendum in Camarines
Sur, Bataan and Negros Occidental.
The fact that the referendum in the municipality of Pasacao, Camarines Sur, shows that
there were more votes in favor of a plebiscite to be held later than those against, only
serves to emphasize that there was freedom of voting among the members of the Citizens
Assemblies all over the country during the referendum from January 10 to 15, 1973
(Annex-6 Cam. Sur to Rejoinder of Petitioners in L-36165). If there was no such freedom of
choice, those who wanted a plebiscite later would not outnumber those against holding
such plebiscite.
The letter of Governor Felix O. Alfelor, Sr. dated January 14, 1973 confirms the "strong
manifestation of approval of the new Constitution by almost 97% by the members of the
Citizens Assemblies in Camarines Sur" (Annex-Camarines Sur to Rejoinder of Petitioners in
L-36165).
The report of Governor Efren B. Pascual of Bataan shows that the members of the Citizens
Assemblies voted overwhelmingly in favor of the new Constitution despite the fact that the
second set of questions including the question "Do you approve of the new Constitution?"
was received only on January 10. Provincial Governor Pascual stated that the "orderly
conduct and favorable results of the referendum" were due not only to the coordinated
efforts and cooperation of all teachers and government employees in the area but also to
the enthusiastic participation by the people, showing "their preference and readiness to
accept this new method of government to people consultation in shaping up government
policies." (Annex-Bataan to Rejoinder of Petitioners in L-36165).
As heretofore stated, it is not necessary that voters ratifying the new Constitution are
registered in the book of voters; it is enough that they are electors voting on the new
Constitution (Bott v. Wurts, 40 A 740 [1898]; 43 A 744, 881 [1899]; 45 LRA 251). The fact
that the number of actual voters in the referendum in certain localities may exceed the
number of voters actually registered for the 1971 elections, can only mean that the excess
represents the qualified voters who are not yet registered including those who are at least
15 years of age and the illiterates. Although ex-convicts may have voted also in the
referendum, some of them might have been granted absolute pardon or were sentenced to
less than one year imprisonment to qualify them to vote (Sec. 201, 1971 Rev. Election
Code). At any rate, the ex-convicts constitute a negligible number, discounting which
would not tilt the scale in favor of the negative votes.
Similarly, the fact that Mayor Marcial F. Samson of Caloocan City, who belongs to the
Liberal Party, stated in his letter dated March 13, 1973 that he does not "feel authorized by
the proper authorities to confirm or deny the data" concerning the number of participants,

the Yes votes and No votes in the referendum on the new Constitution among the
members of the Citizens Assemblies in Caloocan City, does not necessarily give rise to the
inference that Mayor Samson of Caloocan City is being intimidated, having been recently
released from detention; because in the same letter of Mayor Samson, he suggested to
counsel for petitioners in L-36165 that he can secure "the true and legitimate results of the
referendum" from the Office of the President (Annex Caloocan-B to Rejoinder of Petitioners
in L-36165). Why did not learned and eminent counsel heed such suggestion?
Counsel for petitioners in L-36165, to sustain their position, relies heavily on the
computation of the estimated turnover in the Citizens Assemblies referendum on January
10 to 15, 1973 by a certain Professor Benjamin R. Salonga, of the Mapua Institute of
Technology, ostensibly a close relative of former Senator Jovito R. Salonga, eminent
counsel for petitioners in L-36165 (Annex M-as amended, to Consolidated Rejoinder of
petitioners in L-36165 to the Notes of Arguments and Memorandum of respondents).
Professor Salonga is not a qualified statistician, which all the more impairs his credibility.
Director Tito A. Mijares of the Bureau of Census and Statistics, in his letter dated March 16,
1973 addressed to the Secretary of the Department of Local Government and Community
Development, refutes the said computation of Professor Benjamin R. Salonga,
thus:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"1) I do not quite understand why (Problem I) all qualified registered voters and the 15-20year-old youths (1972) will have to be estimated in order to give a 101.9% estimate of the
percentage participation of the 15-20 year old plus total number of qualified voters which
does not deem to answer the problem. This computation apparently fails to account for
some 5.6 million persons 21 years old and over who were not registered voters
(COMELEC), but who might be qualified to participate at the Citizens Assembly.
"2) The official population projection of this office (medium assumption) for 15 year olds
and over as of January 1, 1973 is 22.506 million. If total number of participants at the
Citizens Assembly Referendum held on January 10-15, 1973 was 16.702 million,
participation rate will therefore be the ratio of the latter figure to the former which gives
74.2%.
"3) I cannot also understand c-2 Solution to Problem 11. The difference or implied
number of 15-20 year olds of 5,039,906 would represent really not only all 15 year olds
and over who participated at the Citizens Assembly but might not have been registered
voters at the time, assuming that all the 11,661,909 registered voted at the Citizens
Assembly. Hence, the estimate percentage participation of 15-20 years olds of 105.6%
does not seem to provide any meaningful information.
"To obtain the participation rate of 15-20 years old one must divide the number in this
age group, which was estimated to be 4.721 million as of January 1, 1973 by the
population of 15 years old and over for the same period which was estimated to be
22.506 million, giving 21.0%.
"In Problem III, it should be observed that registered voters also include names of voters
who are already dead. It cannot therefore be assumed that all of them participated at the
Citizens Assembly. It can therefore be inferred that a total number of persons 15 and over
unqualified/disqualified to vote will be more than 10,548,197 and hence the difference or
implied number of registered voters that participated will be less than 6,153,618.
"I have reservations on whether an appropriate number of qualified voters that
supposedly voted could be meaningfully estimated.
"5) The last remark will therefore make the ratio: (a) [Solution to Problem] more than 1.71

56

and that for (b), accordingly, will also be less than 36.8%." (Annex F Rejoinder).
From the foregoing analysis of the Director of Census and Statistics as of January 21, 1973,
the official population projection for 15-year olds and over is 22,506,000. If 16,702,000
voted in the referendum, the participation ratio would be 74.2% of 22,506,000.
If the registered electors as of the election of November 8, 1971 numbered 11,661,909,
the difference between 16,702,000 who participated in the referendum and the registered
electors of 11,661,909 for the November 8, 1971 elections, is 5,040,091, which may
include not only the 15-year olds and above but below 21 but also the qualified electors
who were not registered before the November 8, 1971 elections as well as illiterates who
are 15 years old and above but below 21.
Moreover, in the last Presidential election in November, 1969, We found that the
incumbent President obtained over 5,000,000 votes as against about 3,000,000 votes for
his rival LP Senator Sergio Osmea, Jr., garnering a majority of from about 896,498 to
1,436,118 (Osmea, Jr. v. Marcos, Presidential Election Contest No. 3, Jan. 8, 1973).
The petitioners in all the cases at bar cannot state with justification that those who voted
for the incumbent President in 1969 did not vote in favor of the 1973 Constitution during
the referendum from January 10 to 15, 1973. It should also be stressed that many of the
partisans of the President in the 1969 Presidential elections, have several members in their
families and relatives who are qualified to participate in the referendum because they are
15 years or above including illiterates, which fact should necessarily augment the number
of votes who voted for the 1973 Constitution.
(6) It is also urged that martial law being the rule of force, is necessarily inconsistent with
freedom of choice, because the people fear to disagree with the President as Commanderin-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Philippines and therefore cannot voice views opposite
to or critical of the position of the President on the 1973 Constitution and on the mode of
its ratification.
It is also claimed or urged that there can be no free choice during martial law which
inevitably generates fear in the individual. Even without martial law, the penal, civil or
administrative sanction provided for the violation of the law ordinarily engenders fear in
the individual which fear persuades the individual to comply with or obey the law. But
before martial law was proclaimed, many individuals did not fear such sanctions of the law
because of lack of effective or equal enforcement or implementation thereof in brief,
compartmentalized justice and extraneous pressures and influences frustrated the firm
and just enforcement of the laws. The fear that is generated by martial law is merely the
fear of immediate execution and swift enforcement of the law and therefore immediate
infliction of the punishment or sanction prescribed by the law whenever it is transgressed
during the period of martial law. This is not the fear that affects the voters freedom of
choice or freedom to vote for or against the 1973 Constitution. Those who cringe in fear
are the criminals or the law violators. Surely, petitioners do not come under such category.
(7) Petitioners likewise claim that open voting by viva voce or raising of hands violates the
secrecy of the ballot as secured by the election laws. But the 1935 Constitution does not
require secret voting. We search in vain for such guarantee or prescription in said organic
law. The Commission on Elections under the 1940 Amendment, embodied as Article X is
merely mandated to insure "free, orderly and honest election." Congress, under its plenary
law-making authority, could have validly prescribed in the election law open voting in the
election of public officers, without trenching upon the Constitution. Any objection to such a
statute concerns its wisdom or propriety, not its legality or constitutionality. Secret
balloting was demanded by partisan strife in elections for elective officials. Partisanship

based on party or personal loyalties does not generally obtain in a plebiscite on proposed
constitutional amendments or on a new Constitution. We have seen even before and
during martial law that voting in meetings of government agencies or private organizations
is usually done openly. This is specially true in sessions of Congress, provincial boards, city
councils, municipal boards and barrio councils when voting on national or local issues, not
on personalities.
Then again, open voting was not a universal phenomenon in the Citizens Assemblies. It
might have been true in certain areas, but that does not necessarily mean that it was done
throughout the country.
The recent example of an open voting is the last election on March 3, 1973 of the National
Press Club officers who were elected by acclamation presided over by its former president,
petitioner Eduardo Monteclaro in L-36236 (see Bulletin Today, p. 8, March 3, 1973 issue).
There can be no more hardboiled group of persons than newspapermen, who cannot say
that voting among them by acclamation was characterized by fear among the members of
the National Press Club.
Moreover, petitioners would not be willing to affirm that all the members of the citizenry of
this country are against the new Constitution. They will not deny that there are those who
favor the same, even among the 400,000 teachers among whom officers of the
Department of Education campaigned for the ratification of the new Constitution.
Not one of the petitioners can say that the common man farmer, laborer, fisherman,
lowly employee, jeepney driver, taxi driver, bus driver, pedestrian, salesman, or salesgirl
does not want the new Constitution, or the reforms provided for therein.
(8) Petitioners likewise claim that there was no sufficient publicity given to the new
Constitution. This is quite inaccurate; because even before the election in November, 1970
of delegates to the Constitutional Convention, the proposed reforms were already
discussed in various forums and through the press as well as other media of information.
Then after the Constitutional Convention convened in June, 1971, specific reforms
advanced by the delegates were discussed both in committee hearings as well as in the
tri-media the press, radio and television. Printed materials on the proposed reforms
were circulated by their proponents. From June, 1971 to November 29, 1972, reforms were
openly discussed and debated except for a few days after the proclamation of martial law
on September 21, 1972. From the time the Constitutional Convention reconvened in
October, 1972 until January 7, 1973, the provisions of the new Constitution were debated
and discussed in forums sponsored by private organizations and universities and debated
over the radio and on television. The Philippines is a literate country, second only to Japan
in the Far East, and more literate perhaps than many of the mid-western and southern
states of the American Union and Spain. Many residents in about 1,500 towns and 33,000
barrios of the country have radios. Even the illiterates listened to the radio broadcasts on
and discussed the provisions of the 1973 Constitution.
As reported by the eminent and widely read columnist Teodoro Valencia in his column in
Bulletin Today, March 4, 1973 issue, "Otto Lang, Hollywood producer director (Tora, Tora,
Tora) went around the country doing a 30-minute documentary on the Philippines for
American television and stated that what impressed him most in his travel throughout the
country was the general acceptance of the New Society by the people which he saw in his
6-week travel from Aparri to Jolo."cralaw virtua1aw library
The report of Frank Valeo (Bulletin Today, March 3 and 4, 1973 and Daily Express, March 3,
and Sunday Express, March 4), Secretary of the United States Senate, who conducted a
personal survey of the country as delegate of Senator Mike Mansfield, Chairman,

57

Committee on US-Philippine relations, states:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph


"Martial law has paved the way for a re-ordering of the basic social structure of the
Philippines. President Marcos has been prompt and sure-footed in using the power of
presidential decree under martial law for this Purpose. He has zeroed in on areas which
have been widely recognized as prime sources of the nations difficulties land tenure,
official corruption, tax evasion and abuse of oligarchic economic power. Clearly, he knows
the targets. What is not yet certain is how accurate have been his shots. Nevertheless,
there is marked public support for his leadership and tangible alternatives have not been
forthcoming. That would suggest that he may not be striking too far from the mark.
"The United States business community in Manila seems to have been reassured by recent
developments . . . (Italics supplied.)
Petitioners cannot safely assume that all the peaceful citizens of the country, who
constitute the majority of the population, do not like the reforms stipulated in the new
Constitution, as well as the decrees, orders and circulars issued to implement the same. It
should be recalled, as herein before stated, that all these reforms were the subject of
discussion both in the committee hearings and on the floor of the Constitutional
Convention, as well as in public forums sponsored by concerned citizens or civic
organizations at which Con-Con delegates as well as other knowledgeable personages
expounded their views thereon and in all the media of information before the proclamation
of martial law on September 21, 1972. This is the reason why the Constitutional
Convention, after spending close to P30 million during the period from June 1, 1971 to
November 29, 1972, found it expedient to accelerate their proceedings in November, 1972
because all views that could possibly be said on the proposed provisions of the 1973
Constitution were already expressed and circulated. The 1973 Constitution may contain
some unwise provisions. But this objection to such unwise or vague provisions, as
heretofore stated, refers to the wisdom of the aforesaid provisions, which issue is not for
this Court to decide; otherwise We will be substituting Our judgment for the judgment of
the Constitutional Convention and in effect acting as a constituent assembly.
VI
PRESIDENT AS COMMANDER IN CHIEF EXERCISES LEGISLATIVE POWERS DURING MARTIAL
LAW.
The position of the respondent public officers that under martial law, the President as
Commander-in-Chief is vested with legislative powers, is sustained by the ruling in the
1949 case of Kuroda v. Jalandoni, Et. Al. (83 Phil. 171, 177-178), which reiterates the 1945
case of Yamashita v. Styer (75 Phil. 563, 571-72). The trial of General Kuroda was after the
surrender of Japan on October 2, 1945 (23 Encyc. Brit. 1969 ed., p. 799) and hence no
more martial law in the Philippines.
". . . Consequently, in the promulgation and enforcement of Executive Order No. 68, the
President of the Philippines has acted in conformity with the generally accepted principles
and policies of international law which are part of our Constitution.
"The promulgation of said executive order is an exercise by the President of his powers as
Commander in Chief of all our armed forces, as upheld by this Court in the case of
Yamashita v. Styer (L-129, 42 Off. Gaz., 664) when we said
"War is not ended simply because hostilities have ceased. After cessation of armed
hostilities, incidents of war may remain pending which should be disposed of as in time of
war.An important incident to a conduct of war is the adoption of measures by the military
command not only to repel and defeat the enemies but to seize and subject to disciplinary

measures those enemies who in their attempt to thwart or impede our military effort have
violated the law of war. (Ex parte Quirin, 317 U.S., 1; 63 Sup. Ct., 2.) Indeed, the power to
create a military commission for the trial and punishment of war criminals is an aspect of
waging war. And, in the language of a writer, a military commission has jurisdiction so
long as a technical state of war continues. This includes the period of an armistice, or
military occupation, up to the effective date of a treaty of peace, and may extend beyond,
by treaty agreement. (Cowles, Trial of War Criminals by Military Tribunals, American Bar
Association Journal, June, 1944).
Consequently, the President as Commander in Chief is fully empowered to consummate
this unfinished aspect of war, namely, the trial and punishment of war criminals, through
the issuance and enforcement of Executive Order No. 68." (83 Phil. 177-178; Italics
supplied).
Chief Justice Stone of the United States Supreme Court likewise appears to subscribe to
this view, when, in his concurring opinion in Duncan v. Kahanamoku (327 U.S. 304 [1946]),
he defined martial law as "the exercise of the power which resides in the executive branch
of the government to preserve order and insure the public safety in times of emergency,
when other branches of the government are unable to function, or their functioning would
itself threaten the public safety." (Italics supplied). There is an implied recognition in the
aforesaid definition of martial law that even in places where the courts can function, such
operation of the courts may be affected by martial law should their "functioning . . .
threaten the public safety." It is possible that the courts, in asserting their authority to pass
upon questions which may adversely affect the conduct of the punitive campaign against
rebels, secessionists, dissidents as well as subversives, martial law may restrict such
judicial function until the danger to the security of the state and of the people shall have
been decimated.
The foregoing view appears to be shared by Rossiter when he
stated:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"Finally, this strong government, which in some instances might become an outright
dictatorship, can have no other purposes than the preservation of the independence of the
state, the maintenance of the existing constitutional order, and the defense of the political
and social liberties of the people. It is important to recognize the true and limited ends of
any practical application of the principle of constitutional dictatorship. Perhaps the matter
may be most clearly stated in this way: the government of a free state is proceeding on its
way and meeting the usual problems of peace and normal times within the limiting
framework of its established constitutional order. The functions of government are
parceled out among a number of mutually independent offices and institutions; the power
to exercise those functions is circumscribed by well-established laws, customs, and
constitutional prescriptions; and the people for whom this government was instituted are
in possession of a lengthy catalogue of economic, political, and social rights which their
leaders recognize as inherent and inalienable. A severe crisis arises the Country is
invaded by a hostile power, or a dissident segment of the citizenry revolts, or the impact of
a world-wide depression threathens to bring the nations economy in ruins. The
government meets the crisis by assuming more powers and respecting fewer rights. The
result is a regime which can act arbitrarily and even dictatorially in the swift adoption of
measures designed to save the state and its people from the destructive effects of the
particular crisis. And the narrow duty to be pursued by this strong government, this
constitutional dictatorship? Simply this and nothing more: to end the crisis and restore
normal times. The government assumes no power and abridges no right unless plainly
indispensable to that end; it extends no further in time than the attainment of that end;
and it makes no alteration in the political, social and economic structure of the nation
which can not be eradicated with the restoration of normal times. In short, the aim of

58

constitutional dictatorship is the complete restoration of the status quo ante bellum. This
historical fact does not comport with philosophical theory, that there never has been a
perfect constitutional dictatorship, is an assertion that can be made without fear of
contradiction. But this is true of all institutions of government, and the principle of
constitutional dictatorship remains eternally valid no matter how often and seriously it may
have been violated in practice." (Constitutional Dictatorship, 1948 ed., by Clinton L.
Rossiter, p.7; Italics supplied.)
Finally, Rossiter expressly recognizes that during martial law, the Chief Executive exercises
legislative power, whether of temporary or permanent character,
thus:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"The measures adopted in the prosecution of a constitutional dictatorship should never be
permanent in character or effect. Emergency powers are strictly conditioned by their
purpose and this purpose is the restoration of normal conditions. The actions directed to
this end should therefore be provisional. For example, measures of a legislative nature
which work a lasting change in the structure of the state or constitute permanent
derogations from existing law should not be adopted under an emergency enabling act, at
least not without the positively registered approval of the legislature. Permanent laws,
whether adopted in regular or irregular times, are for parliaments to enact. By this same
token, the decisions and sentences of extraordinary courts should be reviewed by the
regular courts after the termination of the crisis.
"But what if a radical act of permanent character, one working lasting changes in the
political and social fabric, is indispensable to the successful prosecution of the particular
constitutional dictatorship? The only answer can be: it must be resolutely taken and openly
acknowledged. President Lincoln found it necessary to proceed to the revolutionary step of
emancipation in aid of his conservative purpose of preserving the Union; as a
constitutional dictator he had a moral right to take this radical action. Nevertheless, it is
imperative that any action with such last effects should eventually receive the positive
approval of the people or of their representatives in the legislature." (P. 303, Italics
supplied).
From the foregoing citations, under martial law occasioned by severe crisis generated by
revolution, insurrection or subversion or even by just severe economic depression or
dislocation, the government exercises more powers and respects fewer rights in order "to
end the crisis and restore normal times." The government can assume additional powers
indispensable to the attainment of that end the complete restoration of peace. In our
particular case, eradication of the causes that incited rebellion and subversion as well as
secession, is the sine qua non to the complete restoration of normalcy. Exercise of
legislative power by the President as Commander in Chief, upon his proclamation of
martial law, is justified because, as he professes, it is directed towards the institution of
radical reforms essential to the elimination of the causes of rebellious, insurgent or
subversive conspiracies and the consequent dismantling of the rebellious, insurgent or
subversive apparatus.
Hence, the issuance of Presidential Decree Nos. 86 and 86-A as well as Proclamation No.
1102 is indispensable to the effectuation of the reforms within the shortest possible time
to hasten the restoration of normalcy.
"Must the government be too strong for the liberties of the people; or must it be too weak
to maintain its existence?" That was the dilemma that vexed President Lincoln during the
American Civil War, when without express authority in the Constitution and the laws of the
United States, he suspended one basic human freedom the privilege of the writ
of habeas corpus in order to preserve with permanence the American Union, the Federal

Constitution of the United States and all the civil liberties of the American people. This is
the same dilemma that presently confronts the Chief Executive of the Republic of the
Philippines, who, more than the Courts and Congress, must, by express constitutional
mandate, secure the safety of our Republic and the rights as well as lives of the against
open rebellion, insidious subversion and succession. The Chief Executive announced
repeatedly that in choosing to proclaim martial law, the power expressly vested in him by
the 1935 Constitution (Sec. 10[2], Art. VII, 1935 Constitution) to insure our national and
individual survival in peace and freedom, he is in effect waging a peaceful, democratic
revolution from the center against the violent revolution and subversion being mounted by
the economic oligarchs of the extreme right, who resist reforms to maintain their economic
hegemony, and the communist rebels and Moist oriented secessionists of the extreme left
who demand swift institution of reforms. In the exercise of his constitutional and statutory
powers, to save the state and to protect the citizenry against actual and threatened
assaults from insurgents, secessionists and subversives, doctrinaire concepts and
principles, no matter how revered they may be by jurisprudence and time, should not be
regarded as peremptory commands; otherwise the dead hand of the past will regulate and
control the security and happiness of the living present. A contrary view would be to deny
the self-evident proposition that constitution and laws are mere instruments for the wellbeing, peace, security and prosperity of the country and its citizenry. The law as a means
of social control is not static, but dynamic. Paraphrasing Mr. Justice Frankfurter, the
Constitution is neither a printed finality nor the imprisonment of the past, but the unfolding
of the future. In the vein of Mr. Justice Holmes, the meaning of the words of the
Constitution is not to be determined by merely opening a dictionary. Its terms must be
construed in the context of the realities in the life of a nation it is intended to serve.
Because experience may teach one generation to doubt the validity and efficacy of the
concepts embodied in the existing Constitution and persuade another generation to
abandon them entirely, heed should be paid to the wise counsel of some learned jurists
that in the resolution of constitutional questions like those posed before Us the
blending of idealism and practical wisdom or progressive legal realism should be applied
(see Alexander M. Bickel, the Supreme Court and the Idea of Progress, 1970 ed., pp. 1921). To Justice Frankfurter, law is "a vital agency for human betterment" and constitutional
law "is applied politics, using the word in its noble sense." (Frankfurter, Law and Politics,
1939 ed., pp. 3 & 6; Italics supplied). Justice Brandeis gave utterance to the truth that "Our
Constitution is not a straight jacket. It is a living organism. As such, it is capable of growth
or expansion and adaptation to new conditions. Growth implies changes, political,
economic and social." (Brandeis Papers, Harvard Law School; Italics supplied). Harvard
Professor Thomas Reed Powell emphasizes "practical wisdom," for "the logic of
constitutional law is the common sense of the Supreme Court." (Powell, the Validity of
State Legislation, under the Webb-Kenyon Law, 2 Southern Law Quarterly, pp. 112, 138139, cited in Bickels Opus, supra; Italics supplied).
The eternal paradox in this finite world of mortal and fallible men is that nothing is
permanent except change. Living organisms as well as man-made institutions are not
immutable. Civilized men organize themselves into a State only for the purpose of serving
their supreme interest their welfare. To achieve such end, they created an agency
known as the government. From the savage era thru ancient times, the Middle Ages, the
Dark Ages and the Renaissance to this era of sophisticated electronics and nuclear
weaponry, states and governments have mutated in their search for the magic instrument
for their well-being. It was trial and error then as it is still now. Political philosophies and
constitutional concepts, forms and kinds of government, had been adopted, overturned,
discarded, re-adopted or modified to built the needs of a given society at a particular given
epoch. This is true of constitutions and laws because they are not "the infallible
instruments of a manifest destiny." No matter how we want the law to be stable, it cannot
stand still. As Mr. Justice Holmes aptly observed, every "constitution is an experiment as all
life is an experiment," (Abrahms v. U.S., 250 US 616, 631) for the life of the law is not

59

logic, but experience." In the pontifical tones of Mr. Justice Benjamin Nathan Cardozo, "so
long as society is inconstant, there can be no constancy in law," and "there will be change
whether we will it or not." As Justice Jose P. Laurel was wont to say, "We cannot, Canutelike, command the waves of progress to halt."cralaw virtua1aw library
Thus, political scientists and jurists no longer exalt with vehemence a "government that
governs least." Adherents there are to the poetic dictum of Alexander Pope: "For forms of
government let fools contest; whatever is best administered is best." (Poems of Pope, 1931
Cambridge ed., p. 750). In between, the shades vary from direct democracy,
representative democracy, welfare states, socialist democracy, mitigated socialism, to
outright communism which degenerated in some countries into totalitarianism or
authoritarianism.
Hence, even the scholar, who advances academic opinions unrelated to factual situations
in the seclusion of his ivory tower, must perforce submit to the inexorable law of change in
his views, concepts, methods and techniques when brought into the actual arena of
conflict as a public functionary face to face with the practical problems of state,
government and public administration. And so it is that some learned jurists, in the
resolution of constitutional issues that immediately affect the lives, liberties and fortunes
of the citizens and the nation, recommend the blending of idealism with practical wisdom,
which legal thinkers prefer to identify as progressive legal realism. The national leader,
who wields the powers of government, must and has to innovate if he must govern
effectively to serve the supreme interests of the people. This is especially true in times of
great crises where the need for a leader with vision, imagination, capacity for decision and
courageous action is greater, to preserve the unity of the people, to promote their wellbeing, and to insure the safety and stability of the Republic. When the methods of rebellion
and subversion have become covert, subtle and insidious, there should be a recognition of
the corresponding authority on the part of the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces to
utilize all the available techniques to suppress the peril to the security of the government
and the State.
Over a century and a half ago, Thomas Jefferson, one of the founding fathers of the
American Constitution and former President of the United States, who personifies the
progressive liberal, spoke the truth when he said that some men "ascribe to men of the
preceding age a wisdom more than human, and suppose what they did to be beyond
amendment . . . But I know also, that laws and institutions must go hand in hand with the
progress of the human mind. As that becomes more developed, more enlightened, as new
discoveries are made, new truths disclosed and manners and opinions change, with the
change of circumstances, institutions must also advance, and keep pace with the times."
(Vol. 12, Encyclopedia Britannica, 1969 ed., p. 989).
The wisdom of the decision of the Chief Executive can only be judged in the perspective of
history. It cannot be adequately and fairly appraised within the present ambiance, charged
as it is with so much tension and emotion, if not partisan passion. The analytical, objective
historians will write the final verdict in the same way that they pronounced judgment on
President Abraham Lincoln who suspended the privilege of the writ of habeas
corpus without any constitutional or statutory authority therefor and of President Franklin
Delano Roosevelt who approved the proclamation of martial law in 1941 by the governor of
Hawaii throughout the Hawaiian territory. President Lincoln not only emancipated the
Negro slaves in America, but also saved the Federal Republic of the United States from
disintegration by his suspension of the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus, which power
the American Constitution and Congress did not then expressly vest in him. No one can
deny that the successful defense and preservation of the territorial integrity of the United
States was due in part, if not to a great extent, to the proclamation of martial law over the
territory of Hawaii main bastion of the outer periphery or the outpost of the American

defense perimeter in the Pacific which protected the United States mainland not only
from actual invasion but also from aerial or naval bombardment by the enemy.
Parenthetically, the impartial observer cannot accurately conclude that the American
Supreme Court acted with courage in its decision in the cases of Ex parte Milligan and
Duncan v. Kahanamoku (filed on May 10, 1865 argued on March 5 to 13, 1866, decided on
April 3, 1866, and opinion delivered on December 17, 1866) after the lifting of the
proclamation suspending the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus, long after the Civil War
and the Second World ended respectively on April 9 or 26, 1865 (Vol. 1, Encyclopedia
Britannica, 1969 ed., pp. 730, 742) and on September 2, 1945 (Vol. 23, Encyclopedia
Britannica, 1969 ed., p. 799). Was the delay on the part of the American Supreme Court in
deciding these cases against the position of the United States President in suspending
the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus in one case and approving the proclamation of
martial law in the other deliberate as an act of judicial statesmanship and recognition on
their part that an adverse court ruling during the period of such a grave crisis might
jeopardize the survival of the Federal Republic of the United States in its life-and-death
struggle against an organized and well armed rebellion within its own borders and against
a formidable enemy from without its territorial confines during the last global
armageddon?
VIII
DOCTRINE OF SEPARATION OF POWERS PRECLUDES MANDAMUS AGAINST SENATORS.
In G.R. No. L-36165, mandamus will not lie to compel respondents Gil Puyat and Jose Roy
to convene the Senate of the Philippines even on the assumption that the 1935
Constitution still subsists; because pursuant to the doctrine of separation of powers under
the 1935 Constitution, the processes of this Court cannot legally reach a coordinate branch
of the government or its head. This is a problem that is addressed to the Senate itself for
resolution; for it is purely an internal problem of the Senate. If a majority of the senators
can convene, they can elect a new Senate President and a new Senate President Pro
Tempore. But if they have no quorum, those present can order the arrest of the absent
members (Sec. 10[2], Art. VI, 1935 Constitution). If this falls, then there is no remedy
except an appeal to the people. The dictum ubi jus, ubi remedium, is not absolute and
certainly does not justify the invocation of the power of this Court to compel action on the
part of a co-equal body or its leadership. This was emphasized with sufficient clarity by this
Court in the 1949 case of Avelino v. Cuenco (83 Phil. 17, 22-24), with which the
distinguished counsels for the petitioners in L-36164 and L-36165 are familiar. WE stress
that the doctrine of separation of powers and the political nature of the controversy such
as this, preclude the interposition of the Judiciary to nullify an act of a coordinate body or
to command performance by the head of such a co-ordinate body of his functions.
Mystifying is the posture taken by counsels for petitioners in referring to the political
question doctrine almost in mockery as a magic formula which should be disregarded
by this Court, forgetting that this magic formula constitutes an essential skein in the
constitutional fabric of our government, which, together with other basic constitutional
precepts, conserves the unity of our people, strengthens the structure of the government
and assures the continued stability of the country against the forces of division, if not of
anarchy.
Moreover, if they have a quorum, the senators can meet anywhere. Validity of the acts of
the Senate does not depend on the place of session; for the Constitution does not
designate the place of such a meeting. Section 9 of Article VI imposes upon Congress to
convene in regular session every year on the 4th Monday of January, unless a different
date is fixed by law, or on special session called by the President. As former Senator Arturo
Tolentino, counsel for respondents Puyat and Roy in L-36165, stated, the duty to convene
is addressed to all members of Congress, not merely to its presiding officers. The fact that

60

the doors of Congress are padlocked, will not prevent the senators especially the
petitioners in L-36165 if they are minded to do so, from meeting elsewhere at the
Sunken Gardens, at the Luneta Independence Grandstand, in any of the big hotels or
theaters, in their own houses, or at the Araneta Coliseum, which is owned by the father-inlaw of petitioner Gerardo Roxas in L-36165.

The Constitutional provision on the convening of Congress, is addressed to the individual


members of the legislative body (Sec. 9, Art. VI of 1935 Constitution).

against all dangers that may destroy its life, whether in the form of invasion from without
or rebellion and subversion from within. This is the first law of nature and ranks second to
none in the hierarchy of all values, whether human or governmental. Every citizen, who
prides himself in being a member or a civilized society under an established government,
impliedly submits to certain constraints on his freedom for the general welfare and the
preservation of the State itself, even as he reserves to himself certain rights which
constitute limitations on the powers of government. But when there is an inevitable clash
between an exertion of governmental authority and the assertion of individual freedom,
the exercise of which freedom imperils the State and the civilized society to which the
individual belongs, there can be no alternative but to submit to the superior right of the
government to defend and preserve the State. In the language of Mr. Justice Holmes
often invoked by herein petitioners "when it comes to a decision involving its (state life,
the ordinary rights of individuals must yield to what he (the President) deems the
necessities of the moment. Public danger warrants the substitution of executive process
for judicial process. (See Keely v. Sanders, 99 U.S. 441, 446, 25 L ed. 327, 328). This was
admitted with regard to killing men in the actual clash of arms. And we think it is obvious,
although it was disputed, that the same is true of temporary detention to prevent
apprehended harm." (Moyer v. Peabody, 212 U.S. 77, 85, 53 L ed., 411, 417).

IX
TO NULLIFY PROCLAMATION NO. 1102 AND 1973 CONSTITUTION REQUIRES EIGHT OR TEN
VOTES OF SUPREME COURT.

The rhetoric of freedom alone is not enough. It must be the rhetoric of freedom with order
and security for all, that should be the shibboleth; for freedom cannot be enjoyed in an
environment of disorder and anarchy.

The petitioners in L-36164 and L-36236 specifically pray for a declaration that the alleged
ratification of the 1973 Constitution is null and void and that the said 1973 Constitution be
declared unenforceable and inoperative.

The incumbent Chief Executive who was trying to gain the support for his reform program
long before September 21, 1972, realized almost too late that he was being deceived by
his partymates as well as by the opposition, who promised him cooperation, which
promises were either offered as a bargaining leverage to secure concessions from him or
to delay the institution of the needed reforms. The people have been victimized by such
bargaining and dilly-dallying. To overt a terrifying blood bath and the breakdown of the
Republic, the incumbent President proclaimed martial law to save the Republic from being
overrun by communists, secessionists and rebels by effecting the desired reforms in order
to eradicate the evils that plague our society, which evils have been employed by the
communists, the rebels and secessionists to exhort the citizenry to rise against the
government. By eliminating the evils, the enemies of the Republic will be decimated. How
many of the petitioners and their counsels have been utilizing the rebels, secessionists and
communists for their own personal or political purposes and how many of them are being
used in turn by the aforesaid enemies of the State for their own purposes?

However, a session by the Senate alone would be purely an exercise in futility, for it cannot
validly meet without the lower House (Sec. 10[5], Art. VI, 1935 Constitution). Hence, this
petition by five former senators for mandamus in L-36165 is useless.
And as pointed out by former Senator Arturo Tolentino, counsel for respondents Puyat and
Roy, mandamus will lie only if there is a law imposing on the respondents the duty to
convene the body. The rule imposing such a duty invoked by petitioners in L-36165 is
purely an internal rule of the Senate; it is not a law because it is not enacted by both
Houses and approved by the President.

As heretofore stated, Proclamation No. 1102 is an enactment of the President as


Commander-in-Chief during martial law as directly delegated to him by Section 10(2) of
Article VII of the 1935 Constitution.
A declaration that the 1973 Constitution is unenforceable and inoperative is practically
deciding that the same is unconstitutional. The proposed Constitution is an act of the
Constitutional Convention, which is co-equal and coordinate with as well as independent of
either Congress or the Chief Executive. Hence, its final act, the 1973 Constitution, must
have the same category at the very least as the act of Congress itself.
Consequently, the required vote to nullify Proclamation No. 1102 and the 1973
Constitution should be eight (8) under Section 10 of Article VIII of the 1935 Constitution in
relation to Section 9 of the Judiciary Act or Republic Act No. 296, as amended, or should be
ten (10) under Section 2(2) of Article X of the 1973 Constitution. Should the required vote
of eight (8) or ten (10), as the case may be, for the declaration of invalidity or
unconstitutionality be not achieved, the 1973 Constitution must be deemed to be valid, in
force and operative.
X
ARTICLE OF FAITH
WE yield to no man as devotees of human rights and civil liberties. Like Thomas Jefferson,
We swear "eternal hostility towards any form of tyranny over the mind of man" as well as
towards bigotry and intolerance, which are anathema to a free spirit. But human rights and
civil liberties under a democratic or republican state are never absolute and never immune
to restrictions essential to the common weal. A civilized society cannot long endure
without peace and order, the maintenance of which is the primary function of the
government. Neither can civilized society survive without the natural right to defend itself

If the petitioners are sincere in their expression of concern for the greater mass of the
populace, more than for their own selves, they should be willing to give the incumbent
Chief Executive a chance to implement the desired reforms. The incumbent President
assured the nation that he will govern within the framework of the Constitution and if at
any time, before normalcy is restored, the people thru their Citizens Assemblies, cease to
believe in his leadership, he will step down voluntarily from the Presidency. But if, as
apprehended by the petitioners, he abuses and brutalizes the people, then to the
battlements we must go to man the ramparts against tyranny. This, it is believed, he
knows only too well; because he is aware that he who rides the tiger will eventually end
inside the tigers stomach. He who toys with revolution will be swallowed by that same
revolution. History is replete with examples of libertarians who turned tyrants and were
burned at stake or beheaded or hanged or guillotined by the very people whom they at
first championed and later deceived. The most bloody of such mass executions by the
wrath of a wronged people, was the decapitation by guillotine of about 15,000 Frenchmen
including the leaders of the French revolution, like Robespierre, Danton, Desmoulins and
Marat. He is fully cognizant of the lessons of history.

61

HENCE, THE DISMISSAL OF THESE FIVE CASES IS JUSTIFIED.


ESGUERRA, J.: For Dismissal of Petitions
These petitions seek to stop and prohibit the respondents Executive Officers from
implementing the Constitution signed on November 30, 1972; in L-36165, to compel
respondents Gil Puyat and Jose J. Roy, President and President Pro-Tempore, respectively, of
the Senate under the 1935 Constitution, to convene the Senate in regular session which
should have started on January 22, 1973; to nullify Proclamation No. 1102 of the President
issued on January 17, 1973, which declared the ratification of the Constitution on
November 30, 1972, by the Filipino people, through the barangays or Citizens Assemblies
established under Presidential Decree No. 86 issued on December 31, 1972, which were
empowered under Presidential Decree No. 86-A, issued on January 5, 1973, to act in
connection with the ratification of said Constitution.
Grounds for the petitions are as follows:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library
1. That the Constitutional Convention was not a free forum for the making of a Constitution
after the declaration of Martial Law on September 21, 1972.
2. The Convention was not empowered to incorporate certain provisions in the 1972
Constitution because they are highly unwise and objectionable and the people were not
sufficiently informed about them.
3. The President had no authority to create and empower the Citizens Assemblies to ratify
the new Constitution at the referendum conducted in connection therewith, as said
assemblies were merely for consultative purposes, and
4. The provisions of Article XV of the 1935 Constitution prescribing the manner of
amending the same were not duly observed.
The petitions were not given due course immediately but were referred to the Solicitor
General as counsel for the respondents for comment, with three members of the Court,
including the undersigned, voting to dismiss them outright. The comments were
considered motions to dismiss which were set for hearing and extensively argued.
Thereafter both parties submitted their notes and memoranda on their oral arguments.
I.
The issues raised for determination, on which the resolution of the Motion to Dismiss
hinges, are as follows:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library
1. Is the question presented political and, hence, beyond the competence of this Court to
decide, or is it justiciable and fit for judicial determination?
2. Was the new Constitution of November 30, 1972, ratified in accordance with the
amending process prescribed by Article XV of the 1935 Constitution?
3. Has the new Constitution been accepted and acquiesced in by the Filipino people?
4. Is the new Constitution actually in force and effect?
5. If the answers to questions Nos. 3 and 4 be in the affirmative, are petitioners entitled to
the reliefs prayed for?
II.
The pivotal question in these cases is whether the issue raised is highly political and,
therefore, not justiciable. I maintain that this Court should abstain from assuming
jurisdiction, but, instead, as an act of judicial statesmanship, should dismiss the petitions.
In resolving whether or not the question presented is political, joint discussion of issues
Nos. 1, 3 and 4 is necessary so as to arrive at a logical conclusion. For after the acceptance
of a new Constitution and acquiescence therein by the people by putting it into practical

operation, any question regarding its validity should he foreclosed and all debates on
whether it was duly or lawfully ushered into existence as the organic law of the state
become political and not judicial in character.
The undisputed facts that lead to the issuance of Proclamation No. 1102 and Presidential
Decrees Nos. 86 and 86-A are fully set forth in the majority and dissenting opinions in the
Plebiscite cases decided on January 22, 1973, and need not be repeated here.
Petitioners seeks to set at naught Proclamation No. 1102 and Presidential Decrees Nos. 86
and 86-A, claiming that the ratification of the new Constitution pursuant to the said
decrees is invalid and of no effect. Presidential Decree No. 86 organized the barangays or
Citizens Assemblies composed of all citizens at least fifteen years of age, and through
these assemblies the proposed 1972 Constitution was submitted to the people for
ratification. Proclamation No. 1102 of the President announced or declared the result of the
referendum or plebiscite conducted through the Citizens Assemblies, and that 14,976,561
members thereof voted for the ratification of the new Constitution and 743,869 voted
against it. Petitioners assail these two acts of the President as unauthorized and devoid of
legal effect.
But looking through the veneer of judicial conformity with which the petitions have been
adroitly contrived, what is sought to be invalidated is the new Constitution itself the
very framework of the present Government since January 17, 1973. The reason is obvious.
The Presidential decrees set up the means for the ratification and acceptance of the new
Constitution and Proclamation No. 1102 simply announced the result of the referendum or
plebiscite by the people through the Citizens Assemblies. The Government under the new
Constitution has been running on its tracks normally and apparently without obstruction in
the form of organized resistance capable of jeopardizing its existence and disrupting its
operation. Ultimately the issue is whether the new Constitution may be set aside by this
Court. But has it the power and authority to assume such a stupendous task when the
result of such invalidation would be to subject this nation to divisive controversies that
may totally destroy the social order which the Government under the new Constitution has
been admirably protecting and promoting under Martial Law? That the new Constitution
has taken deep root and the people are happy and contended with it is a living reality
which the most articulate critics of the new order cannot deny. 95 out of 108 members of
the House of Representatives have opted to serve in the interim National Assembly
provided for under the new Constitution. 15 out of 24 Senators have done likewise. The
members of the Congress did not meet anymore last January 22, 1973, not because they
were really prevented from so doing but because of no serious effort on their parts to
assert their offices under the 1935 Constitution. In brief the Legislative Department under
the 1935 Constitution is a thing of the past. The Executive Department has been fully
reorganized; new appointments of key executive officers including those of the Armed
Forces were extended and they took an oath to support and defend the new Constitution.
The courts, except the Supreme Court by reason of these cases, have administered justice
under the new Constitution. All government offices have dealt with the public and
performed their functions according to the new Constitution and laws promulgated
thereunder.
If the real purpose of the petitions is to set aside the new Constitution, how can this Court
justify its assumption of jurisdiction when no power has . . . conferred upon it the
jurisdiction to declare the Constitution or any part thereof null and void? It is the height of
absurdity and impudence for a court to wage open war against the organic act to which it
owes its existence. The situation in which this Court finds itself does not permit it to pass
upon the question whether or not the new Constitution has entered into force and has
superseded the 1935 Constitution. If it declares that the present Constitution has not been
validly ratified, it has to uphold the 1935 Constitution as still the prevailing organic law.

62

The result would be too anomalous to describe, for then this Court would have to declare
that it is governed by one Constitution or the 1935 Constitution, and the legislative and
executive branches by another or the 1972 Constitution.
If it declares that the 1972 Constitution is now operative, how can it exercise judicial
discretion in these cases when it would have no other choice but to uphold the new
Constitution as against any other one? In the circumstances it would be bereft of judicial
attributes as the matter would then be not meet for judicial determination, but one
addressed to the sovereign power of the people who have already spoken and delivered
their mandate by accepting the fundamental law on which the government of this Republic
is now functioning. To deny that the new Constitution has been accepted and actually is in
operation would be flying in the face of reason and pounding ones bare head against a
veritable stone wall or a heavily reinforced concrete, or simply "kicking the deadly pricks"
with ones bare foot in an effort to eliminate the lethal points.
When a Constitution has been in operation for sometime, even without popular ratification
at that, submission of the people thereto by the organization of the government provided
therein and observance of its prescriptions by public officers chosen thereunder, is
indicative of approval. Courts should be slow in nullifying a Constitution claimed to have
been adopted not in accordance with constitutional or statutory directives [Miller v.
Johnson, 92 Ky. 589; 189 S.W. 522; Taylor v. Commonwealth, 101; Va. 829; 44 S.E. 754;
Smith v. Good, 34 F 204, 207; Wiston v. Ryan, 70 Neb. 211; 97 N.W. 347].
In Miller v. Johnson, supra, the Court said:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
". . . But it is a case where a new constitution has been formed and promulgated according
to the forms of law. Great interests have already arisen under it; important rights exist by
virtue of it; persons have been convicted of the highest crimes known to the law,
according to its provisions; the political power of the government has in many ways
recognized it; and under such circumstances, it is our duty to treat and regard it as a valid
constitution, and now the organic law of our state. We need not consider the validity of the
amendments made after the convention reassembled. If the making of them was in excess
of its power, yet, as the entire instrument has been recognized as valid in the manner
suggested, it would be equally an abuse of power by the judiciary, and violative of the
rights of the people, who can and property should remedy the matter, if not to their
liking, if it were to declare the instrument or a portion invalid, and bring confusion and
anarchy upon the state." (Emphasis supplied)
In Smith v. Good, supra, the Court said:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"It is said that a state court is forbidden from entering upon such an inquiry when applied
to a new constitution, and not an amendment, because the judicial power presupposes an
established government, and if the authority of that government is annulled and
overthrown, the power of its courts is annulled with it; and therefore, if a state court should
enter upon such an inquiry, and come to the conclusion that the government under which
it acted had been displaced by an opposing government, it would cease to be a court, and
it would be incapable of pronouncing a judicial decision upon the question before it; but, if
it decides at all, it must necessarily affirm the existence of the government under which it
exercises its judicial powers." (Emphasis supplied)
These rules are all traceable to Luther v. Borden, 48 U.S. (7 How.), 12 L. Ed. 581, 598
(1849) where it was held:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"Judicial power presupposes an established government capable of enacting laws and
enforcing their execution, and of appointing judges to expound and administer them. The

acceptance of the judicial office is a recognition of the authority of the government from
which it is derived. And if the authority of that government is annulled and overthrown, the
power of its courts and other officers is annulled with it. And if a State court should enter
upon the inquiry proposed in this case, and should come to the conclusion that the
government under which it acted had been put aside and displaced by an opposing
government it would cease to be a court, and be incapable of pronouncing a judicial
decision upon the question it undertook to try. If it decides at all as a court, it necessarily
affirms the existence and authority of the government under which it is exercising judicial
power."cralaw virtua1aw library
The foreign relations of the Republic of the Philippines have been normally conducted on
the basis of the new Constitution and no state with which we maintain diplomatic relations
has withdrawn its recognition of our government. (For particulars about executive acts
done under the new Constitution, see pages 22-25 of the Comments of the Solicitor
General, dated February 3, 1973.)
Certainly the invalidation of Proclamation No. 1102 and Presidential Decrees Nos. 86 and
86-A by this Court would smack of plain political meddling which is described by the United
States Supreme Court as "entering a political thicket" in Colegrove v. Green, 328 U.S. p.
549. At this juncture it would be the part of wisdom for this Court to adopt the proper
attitude towards political upheavals and realize that the question before Us is political and
not fit for judicial determination. For a political question is one entrusted to the people for
judgment in their sovereign capacity (Taada v. Cuenco, G.R. No. L-10520, Feb. 28, 1967;
100 Phil. 1101), or to a co-equal and coordinate branch of the Government (Vera v.
Arellano, 77 Phil. 192; Mabanag v. Lopez Vito, 78 Phil. 1; Alejandrino v. Quezon, 46 Phil. 35;
Cabili v. Francisco, G. R. No. 4638, May 8, 1931). A case involves a political question when
there would be "the impossibility of undertaking independent resolutions without
expressing a lack of respect due to coordinate branches of government", or when there is
"the potentiality of embarassment from multifarious pronouncements by various
departments on one question."cralaw virtua1aw library
To preserve the prestige and eminence that this Court has long enjoyed as the "ultimate
organ of the Supreme Law of the Land in that vast range of legal problems often strongly
entangled in popular feeling on which this Court must pronounce", let us harken to the
following admonition of Justice Frankfurter in his dissent in Baker v. Carr, 369 U.S. 186; 82
S. Ct. 691; 7 L. Ed. 2d. 663:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"The Courts authority possessed neither of the purse nor the sword ultimately rests
on sustained public confidence in its moral sanction. Such feeling must be nourished by
the Courts complete detachment, in fact and appearance, from political entanglements
and abstention from injecting itself into the clash of political forces in political
settlement . . ." (Emphasis supplied)
The people have accepted and submitted to a new Constitution to replace the 1935
Constitution. The new organic law is now in the plenitude of its efficacy and vigor. We are
now living under its aegis and protection and only the cynics will deny this. This Court
should not in the least attempt to act as a super-legislature or a super- board of canvassers
and sow confusion and discord among our people by pontificating that there was no valid
ratification of the new Constitution. The sober realization of its proper role and delicate
function and its consciousness of the limitations on its competence, especially in situations
like this, are more in keeping with the preservation of our democratic tradition than the
blatant declamations of those who wish the Court to engage in their brand of activism and
would not mind plunging it into the whirlpool of passion and emotion in an effort to capture
the entoxicating applause of the multitude.

63

For all the foregoing, I vote to dismiss all petitions.


ZALDIVAR, J., concurring and dissenting:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library
In these five cases, the main issue to be resolved by this Court is whether or not the
Constitution proposed by the Constitutional Convention of 1971 had been ratified in
accordance with the provisions of Article XV of the 1935 Constitution. In the plebiscite
cases, which were decided by this Court on January 22, 1973 1 , I held the view that this
issue could be properly resolved by this Court, and that it was in the public interest that
this Court should declare then whether or not the proposed Constitution had been validly
ratified. The majority of this Court, however, was of the view that the issue was not
squarely raised in those cases, and so the Court, as a body, did make any categorical
pronouncement on the question of whether or not the Constitution proposed by the 1971
Convention was validly ratified. I was the only one who expressed the opinion that the
proposed Constitution was not validly ratified and therefore "it should not be given force
and effect."cralaw virtua1aw library
The Court is now called upon to declare, and to inform the people of this country, whether
or not that proposed Constitution had been validly ratified and had come into effect.
The Solicitor General, however, contends that this Court has no jurisdiction to resolve the
issue that we have mentioned because that issue is a political question that cannot be
decided by this Court. This contention of the Solicitor General is untenable. A political
question relates 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 legislative, or to the executive, branch of the government. 2 The
courts have the power to determine whether the acts of the executive are authorized by
the Constitution and the laws whenever they are brought before the court in a judicial
proceeding. The judicial department of the government exercises a sort of controlling, or
rather restraining, power over the two other departments of the government. Each of the
three departments, within its proper constitutional sphere, acts independently of the other,
and restraint is only placed on one department when that sphere is actually transcended.
While a court may not restrain the executive from committing an unlawful act, it may,
when the legality of such an act is brought before it in a judicial proceeding, declare it to
be void, the same as it may declare a law enacted by the legislature to be
unconstitutional. 3 It is a settled doctrine that 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. It must be remembered that the
people act through the 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 actions 4 . In the case of Gonzales v. Commission on Elections 5 , this Court
ruled that the issue as to whether or not a resolution of Congress acting as a constituent
assembly violates the Constitution is not a political question and is therefore subject to
judicial review. In the case of Avelino v. Cuenco 6 , this Court held that the exception to the
rule that courts will not interfere with a political question affecting another department is
when such political question involves an issue as to the construction and interpretation of
the provisions of the constitution. And so, it has been held that the question of whether a
constitution shall be amended or not is a political question which is not in the power of the
court to decide, but whether or not the constitution has been legally amended is a
justiciable question. 7
My study on the subject of whether a question before the court is political or judicial,
based on decisions of the courts in the United States where, after all, our constitutional

system has been patterned to a large extent made me arrive at the considered view
that it is in the power of this Court, as the ultimate interpreter of the Constitution, to
determine the validity of the proposal, the submission, and the ratification of any change
in the Constitution. Ratification or non-ratification of a constitutional amendment is a vital
element in the procedure to amend the constitution, and I believe that the Court can
inquire into, and decide on, the question of whether or not an amendment to the
constitution, as in the present cases, has been ratified in accordance with the
requirements prescribed in the Constitution that was amended. And so, in the cases now
before Us, I believe that the question of whether or not the Constitution proposed by the
1971 Constitutional Convention had been validly ratified or not is a justiciable question.
The Chief Justice, in his opinion, has discussed lengthily the subject on whether or not, the
cases, before Us involve a political, or a judicial, question. I fully concur with his conclusion
that the question involved in these cases is justiciable.
On the question now of whether or not the Constitution proposed by the 1971
Constitutional Convention has been validly ratified, I am reproducing herein pertinent
portions of my dissenting opinion in the plebiscite cases:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"The ratification of the Constitution proposed by the 1971 Constitutional Convention must
be done in accordance with the provisions of Section 1, Article XV of the 1935 Constitution
of the Philippines, which reads:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library
Section 1. 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 the 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.
"It is in consonance with the abovequoted provision of the 1935 Constitution that on March
16, 1967, the Congress of the Philippines passed Resolution No. 2 calling a convention to
propose amendments to the Constitution of the Philippines. Sec. 7 of said Resolution No. 2
reads as follows:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library
SECTION 7. The amendments proposed by the Convention shall be valid and considered
part of the Constitution when approved by a majority of the votes cast in an election at
which they are submitted to the people for their ratification pursuant to Article XV of the
Constitution.
"It follows that from the very resolution of the Congress of the Philippines which called for
the 1971 Constitutional Convention there was a clear mandate that the amendments
proposed by the 1971 Convention, in order to be valid and considered part of the
Constitution, must be approved by majority of the votes cast in an election at which they
are submitted to the people for their ratification as provided in the Constitution.
"This Court, in the case of Tolentino v. Commission on Elections, L-35140, October 16, 1971
(41 SCRA 715), speaking through Mr. Justice Barredo, said:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library
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 detat. As to such kind of

64

conventions, it is absolutely true that the convention is completely without restraint 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 . . .
x
x
x
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.
"In Proclamation No. 1102, issued on January 17, 1973, the President of the Philippines
certified that as a result of the voting before the barangays (Citizens Assemblies)
14,976,561 members of the barangays voted for the adoption of the proposed
Constitution, as against 743,869 who voted for its rejection, and on the basis of the
overwhelming majority of the votes cast by the members of all the barangays throughout
the Philippines the President proclaimed that the Constitution proposed by the 1971
Convention has been ratified and has thereby come into effect.
"It is very plain from the very wordings of Proclamation No. 1102 that the provisions of
Section 1 of Article XV of the Constitution of 1935 were not complied with. It is not
necessary that evidence be produced before this Court to show that no elections were held
in accordance with the provisions of the Election Code. Proclamation No. 1102
unequivocably states that the proposed Constitution of 1972 was voted upon by the
barangays. It is very clear, therefore, that the voting held in these barangays is not the
election contemplated in the provisions of Section 1, Article XV, of the 1935 Constitution.
The election contemplated in said constitutional provision is an election held in accordance
with the provisions of the election law, where only the qualified and registered voters of
the country would cast their votes, where official ballots prepared for the purpose are
used, where the voters would prepare their ballots in secret inside the voting booths in the
polling places established in the different election precincts throughout the country, where
the election is conducted by election inspectors duly appointed in accordance with the
election law, where the votes are canvassed and reported in a manner provided for in the
election law. It was this kind of election that was held on May 14, 1935, when the
Constitution of 1935 was ratified; on April 30, 1937, when the amendment to the
Constitution providing for Womens Suffrage was ratified; on June 18, 1940, when the 1940
Amendments to the Constitution were ratified; on March 11, 1947 when the Parity
Amendment to the Constitution was ratified; and on November 14, 1967 when the
amendments to the Constitution to increase the number of Members of the House of
Representatives and to allow the Members of Congress to run in the elections for
Delegates to the Constitutional Convention of 1971 were rejected.

basis for proclaiming the ratification of the proposed constitution. It is very clear, to me,
that Proclamation No. 1102 was issued in complete disregard or in violation, of the
provisions of Section 1 of Article XV of the 1935 Constitution.
"Proclamation No. 1102 mentions, furthermore, that on the question as to whether or not
the people would still like a plebiscite to be called to ratify the new Constitution,
14,298,814 members of the barangays answered that there was no need for a plebiscite
but that the vote of the barangays should be considered a vote in a plebiscite. It would
thus appear that the barangays assumed the power to determine whether a plebiscite as
ordained in the Constitution be held or not. Indeed, the provision of Section 1, Article XV of
the Constitution was completely disregarded.
"The affirmative votes cast in the barangays are not the votes contemplated in Section 1
of Article XV of the 1935 Constitution. The votes contemplated in said constitutional
provision are votes obtained through the election processes as provided by law.
An election is the embodiment of the popular will, the expression of the sovereign power
of the people. In common parlance an election is the act of casting and receiving the
ballots, counting them, and making the return. (Hontiveros v. Altavas, 24 Phil. 632, 637).
Election implies a choice by an electoral body at the time and substantially in the manner
and with the safeguards provided by law with respect to some question or issue. (Leffel v.
Brown, Com. P1., 159 N.E. 2d 807, 808 cited in 29 C.J.S. 13 at footnote 6.5).
. . . the statutory method whereby qualified voters or electors pass on various public
matters submitted to them the election of officers, national, state, county, township
the passing on various other questions submitted for their determination. (29 C.J.S. 13,
citing Iowa-llinois Gas & Elec. Co. v. City of Bettendorf, 41 N.W. 2d 1, 5, 241 Iowa 358).
Election is expression of choice by voters of body politic. (Ginsburg v. Giles, 72 S.W. 2d
438, 254 Ky. 720, in Words and Phrases, Permanent Edition, p. 234).
"The right to vote may be exercised only on compliance with such statutory requirements
as have been set by the legislature. (People ex rel. Rago v. Lipsky, 63 N.E. 2d 642, 327 Ill.
App. 63; Rothfels v. Southworth, 356 P. 2d 612, 11 Utah 2d 169 in 29 C.J.S. 38). (Italics
supplied).
"In this connection I herein quote the pertinent provisions of the Election Code of
1971:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library
Sec. 2. Applicability of this Act. All elections of public officers except barrio officials and
plebiscites shall be conducted in the manner provided by this Code.

"I cannot see any valid reason why the practice or procedure in the past, in implementing
the constitutional provision requiring the holding of an election to ratify or reject an
amendment to the Constitution, has not been followed in the case of the Constitution
proposed by the 1971 Constitutional Convention.

Sec. 99. Necessity of registration to be entitled to vote. In order that a qualified voter
may vote in any regular or special election or in any plebiscite he must be registered in the
permanent list of voters for the city, municipality or municipal district in which he resides:
Provided, That no person shall register more than once without first applying for
cancellation of his previous registration. (Italics supplied). (Please see also Sections 100102, Election Code of 1971, RA. No. 6388).

"It is my view that the President of the Philippines cannot by decree order the ratification
of the proposed 1972 Constitution thru a voting in the barangays and make said result the

"It is stated in Proclamation No. 1102 that the voting was done by the members of citizens
assemblies who are 15 years of age or over. Under the provision of Section 1 of Article V of

65

the 1935 Constitution the age requirement to be a qualified voter is 21 years or over.
"But what is more noteworthy is the fact that the voting in the barangays, except in very
few instances, was done by the raising of hands by the persons indiscriminately gathered
to participate in the voting, where even children below 15 years of age were included. This
is a matter of common observation, or of common knowledge, which the Court may take
judicial notice of. To consider the votes in the barangays as expressive of the popular will
and use them as the basis in declaring whether a Constitution is ratified or rejected is to
resort to a voting by demonstrations, which is would mean the rule of the crowd, which is
only one degree higher than the rule by the mob. Certainly, so important a question as to
whether the Constitution, which is the supreme law of the land, should be ratified or not,
must not be decided by simply gathering people and asking them to raise their hands in
answer to the question of whether they vote for or against a proposed Constitution. The
election processes as provided by law should be strictly observed in determining the will of
the sovereign people in a democracy. In our Republic the will of the people must be
expressed through the ballot in a manner that is provided by law.
"It is said that in a democracy the will of the people is the supreme law. Indeed, the people
are sovereign, but the will of the people must be expressed in a manner as the law and the
demands of a well-ordered society require. The rule of law must prevail even over the
apparent will of the majority of the people, if that will had not been expressed, or obtained,
in accordance with the law. Under the rule of law public questions must be decided in
accordance with the Constitution and the law. This is specially true in the case of the
adoption of a constitution or in the ratification of an amendment to the Constitution.
"The following citations are, to me, very relevant in the effort to determine whether the
proposed Constitution of 1972 had been validly ratified, or not:chanrob1es virtual 1aw
library
When it is said that the people have the right to alter or amend the constitution, it must
not be understood that this term necessarily includes all the inhabitants of the state. Since
the question of the adoption or rejection of a proposed new constitution or constitutional
amendment must be answered by a vote, the determination of it rests with those who, by
the existing constitution, are accorded the right of suffrage. But the qualified electors must
be understood in this, as in many other cases, as representing those who have not the
right to participate in the ballot. If a constitution should be abrogated, and a new one
adopted, by the whole mass of people in a state, acting through representatives not
chosen by the people in the political sense of the term, but by the general body of the
populace, the movement would be extra-legal (Blacks Constitutional Law, Second Edition,
pp. 47-48).
The theory of our political system is that the ultimate sovereignty is in the people, from
whom springs all legitimate authority. The people of the Union created a national
constitution, and conferred upon it powers of sovereignty over certain subjects, and the
people of each State created a State government, to exercise the remaining powers of
sovereignty so far as they were disposed to allow them to be exercised at all. By the
constitution which they establish, they not only tie up the hands of their official agencies,
but their own hands as well; and neither the officers of the State, nor the whole people as
an aggregate body, are at liberty to take action in opposition to this fundamental law.
(Cooleys Constitutional Limitations, 8th Edition, Vol. I, p. 81 cited in Graham v. Jones, 3 So.
2d. 761, 782).

The theory that a favorable vote by the electorate, however unanimous, on a proposal to
amend a constitution, may cure, render innocuous, all or any antecedent failures to
observe commands of that Constitution in respect of the formulation or submission of
proposed amendments thereto, does not prevail in Alabama, where the doctrine of the
stated theory was denied, in obvious effect, by the pronouncement 60 years ago of broad,
wholesome constitutional principles in Collier v. Frierson, supra, as quoted in the original
opinion, ante. The people themselves are bound by the Constitution; and, being so bound,
are powerless, whatever their numbers, to change or thwart its mandates, except through
the peaceful means of a constitutional convention, or of amendment according to the
mode therein prescribed, or through the exertion of the original right of revolution.The
Constitution may be set aside by revolution, but it can only be amended in the way it
provides, said Hobson, C.J., in McCreary v. Speer, 156 Ky. 783, 791, 162 S. W. 99, 103.
(Johnson v. Craft, Et Al., 87 So. 375, 385, 387, On Rehearing).
The fact that a majority voted for the amendment, unless the vote was taken as provided
by the Constitution, is not sufficient to make a change in that instrument. Whether a
proposed amendment has been legally adopted is a judicial question, for the court must
uphold and enforce the Constitution as written until it is amended in the way which it
provides for. Wood v. Tooker, 15 Mont. 8, 37 Pac. 840, 25 L.R.A. 560; McConaughty v.
State, 106 Minn. 409, 119 N.W. 408; Oakland Paving Company v. Hilton, 69 Cal. 499,11
Pac. 3; Utter v. Mosely, 16 Idaho 274, 100 Pac. 1958, 133 Am. St. Rep. 94, 18 Ann. Cas.
723. (McCreary v. Speer, 162 S.W. 99,104).
Provisions of a constitution regulating its own amendment, . . . are not merely directory,
but are mandatory; and a strict observance of every substantial requirement is essential to
the validity of the proposed amendment. These provisions are as binding on the people as
on the legislature, and the former are powerless by vote of acceptance to give legal
sanction to an amendment the submission of which was made in disregard of the
limitations contained in the constitution. (16 C.J.S. 35-36 cited in Graham v. Jones, 3 So.
2d 761, 782).
It is said that chaos and confusion in the governmental affairs of the State will result from
the Courts action in declaring the proposed constitutional amendment void. This
statement is grossly and manifestly inaccurate. If confusion and chaos should ensue, it will
not be due to the action of the Court but will be the result of the failure of the drafters of
the joint resolution to observe, follow and obey the plain essential provisions of the
Constitution. Furthermore, to say that, unless the Court disregards its sworn duty to
enforce the Constitution, chaos and confusion will result, is an inherently weak argument in
favor of the alleged constitutionality of the proposed amendment. It is obvious that, if the
Court were to countenance the violations of the sacramental provisions of the Constitution,
those who would thereafter desire to violate it and disregard its clear mandatory provisions
would resort to the scheme of involving and confusing the affairs of the State and then
simply tell the Court that it was powerless to exercise one of its primary functions by
rendering the proper decree to make the Constitution effective. (Graham v. Jones, 3 So.
2d. 761, 793-794).
"In our jurisprudence I find an instance where this Court did not allow the will of the
majority to prevail, because the requirements of the law were not complied with. In the
case of Monsale v. Nico, 83 Phil. 758, Monsale and Nico were both candidates for the office
of Municipal Mayor of Miagao, Iloilo, in the elections of November 11, 1947. Monsale had
duly filed his certificate of candidacy before the expiration of the period for the filing of the
same. However, on October 10, 1947, after the period for the filing of certificate of

66

candidacy, Monsale withdrew his certificate of candidacy. But on November 7, 1947


Monsale attempted to revive his certificate of candidacy by withdrawing the withdrawal of
his certificate of candidacy. e (The Commission on Elections, on November 8, 1947, ruled
that Monsale could no longer be a candidate. Monsale nevertheless proceeded with his
candidacy. The boards of inspectors in Miagao, however, did not count the votes cast for
Monsale upon the ground that the votes cast for him were stray votes, because he was
considered as having no certificate of candidacy. On the other hand, the boards of
inspectors credited Nico with 2,291 votes, and Nico was proclaimed elected. Monsale filed
a protest against the election of Nico in the Court of First Instance of Iloilo. In the count of
the ballots during the proceedings in the trial court it appeared that Monsale had obtained
2,877 votes while Nico obtained 2,276 votes, or a margin of 601 votes in favor of Monsale.
The Court of First Instance of Iloilo decided the election protest in favor of Monsale. Upon
appeal by Nico, this Court reversed the decision of the lower court. This Court declared
that because Monsale withdrew his certificate of candidacy his attempt to revive it by
withdrawing his withdrawal of his certificate of candidacy did not restore the effectiveness
of his certificate of candidacy, and this Court declared Nico the winner in spite of the fact
that Monsale had obtained more votes than he.
"We have cited this Monsale case to show that the will of the majority of the voters would
not be given effect, as declared by this Court, if certain legal requirements have not been
complied with in order to render the votes valid and effective to decide the result of an
election.
"And so, in the cases now before this Court, the fact that the voting in the citizens
assemblies (barangays) is not the election that is provided for in the 1935 Constitution for
the ratification of the amendment to the Constitution, the affirmative votes cast in those
assemblies can not be made the basis for declaring the ratification of the proposed 1972
Constitution, in spite of the fact that it was reported that 14,976,561 members of the
citizens assemblies voted for the adoption as against 743,869 for the rejection, because
the votes thus obtained were not in accordance with the provisions of Section 1 of Article
XV of the 1935 Constitution of the Philippines. The rule of law must he upheld.
"My last observation: One of the valid grounds against the holding of the plebiscite on
January 15, 1973, as provided in Presidential Decree No. 73, is that there is no freedom on
the part of the people to exercise their right of choice, because of the existence of martial
law in our country. The same ground holds true as regards the voting of the barangays on
January 10 to 15, 1973. More so, because by General Order No. 20, issued on January 7,
1973, the President of the Philippines ordered that the provisions of Section 3 of
Presidential Decree No. 73 in so far as they allow free public discussion of the proposed
constitution, as well as any order of December 17, 1972 temporarily suspending the
effects of Proclamation No. 1081 for the purpose of free and open debate on the proposed
constitution, he suspended in the meantime. It is, therefore, my view that voting in the
barangays on January 10-15, 1973 was not free, and so this is one added reason why the
results of the voting in the barangays should not be made the basis for the proclamation of
the ratification of the proposed Constitution.
"It is my view, therefore, that Proclamation No. 1102 is repugnant to the 1935 Constitution,
and so it is invalid, and should not be given effect. The Constitution of 1972 proposed by
the 1971 Constitutional Convention should be considered as not yet ratified by the people
of this Republic, and so it should not be given force and effect."cralaw virtua1aw library
It is urged by the Solicitor General, however, that the voting in the citizens assemblies was

a substantial compliance with the provisions of Article XV of the 1935 Constitution. The
Solicitor General-maintains that the primary thrust of the provision of Article XV of the
1935 Constitution is that "to be valid, amendments must gain the approval of the majority
in recognition of the democratic postulate that sovereignty resides in the people." It is not
disputed that in a democracy sovereignty resides in the people. But the term "people"
must be understood in its constitutional meaning, and they are "those persons who are
permitted by the Constitution to exercise the elective franchise." 8 Thus, in Section 2 of
Article VII of the 1935 Constitution, it is provided that "The President shall hold his office
during a term of four years and, together with the Vice- President chosen for the same
term, shall be elected by direct vote of the people . . ." Certainly under that constitutional
provision the "people" who elect directly the President and the Vice-President are no other
than the persons who, under the provisions of the same Constitution, are granted the right
to vote. In like manner the provision in Section 1 of Article II of the 1935 Constitution which
says "Sovereignty resides in the people and all government authority emanates from
them", the "people" who exercise the sovereign power are no other than the persons who
have the right to vote under the Constitution. In the case of Garchitorena v. Crescini 9 ,
this Court, speaking through Mr. Justice Johnson, said, "In democracies, the people,
combined, represent the sovereign power of the State. Their sovereign authority is
expressed through the ballot, of the qualified voters, in duly appointed elections held from
time to time, by means of which they choose their officials for definite fixed periods, and to
whom they entrust, for the time being, as their representatives, the exercise of the powers
of government." In the case of Moya v. Del Fierro, 10 this Court, speaking through Mr.
Justice Laurel, said, "As long as popular government is an end to be achieved and
safeguarded, suffrage, whatever may be the modality and form devised, must continue to
be the means by which the great reservoir of power must be emptied into the receptacular
agencies wrought by the people through their Constitution in the interest of good
government and the common weal. Republicanism, in so far as it implies the adoption of a
representative type of government, necessarily points to the enfranchised citizen as a
particle of popular sovereignty and as the ultimate source of the established authority."
And in the case of Abanil v. Justice of the Peace of Bacolod, 11 this Court said: "In the
scheme of our present republican government, the people are allowed to have a voice
therein through the instrumentality of suffrage to be availed of by those possessing certain
prescribed qualifications. The people, in clothing a citizen with the elective franchise for
the purpose of securing a consistent and perpetual administration of the government they
ordain, charge him with the performance of a duty in the nature of a public trust, and in
that respect constitute him a representative of the whole people. This duty requires that
the privilege thus bestowed should be exercised, not exclusively for the benefit of the
citizen or class of citizens professing it, but in good faith and with an intelligent zeal for the
general benefit and welfare of the state. (U.S. v. Cruikshauk, 92 U.S. 588) . . ." There is no
question, therefore, that when we talk of sovereign people, what is meant are the people
who act through the duly qualified and registered voters who vote during an election that
is held as provided in the Constitution or in the law.
The term "election" as used in Section 1 of Article XV of the 1935 Constitution should be
construed along with the term "election" as used in the provisions of Section 4 of the
Philippine Independence Act of the Congress of the United States, popularly known as the
Tydings-McDuffie Law (Public Act No. 127). Said Section 4 of the Tydings-McDuffie Law
provides as follows:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"Section 4. After the President of the United States has certified that the constitution
conforms with the provisions of this act, it shall be submitted to the people of the
Philippine Islands for their ratification or rejection at an election to be held within four

67

months after the date of such certification, on a date to be fixed by the Philippine
Legislature, at which election the qualified voters of the Philippine Islands shall have an
opportunity to vote directly for or against the proposed constitution and ordinances
appended thereto. Such election shall be held in such manner as may be prescribed by the
Philippine Legislature, to which the return of the election shall be made. The Philippine
Legislature shall by law provide for the canvassing of the return and shall certify the result
of the Governor- General of the Philippine Islands, together with a statement of the votes
cast, and a copy of said constitution and ordinances. If a majority of the votes cast shall be
for the constitution, such vote shall be deemed an expression of the will of the people of
the Philippine Independence, and the Governor-General shall, within thirty days after
receipt of the certification from the Philippine Legislature, issue a proclamation for the
election of officers of the government of the Commonwealth of the Philippine Islands
provided for in the Constitution . . ."cralaw virtua1aw library
It can safely be said, therefore, that when the framers of the 1935 Constitution used the
word "election" in Section 1 of Article XV of the 1935 Constitution they had no other idea in
mind except the elections that were periodically held in the Philippines for the choice of
public officials prior to the drafting of the 1935 Constitution, and also the "election"
mentioned in the Independence Act at which "the qualified voters of the Philippine Islands
shall have an opportunity to vote directly for or against the proposed constitution . . ." It is
but logical to expect that the framers of the 1935 Constitution would provide a mode of
ratifying an amendment to that Constitution similar to the mode of ratifying the original
Constitution itself.
It is clear, therefore, that the ratification or any amendment to the 1935 Constitution could
only he done by holding an election, as the term "election" was understood, and practiced,
when the 1935 Constitution was drafted. The alleged referendum in the citizens
assemblies participated in by persons aged 15 years or more, regardless of whether
they were qualified voters or not, voting by raising their hands, and the results of the
voting reported by the barrio or ward captain to the municipal mayor, who in turn
submitted the report to the Provincial Governor, and the latter forwarding the reports to
the Department of Local Governments, all without the intervention of the Commission on
Elections which is the constitutional body which has exclusive charge of the enforcement
and administration of all laws relative to the conduct of elections was not only a nonsubstantial compliance with the provisions of Section 1 of Article XV of the 1935
Constitution but a downright violation of said constitutional provision. It would be indulging
in sophistry to maintain that the voting in the citizens assemblies amounted to a
substantial compliance with the requirements prescribed in Section 1 of Article XV of the
1935 Constitution, 1935 Constitution.
It is further contended by the Solicitor General, that even if the Constitution proposed by
the 1971 Constitutional Convention was not ratified in accordance with the provisions of
Section 1 of Article XV of the 1935 Constitution, the fact is that after the President of the
Philippines had issued Proclamation No. 1102 declaring that the said proposed Constitution
"has been ratified by overwhelming majority of all the votes cast by the members of all the
barangays (citizens assemblies) throughout the Philippines and had thereby come into
effect" the people have accepted the new Constitution. What appears to me, however, is
that practically it is only the officials and employees under the executive department of
the Government who have been performing their duties apparently in observance of the
provisions of the new Constitution. It could not be otherwise, because the President of the
Philippines, who is the head of the executive department, had proclaimed that the new
Constitution had come into effect, and his office had taken the steps to implement the

provisions of the new Constitution. True it is, that some 92 members of the House of
Representatives and 15 members of the Senate, of the Congress of the Philippines had
expressed their option to serve in the interim National Assembly that is provided for in
Section 2 of Article XVII of the proposed Constitution. It must be noted, however, that of
the 15 senators who expressed their option to serve in the interim National Assembly only
one of them took his oath of office, and of the 92 members of the House of
Representatives who opted to serve in the interim National Assembly, only 22 took their
oath of office. The fact, that only one Senator out of 24, and only 22 Representatives out of
110, took their oath of office, is an indication that only a small portion of the members of
Congress had manifested their acceptance of the new Constitution. It is in the taking of the
oath of office where the affiant says that he swears to "support and defend the
Constitution" that the acceptance of the Constitution is made manifest. I agree with
counsel for petitioners in 1,36165 (Gerardo Roxas, Et. Al. v. Alejandro Melchor, Et. Al.)
when he said that the members of Congress who opted to serve in the interim National
Assembly did so only ex abundante cautela, or by way of a precaution, or making sure,
that in the event the new Constitution becomes definitely effective and the interim
National Assembly is convened they can participate in legislative work in their capacity as
duly elected representatives of the people, which otherwise they could not do if they did
not manifest their option to serve, and that option had to be made within 30 days from
January 17, 1973, the date when Proclamation No. 1102 was issued. Of course, if the
proposed Constitution does not become effective, they continue to be members of
Congress under the 1935 Constitution. Let it be considered that the members of the House
of Representatives were elected in 1969 to serve a term which will yet expire on December
31, 1973. Whereas, of the Senators who opted to serve in the interim National Assembly,
the term of some of them will yet expire on December 31, 1973, some on December 31,
1975, and the rest on December 31, 1977. Let if be noted that 9 Senators did not opt to
serve in the interim National Assembly, and 18 members of the House of Representatives
also did not opt to serve in the interim National Assembly.
Neither can it be said that the people have accepted the new Constitution. I cannot, in
conscience, accept the reported affirmative votes in the citizens assemblies as a true and
correct expression by the people of their approval, or acceptance, of the proposed
Constitution. I have my serious doubts regarding the freedom of the people to express
their views regarding the proposed Constitution during the voting in the citizens
assemblies, and I have also my serious doubts regarding the truthfulness and accuracy of
the reports of the voting in the citizens assemblies. This doubt has been engendered in my
mind after a careful examination and study of the records of these cases, particularly with
respect to the reports of the voting in the citizens assemblies. Perhaps, it may be said that
the people, or the inhabitants of this country, have acquiesced to the new Constitution, in
the sense that they have continued to live peacefully and orderly under the government
that has been existing since January 17, 1973 when it was proclaimed that the new
Constitution came into effect. But what could the people do? In the same way that the
people have lived under martial law since September 23, 1972, they also have to live
under the government as it now exists, and as it has existed since the declaration of
martial law on September 21, 1972, regardless of what Constitution is operative
whether it is the 1935 Constitution or the new Constitution. Indeed, there is nothing that
the people can do under the circumstances actually prevailing in our country today
circumstances, known to all, and which I do not consider necessary to state in this opinion
I cannot agree, therefore, with my worthy colleagues in the Court who hold the view that
the people have accepted the new Constitution, and that because the people have
accepted it, the new Constitution should be considered as in force, regardless of the fact
that it was not ratified in accordance with the provisions of Section 1 of Article XV of the

68

1935 Constitution.
It is my honest view that the Constitution proposed by the 1971 Constitutional Convention
has not come into effect. I do not say, however, that the proposed Constitution is invalid.
To me, the validity of the proposed Constitution is not in issue in the cases before Us. What
the petitioners assail is not the validity of the proposed Constitution but the validity of
Presidential Proclamation No. 1102 which declares the proposed Constitution as having
been ratified and has come into effect. It being my considered view that the ratification of
the proposed Constitution, as proclaimed in Proclamation No. 1102, is not in accordance
with the provisions of Section 1 of Article XV of the 1935 Constitution, I hold that
Proclamation No. 1102 is invalid and should not be given force and effect. The proposed
Constitution, therefore, should be considered as not yet validly ratified, and so it is not in
force. The proposed Constitution may still be submitted to a plebiscite in conformity with
Section 1 of Article XV of the 1935 Constitution. Incidentally, I must state that the 1935
Constitution is still in force, and this Court is still functioning under the 1935 Constitution.
I sincerely believe that the proposed Constitution may still be submitted to the people in
an election or plebiscite held in accordance with the provisions of Section 1 of Article XV of
the 1935 Constitution. In fact, as we have adverted to in this opinion, this was the
mandate of Congress when, on March 16, 1967, it passed Resolution No. 2 calling a
convention to propose amendments to the 1935 Constitution. The Court may take judicial
notice of the fact that the President of the Philippines has reassured the nation that the
government of our Republic since the declaration of martial law is not a revolutionary
government, and that he has been acting all the way in consonance with his powers under
the Constitution. The people of this Republic has reason to be happy because, according to
the President, we still have a constitutional government. It being my view that the 1935
Constitution is still in force, I believe Congress may still convene and pass a law calling for
an election at which the Constitution proposed by the 1971 Constitutional Convention will
be submitted to the people for their ratification or rejection. A plebiscite called pursuant to
Section 1 of Article XV of the 1935 Constitution is an assurance to our people that we still
have in our country the Rule of Law, and that the democratic system of government that
has been implanted in our country by the Americans, and which has become part of our
social and political fabric, is still a reality.
The views that I have expressed in this opinion are inspired by a desire on my part to bring
about stability in the democratic and constitutional system in our country. I feel that if this
Court would give its imprimatur to the ratification of the proposed Constitution, as
announced in Proclamation No. 1102, it being very clear that the provisions of Section 1 of
Article XV of the 1935 Constitution had not been complied with, We will be opening the
gates for a similar disregard of the Constitution in the future. What I mean is that if this
Court now declares that a new Constitution is now in force because the members of the
citizens assemblies had approved said new Constitution, although that approval was not in
accordance with the procedure and the requirements prescribed in the 1935 Constitution,
it can happen again in some future time that some amendments to the Constitution may
be adopted, even in a manner contrary to the existing Constitution and the law, and then
said proposed amendment is submitted to the people in any manner and what will matter
is that a basis is claimed that there was approval by the people. There will not be stability
in our constitutional system, and necessarily no stability in our government. As a member
of this Court I only wish to contribute my humble efforts to prevent the happening of such
a situation in the future.
It appearing to me that the announced ratification of the proposed Constitution through

the voting in the citizens assemblies is a clear violation of the 1935 Constitution, what I
say in this opinion is simply an endeavor on my part to be true to my oath of office to
defend and support the 1935 Constitution. I am inspired by what the great jurist and
statesman, Jose P. Laurel, said:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"Let our judges be as it were the vestal keepers of the purity and sanctity of our
Constitution, and the protection and vindication of popular rights will be safe and secure in
their reverential guardianship."cralaw virtua1aw library
I only wish to help prevent, if I can, democracy and the liberties of our people from
vanishing in our land, because, as Justice George Sutherland of the U. S. Supreme Court
said:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"(t)he saddest epitaph which can be carved in memory of a vanished liberty is that it was
lost because its possessors failed to stretch forth a saving hand while yet there was
time."cralaw virtua1aw library
I concur fully with the personal views expressed by the Chief Justice in the opinion that he
has written in these cases. Along with him, I vote to deny the motion to dismiss and to give
due course to the petitions in these cases.
FERNANDO, J., dissenting:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library
No question more momentous, none impressed with such transcendental significance is
likely to confront this Court in the near or distant future as that posed by these petitions.
For while the specific substantive issue is the validity of Presidential Proclamation No.
1102, an adverse judgment may be fraught with consequences that, to say the least, are
far-reaching in its implications. As stressed by respondents, "what petitioners really seek to
invalidate is the new Constitution." 1 Strict accuracy would of course qualify such
statement that what is in dispute, as noted in the opinion of the Chief Justice, goes only as
far as the validity of its ratification. It could very well be though that the ultimate outcome
is not confined within such limit, and this is not to deny that under its aegis, there have
been marked gains in the social and economic sphere, but given the premise of continuity
in a regime under a fundamental law, which itself explicitly recognizes the need for change
and the process for bringing it about, 2 it seems to me that the more appropriate course is
for this Court to give heed to the plea of petitioners that the most serious attention be paid
to their submission that the challenged executive act fails to meet the test of
constitutionality. Under the circumstances, with regret and with due respect for the opinion
of my brethren, I must perforce dissent. It would follow therefore that the legal position
taken by the Chief Justice as set forth with his usual lucidity and thoroughness has, on the
whole, my concurrence, subject, of course, to reservations insofar as it contains views and
nuances to which I have in the past expressed doubts. Nonetheless, I feel that a brief
expression of the reasons for the stand I take would not be amiss.
In coping with its responsibility arising from the function of judicial review, this Court is not
expected to be an oracle given to utterances of eternal verities, but certainly it is more
than just a keen but passive observer of the contemporary scene. It is, by virtue of its role
under the separation of powers concept, involved not necessarily as a participant in the
formation of government policy, but as an arbiter of its legality. Even then, there is realism
in what Lerner did say about the American Supreme Court as "the focal point of a set of
dynamic forces which [could play] havoc with the landmarks of the American state and
determine the power configuration of the day." 3 That is why there is this caveat. In the

69

United States as here, the exercise of the power of judicial review is conditioned on the
necessity that the decision of a case or controversy before it so requires. To repeat, the
Justices of the highest tribunal are not, as Justice Frankfurter made clear, "architects of
policy. They can nullify the policy of others, they are incapable of fashioning their own
solutions for social problems." 4 Nonetheless, as was stressed by Professors Black 5 and
Murphy, 6 a Supreme Court by the conclusion it reaches and the decision it renders does
not merely check the coordinate branches, but also by its approval stamps with legitimacy
the action taken. Thus in affirming constitutional supremacy, the political departments
could seek the aid of the judiciary. For the assent it gives to what has been done conduces
to its better support in a regime where the rule of law holds sway. In discharging such a
rule, this Court must necessarily take into account not only what the exigent needs of the
present demand but what may lie ahead in the unexplored and unknown vistas of the
future. It must guard against the pitfall of lack of understanding of the dominant forces at
work to seek a better life for all, especially those suffering from the pangs of poverty and
disease, by a blind determination to adhere to the status quo. It would be tragic, and a
clear case of its being recreant to its trust, if the suspicion can with reason be entertained
that its approach amounts merely to a militant vigilantism that is violently opposed to any
form of social change. It follows then that it does not suffice that recourse be had only to
what passes for scholarship in the law that could be marred by inapplicable erudition and
narrow legalism. Even with due recognition of such factors, however, I cannot, for reasons
to be set more at length and in the light of the opinion of the Chief Justice, reach the same
result as the majority of my brethren. For, in the last analysis, it is my firm conviction that
the institution of judicial review speaks too clearly for the point to be missed that official
action, even with due allowance made for the good faith that invariably inspires the step
taken, has to face the gauntlet of a court suit whenever there is a proper case with the
appropriate parties.
1. Respondents are acting in the soundest constitutional tradition when, at the outset, they
would seek a dismissal of these petitions. For them, the question raised is political and
thus beyond the jurisdiction of this Court. Such an approach cannot be indicted for
unorthodoxy. It is implicit in the concept of the rule of law that rights belong to the people
and that government possesses powers only. Essentially then, unless such an authority
may either be predicated on express or implied grant in the Constitution or the statutes,
an exercise thereof cannot survive an inquiry as to its validity. Respondents through
Solicitor-General Mendoza would deny our competence to proceed further. It is their view,
vigorously pressed and plausibly asserted, that since what is involved is not merely the
effectivity of an amendment but the actual coming into effect of a new constitution, the
matter is not justiciable. The immediate reaction is that such a contention is to be tested in
the light of the fundamental doctrine of separation of powers that it is not only the function
but the solemn duty of the judiciary to determine what the law is and to apply it in cases
and controversies that call for decision. 7 Since the Constitution pre-eminently occupies
the highest rung in the hierarchy of legal norms, it is in the judiciary, ultimately this
Tribunal, that such a responsibility is vested. With the 1935 Constitution containing, as
above noted, an explicit article on the subject of amendments, it would follow that the
presumption to be indulged in is that the question of whether there has been deference to
its terms is for this Court to pass upon. What is more, the Gonzales, 8 Tolentino 9 and
Planas 10 cases speak unequivocally to that effect. Nor is it a valid objection to this
conclusion that what was involved in those cases was the legality of the submission and
not ratification, for from the very language of the controlling article, the two vital steps are
proposal and ratification, which as pointed out in Dillon v. Gloss, 11 "cannot be treated as
unrelated acts, but as succeeding steps in a single endeavor." 12 Once an aspect thereof is
viewed as judicial, there would be no justification for considering the rest as devoid of that

character. It would be for me then an indefensible retreat, deriving no justification from


circumstances of weight and gravity, if this Court were to accede to what is sought by
respondents and rule that the question before us is political.
On this point, it may not be inappropriate to refer to a separate opinion of mine in Lansang
v. Garcia. 13 Thus: "The term has been made applicable to controversies clearly non
judicial and therefore beyond its jurisdiction or to an issue involved in a case appropriately
subject to its cognizance, as to which there has been a prior legislative or executive
determination to which deference must be paid. It has likewise been employed loosely to
characterize a suit where the party proceeded against is the President or Congress, or any
branch thereof. If to be delimited with accuracy, political questions should refer to such as
would under the Constitution be decided by the people in their sovereign capacity or in
regard to which full discretionary authority is vested either in the Presidency or Congress.
It is thus beyond the competence of the judiciary to pass upon. Unless clearly falling within
the above formulation, the decision reached by the political branches whether in the form
of a congressional act or an executive order could be tested in court. Where private rights
are affected, the judiciary has no choice but to look into its validity. It is not to be lost sight
of that such a power comes into play if there be an appropriate proceeding that may be
filed only after either coordinate branch has acted. Even when the Presidency or Congress
possesses plenary power, its improvident exercise or the abuse thereof, if shown, may give
rise to a justiciable controversy. For the constitutional grant of authority is not usually
unrestricted. There are limits to what may be done and how it is to be accomplished.
Necessarily then, the courts in the proper exercise of judicial review could inquire into the
question of whether or not either of the two coordinate branches has adhered to what is
laid down by the Constitution. The question thus posed is judicial rather than political." 14
The view entertained by Professor Dodd is not too dissimilar. For him such a term "is
employed to designate certain types of functions committed to the political organs of
government (the legislative and executive departments, or either of them), and not subject
to judicial investigation." 15 After a thorough study of American judicial decisions, both
federal and state, he could conclude: "The field of judicial nonenforceability is important,
but is not large when contrasted with the whole body of written constitutional texts. The
exceptions from judicial enforceability fall primarily within the field of public or
governmental interests." 16 Nor was Professor Westons formulation any different. As was
expressed by him: "Judicial questions, in what may be thought the more useful sense, are
those which the sovereign has set to be decided in the courts. Political questions, similarly,
are those which the sovereign has entrusted to the so called political departments of
government or has reserved to be settled by its own extra-governmental action." 17 What
appears undeniable then both from the standpoint of Philippine as well as American
decisions is the care and circumspection required before the conclusion is warranted that
the matter at issue is beyond judicial cognizance, a political question being raised.
2. The submission of respondents on this subject of political question, admittedly one of
complexity and importance, deserves to be pursued further. They would derive much aid
and comfort from the writings of both Professor Bickel 18 of Yale and Professor Freund 19
of Harvard, both of whom in turn are unabashed admirers of Justice Brandeis. Whatever be
the merit inherent in their lack of enthusiasm for a more active and positive role that must
be played by the United States Supreme Court in constitutional litigation, it must be
judged in the light of our own history. It cannot be denied that from the well nigh four
decades of constitutionalism in the Philippines, even discounting an almost similar period
of time dating from the inception of American sovereignty, there has sprung a tradition of
what has been aptly termed as judicial activism. Such an approach could be traced to the
valedictory address before the 1935 Constitutional Convention of Claro M. Recto. He spoke

70

of the trust reposed in the judiciary in these words: "It is one of the paradoxes of
democracy that the people at times place more confidence in instrumentalities of the State
other than those directly chosen by them for the exercise of their sovereignty." 20 It would
thus appear that even then this Court was expected not to assume an attitude of timidity
and hesitancy when a constitutional question is posed. There was the assumption of
course that it would face up to such a task, without regard to political considerations and
with no thought except that of discharging its trust. Witness these words of Justice Laurel
in an early landmark case, People v. Vera, 21 decided in 1937: "If it is ever necessary for us
to make any vehement affirmance during this formative period of our political history, it is
that we are independent of the Executive no less than of the Legislative department of our
government independent in the performance of our functions, undeterred by any
consideration, free from politics, indifferent to popularity, and unafraid of criticism in the
accomplishment of our sworn duty as we see it and as we understand it." 22 The hope of
course was that such assertion of independence and impartiality was not mere rhetoric.
That is a matter more appropriately left to others to determine. It suffices to state that
what elicits approval on the part of our people of a judiciary ever alert to inquire into
alleged breaches of the fundamental law is the realization that to do so is merely to do
what is expected of it and that thereby there is no invasion of spheres appropriately
belonging to the political branches. For it needs to be kept in kind always that it can act
only when there is a suit with proper parties before it, wherein rights appropriate for
judicial enforcement are sought to be vindicated. Then, too, it does not approach
constitutional questions with dogmatism or apodictic certainty nor view them from the
shining cliffs of perfection. This is not to say though that it is satisfied with an empiricism
untroubled by the search for jural consistency and rational coherence. A balance has to be
struck. So juridical realism requires. Once allowance is made that for all its care and
circumspection this Court is manned by human beings fettered by fallibility, but
nonetheless earnestly and sincerely striving to do right, the public acceptance of its
vigorous pursuit of the task of assuring that the Constitution be obeyed is easy to
understand. It has not in the past shirked its responsibility to ascertain whether there has
been compliance with and fidelity to constitutional requirements. Such is the teaching of a
host of cases from Angara v. Electoral Commission 23 to Planas v. Commission on
Elections. 24 It should not start now. It should continue to exercise its jurisdiction, even in
the face of a plausible but not sufficiently persuasive insistence that the matter before it is
political.
Nor am I persuaded that the reading of the current drift in American legal scholarship by
the Solicitor-General and his equally able associates presents the whole picture. On the
question of judicial review, it is not a case of black and white; there are shaded areas. It
goes too far, in my view, if the perspective is one of dissatisfaction, with its overtones of
distrust. This expression of disapproval has not escaped Dean Rostow of Yale, who began
one of his most celebrated legal essays. The Democratic Character of Judicial Review, thus:
"A theme of uneasiness, and even of guilt, colors the literature about judicial review. Many
of those who have talked, lectured, and written about the Constitution have been troubled
by a sense that judicial review is undemocratic." 25 He went on to state: "Judicial review,
they have urged, is an undemocratic shoot on an otherwise respectable tree. It should be
cut off, or at least kept pruned and inconspicuous." 26 His view was precisely the opposite.
Thus: "The power of constitutional review, to be exercised by some part of the
government, is implicit in the conception of a written constitution delegating limited
powers. A written constitution would promote discord rather than order in society if there
were no accepted authority to construe it, at the least in cases of conflicting action by
different branches of government or of constitutionally unauthorized governmental action
against individuals. The limitation and separation of powers, if they are to survive, require

a procedure for independent mediation and construction to reconcile the inevitable


disputes over the boundaries of constitutional power which arise in the process of
government." 27 More than that, he took pains to emphasize: "Whether another method of
enforcing the Constitution could have been devised, the short answer is that no such
method has developed. The argument over the constitutionality of judicial review has long
since been settled by history. The power and duty of the Supreme Court to declare statutes
or executive action unconstitutional in appropriate cases is part of the living
Constitution.The course of constitutional history, Mr. Justice Frankfurter recently
remarked, has cast responsibilities upon the Supreme Court which it would be
"stultification" for it to evade." 28 or is it only Dean Rostow who could point to Fraukfurter,
reputed to belong to the same school of thought opposed to judicial activism, if not its
leading advocate during his long stay in the United States Supreme Court, as one fully
cognizant of the stigma that attaches to a tribunal which neglects to meet the demands of
judicial review. There is a statement of similar import from Professor Mason: "In Stein v.
New York Frankfurter remarked, somewhat self-consciously perhaps, that the duty of
deference cannot be allowed imperceptibly to slide into abdication." 29 Professor
Konefsky, like Dean Rostow, could not accept the characterization of judicial review as
undemocratic. Thus in his study of Holmes and Brandeis, the following appears: "When it is
said that judicial review is an undemocratic feature of our political system, it ought also to
be remembered that the architects of that system did not equate constitutional
government with unbridled majority rule. Out of their concern for political stability and
security for private rights, . . ., they designed a structure whose keystone was to consist of
barriers to the untrammeled exercise of power by any group. They perceived no
contradiction between effective government and constitutional cheeks. To James Madison,
who may legitimately be regarded as the philosopher of the Constitution, the scheme of
mutual restraints was the best answer to what he viewed as the chief problem in erecting
a system of free representative government: In framing a government which is to be
administered by men over men, the great difficulty lies in this: you must first enable the
government to control the governed; and in the next place oblige it to control itself." 30
There is thus an inevitability to the flowering of judicial review. Could it be that the tone of
discontent apparent in the writings of eminent authorities on the subject evince at the
most fears that the American Supreme Court might overstep the bounds allotted to the
judiciary? It cannot be a denial of the fitness of such competence being vested in judges
and of their being called upon to fulfill such a trust whenever appropriate to the decision of
a case before them. That is why it has been correctly maintained that notwithstanding the
absence of any explicit provision in the fundamental law of the United States Constitution,
that distinguished American constitutional historian, Professor Corwin, could rightfully
state that judicial review "is simply incidental to the power of courts to interpret the law, of
which the Constitution is part, in connection with the decision of cases." 31 This is not to
deny that there are those who would place the blame or the credit, depending upon ones
predilection, on Marshalls epochal opinion in Marbury v. Madison. 32 Curtis belonged to
that persuasion. As he put it: "The problem was given no answer by the Constitution. A
hole was left where the Court might drive in the peg of judicial supremacy, if it could. And
that is what John Marshall did." 33 At any rate there was something in the soil of American
juristic thought resulting in this tree of judicial power so precariously planted by Marshall
striking deep roots and showing wonderful vitality and hardiness. It now dominates the
American legal scene. Through it, Chief Justice Hughes, before occupying that exalted
position, could state in a lecture: "We are under a Constitution, but the Constitution is what
the judges say it is . . ." 34 The above statement is more than just an aphorism that lends
itself to inclusion in judicial anthologies or bar association speeches. It could and did
provoke from Justice Jackson, an exponent of the judicial restraint school thought, this

71

meaningful query: "The Constitution nowhere provides that it shall be what the judges say
it is. How, then, did it come about that the statement not only could be made but could
become current as the most understandable and comprehensive summary of American
constitutional law?" 35 It is no wonder that Professor Haines could pithily and succinctly
sum up the place of the highest American tribunal in the scheme of things in this wise:
"The Supreme Court of the United States has come to be regarded as the unique feature of
the American governmental system." 36 Let me not be misunderstood. There is here no
attempt to close ones eyes to a discernible tendency on the part of some distinguished
faculty minds to look askance at what for them may be inadvisable extension of judicial
authority. For such indeed is the case as reflected in two leading cases of recent vintage,
Baker v. Carr, 37 decided in 1962 and Powell v. MacCormack, 38 in 1969, both noted in the
opinion of the Chief Justice. The former disregarded the warning of Justice Frankfurter in
Colegrove v. Green 39 about the American Supreme Court declining jurisdiction on the
question of apportionment as to do so "would cut very deep into the very being of
Congress." 40 For him, the judiciary "ought not to enter this political thicket." Baker has
since then been followed; it has spawned a host of cases. 41 Powell, on the question of the
power of a legislative body to exclude from its ranks a person whose qualifications are
uncontested, for many the very staple of what is essentially political, certainly goes even
further than the authoritative Philippine decision of Vera v. Avelino, 42 It does look then
that even in the United States, the plea for judicial self-restraint, even if given voice by
those competent in the field of constitutional law, has fallen on deaf ears. There is in the
comments of respondents an excerpt from Professor Freund quoting from one of his essays
appearing in a volume published in 1968. It is not without interest to note that in another
paper, also included therein, he was less than assertive about the necessity for selfrestraint and apparently mindful of the claims of judicial activism. Thus: "First of all, the
Court has a responsibility to maintain the constitutional order, the distribution of public
power, and the limitations on that power." 43 As for Professor Bickel, it has been said that
as counsel for the New York Times in the famous Vietnam papers case, 44 he was less than
insistent on the American Supreme Court exercising judicial self restraint. There are signs
that the contending forces on such question, for some an unequal contest, are now
quiescent. The fervor that characterized the expression of their respective points of view
appears to have been minimized. Not that it is to be expected that it will entirely
disappear, considering how dearly cherished are, for each group, the convictions,
prejudices one might even say, entertained. At least what once was fitly characterized as
the booming guns of rhetoric, coming from both directions, have been muted. Of late,
scholarly disputations have been centered on the standards that should govern the
exercise of the power of judicial review. In his celebrated Holmes lecture in 1959 at the
Harvard Law School, Professor Wechsler advocated as basis for decision what he termed
neutral principles of constitutional law. 45 It has brought forth a plethora of law review
articles, the reaction ranging from guarded conformity to caustic criticism. 46 There was,
to be sure, no clear call to a court in effect abandoning the responsibility incumbent on it
to keep governmental agencies within constitutional channels. The matter has been put in
temperate terms by Professor Frank thus: "When allowance has been made for all these
factors, it nevertheless seems to me that the doctrine of political questions ought to be
very sharply confined to cases where the functional reasons justify it and that in a given
case involving its expansion there should be careful consideration also of the social
considerations which may militate against it. The doctrine has a certain specious charm
because of its nice intellectualism and because of the fine deference it permits to
expertise, to secret knowledge, and to the prerogatives of others. It should not be allowed
to grow as a merely intellectual plant." 47

impeccable sources of the worth and significance of judicial review in the United States. I
cannot resist the conclusion then that the views advanced on this subject by distinguished
counsel for petitioners, with Senators Lorenzo M. Taada and Jovito Salonga at the van,
rather than the advocacy of the Solicitor-General, possess the greater weight and carry
persuasion. So much then for the invocation of the political question principle as a bar to
the exercise of our jurisdiction.
3. That brings me to the issue of the validity of the ratification. The crucial point that had
to be met is whether Proclamation No. 1102 manifests fidelity to the explicit terms of
Article XV. There is, of course, the view not offensive to reason that a sense of the realities
should temper the rigidity of devotion to the strict letter of the text to allow deference to
its spirit to control. With due recognition of its force in constitutional litigation, 48 if my
reading of the events and the process that led to such proclamation, so clearly set forth in
the opinion of the Chief Justice, is not inaccurate, then it cannot be confidently asserted
that there was such compliance. It would be to rely on conjectural assumptions that did
founder on the rock of the undisputed facts. Any other conclusion would, for me, require an
interpretation that borders on the strained. So it has to be if one does not lose sight of how
the article on amendments is phrased. A word, to paraphrase Justice Holmes may not be a
crystal, transparent and unchanged, but it is not, to borrow from Learned Hand, that
eminent jurist, a rubber band either. It would be unwarranted in my view then to assert
that the requirements of the 1935 Constitution have been met. There are American
decisions, 49 and they are not few in number, which require that there be obedience to the
literal terms of the applicable provision. It is understandable why it should be thus. If the
Constitution is the supreme law, then its mandate must be fulfilled. No evasion is to be
tolerated. Submission to its commands can be shown only if each and every word is given
meaning rather than ignored or disregarded. This is not to deny that a recognition of the
conclusive effect attached to the electorate manifesting its will to vote affirmatively on the
amendments proposed poses an obstacle to the judiciary being insistent on the utmost
regularity. Briefly stated, substantial compliance is enough. A great many American State
decisions may be cited in support of such a doctrine. 50

Even if the assumption be indulged in that Article XV is not


phrased in terms too clear to be misread, so that this Court is
called upon to give meaning and perspective to what could be
considered words of vague generality, pregnant with uncertainty,
still whatever obscurity it possesses is illumined when the light of
the previous legislation is thrown on it. In the first Commonwealth
Act, 51 submitting to the Filipino people for approval or
disapproval certain amendments to the original ordinance
appended to the 1935 Constitution, it was made clear that the
election for such purpose was to "be conducted in conformity with
the provisions of the Election Code insofar as the same may be
applicable." 52 Then came the statute, 53 calling for the
plebiscite on the three 1940 amendments providing for the
plebiscite

It is difficult, for me at least, not to be swayed by such appraisal, coming from such

72

the three 1930 amendments providing for a bicameral Congress


or a Senate and a House of Representatives to take the place of a
unicameral National Assembly, 54 reducing the term of the
President to four years but allowing his re-election with the
limitation that he cannot serve for more than eight consecutive
years, 55 and creating an independent Commission on Elections.
56 Again, it was expressly provided that the election "shall be
conducted in conformity with the provisions of the Election Code
in so far as the same may be applicable." 57 The approval of the
present parity amendment was by virtue of a Republic Act 58
which specifically made applicable the then Election Code. 59
There is a similar provision in the legislation, 60 which in
cotemplation of the 1971 Constitutional Convention, saw to it that
there be an increase in the membership of the House of
Representatives to a maximum of one hundred eighty and
assured the eligibility of senators and representatives to become
members of such constituent body without forfeiting their seats,
as proposed amendments to be voted on in the 1967 elections.
61 That is the consistent course of interpretation followed by the
legislative branch. It is most persuasive, if not controlling. The
restraints thus imposed would set limits to the Presidential action
taken, even on the assumption that either as an agent of the
Constitutional Convention or under his martial law prerogatives,
he was not devoid of power to specify the mode of ratification. On
two vital points, who can vote and how they register their will,
Article XV had been given a definitive construction. That is why I
fail to see sufficient justification for this Court affixing the
imprimatur of its approval on the mode employed for the
ratification of the revised Constitution as reflected in Proclamation
No. 1102.
4. Nor is the matter before us solely to be determined by the
failure to comply with the requirements of Article XV.
Independently of the lack of validity of the ratification of the new
Constitution, if it be accepted by the people, in whom sovereignty
resides according to the Constitution, 62 then this Court cannot
refuse to yield assent to such a political decision of the utmost
gravity, conclusive in its effect. Such a fundamental principle is
meaningless if it does not imply, to follow Laski, that the nation as
a whole constitutes the "single center of ultimate reference,"

necessarily the possessor of that "power that is able to resolve


disputes by saying the last word." 63 If the origins of the
democratic polity enshrined in the 1935 Constitution with the
declaration that the Philippines is a republican state could be
traced back to Athens and to Rome, it is no doubt true, as McIver
pointed out, that only with the recognition of the nation as the
separate political unit in public law is there the juridical
recognition of the people composing it "as the source of political
authority." 64 From them, as Corwin did stress, emanate "the
highest possible embodiment of human will," 65 which is supreme
and must be obeyed. To avoid any confusion and in the interest of
clarity, it should be expressed in the manner ordained by law.
Even if such were not the case, however, once it is manifested, it
is to be accepted as final and authoritative. The government
which is merely an agency to register its commands has no
choice but to submit. Its officials must act accordingly. No agency
is exempt from such a duty, not even this Court. In that sense, the
lack of regularity in the method employed to register its wishes is
not fatal in its consequences. Once the fact of acceptance by the
people of a new fundamental law is made evident, the judiciary is
left with no choice but to accord it recognition. The obligation to
render it obeisance falls on the courts as well.
There are American State decisions that enunciate such a doctrine. While certainly not
controlling, they are not entirely bereft of persuasive significance. In Miller v. Johnson, 66
decided in 1892, it was set forth in the opinion of Chief Justice Holt that on May 3, 1890, an
act was passed in Kentucky, providing for the calling of a convention for the purpose of
framing a new constitution and the election of delegates. It provided that before any form
of constitution made by them should become operative, it should be submitted to the
voters of the state and ratified by a majority of those voting. The constitution then in force
authorized the legislature, the preliminary steps having been taken, to call a convention
"for the purpose of readopting, amending, or changing" it but contained no provision
giving the legislature the power to require a submission of its work to a vote of the people.
The convention met in September, 1890. By April, 1891, it completed a draft of a
constitution, submitted it to a popular vote, and then adjourned until September following.
Its work was approved by a majority. When the convention reassembled, the delegates
made numerous changes in the instrument. As thus amended, it was promulgated by the
convention of September 28, 1891, as the new constitution. An action was brought to
challenge its validity. It failed in the lower court. In affirming such judgment dismissing the
action, Chief Justice Holt stated: "If a set of men, not selected by the people according to
the forms of law, were to formulate an instrument and declare it the constitution, it would
undoubtedly be the duty of the courts to declare its work a nullity. This would be
revolution, and this the courts of the existing government must resist until they are
overturned by power, and a new government established. The convention, however, was
the offspring of law. The instrument which we are asked to declare invalid as a constitution
has been made and promulgated according to the forms of law. It is a matter of current
history that both the executive and legislative branches of the government have

73

recognized its validity as a constitution, and are now daily doing so . . . While the judiciary
should protect the rights of the people with great care and jealousy, because this is its
duty, and also because, in times of great popular excitement, it is usually their last resort,
yet it should at the same time be careful not to overstep the proper bounds of its power,
as being perhaps equally dangerous; and especially where such momentous results might
follow as would be likely in this instance, if the power of the judiciary permitted, and its
duty requires, the overthrow of the work of the convention." 67 In Taylor v.
Commonwealth, 68 a 1903 decision, it was contended that the Virginia Constitution
proclaimed in 1902 is invalid as it was ordained and promulgated by the convention
without being submitted for ratification or rejection by the people. The Court rejected such
a view. As stated in the opinion of Justice Harrison: "The Constitution of 1902 was ordained
and proclaimed by a convention duly called by direct vote of the people of the state to
revise and amend the Constitution of 1869. The result of the work of the convention has
been recognized, accepted, and acted upon as the only valid Constitution of the state by
the Governor in swearing fidelity to it and proclaiming it, as directed thereby; by the
Legislature in its formal official act adopting a joint resolution, July 15, 1902, recognizing
the Constitution ordained by the convention which assembled in the city of Richmond on
the 12th day of June, 1901, as the Constitution of Virginia; by the individual oaths of its
members to support it, and by enforcing its provisions; and by the people in their primary
capacity by peacefully accepting it and quiescing in it, by registering as voters under it to
the extent of thousands throughout the state, and by voting, under its provisions, at a
general election for their representatives in the Congress of the United States. The
Constitution having been thus acknowledged and accepted by the officers administering
the government and by the people of the state, and there being no government in
existence under the Constitution of 1869 opposing or denying its validity, we have no
difficulty in holding that the Constitution in question, which went into effect at noon on the
10th day of July, 1902, is the only rightful, valid, and existing Constitution of this state, and
that to it all the citizens of Virginia owe their obedience and loyal allegiance." 69
It cannot be plausibly asserted then that premises valid in law are lacking for the claim
that the revised Constitution has been accepted by the Filipino people. What is more, so it
has been argued, it is not merely a case of its being implied. Through the Citizens
Assemblies, there was a plebiscite with the result as indicated in Proclamation No. 1102.
From the standpoint of respondents then, they could allege that there was more than just
mere acquiescence by the sovereign people. Its will was thus expressed formally and
unmistakably. It may be added that there was nothing inherently objectionable in the
informal method followed in ascertaining its preference. Nor is the fact that Filipinos of
both sexes above the age of fifteen were given the opportunity to vote to be deplored. The
greater the base of mass participation, the more there is fealty to the democratic concept.
It does logically follow likewise that all such circumstances being conceded, then no
justiciable question may be raised. This Court is to respect what had thus received the
peoples sanction. That is not for me though the whole of it. Further scrutiny even then is
not entirely foreclosed. There is still an aspect that is judicial, an inquiry may be had as to
whether such indeed was the result. This is no more than what the courts do in election
cases. There are other factors to bear in mind. The fact that the President so certified is
well-nigh conclusive. There is in addition the evidence flowing from the conditions of peace
and stability. There thus appears to be conformity to the existing order of things. The daily
course of events yields such a conclusion. What is more, the officials under the 1935
Constitution, including practically all Representatives and a majority of the Senators, have
signified their assent to it. The thought persists, however, that as yet sufficient time has
not elapsed to be really certain.
Nor is this all. There is for me an obstacle to the petitions being dismissed for such
ascertainment of popular will did take place during a period of martial law. It would have
been different had there been that freedom of debate with the least interference, thus

allowing a free market of ideas. If it were thus, it could be truly said that there was no
barrier to liberty of choice. It would be a clear-cut decision either way. One could be certain
as to the fact of the acceptance of the new or of adherence to the old. This is not to deny
that votes are cast by individuals with their personal concerns uppermost in mind, worried
about their immediate needs and captive to their existing moods. That is inherent in any
human institution, much more so in a democratic polity. Nor is it open to any valid
objection because in the final analysis the state exists for the individuals who in their
collectivity compose it. Whatever be their views, they are entitled to respect. It is difficult
for me, however, at this stage to feel secure in the conviction that they did utilize the
occasion afforded to give expression to what was really in their hearts. This is not to imply
that such doubt could not be dispelled by evidence to the contrary. If the petitions be
dismissed however, then such opportunity is forever lost.
5. With the foregoing legal principles in mind, I find myself unable to join the ranks of my
esteemed brethren who vote for the dismissal of these petitions. I cannot yield an
affirmative response to the plea of respondents to consider the matter closed, the
proceedings terminated once and for all. It is not an easy decision to reach. It has
occasioned deep thought and considerable soul-searching. For there are countervailing
considerations that exert a compulsion not easy to resist. It can be asserted with truth,
especially in the field of social and economic rights, that with the revised Constitution,
there is an auspicious beginning for further progress. Then too it could resolve what
appeared to be the deepening contradictions of political life, reducing at times
governmental authority to near impotence and imparting a sense of disillusionment in
democratic processes. It is not too much to say therefore that there had indeed been the
revision of a fundamental law to vitalize the very values out of which democracy grows. It
is one which has all the earmarks of being responsive to the dominant needs of the times.
It represents an outlook cognizant of the tensions of a turbulent era that is the present.
That is why for some what was done represented an act of courage and faith, coupled with
the hope that the solution arrived at is a harbinger of a bright and rosy future.
It is such a comfort then that even if my appraisal of the situation had commanded a
majority, there is not, while these lawsuits are being further considered, the least
interference with the executive department. The President in the discharge of all his
functions is entitled to obedience. He remains the commander-in-chief with all the
constitutional power it implies. Public officials can go about their accustomed tasks in
accordance with the revised Constitution. They can pursue the even tenor of their ways.
They are free to act according to its tenets. That was so these past few weeks, even after
that petitions were filed. There was not at any time any thought of any restraining order.
So it was before. That is how things are expected to remain even if the motions to dismiss
were not granted. It might be asked though, suppose the petition should prevail? What
then? Even so, the decision of this Court need not be executory right away. Such a
disposition of a cast before this Court is not novel. That was how it was done in the
Emergency Powers Act controversy. 70 Once compliance is had with the requirements of
Article XV of the 1935 Constitution, to assure that the coming force of the revised charter
is free from any taint of infirmity, then all doubts are set at rest.
For some, to so view the question before us is to be caught in a web of unreality, to cherish
illusions that cannot stand the test of actuality. What is more, it may give the impression of
reliance on what may, for the practical man of affairs, be no more than gossamer
distinctions and sterile refinements unrelated to events. That may be so, but I find it
impossible to transcend what for me are the implications of traditional constitutionalism.
This is not to assert that an occupant of the bench is bound to apply with undeviating
rigidity doctrines which may have served their day. He could at times even look upon them
as mere scribblings in the sands to be washed away by the advancing tides of the present.
The introduction of novel concepts may be carried only so far though. As Cardozo put the

74

matter: "The judge, even when he is free, is still not wholly free. He is not to innovate at
pleasure. He is not a knight-errant, roaming at will in pursuit of his own ideal of beauty or
of goodness. He is to draw his inspiration from consecrated principles. He is not to yield to
spasmodic sentiment, to vague and unregulated benevolence. He is to exercise a
discretion informed by tradition, methodized by analogy, disciplined by system, and
subordinated to the primordial necessity of order in the social life. Wide enough in all
conscience is the field of discretion that remains." 71 Moreover what made it difficult for
this Court to apply settled principles, which for me have not lost their validity, is traceable
to the fact that the revised Constitution was made to take effect immediately upon
ratification. If a period of time were allowed to elapse precisely to enable the judicial power
to be exercised, no complication would have arisen. Likewise, had there been only one or
two amendments, no such problem would be before us. That is why I do not see sufficient
justification for the orthodoxies of constitutional law not to operate.
Even with full realization then that the approach pursued is not all that it ought to have
been and the process of reasoning not without its shortcomings, the basic premises of a
constitutional democracy, as I understand them and as set forth in the preceding pages,
compel me to vote the way I did.
TEEHANKEE, J., dissenting:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library
The masterly opinion of the Chief Justice wherein he painstakingly deals with the
momentous issues of the cases at bar in all their complexity commands my concurrence.
I would herein make an exposition of the fundamental reasons and considerations for my
stand.
The unprecedented and precedent-setting issue submitted by petitioners for the Courts
resolution is the validity and constitutionality of Presidential Proclamation No. 1102 issued
on January 17, 1973, certifying and proclaiming that the Constitution proposed by the 1971
Constitutional Convention "has been ratified by an overwhelming majority of all the votes
cast by the members of all the Barangays (Citizens Assemblies) throughout the Philippines,
and has thereby come into effect."cralaw virtua1aw library
More specifically, the issue submitted is whether the purported ratification of the proposed
Constitution by means of the Citizens Assemblies has substantially complied with the
mandate of Article XV of the existing Constitution of 1935 that duly proposed amendments
thereto, in toto or parts thereof, "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." 1
A necessary corollary issue is whether the purported ratification of the proposed
Constitution as signed on November 30, 1972 by the 1971 Constitutional Convention may
be said also to have substantially complied with its own mandate that" (T)his Constitution
shall take effect immediately upon its ratification by a majority of the votes cast in a
plebiscite called for the purpose and except as herein provided, shall supersede the
Constitution of Nineteen hundred and thirty-five and all amendments thereto." 2
Respondents contend that" (A)lthough apparently what is sought to be annulled is
Proclamation No. 1102, what petitioners really seek to invalidate is the new Constitution",
and their actions must be dismissed, because:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library
"the Court may not inquire into the validity of the procedure for ratification" which is
"political in character" and that what is sought to be invalidated is not an act of the
President but of the people:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

" (T)he fact of approval of the new Constitution by an overwhelming majority of the votes
cast as declared and certified in Proclamation No. 1102 is conclusive on the courts;
"Proclamation No. 1102 was issued by the President in the exercise of legislative power
under martial law . . . Alternatively, or contemporaneously, he did so as agent of the
Constitutional Convention;"
"alleged defects, such as absence of secret voting, enfranchisement of persons less
than 21 Years, non supervision (by) the Comelec are matters not required by Article XV of
the 1935 Constitution" ; (sic)
"after ratification, whatever defects there might have been in the procedure are
overcome and mooted (and muted) by the fact of ratification" ; and
" (A)ssuming finally that Article XV of the 1935 Constitution was not strictly followed, the
ratification of the new Constitution must nonetheless be respected. For the procedure
outlined in Article XV was not intended to be exclusive of other procedures, especially one
which contemplates popular and direct participation of the citizenry . . ." 3
To test the validity of respondents submittal that the Court, in annulling Proclamation No.
1102 would really be "invalidating the new Constitution", the terms and premises of the
issues have to be defined.
Respondents themselves assert that "Proclamation No. 1102 . . . is plainly merely
declaratory of the fact that the 1973 Constitution has been ratified and has come into
force." 4
The measure of the fact of ratification is Article XV of the 1935 Constitution. This has
been consistently held by the Court in the Gonzales: 5 and Tolentino 6 cases.
In the Tolentino case, this Court emphasized "that the provisions of Section 1 of Article
XV of the Constitution, dealing with the procedure or manner of amending the
fundamental law are binding upon the Convention and the other departments of the
government. It must be added that . . . they are no less binding upon the people." 7
In the same Tolentino case, this Court further proclaimed that "as long as any
amendment is formulated and submitted under the aegis of the present Charter, any
proposal for such amendment which is not in conformity with the letter, spirit and intent of
the Charter for effecting amendments, cannot receive the sanction of this Court." 8
As continues to be held by a majority of this Court, proposed amendments to the
Constitution "should be ratified in only one way, that is, in an election or plebiscite held in
accordance with law and participated in only by qualified and duly registered voters" 9 and
under the supervision of the Commission on Elections. 10
Hence, if the Court declares Proclamation 1102 null and void because on its face, the
purported ratification of the proposed Constitution has not faithfully nor substantially
observed nor complied with the mandatory requirements of Article XV of the (1935)
Constitution, it would not he "invalidating" the proposed new Constitution but would be
simply declaring that the announced fact of ratification thereof by means of the Citizens
Assemblies referendums does not pass the constitutional test and that the proposed new
Constitution has not constitutionally come into existence.
Since Proclamation 1102 is acknowledged by respondent to be "plainly merely
declaratory" of the disputed fact of ratification, they cannot assume the very fact to be
established and beg the issue by citing the self-same declaration as proof of the purported
ratification therein declared.
What complicates the cases at bar is the fact that the proposed 1972 Constitution was
enforced as having immediately taken effect upon the issuance on January 17, 1973 of
Proclamation 1102 and the question of whether "confusion and disorder in government
affairs would (not) result" from a judicial declaration of nullity of the purported ratification
is raised by the Solicitor-General on behalf of respondents.

75

A comparable precedent of great crisis proportions is found in the Emergency Powers


cases, 11 wherein the Court in its Resolution of September 16, 1949 after judgment was
initially not obtained on August 26, 1949 for lack of the required six (6) votes, finally
declared in effect that the pre-war emergency powers delegated by Congress to the
President, under Commonwealth Act 671 in pursuance of Article VI, section 26 of the
Constitution, had ceased and became inoperative at the latest in May, 1946 when
Congress met in its first regular session on May 25, 1946.
Then Chief Justice Manuel V. Moran recited the great interests and important rights that
had arisen under executive orders "issued in good faith and with the best of intentions by
three successive Presidents, and some of them may have already produced extensive
effects on the life of the nation" in the same manner as may have arisen under the bona
fide acts of the President now in the honest belief that the 1972 Constitution had been
validly ratified by means of the Citizens Assemblies referendums and indicated the
proper course and solution therefor, which were duly abided by and confusion and disorder
as well as harm to public interest and innocent parties thereby avoided as
follows:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"Upon the other hand, while I believe that the emergency powers had ceased in June 1945,
I am not prepared to hold that all executive orders issued thereafter under Commonwealth
Act No. 671, are per se null and void. It must he borne in mind that these executive orders
had been issued in good faith and with the best of intentions by three successive
Presidents, and some of them may have already produced extensive effects in the life of
the nation. We have, for instance, Executive Order No. 73, issued on November 12, 1945,
appropriating the sum of P6,750,000 for public works; Executive Order No. 86, issued on
January 7, 1946, amending a previous order regarding the organization of the Supreme
Court; Executive Order No. 89, issued on January 1, 1946, reorganizing the Courts of First
Instance; Executive Order No. 184, issued on November 19, 1948, controlling rice and
palay to combat hunger; and other executive orders appropriating funds for other
purposes. The consequences of a blanket nullification of all these executive orders will be
unquestionably serious and harmful. And I hold that before nullifying them, other
important circumstances should be inquired into, as for instance, whether or not they have
been ratified by Congress expressly or impliedly, whether their purposes have already
been accomplished entirely or partially, and in the last instance, to what extent;
acquiescence of litigants; de facto officers; acts and contracts of parties acting in good
faith; etc. It is my opinion that each executive order must be viewed in the light of its
peculiar circumstances, and , if necessary and possible, before nullifying it, precautionary
measures should be taken to avoid harm to public interest and innocent parties." 12
Initially, then Chief Justice Moran voted with a majority of the Court to grant the Araneta
and Guerrero petitions holding null and void the executive orders on rentals and export
control but to defer judgment on the Rodriguez and Barredo petitions for judicial
declarations of nullity of the executive orders appropriating the 1949-1950 fiscal year
budget for the government and P6 million for the holding of the 1949 national elections.
After rehearing, he further voted to also declare null and void the last two executive orders
appropriating funds for the 1949 budget and elections, completing the "sufficient majority"
of six against four dissenting justices "to pronounce a valid judgment on that matter." 13
Then Chief Justice Moran, who penned the Courts majority resolution, explained his vote
for annulment despite the great difficulties and possible "harmful consequences" in the
following passage, which bears re-reading:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"However, now that the holding of a special session of Congress for the purpose of
remedying the nullity of the executive orders in question appears remote and uncertain, I
am compelled to, and do hereby, give my unqualified concurrence in the decision penned

by Mr. Justice Tuason declaring that these two executive orders were issued without
authority of law.
"While in voting for a temporary deferment of the judgment I was moved by the belief that
positive compliance with the Constitution by the other branches of the Government, which
is our prime concern in all these cases, would be effected, and indefinite deferment will
produce the opposite result because it would legitimize a prolonged or permanent evasion
of our organic law. Executive orders which are, in our opinion, repugnant to the
Constitution, would be given permanent life, opening the way or practices which may
undermine our constitutional structure.
"The harmful consequences which, as I envisioned in my concurring opinion, would come
to pass should the said executive orders by immediately declared null and void are still
real. They have not disappeared by reason of the fact that a special session of Congress is
not now forthcoming. However, the remedy now lies in the hands of the Chief Executive
and of Congress, for the Constitution vests in the former the power to call a special session
should the need for one arise, and in the latter, the power to pass a valid appropriations
act.
"That Congress may again fail to pass a valid appropriation act is a remote possibility, for
under the circumstances is fully realizes its great responsibility of saving the nation from
breaking down; and furthermore, the President in the exercise of his constitutional powers
may, if he so desires, compel Congress to remain in special session till it approves the
legislative measures most needed by the country.
"Democracy is on trial in the Philippines, and surely it will emerge victorious as a
permanent way of life in this country, if each of the great branches of the Government,
within its own allocated sphere, complies with its own constitutional duty,
uncompromisingly and regardless of difficulties.
"Our Republic is still young, and the vital principles underlying its organic structure should
be maintained firm and strong, hard as the best of steel, so as to insure its growth and
development along solid lines of a stable and vigorous democracy." 14
The late Justice Pedro Tuason who penned the initial majority judgment (declaring null and
void the rental and export control executive orders) likewise observed that" (T)he truth is
that under our concept of constitutional government, in times of extreme perils more than
in normal circumstances the various branches, executive, legislative, and judicial, given
the ability to act, are called upon to perform the duties and discharge the responsibilities
committed to them respectively." 15
It should be duly acknowledged that the Courts task of discharging its duty and
responsibility has been considerably lightened by the Presidents public manifestation of
adherence to constitutional processes and of working within the proper constitutional
framework as per his press conference of January 20, 1973, wherein he stated that" (T)he
Supreme Court is the final arbiter of the Constitution. It can and will probably determine
the validity of this Constitution. I did not want to talk about this because actually there is a
case pending before the Supreme Court. But suffice it to say that I recognize the power of
the Supreme Court. With respect to appointments, the matter falls under a general
provision which authorizes the Prime Minister to appoint additional members to the
Supreme Court. Until the matter of the new Constitution is decided, I have no intention of
utilizing that power." 16
Thus, it is that as in an analogous situation wherein the state Supreme Court of Mississippi
held that the questions of whether the submission of the proposed constitutional

76

amendment of the State Constitution providing for an elective, instead of an appointive,


judiciary and whether the proposition was in fact adopted, were justiciable and not political
questions, we may echo the words therein of Chief Justice Whitfield that" (W)e do not seek
a jurisdiction not imposed upon us by the Constitution. We could not, if we would, escape
the exercise of that jurisdiction which the Constitution has imposed upon us. In the
particular instance in which we are now acting, our duty to know what the Constitution of
the state is, and in accordance with our oaths to support and maintain it in its integrity,
imposed on us a most difficult and embarrassing duty, one which we have not sought, but
one which, like all others, must be discharged." 17
In confronting the issues at bar, then, with due regard for my colleagues contrary views,
we are faced with the hard choice of maintaining a firm and strict perhaps, even rigid
stand that the Constitution is a "superior paramount law, unchangeable by ordinary
means" save in the particular mode and manner prescribed therein by the people, who, in
Cooleys words, so "tied up (not only) the hands of their official agencies, but their own
hands as well" 18 in the exercise of their sovereign will or a liberal and flexible stand that
would consider compliance with the constitutional article on the amending process as
merely directory rather than mandatory.
The first choice of a strict stand, as applied to the cases at bar, signifies that the
Constitution may be amended in toto or otherwise exclusively "by approval by a majority
of the votes cast an election at which the amendments are submitted to the people for
their ratification", 19 participated in only by qualified and duly registered voters twentyone years of age or over 20 and duly supervised by the Commission on Elections, 21 in
accordance with the cited mandatory constitutional requirements.
The alternative choice of a liberal stand would permit a disregard of said requirements on
the theory urged by respondents that "the procedure outlined in Article XV was not
intended to be exclusive of other procedures especially one which contemplates popular
and direct participation of the citizenry", 22 that the constitutional age and literacy
requirements and other statutory safeguards for ascertaining the will of the majority of the
people may likewise be changed as "suggested, if not prescribed, by the people (through
the Citizens Assemblies) themselves", 23 and that the Comelec is constitutionally
"mandated to oversee . . . elections (of public officers) and not plebiscites." 24
To paraphrase U.S. Chief Justice John Marshall who first declared in the historic 1803 case
of Marbury v. Madison 25 the U.S. Supreme Courts power of judicial review and to declare
void laws repugnant to the Constitution, there is no middle ground between these two
alternatives. As Marshall expounded it:" (T)he Constitution is either a superior paramount
law, unchangeable by ordinary means, or it is on a level with ordinary legislative acts, and,
like other acts, is alterable when the legislature shall please to alter it. If the former part of
the alternative be true, then a legislative act, contrary to the Constitution, is not law; if the
latter part be true, then written constitutions are absurd attempts on the part of a people,
to limit a power, in its own nature, illimitable."cralaw virtua1aw library
As was to be restated by Justice Jose P. Laurel a century and a third later in the 1936
landmark case of Angara v. Electoral Commission, 26" (T)he Constitution sets forth in no
uncertain language the restrictions and limitations upon governmental powers and
agencies. If these restrictions and limitations are transcended it would be inconceivable if
the Constitution had not provided for a mechanism by which to direct the course of
government along constitutional channels, for then the distribution of powers would be
mere verbiage, the bill of rights mere expressions of sentiment, and the principles of good
government mere political apothegms. Certainly, the limitations of good government and
restrictions embodied in our Constitution are real as they should be in any living
Constitution."cralaw virtua1aw library

Justice Laurel pointed out that in contrast to the United States Constitution, the Philippine
Constitution as "a definition of the powers of government" placed upon the judiciary the
great burden of "determining the nature, scope and extent of such powers" and stressed
that "when the judiciary mediates to allocate constitutional boundaries, it does not assert
any superiority over the other departments . . . but only asserts the solemn and sacred
obligation entrusted 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 the instrument secures and guarantees to them."cralaw virtua1aw library
II
Marshall was to utter much later in the equally historic 1819 case of McCulloch v. Maryland
27 the "climactic phrase," 28 "we must never forget that it is a constitution we are
expounding," termed by Justice Frankfurter as "the single most important utterance in
the literature of constitutional law most important because most comprehensive and
comprehending." 29 This enduring concept to my mind permeated this Courts exposition
and rationale in the hallmark case of Tolentino, wherein we rejected the contentions on the
Conventions behalf "that the issue . . . is a political question and that the Convention
being a legislative body of the highest order is sovereign, and as such, its acts impugned
by petitioner are beyond the control of Congress and the Courts." 30
This Court therein made its unequivocal choice of strictly requiring faithful (which really
includes substantial) compliance with the mandatory requirements of the amending
process.
1. In denying reconsideration of our judgment of October 16, 1971 prohibiting the
submittal in an advance election of the 1971 Constitutional Conventions Organic
Resolution No. 1 proposing to amend Article V, section 1 of the Constitution by lowering
the voting age to 18 years (vice 21 years) 30a "without prejudice to other amendments
that will be proposed in the future . . . on other portions of the amended section", this
Court stated that "the constitutional provision in question (as proposed) presents no doubt
which may be resolved in favor of respondents and intervenors. We do not believe such
doubt can exist only because it is urged that the end sought to be achieved is to be
desired. Paraphrasing no less than the President of the Constitutional Convention of 1934,
Claro M. Recto, let those who would put aside, invoking grounds at best controversial, any
mandate of the fundamental law purportedly in order to attain some laudable objective
bear in mind that someday somehow others with purportedly more laudable objectives
may take advantage of the precedent and continue the destruction of the Constitution,
making those who laid down the precedent of justifying deviations from the requirements
of the Constitution the victims of their own fully." 31
2. This Court held in Tolentino that:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
". . . 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

77

of care is taken in preparing and drafting it. A constitution worthy of the people for
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 handwork 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 in the people themselves, in regard to the process of their amendment. And when
such limitations or conditions are so incorporated in the original constitution, it does not lie
in the delegates of any subsequent convention to claim that they may ignore and
disregard such conditions because they are as powerful and omnipotent as their original
counterparts." 32
3. This Court in Tolentino likewise formally adopted the doctrine of proper submission first
advanced in Gonzales v. Comelec 33 , thus:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"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 se as 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, 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 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." 34
4. Four other members of the Court 35 in a separate concurrence in Tolentino, expressed
their "essential agreement" with Justice Sanchez separate opinion in Gonzales on the
need for" fair submission (and) intelligent consent or rejection" as "minimum requirement
that must be met in order that there can be a proper submission to the people of a
proposed constitutional amendment" thus:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
". . . 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. By this, we are not to
be understood as saying that, if one citizen or 100 citizens or 1,000 citizens cannot be

reached, then there is no submission within the meaning of the word as intended by the
framers of the Constitution. 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" 36
They stressed further the need for undivided attention, sufficient information and full
debate, conformably to the intendment of Article XV, section 1 of the Constitution, in this
wise:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"A number of doubts or misgivings could conceivably and logically assail the average
voter. Why should the voting age be lowered at all, in the first place? Why should the new
voting age be precisely 18 years, and not 19 or 20? And why not 17? Or even 16 or 15? Is
the 18- year old as mature as the 21-year old so that there is no need of an educational
qualification to entitle him to vote? In this age of permissiveness and dissent, can the 18year old be relied upon to vote with judiciousness when the 21-year old, in the past
elections, has not performed so well? If the proposed amendment is voted down by the
people, will the Constitutional Convention insist on the said amendment? Why is there an
unseemly haste on the part of the Constitutional Convention in having this particular
proposed amendment ratified at this particular time? Do some of the members of the
Convention have future political plans which they want to begin to subserve by the
approval this year of this amendment? If this amendment is approved, does it thereby
mean that the 18-year old should not also shoulder the moral and legal responsibilities of
the 21-year old? Will he be required to render compulsory military service under the
colors? Will the age of contractual consent be reduced to 18 years? If I vote against this
amendment, will I not be unfair to my own child who will be 18 years old, come 1973?
"The above are just samplings from here, there and everywhere from a domain (of
searching questions) the bounds of which are not immediately ascertainable. Surely, many
more questions can be added to the already long litany. And the answers cannot be had
except as the questions are debated fully, pondered upon purposefully, and accorded
undivided attention.
"Scanning the contemporary scene, we say that the people are not, and by election time
will not be, sufficiently informed of the meaning, nature and effects of the proposed
constitutional amendment. They have not been afforded ample time to deliberate thereon
conscientiously. They have been and are effectively distracted from a full and
dispassionate consideration of the merits and demerits of the proposed amendment by
their traditional pervasive involvement in local elections and politics. They cannot thus
weigh in tranquility the need for and the wisdom of the proposed amendment." 37
5. This Court therein dismissed the plea of disregarding the mandatory requirements of the
amending process "in favor of allowing the sovereign people to express their decision on
the proposed amendments" as "anachronistic in the realm of constitutionalism and
repugnant to the essence of the rule of law," in the following terms:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
". . . The preamble of the Constitution says that the Constitution has been ordained by the
Filipino people, imploring the aid of Divine Providence. Section 1 of Article XV is nothing
more than a part of the Constitution thus ordained by the people. Hence, in construing said
section, We must read it as if the people had said, This Constitution may be amended, but
it is our will that the amendment must be proposed and submitted to Us for ratification
only in the manner herein provided. . . . Accordingly, the real issue here cannot be
whether or not the amending process delineated by the present Constitution may be
disregarded in favor of allowing the sovereign people to express their decision on the

78

proposed amendments, if only because it is evident that 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; rather, it is whether or not the provisional nature of the
proposed amendment and the manner of its submission to the people for ratification or
rejection conform with the mandate of the people themselves in such regard, as expressed
in the Constitution itself." 38
6. This Court, in not heeding the popular clamor, thus stated its position:" (I)t 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." 39
7. The Chief Justice, in his separate opinion in Tolentino concurring with this Courts denial
of the motion for reconsideration, succinctly restated this Courts position on the
fundamentals, as follows:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library
On the premature submission of a partial amendment proposal, with a "temporary
provisional or tentative character" : ." . . a partial amendment would deprive the voters
of the context which is usually necessary for them to make a reasonably intelligent
appraisal of the issue submitted for their ratification or rejection . . . Then, too, the
submission to a plebiscite of a partial amendment, without a definite frame of reference, is
fraught with possibilities which may jeopardize the social fabric. For one thing, it opens the
door to wild speculations. It offers ample opportunities for overzealous leaders and
members of opposing political camps to unduly exaggerate the pros and cons of the partial
amendment proposed. In short, it is apt to breed false hopes and create wrong
impressions. As a consequence, it is bound to unduly strain the peoples faith in the
soundness and validity of democratic processes and institutions."cralaw virtua1aw library
On the plea to allow submission to the sovereign people of the "fragmentary and
incomplete" proposal, although inconsistent with the letter and spirit of the Constitution:
"The view, has, also, been advanced that the foregoing considerations are not decisive on
the issue before Us, inasmuch as the people are sovereign, and the partial amendment
involved in this case is being submitted to them. The issue before Us is whether or not said
partial amendment may be validly submitted to the people for ratification in a plebiscite
to coincide with the local elections in November 1971, and this particular issue will not be
submitted to the people. What is more, the Constitution does not permit its submission to
the people. The question sought to be settled in the scheduled plebiscite is whether or not
the people are in favor of the reduction of the voting age."cralaw virtua1aw library
On a "political" rather than "legalistic" approach: "Is this approach to the problem too
legalistic? This term has several possible connotations. It may mean strict adherence to
the law, which in the case at bar is the Supreme Law of the land. On this point, suffice it to
say that, in compliance with the specific mandate of such Supreme Law, the members of
the Supreme Court have taken the requisite oath to support and defend the
Constitution. . . . Then, again, the term legalistic may be used to suggest inversely that
the somewhat strained interpretation of the Constitution being urged upon this Court be
tolerated or, at least, overlooked, upon the theory that the partial amendment on the
voting age is badly needed and reflects the will of the people, specially the youth. This
course of action favors, in effect, the adoption of a political approach, inasmuch as the
advisability of the amendment and an appraisal of the peoples feeling thereon are political

matters. In fact, apart from the obvious message of the mass media, and, at times, of the
pulpit, the Court has been literally bombarded with scores of handwritten letters, almost all
of which bear the penmanship and the signature of girls, as well as the letterhead of some
secretarian educational institutions, generally stating that the writer is 18 years of age and
urging that she or he be allowed to vote. Thus, the pressure of public opinion has been
brought to bear heavily upon the Court for a reconsideration of its decision in the case at
bar.
"As above stated, however, the wisdom of the amendment and the popularity thereof are
political questions beyond our province. In fact, respondents and the intervenors originally
maintained that We have no jurisdiction to entertain the petition herein, upon the ground
that the issue therein raised is a political one. Aside from the absence of authority to pass
upon political question, it is obviously improper and unwise for the bench to delve into
such questions owing to the danger of getting involved in politics, more likely of a partisan
nature, and, hence, of impairing the image and the usefulness of courts of justice as
objective and impartial arbiters of justiciable controversies.
"Then, too, the suggested course of action, if adopted, would constitute a grievous
disservice to the people and the very Convention itself. Indeed, the latter and the
Constitution it is in the process of drafting stand essentially for the Rule of Law. However,
as the Supreme Law of the land, a Constitution would not be worthy of its name, and the
Constitution called upon to draft it would he engaged in a futile undertaking, if we did not
exact faithful adherence to the fundamental tenets set forth in the Constitution and
compliance with its provisions were not obligatory. If we, in effect, approved, consented to
or even overlooked a circumvention of said tenets and provisions, because of the good
intention with which Resolution No. 1 is animated, the Court would thereby become the
Judge of the good or bad intentions of the Convention and thus be involved in a question
essentially political in nature.
"This is confirmed by the plea made in the motions for reconsideration in favor of the
exercise of judicial statesmanship in deciding the present case. Indeed, politics is the
ward commonly used to epitomize compromise, even with principles, for the sake of
political expediency or the advancement of the bid for power of a given political party.
Upon the other hand, statesmanship is the expression usually availed of to refer to high
politics or parties on the highest level. In any event, qualities, political approach, political
expediency and statesmanship are generally associated, and often identified, with the
dictum that the end justifies the means. I earnestly hope that the administration of justice
in this country and the Supreme Court, in particular, will never adhere to or approve or
indorse such dictum." 40
Tolentino, he pointed out that although" (M)ovants submittal that (T)he primary purpose
for the submission of the proposed amendment lowering the voting age to the plebiscite
on November 8, 1971 is to enable the youth 18 to 20 years who comprise more than three
(3) million of our population to participate in the ratification of the new Constitution in
1972 so as to allow young people who would be governed by the new Constitution to be
given a say on what kind of Constitution they will have is a laudable end, . . . those urging
the vitality and importance of the proposed constitutional amendment and its approval
ahead of the complete and final draft of the new Constitution must seek a valid solution to
achieve it in a manner sanctioned by the amendatory process ordained by our people in
the present Constitution" 41 so that there may be "submitted, not piece- meal, but by
way of complete and final amendments as an integrated whole (integrated either with the
subsisting Constitution or with the new proposed Constitution) . . ."cralaw virtua1aw library
9. The universal validity of the vital constitutional precepts and principles aboveenunciated can hardly be gainsaid. I fail to see the attempted distinction of restricting their

79

application to proposals for amendments of particular provisions of the Constitution and


not to so-called entirely new Constitutions. Amendments to an existing Constitution
presumably may be only of certain parts or in toto, and in the latter case would give rise to
an entirely new Constitution. Where this Court held in Tolentino that "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 it would appeal that
the reverse would equally be true; which is to say, that the adoption of a whole new
Constitution would be of no less importance than any particular amendment and therefore
the necessary care and deliberation as well as the mandatory restrictions and safeguards
in the amending process ordained by the people themselves so that "they (may) be
insulated against precipitate and hasty actions motivated by more or less passing political
moods or fancies" must necessarily equally apply thereto.
III
1. To restate the basic premises, the people provided in Article XV of the Constitution for
the amending process only "by approval by a majority of the votes cast at an election at
which the (duly proposed) amendments are submitted to the people for their ratification"
The people ordained in Article V, section 1 that only those thereby enfranchised and
granted the right of suffrage may speak the "will of the body politic", viz, qualified literate
voters twenty one years of age or over with one years residence in the municipality where
they have registered.
The people, not as yet satisfied, further provided by amendment duly approved in 1940 in
accordance with Article XV, for the creation of an independent Commission on Elections
with "exclusive charge" for the purpose of "insuring free, orderly and honest elections" and
ascertaining the true will of the electorate and more, as ruled by this Court in Tolentino,
in the case of proposed constitutional amendments, insuring proper submission to the
electorate of such proposals. 42
2. A Massachussets case 43 with a constitutional system and provisions analogous to ours,
best defined the uses of the term" people" as a body politic and" people" in the political
sense who are synonymous with the qualified voters granted the right to vote by the
existing Constitution and who therefore are "the sole organs through which the will of the
body politic can be expressed."cralaw virtua1aw library
It was pointed out therein that" (T)he word people may have somewhat varying
significations dependent upon the connection in which it is used. In some connections in
the Constitution it is confined to citizens and means the same as citizens. It excludes
aliens. It includes men, women, and children. It comprehends not only the sane,
competent, law-abiding and educated, but also those who are wholly or in part dependents
and charges upon society by reason of immaturity, mental or moral deficiency or lack of
the common essentials of education. All these persons are secured by the fundamental
guarantees of the Constitution in life, liberty, and property and the pursuit of happiness,
except as these may be limited for the protection of society."cralaw virtua1aw library
In the sense of "body politic (as) formed by voluntary association of individuals" governed
by a constitution and common laws in a "social compact . . . for the common good" and in
another sense of "people" in a "practical sense" for "political purposes" it was therein
fittingly stated that" (I)n this sense, people comprises many who, by reason of want of
years, of capacity or of the educational requirements of Article 20 of the amendments of
the Constitution, can have no voice in government and who yet are entitled to all the
immunities and protection established by the Constitution.People in this aspect is
coextensive with the body politic. But it is obvious that people cannot be used with this
broad meaning in a political signification. The people in this connection means that part

of the entire body of inhabitants who under the Constitution are intrusted with the exercise
of the sovereign power and the conduct of government. The people in the Constitution in
a practical sense means those who under the existing Constitution possess the right to
exercise the elective franchise and who, while that instrument remains in force unchanged,
will be the sole organs through which the will of the body politic can be expressed.People
for political purposes must be considered synonymous with qualified voters."
As was also ruled by the U.S. Supreme Court,." . . While the people are thus the source of
political power, their governments, national and state, have been limited by written
constitutions, and they have themselves thereby set bounds to their own power, as
against the sudden impulse of mere majorities." 44
From the text of Article XV of our Constitution, requiring approval of amendment proposals
"by a majority of the votes cast at an election at which the amendments are submitted to
the people for their ratification", it seems obvious as above-stated that" people" as therein
used must be considered synonymous with "qualified voters" as enfranchised under Article
V, section 1 of the Constitution since only" people" who are qualified voters can exercise
the right of suffrage and cast their votes.
3. Sound constitutional policy and the sheer necessity of adequate safeguards as ordained
by the Constitution and implementing statutes to ascertain and record the will of the
people in free, orderly and honest elections supervised by the Comelec make it imperative
that there be strict adherence to the constitutional requirements laid down for the process
of amending in toto or in part the supreme law of the land.
Even at barrio level 45 the Revised Barrio Charter fixes certain safeguards for the holding
of barrio plebiscites thus: "SEC. 6. Plebiscite. A plebiscite may be held in the barrio when
authorized by a majority vote of the members present in the barrio assembly, there being
a quorom, or when called by at least four members of the barrio council: Provided,
however, That no plebiscite shall be held until after thirty days from its approval by either
body, and such plebiscite has been given the widest publicity in the barrio, stating the
date, time and place thereof, the questions or issues to be decided, action to be taken by
the voters, and such other information relevant to the holding of the plebiscite." 46
As to voting at such barrio plebiscites, the Charter further requires that" (A)ll duly
registered barrio assembly members qualified to vote may vote in the plebiscite. Voting
procedures may be made either in writing as in regular elections, and/or declaration by the
voters to the board of election tellers." 47
The subjects of the barrio plebiscites are likewise delimited thus: "A plebiscite may be
called to decide on the recall of any member of the barrio council. A plebiscite shall be
called to approve any budgetary, supplemental appropriations or special tax ordinances"
and the required majority vote is also specified:" (F)or taking action on any of the above
enumerated measures, majority vote of all the barrio assembly members registered in the
list of the barrio secretary is necessary." 48
The qualifications for voters in such barrio plebiscites and elections of barrio officials 49
comply with the suffrage qualifications of Article V, section 1 of the Constitution and
provide that" (S)EC. 10. Qualifications of Voters and Candidates. Every citizen of the
Philippines, twenty one years of age or over, able to read and write, who has been a
resident of the barrio during the six months immediately preceding the election, duly
registered in the list of voters kept by the barrio secretary, who is not otherwise
disqualified, may vote or be a candidate in the barrio elections." 50
IV

80

1. Since it appears on the face of Proclamation 1102 that the mandatory requirements
under the above-cited constitutional articles have not been complied with and that no
election or plebiscite for ratification as therein provided as well as in section 16 of Article
XVII of the proposed Constitution itself 51 has been called or held, there cannot be said to
have been a valid ratification.
2. Petitioners raised serious questions as to the veracity and genuineness of the reports or
certificates of results purportedly showing unaccountable discrepancies in seven figures in
just five provinces 52 between the reports as certified by the Department of Local
Governments and the reports as directly submitted by the provincial and city executives,
which latter reports respondents disclaimed inter alia as not final and complete or as not
signed; 53 whether the reported votes of approval of the proposed Constitution
conditioned upon the non-convening of the interim National Assembly provided in Article
XVII, section 1 thereof, 54 may be considered as valid; the allegedly huge and uniform
votes reported; and many others.
3. These questions only serve to justify and show the basic validity of the universal
principle governing written constitutions that proposed amendments thereto or in
replacement thereof may be ratified only in the particular mode or manner prescribed
therein by the people. Under Article XV, section 1 of our Constitution, amendments thereto
may be ratified only in the one way therein provided, i.e. in an election or plebiscite held in
accordance with law and duly supervised by the Commission on Elections, and which is
participated in only by qualified and duly registered voters. In this manner, the safeguards
provided by the election code generally assure the true ascertainment of the results of the
vote and interested parties would have an opportunity to thresh out properly before the
Comelec all such questions in pre-proclamation proceedings.
4. At any rate, unless respondents seriously intend to question the very statements and
pronouncements in Proclamation 1102 itself which shows on its face, as already stated,
that the mandatory amending process required by the (1935) Constitution was not
observed, the cases at bar need not reach the stage of answering the host of questions,
raised by petitioners against the procedure observed by the Citizens Assemblies and the
reported referendum results since the purported ratification is rendered nugatory by
virtue of such non-observance.
5. Finally, as to respondents argument that the President issued Proclamation 1102 "as
agent of the Constitutional Convention" 55 under Resolution No. 5844 approved on
November 22, 1973, and "as agent of the Convention the President could devise other
forms of plebiscite to determine the will of the majority vis-a-vis the ratification of the
proposed Constitution." 56
The minutes of November 22, 1972, of the Convention, however, do not at all support this
contention. On the contrary, the said minutes fully show that the Conventions proposal
and "agency" was that the President issue a decree precisely calling a plebiscite for the
ratification of the proposed new Constitution on an appropriate date, under the charge of
the Comelec, and with a reasonable period for an information campaign, as
follows:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"12. Upon recognition by the Chair, Delegate Duavit moved for the approval of the
resolution, the resolution portion of which read as follows:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library
RESOLVED, AS IT IS HEREBY RESOLVED, that the 1971 Constitutional Convention propose
to President Ferdinand E. Marcos that a decree be issued calling a plebiscite for the
ratification of the proposed New Constitution on such appropriate date as he shall
determine and providing for the necessary funds therefor, and that copies of this

resolution as approved in plenary session be transmitted to the President of the Philippines


and the Commission on Elections for implementation.
"He suggested that in view of the expected approval of the final draft of the new
Constitution by the end of November 1972 according to the Conventions timetable, it
would be necessary to lay the groundwork for the appropriate agencies of the government
to undertake the necessary preparation for the plebiscite.
"x
x
x
"12.2 Interpellating, Delegate Pimentel (V.) contended that the resolution was unnecessary
because section 15, Article XVII on the Transitory Provision, which had already been
approved on second and third readings, provided that the new constitution should be
ratified in a plebiscite called for the purpose by the incumbent President. Delegate Duavit
replied that the provision referred to did not include the appropriation of funds for the
plebiscite and that moreover, the resolution was intended to serve formal notice to the
President and the Commission on Elections to initiate the necessary preparations.
"x
x
x
"12.4 Interpellating, Delegate Madarang suggested that a reasonable period for an
information campaign was necessary in order to properly apprise the people of the
implications and significance of the new charter. Delegate Duavit agreed, adding that this
was precisely why the resolution was modified to give the President the discretion to
choose the most appropriate date for the plebiscite.
"12.5 Delegate Laggui asked whether a formal communication to the President informing
him of the adoption of the new Constitution would not suffice considering that under
Section 15 of the Transitory Provisions, the President would be duty-bound to call a
plebiscite forits ratification. Delegate Duavit replied in the negative, adding that the
resolution was necessary to serve notice to the proper authorities to prepare everything
necessary for the plebiscite.
"12.6 In reply to Delegate Britanico, Delegate Duavit stated that the mechanics for the
holding of the plebiscite would he laid down by the Commission on Elections, in
coordination with the President.
"12.7 Delegate Catan inquired if such mechanics for the plebiscite could include a partial
lifting of martial law in order to allow the people to assemble peaceably to discuss the new
Constitution. Delegate Duavit suggested that the Committee on Plebiscite and Ratification
could coordinate with the COMELEC on the matter.
"12.8 Delegate Guzman moved for the previous question. The Chair declared that there
was one more interpellant and that a prior reservation had been made for the presentation
of such a motion.
1.8a Delegate Guzman withdrew his motion.
"12.9 Delegate Astilla suggested in his interpellation that there was actually no need for
such a resolution in view of the provision of section 15, Article XVII on the Transitory
Provisions. Delegate Duavit disagreed, pointing out that the said provision did not provide
for the funds necessary for the purpose.
"13. Delegate Ozamiz moved to close the debate and proceed to the period of
amendment.
"13.1 Floor Leader Montejo stated that there were no reservations to amend the resolution.
"13.2 Delegate Ozamiz then moved for the previous question. Submitted to a vote, the
motion was approved.
"Upon request of the Chair, Delegate Duavit restated the resolution for voting.

81

"14.1. Delegate Ordoez moved for nominal voting. Submitted to a vote, the motion was
lost.
"14.2. Thereupon, the Chair submitted the resolution to a vote. It was approved by a show
of hands." 57
I, therefore, vote to deny respondents motion to dismiss and to give due course to the
petitions.
Promulgated: June 4, 1973 *
ANTONIO, J.:
In conformity with my reservation, I shall discuss the grounds for my concurrence.
I
It is my view that to preserve the independence of the State, the maintenance of the
existing constitutional order and the defense of the political and social liberties of the
people, in times of a grave emergency, when the legislative branch of the government is
unable to function or its functioning would itself threaten the public safety, the Chief
Executive may promulgate measures legislative in character, for the successful
prosecution of such objectives. For the "Presidents power as Commander-in-chief has been
transformed from a simple power of military command to a vast reservoir of indeterminate
powers in time of emergency . . . In other words, the principal canons of constitutional
interpretation are . . . set aside so far as concerns both the scope of the national power
and the capacity of the President to gather unto himself all constitutionally available
powers in order the more effectively to focus them upon the task of the hour." (Corwin, The
President: Office & Powers, pp. 317, 318, [1948]).
1. The proclamation of martial rule, ushered the commencement of a crisis government in
this country. In terms of power, crisis government in a constitutional democracy entails the
concentration of governmental power. "The more complete the separation of powers in a
constitutional system, the more difficult, and yet the more necessary" according to
Rossiter, "will be their fusion in time of crisis . . . The power of the state in crisis must not
only be concentrated and expanded, it must be freed from the normal system of
constitutional and legal limitations. One of the basic features of emergency powers is the
release of the government from the paralysis of constitutional restraints" (Rossiter,
Constitutional Dictatorship, p. 290).
It is clearly recognized that in moments of peril the effective action of the government is
channeled through the person of the Chief Executive. "Energy in the executive", according
to Hamilton, "is essential to the protection of the community against foreign attacks . . . to
the protection of property against those irregular and high-handed combinations which
sometimes interrupt the ordinary course of justice; to the security of liberty against the
enterprises and assaults of ambition, of faction, and of anarchy." (The Federalist, Number
70). "The entire strength of the nation", said Justice Brewer in the Debts ease (158 U.S.
564; 39 L. ed. 1092), "may be used to enforce in any part of the land the full and free
exercise of all national powers and the security of all rights entrusted by the Constitution
to its care." The marshalling and employment of the "strength of the nation" are matters
for the discretion of the Chief Executive. The Presidents powers in time of emergency defy
precise definition since their extent and limitations are largely dependent upon conditions
and circumstances.
2. The power of the President to act decisively in a crisis has been grounded on the broad
conferment upon the Presidency of the Executive power, with the added specific grant of
power under the "Commander- in-Chief" clause of the constitution. The contours of such
powers have been shaped more by a long line of historical precedents of Presidential
action in times of crisis, rather than judicial interpretation. Lincoln wedded his powers
under the "commander-in- chief" clause with his duty "to take care that the laws be
faithfully executed", to justify the series of extraordinary measures which he took the

calling of volunteers for military service, the augmentation of the regular army and navy,
the payment of two million dollars from unappropriated funds in the Treasury to persons
unauthorized to receive it, the closing of the Post Office to "treasonable correspondence",
the blockade of southern ports, the suspension of the writ of habeas corpus, the arrest and
detention of persons who were represented to him" as being engaged in or contemplating
"treasonable practices" all this for the most part without the least statutory
authorization. Those actions were justified by the imperatives of his logic, that the
President may, in an emergency thought by him to require it, partially suspend the
constitution. Thus his famous question: "Are all laws but one to be unexecuted, and the
Government itself go to pieces lest that one be violated?" The actions of Lincoln "assert for
the President", according to Corwin, "an initiative of indefinite scope and legislative in
effect in meeting the domestic aspects of a war emergency." (Corwin, The President: Office
& Powers, p. 280 [1948]). The facts of the civil war have shown conclusively that in
meeting the domestic problems as a consequence of a great war, an indefinite power must
be attributed to the President to take emergency measures. The concept of "emergency"
under which the Chief Executive exercised extraordinary powers underwent correlative
enlargement during the first and second World Wars. From its narrow concept as an
"emergency" in time of war during the Civil War and World War I, the concept has been
expanded in World War II to include the "emergency" preceding the war and even after it.
"The Second World War" observed Corwin and Koenig, was the First World War writ large,
and the quasi-legislative powers of Franklin Roosevelt as "Commander-in-Chief in
wartime." . . burgeoned correspondingly. The precedents were there to be sure, most of
them from the First World War, but they proliferated amazingly. What is more, Roosevelt
took his first step toward war some fifteen months before our entrance into shooting war.
This step occurred in September, 1940, when he handed over fifty so-called overage
destroyers to Great Britain. The truth is, they were not overage, but had been recently
reconditioned and recommissioned . . . Actually, what President Roosevelt did was to take
over for the nonce Congresss power to dispose of property of the United States (Article IV,
Section 3) and to repeal at least two statutes." (Corwin & Koenig, The Presidency Today,
New York University Press, 1956; sf Corwin, The President: Office and Powers, 1948.)
The creation of public offices is a power confided by the constitution to Congress. And yet
President Wilson, during World War I on the basis of his powers under the "Commander-inChief" clause created "offices" which were copied in lavish scale by President Roosevelt in
World War II. In April 1942, thirty-five "executive agencies" were purely of Presidential
creation. On June 7, 1941 on the basis of his powers as "Commander-in-Chief", he issued
an executive order seizing the North American Aviation plant of Inglewood, California,
where production stopped as a consequence of a strike. This was justified by the
government, as the exercise of Presidential power growing out of the "duty constitutionally
and inherently resting upon the President to exert his civil and military as well as his moral
authority to keep the defense efforts of the United States a going concern" as well as "to
obtain supplies for which Congress has appropriated money, and which it has directed the
President to obtain." On a similar justification other plants and industries were taken over
by the government. It is true that in Youngstown Sheet & Tube v. Sawyer (343 U.S. 579; 72
3. Ct. 863; 96 L. Ed. 1153, [1952]), the Supreme Court of the United States did not sustain
the claims that the President could, as the Nations Chief Executive and as Commander- inChief of the armed forces, validly order the seizure of most of the countrys steel mills. The
Court however did not face the naked question of the Presidents power to seize steel
plants in the absence of any congressional enactment or expressions of policy. The
majority of the Court found that this legislative occupation of the field made untenable the
Presidents claim of authority to seize the plants as an exercise of inherent executive
power or as Commander-in-Chief Justice Clerk in his concurrence to the main opinion of the
Court, explicitly asserted that the President does possess, in the absence of restrictive
legislation, a residual or resultant power above or in consequence of his granted powers,
to deal with emergencies that he regards as threatening the national security. The same

82

view was shared with vague qualifications by Justices Frankfurter and Jackson, two of the
concurring Justices. The three dissenting Justices, speaking through Chief Justice Vinson,
apparently went further by quoting with approval a passage extracted from the brief of the
government in the case of United States v. Midwest Oil Co., (236 U.S. 459, 59 L. Ed. 673,
35 S. Ct. 309) where the court sustained the power of the President to order withdrawals
from the public domain, not only without Congressional sanction but even contrary to
Congressional statutes.

million jobless citizens will not be effected through a scrupulous regard for the tenets of
free enterprise, and hardships caused by the eruptions of nature cannot be mitigated by
letting nature take its course. The Civil War, the depression of 1933, and the recent global
conflict were not and could not have been successfully resolved by governments similar to
those of James Buchanan, William Howard Taft, or Calvin Coolidge." (Rossiter,
Constitutional Dictatorship Crisis of Government in the Modern Democracies, p. 6
[1948;).

It is evident therefore that the Steel Seizure Case, cannot be invoked as an authority to
support the view that the President in times of a grave crisis does not possess a residual
power above or in consequence of his granted powers, to deal with emergencies that he
regards as threatening the national security. The lesson of the Steel Seizure case,
according to Corwin and Koenig, "Unquestionably . . . tends to supplement presidential
emergency power to adopt temporary remedial legislation when Congress has been, in the
judgment of the President, unduly remiss in taking cognizance of and acting on a given
situation." (Corwin and Koenig, The Presidency Today, New York University Press, 1956).

II
We are next confronted with the insistence of Petitioners that the referendum in question
not having been done in accordance with the provisions of existing election laws, where
only qualified voters are allowed to participate, under the supervision of the Commission
on Elections, the new Constitution, should therefore be declared a nullity. Such an
argument is predicated upon an assumption that Article XV of the 1935 Constitution
provides the method for the revision of the constitution, and automatically apply in the
approval of such proposed new Constitution the provisions of the election law and those of
Article V and X of the old Constitution. We search in vain for any provision in the old
charter specifically providing for such procedure in the case of a total revision or a
rewriting of the whole constitution.

The accumulation of precedents has thus built up the presidential power under emergency
conditions to "dimensions of executive prerogative as described by John Locke, of a power
to wit, to fill needed gaps in the law, or even to supersede it so far as may be requisite to
realize the fundamental law of native and government, namely, that as much as may be all
the members of society are to be preserved." (Corwin and Koenig, The Presidency Today).
In the light of the accumulated precedents, how could it be reasonably argued therefore,
that the President had no power to issue Presidential Decree Nos. 86 and 86-A as well as
Proclamation No. 1102, since these measures were considered indispensable to effect the
desired reforms at the shortest time possible and hasten the restoration of normalcy? It is
unavailing for petitioners to contend that we are not faced by an actual "shooting war" for
todays concept of the emergency which justified the exercise of those powers has of
necessity been expanded to meet the exigencies of new dangers and crisis that directly
threaten the nations continued and constitutional existence. For as Corwin observed: ". . .
today the concept of war as a special type of emergency warranting the realization of
constitutional limitations tends to spread, as it were, in both directions, so that there is not
only the war before the war, but the war after the war. Indeed, in the economic crisis
from which the New Deal may be said to have issued, the nation was confronted in the
opinion of the late President with an emergency greater than war; and in sustaining
certain of the New Deal measures the Court invoked the justification of emergency. In the
final result the constitutional practices of wartime have moulded the Constitution to
greater or less extent for peacetime as well, and seem likely to do so still more
pronouncedly under fresh conditions of crisis." (Corwin, Ibid. p. 318.)
The same view was expressed by Rossiter thus:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"The second crisis is rebellion, when the authority of a constitutional government is
resisted openly by large numbers of its citizens who are engaged in violent insurrection
against the enforcement of its laws or are bent on capturing it illegally or even destroying
it altogether. The third crisis, one recognized particularly in modern times as sanctioning
emergency action by constitutional governments, is economic depression. The economic
troubles which plagued all the countries of the world in the early thirties invoked
governmental methods of an unquestionably dictatorial character in many democracies. It
was thereby acknowledged that an economic existence as a war or a rebellion. And these
are not the only crisis which have justified extraordinary governmental action in nations
like the United States. Fire, flood, drought, earthquake, riots, and great strikes have all
been dealt with by unusual and often dictatorial methods. Wars are not won by debating
societies, rebellions are not suppressed by judicial injunctions, the reemployment of twelve

1. There is clearly a distinction between revision and amendment of an existing


constitution. Revision may involve a rewriting of the whole constitution. The act of
amending a constitution, on the other hand, envisages a change of only specific
provisions. The intention of an act to amend is not the change of the entire constitution,
but only the improvement of specific parts of the existing constitution of the addition of
provisions deemed essential as a consequence of new conditions or the elimination of
parts already considered obsolete or unresponsive to the needs of the times. 1 The 1973
Constitution is not a mere amendment to the 1935 Constitution. It is a completely new
fundamental charter embodying new political, social and economic concepts.
According to an eminent authority on Political Law, "The Constitution of the Philippines and
that of the United States expressly provide merely for methods of amendment. They are
silent on the subject of revision. But this is not a fatal omission. There is nothing that can
legally prevent a convention from actually revising the Constitution of the Philippines or of
the United States even were such conventions called merely for the purpose of proposing
and submitting amendments to the people. For in the final analysis it is the approval of the
people that gives validity to any proposal of amendment or revision." (Sinco, Philippine
Political Law, p. 49).
Since the 1936 Constitution does not specifically provide for the method or procedure for
the revision or for the approval of a new constitution, should it now be held that the people
have placed such restrictions on themselves that they are now disabled from exercising
their right as the ultimate source of political power from changing the old constitution
which, in their view, was not responsive to their needs and in adopting a new charter of
government to enable them to rid themselves from the shackles of traditional norms and
to pursue with a new dynamism the realization of their true longings and aspirations,
except in the manner and form provided by Congress for previous plebiscites? Was not the
expansion of the base of political participation, by the inclusion of the youth in the process
of ratification who after all constitute the preponderant majority more in accord with the
spirit and philosophy of the constitution that political power is inherent in the people
collectively? As clearly expounded by Justice Makasiar in his opinion, in all the cases cited
where the Court held that the submission of the proposed amendment was illegal due to
the absence of substantial compliance with the procedure prescribed by the Constitution,
the procedure prescribed by the state Constitution, is so detailed, that it specified the
manner in which such submission shall be made, the persons qualified to vote for the

83

same, the date of election and other definite standards, from which the court could safely
ascertain whether or not the submission was in accordance with the Constitution. Thus the
case of In re McConaughy (119 N.E. 408) relied upon in one of the dissenting opinions
involved the application of the provisions of the state Constitution of Minnesota which
clearly prescribed in detail the procedure under which the Constitution may be amended
or revised. 2 This is not true with our Constitution. In the case of revision there are no
"standards meet for judicial judgment." 3
The framers of our Constitution were free to provide in the Constitution the method or
procedure for the revision or rewriting of the entire constitution, and if such was their
intention, they could and should have so provided. Precedents were not wanting. The
constitutions of the various states of the American Union did provide for procedures for
their amendment, and methods for their revision. 4
Certainly We cannot, under the guise of interpretation, modify, revise, amend, remodel or
rewrite the 1935 Charter. To declare what the law is, or has been, is a judicial power, but to
declare what the law shall be is not within Our judicial competence and authority.
Upon the other hand, since our fundamental charter has not provided the method or
procedure for the revision or complete change of the Constitution, it is evident that the
people have reserved such power in themselves. They decided to exercise it not through
their legislature, but through a Convention expressly chosen for that purpose. The
Convention as an independent and sovereign body has drafted not an amendment but a
completely new Constitution, which decided to submit to the people for approval, not
through an act of Congress, but by means of decrees to be promulgated by the President.
In view of the inability of Congress to act, it was within the constitutional powers of the
President, either as agent of the Constitutional Convention, or under his authority under
martial law, to promulgate the necessary measures for the ratification of the proposed new
Constitution. The adoption of the new Charter was considered as a necessary basis for all
the reforms set in motion under the new society, to root out the causes of unrest. The
imperatives of the emergency underscored the urgency of its adoption. The people in
accepting such procedure and in voting overwhelmingly for the approval of the new
Constitution have, in effect, ratified the method and procedure taken. "When the people
adopt a completely revised or new constitution," said the Court in Wheeler v. Board of
Trustees (37 SE 2nd 322, 326-330), "the framing or submission of the instrument is not
what gives it binding force and effect. The fiat of the people, and only the fiat of the
people, can breathe life into a constitution."cralaw virtua1aw library
This has to be so because, in our political system, all political power is inherent in the
people and free governments are founded on their authority and instituted for their
benefit. Thus Section 1 of Article II of the 1935 Constitution declares that: "Sovereignty
resides in the people and all government authority emanates from them." Evidently the
term people refers to the entire citizenry and not merely to the electorate, for the latter is
only a fraction of the people and is only an organ of government for the election of
government officials.
III
The more compelling question, however is: Has this Court the authority to nullify an entire
Constitution that is already effective as it has been accepted and acquiesced in by the
people as shown by their compliance with the decree promulgated thereunder, their
cooperation in its implementation, and is now maintained by the Government that is in
undisputed authority and dominance?
Of course it is argued that acquiescence by the people cannot be deduced from their acts
of conformity, because under a regime of martial law the people are hound to obey and act

in conformity with the orders of the President, and have absolutely no other choice. The
flaw of this argument lies in its application of a mere theoretical assumption based on the
experiences of other nations on an entirely different factual setting. Such an assumption
flounders on the rock of reality. It is true that as a general rule martial law is the use of
military forces to perform the functions of civil government. Some courts have viewed it as
a military regime which can be imposed in emergency situations. In other words, martial
rule exists when the military rises superior to the civil power in the exercise of some or all
the functions of government. Such is not the case in this country. The government
functions thru its civilian officials. The supremacy of the civil over the military authority is
manifest. Except for the imposition of curfew hours and other restrictions required for the
security of the State, the people are free to pursue their ordinary concerns.
In short, the existing regime in this country, does not contain the oppressive features,
generally associated with a regime of martial law in other countries. "Upon the other hand
the masses of our people have accepted it, because of its manifold blessings. The once
downtrodden rice tenant has at long last, been emancipated a consummation devoutly
wished by every Philippine President since the 1930s. The laborer now holds his head high
because his rights are amply protected and respected." * A new sense of discipline has
swiftly spread beyond the corridors of government into the social order. Responding to the
challenges of the New Society, the people have turned in half a million loose firearms, paid
their taxes on undeclared goods and income in unprecedented numbers and amount, lent
their labors in massive cooperation in land reform, in the repair of dikes, irrigation
ditches, roads and bridges, in reforestation, in the physical transformation of the
environment to make ours a cleaner and greener land. "The entire country is turning into
one vast garden growing food for the body, for thought and for the soul." * More important
the common man has at long last been freed from the incubus of fear.
"Martial law has paved the way for a re-ordering of the basic social structure of the
Philippines" reported Frank Valeo to the United States Senate. "President Marcos has been
prompt and sure- footed in using the power of presidential decree under martial law for
this purpose. He has zeroed in on areas which have been widely recognized as prime
sources of the nations difficulties land tenancy, official corruption, tax evasion and
abuse of oligarchic economic power. Clearly he knows his targets . . . there is marked
public support for his leadership . . ." (Bulletin Today, March 3 and 4, 1973).
In a similar vein, C.L. Sulzberger, a foreign affairs columnist wrote, in the April 11 issue of
The New York Times:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library
During his first Presidential term (1965-1969), Mr. Marcos was discouraged by the failure of
legislators to approve urgently needed reforms. He found his second term further
frustrated by spreading riots, a Maoist uprising in Luzon and a much more serious Moslem
insurrection in the southern islands from Mindanao across the Sulu archipelago to the
frontier regions of Malaysia and Indonesia. Manila claims this war is Maoist-coordinated.
Mr. Marcos has now in effect taken all the reins of power and makes no promise as to when
he will relinquish them. But, while fettering a free press, terminating Congress and locking
up some opponents (many of whom were later amnestied), he has hauled the Philippines
out of stagnation.
Sharecropping is being ended as more than three million acres of arable land are
redistributed with state funds. New roads have been started. The educational system is
undergoing revision, and corruption is diminished. In non-communist Asia it is virtually
impossible to wholly end it and this disagreeable phenomenon still reaches very high.
Mr. Marcos, an imaginative, gifted man, hopes to reshape society by creating an agrarian

84

middle-class to replace the archaic sharecropper-absentee landlord relationship. He is even


pushing a birth control program with the tacit acceptance of the Catholic Church. He has
started labor reforms and increased wages." (Daily Express, April 15, 1973)

Court in its judgment of March 31, 1973 are fully justified.

As explained in this writers opinion of April 24, 1973 on the "Constancia" and
"Manifestation" of counsel for petitioners:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

APPENDIX TO OPINION
(G.R. Nos. L-36142, 36164, 36165, 36236 & 36283)

The new Constitution is considered effective "if the norms created in conformity with it are
by and large applied and obeyed. As soon as the old Constitution loses its effectiveness
and the new Constitution has become effective, the acts that appear with the subjective
meaning of creating or applying legal norms are no longer interpreted by presupposing the
old basic norm, but by presupposing the new one. The statutes issued under the old
Constitution and not taken over are no longer regarded as valid, and the organs authorized
by the old Constitution no longer competent." (Kelsen, Pure Theory of Law, [1967].)

PROVISIONS OF STATE CONSTITUTIONS SPECIFICALLY PROVIDING FOR AMENDMENT AND


REVISION@

The essentially political nature of the question is at once made manifest by understanding
that in the final analysis, what is assailed is not merely the validity of Proclamation No.
1102 of the President, which is merely declaratory of the fact of approval or ratification,
but the legitimacy of the government. It is addressed more to the framework and political
character of this Government which now functions under the new Charter. It seeks to
nullify a Constitution that is already effective.
In such a situation, We do not see how the question posed by petitioners could be judicially
decided. "Judicial power presupposes an established government capable of enacting laws
and enforcing their execution, and of appointing judges to expound and administer them. If
it decides at all as a court, it necessarily affirms the existence and authority of the
government under which it is exercising judicial power." (Luther v. Borden, 48 U.S. [7 How.]
1, 12 L. Ed. 598.)
In other words, where a complete change in the fundamental law has been effected
through political action, the Court whose existence is affected by such change is, in the
words of Mr. Melville Fuller Weston, "precluded from passing upon the fact of change by a
logical difficulty which is not to be surmounted." 5 Such change in the organic law relates
to the existence of a prior point in the Courts "chain of title" to its authority and "does not
relate merely to a question of the horizontal distribution of powers." 6 It involves in
essence a matter which "the sovereign has entrusted to the so-called political departments
of government or has reserved to be settled by its own extra governmental action." 7
The non-judicial character of such a question has been recognized in American law. "From
its earliest opinions this Court has consistently recognized," said Justice Frankfurter, in his
illuminating dissent in Baker v. Carr, 369 U.S. 186, 7 L. Ed. 2d 633, 722, 726, 727), "a class
of controversies which do not lend themselves to judicial standards and judicial remedies.
To classify the various instances as political questions is rather a form of stating this
conclusion than revealing of analysis . . . The crux of the matter is that courts are not fit
instruments of decision where what is essentially at stake is the composition of those large
contests of policy traditionally fought out in non-judicial forums, by which governments
and the actions of governments are made and unmade."cralaw virtua1aw library
The diversity of views contained in the opinions of the members of this Court, in the cases
at bar, cannot be a case of "right" or "wrong" views of the Constitution. It is one of
attitudes and values. For there is scarcely any principle, authority or interpretation which
has not been countered by the opposite. At bottom it is the degree of ones faith in the
nations leadership and in the maturity of judgment of our people.
IN VIEW OF THE FOREGOING, the dismissal of these five cases, and the conclusion of this

Barredo, Makasiar and Esguerra, JJ., concur.

1. Alaska (1959) Art. XIII. Amendment and Revision.


Sec. 1. Amendments. Amendments to this constitution may be proposed by a two-thirds
vote of each house of the legislature. The secretary of state shall prepare a ballot title and
proposition summarizing each proposed amendment, and shall place them on the ballot
for the next statewide election. If a majority of the votes cast on the proposition favor the
amendment, it shall be adopted. Unless otherwise provided in the amendment, it becomes
effective thirty days after the certification of the election returns by the secretary of state.
Sec. 2. Convention. The legislature may call constitutional conventions at any time.
Sec. 3. Call by referendum. If during any ten-year period a constitutional convention has
not been held, the secretary of state shall place on the ballot for the next general election
the question: "Shall there be a Constitutional Convention?" If a majority of the votes cast
on the question are in the negative, the question need not be placed on the ballot until the
end of the next ten-year period. If a majority of the votes cast on the question are in the
affirmative, delegates to the convention shall be chosen at the next regular statewide
election, unless the legislature provides for the election of the delegates at a special
election. The secretary of state shall issue the call for the convention. Unless other
provisions have been made by law, the call shall conform as nearly as possible to the act
calling the Alaska Constitutional Convention of 1955, including, but not limited to, number
of members, districts, election and certification of delegates, and submission and
ratification of revisions and ordinances . . .
Sec. 4. Powers. Constitutional conventions shall have plenary power to amend or revise the
constitution, subject only to ratification by the people. No call for a constitutional
convention shall limit these powers of the convention.
2. California (1879) Art. XVIII. Amending and Revising the Constitution.
Sec. 1. Constitutional amendments. Any amendment or amendments to this Constitution
may be proposed in the Senate or Assembly, and if two-thirds of all the members elected
to each of the two houses shall vote in favor thereof, such proposed amendment or
amendments shall be entered in their Journals, with the yeas and nays taken thereon; and
it shall be the duty of the Legislature to submit such proposed amendment or amendments
to the people in such manner, and at such time, and after such publication as may be
deemed expedient. Should more amendments than one be submitted at the same election
they shall be so prepared and distinguished, by numbers or otherwise, that each can be
voted on separately. If the people shall approve and ratify such amendment or
amendments, or any of them, by a majority of the qualified electors voting thereon such
amendment or amendments shall become a part of this constitution.
Sec. 2. Constitutional convention. Whenever two-thirds of the members elected to each
branch of the Legislature shall deem it necessary to revise this Constitution, they shall
recommend to the electors to vote at the next general election for or against a Convention
for that purpose, and if a majority of the electors voting at such election on the proposition
for a Convention shall vote in favor thereof, the Legislature shall, at its next session,
provide by law for calling the same. The Convention shall consist of a number of delegates

85

not to exceed that of both branches of the Legislature, who shall be chosen in the same
manner, and have the same qualifications, as Members of the Legislature. The delegates
so elected shall meet within three months after their election at such place as the
Legislature may direct. At a special election to be provided for by law, the Constitution that
may be agreed upon by such Convention shall be submitted to the people for their
ratification or rejection, in such manner as the Convention may determine. The returns of
such election shall, in such manner as the Convention shall direct, be certified to the
Executive of the State, who shall call to his assistance the Controller, Treasurer, and
Secretary of State, and compare the returns so certified to him; and it shall be the duty of
the Executive to declare, by his proclamation, such Constitution, as may have been ratified
by a majority of all the votes cast at such special election, to be the Constitution of the
State of California.
2. Colorado (1876) Art. XIX. Amendments.
Sec. 1. Constitutional convention; how called. The general assembly may at any time by a
vote of two-thirds of the members elected to each house, recommend to the electors of
the state, to vote at the next general election for or against a convention to revise, alter
and amend this constitution; and if a majority of those voting on the question shall declare
in favor of such convention, the general assembly shall, at the next session, provide for
the calling thereof. The number of members of the convention shall be twice that of the
senate and they shall be elected in the same manner, at the same places, and in the same
districts. The general assembly shall, in the act calling the convention, designate the day,
hour and place of its meeting; fix the pay of its members and officers, and provide for the
payment of the same, together with the necessary expenses of the convention. Before
proceeding, the members shall take an oath to support the constitution of the United
States, and of the state of Colorado, and to faithfully discharge their duties as members of
the convention. The qualifications of members shall be the same as of members of the
senate; and vacancies occurring shall be filled in the manner provided for filling vacancies
in the general assembly. Said convention shall meet within three months after such
election and prepare such revisions, alterations or amendments to the constitution as may
be deemed necessary; which shall be submitted to the electors for their ratification or
rejection at an election appointed by the convention for that purpose, not less than two
nor more than six months after adjournment thereof; and unless so submitted and
approved by a majority of the electors voting at the election, no such revision, alteration or
amendment shall take effect.
Sec. 2. Amendments to constitution; how adopted. Any amendment or amendments to this
constitution may be proposed in either house of the general assembly, and if the same
shall be voted for by two-thirds of all the members elected to each house, such proposed
amendment or amendments, together with the ayes and noes of each house hereon, shall
be entered in full on their respective journals; the proposed amendment or amendments
shall be published with the laws of that session of the general assembly, and the secretary
of state shall also cause the said amendment or amendments to be published in full in not
more than one newspaper of general circulation in each county, for four successive weeks
previous to the next general election for members of the general assembly; and at said
election the said amendment or amendments shall be submitted to the qualified electors
of the state for their approval or rejection, and such as are approved by a majority of those
voting thereon shall become part of this constitution.
Provided, that if more than one amendment be submitted at any general election, each of
said amendments shall be voted upon separately and votes thereon cast shall be
separately counted the same as though but one amendment was submitted. But the
general assembly shall have no power to propose amendments to more than six articles of
this constitution at the same session.

4. Delaware (1897) Art. XVI. Amendments and Conventions.


Sec. 1. Proposal of constitutional amendments in general assembly; procedure. Any
amendment or amendments to this Constitution may be proposed in the Senate or House
of Representatives; and if the same shall be agreed to by two-thirds of all the members
elected to each House, such proposed amendment or amendments shall be entered on
their journals, with the yeas and nays taken thereon, and the Secretary of State shall
cause such proposed amendment or amendments to be published three months before the
next general election in at least three newspapers in each County in which such
newspapers shall be published; and if in the General Assembly next after the said election
such proposed amendment or amendments shall upon yea and nay vote be agreed to by
two-thirds of all the members elected to each House, the same shall thereupon become
part of the Constitution.
Sec. 2. Constitutional conventions; procedure; compensation of delegates; quorum; powers
and duties; vacancies. The General Assembly by a two thirds vote of all the members
elected to each House may from time to time provide for the submission to the qualified
electors of the State at the general election next thereafter the question, "Shall there be a
Convention to revise the Constitution and amend the same?; and upon such submission, if
a majority of those voting on said question shall decide in favor of a Convention for such
purpose, the General Assembly at its next session shall provide for the election of
delegates to such convention at the next general election. Such Convention shall be
composed of forty-one delegates, one of whom shall be chosen from each Representative
District by the qualified electors thereof, and two of whom shall be chosen from New
Castle County, two from Kent County and two from Sussex County by the qualified electors
thereof respectively. The delegates so chosen shall convene at the Capital of the State on
the first Tuesday in September next after their election. Every delegate shall receive for his
services such compensation as shall be provided by law. A majority of the Convention shall
constitute a quorum for the transaction of business. The Convention shall have power to
appoint such officers, employees and assistants as it may deem necessary, and fix their
compensation, and provide for the printing of its documents, journals, debates and
proceedings. The Convention shall determine the rules of its proceedings, and be the judge
of the elections, returns and qualifications of its members. Whenever there shall be a
vacancy in the office of delegate from any district or county by reason of failure to elect,
ineligibility, death, resignation or otherwise, a writ of election to fill such vacancy shall be
issued by the Governor, and such vacancy shall be filled by the qualified electors of such
district or county.
5. Florida (1887) Art. XVII. Amendments.
Sec. 1. Method of amending constitution. Either branch of the Legislature, at any regular
session, or at any special or extra- ordinary session thereof called for such purpose either
in the governors original call or any amendment thereof, may propose the revision or
amendment of any portion or portions of this Constitution. Any such revision or
amendment may relate to one subject or any number of subjects, but no amendment shall
consist of more than one revised article of the Constitution.
If the proposed revision or amendment is agreed to by three- fifths of the members elected
to each house, it shall be entered upon their respective journals with the yeas and nays
and published in one newspaper in each county where a newspaper is published for two
times, one publication to be made not earlier than ten weeks and the other not later than
six weeks, immediately preceding the election at which the same is to be voted upon, and
thereupon submitted to the electors of the State for approval or rejection at the next
general election, provided, however, that such revision or amendment may be submitted

86

for approval or rejection in a special election under the conditions described in and in the
manner provided by Section 3 of Article XVII of this Constitution. If a majority of the
electors voting upon the amendment adopt such amendment the same shall become a
part of this Constitution.
Sec. 2. Method of revising constitution. If at any time the Legislature, by a vote of twothirds of all the members of both Houses, shall determine that a revision of this
Constitution is necessary, such determination shall be entered upon their respective
Journals, with yeas and nays thereon. Notice of said action shall be published weekly in
one newspaper in every county in which a newspaper is published, for three months
preceding the next general election of Representatives, and in those counties where no
newspaper is published, notice shall be given by posting at the several polling precincts in
such counties for six weeks next preceding said election. The electors at said election may
vote for or against the revision in question. If a majority of the electors so voting be in
favor of revision, the Legislature chosen at such election shall provide by law for a
Convention to revise the Constitution, said Convention to be held within six months after
the passage of such law. The Convention shall consist of a number equal to the
membership of the House of Representatives, and shall be apportioned among the several
counties in the same manner as members of said House.
6. Idaho (1890) Art. XX. Amendments.
Sec. 1: How amendments may be proposed. Any amendment or amendments to this
Constitution may be proposed in either branch of the legislature, and if the same shall be
agreed to by two-thirds of all the members of each of the two houses, voting separately,
such proposed amendment or amendments shall, with the yeas and nays thereon, be
entered on their journals, and it shall be the duty of the legislature to submit such
amendment or amendments to the electors of the state at the next general election, and
cause the same to be published without delay for at least six consecutive weeks, prior to
said election, in not less that one newspaper of general circulation published in each
county; and if a majority of the electors shall ratify the same, such amendment or
amendments shall become a part of this Constitution.
Sec. 3. Revision or amendment by convention. Whenever two-thirds of the members
elected to each branch of the legislature shall deem it necessary to call a convention to
revise or amend this Constitution, they shall recommend to the electors to vote at the next
general election, for or against a convention, and if a majority of all the electors voting at
said election shall have voted for a convention, the legislature shall at the next session
provide by law for calling the same; and such convention shall consist of a number of
members, not less than double the number of the most numerous branch of the
legislature.
7. Iowa (1857) Art. X. Amendments to the Constitution.
Sec 3. Convention. At the general election to be held in the year one thousand eight
hundred and seventy, and in each tenth year thereafter, and also at such times as the
General Assembly may, by law, provide, the question, "Shall there be a Convention to
revise the Constitution, and amend the same?" shall be decided by the electors qualified
to vote for members of the General Assembly; and in case a majority of the electors so
qualified, voting at such election, for and against such proposition, shall decide in favor of
a Convention for such purpose, the General Assembly, at its next session, shall provide by
law for the election of delegates to such Convention.
8. Michigan (1909) Art. XVII. Amendment and Revision.
Sec. 1. Amendment to constitution; proposal by legislature; submission to electors. Any

amendment or amendments to this constitution may be proposed in the senate or house


of representatives. If the same shall be agreed to by 2/3 of the members elected to each
house, such amendment or amendments, shall be entered on the journals, respectively,
with the yeas and nays taken thereon; and the same shall be submitted to the electors at
the next spring or autumn election thereafter, as the legislature shall direct and if a
majority of the electors qualified to vote for members of the legislature voting thereon
shall ratify and approve such amendment or amendments, the same shall become part of
the constitution.
Sec. 4. General revision: convention; procedure. At the Biennial Spring Election to be held
in the year 1961, in each sixteenth year thereafter and at such times as may be provided
by laws, the question of a General Revision of the Constitution shall be submitted to the
Electors qualified to vote for members of the Legislature. In case a majority of the Electors
voting on the question shall decide in favor of a Convention for such purpose, at an
Election to be held not later than four months after the Proposal shall have been certified
as approved, the Electors of each House of Representatives District as then organized shall
Elect One Delegate for each State Representative to which the District is entitled and the
Electors of each Senatorial District as then organized shall Elect One Delegate for each
State Senator to which the District is entitled. The Delegates so elected shall convene at
the Capital City on the First Tuesday in October next succeeding such election, and shall
continue their sessions until the business of the convention shall be completed. A majority
of the delegates elected shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business . . . No
proposed constitution or amendment adopted by such convention shall be submitted to
the electors for approval as hereinafter provided unless by the assent of a majority of all
the delegates elected to the convention, the yeas and nays being entered on the journal.
Any proposed constitution or amendments adopted by such convention shall be submitted
to the qualified electors in the manner provided by such convention on the first Monday in
April following the final adjournment of the convention; but, in case an interval of at least
90 days shall not intervene between such final adjournment and the date of such election,
then it shall be submitted at the next general election. Upon the approval of such
constitution or amendments by a majority of the qualified electors voting thereon such
constitution or amendments shall take effect on the first day of January following the
approval thereof.
9. Minnesota (1867) Art. XIV. Amendments to the Constitution.
Sec. 1. Amendments to constitution; majority vote of electors voting makes amendment
valid. Whenever a majority of both houses of the legislature shall deem it necessary to
alter or amend this Constitution, they may propose such alterations or amendments, which
proposed amendments shall be published with the laws which have been passed at the
same session, and said amendments shall be submitted to the people for their approval or
rejection at any general election, and if it shall appear, in a manner to be provided by law,
that a majority of all the electors voting at said election shall have voted for and ratified
such alterations or amendments, the same shall be valid to all intents and purposes as a
part of this Constitution. If two or more alterations or amendments shall be submitted at
the same time, it shall be so regulated that the voters shall vote for or against each
separately.
Sec. 2. Revision of constitution. Whenever two-thirds of the members elected to each
branch of the legislature shall think it necessary to call a convention to revise this
Constitution, they shall recommend to the electors to vote at the next general election for
members of the legislature, for or against a convention; and if a majority of all the electors
voting at said election shall have voted for a convention, the legislature shall, at their next
session, provide by law for calling the same. The convention shall consist of as many
members as the House of Representatives, who shall be chosen in the same manner, and

87

shall meet within three months after their election for the purpose aforesaid.
Sec. 3. Submission to people of revised constitution drafted at convention. Any convention
called to revise this constitution shall submit any revision thereof by said convention to the
people of the State of Minnesota for their approval or rejection at the next general election
held not less than 90 days after the adoption of such revision, and, if it shall appear in the
manner provided by law that three-fifths of all the electors voting on the question shall
have voted for and ratified such revision, the same shall constitute a new constitution of
the State of Minnesota. Without such submission and ratification, said revision shall be of
no force or effect Section 9 of Article IV of the Constitution shall not apply to election to the
convention.
10. Nevada (1864) Art. 16. Amendments.
Sec. 1. Constitutional amendments; procedure. Any amendment or amendments to this
Constitution may be proposed in the Senate or Assembly; and if the same shall be agreed
to by a Majority of all the members elected to each of the two houses, such proposed
amendment or amendments shall be entered on their respective journals, with the Yeas
and Nays taken thereon, and referred to the Legislature then next to be chosen, and shall
be published for three months next preceding the time of making such choice. And if in the
Legislature next chosen as aforesaid, such proposed amendment or amendments shall be
agreed to by a majority of all the members elected to each house, then it shall be the duty
of the Legislature to submit such proposed amendment or amendments to the people, in
such manner and at such time as the Legislature shall prescribe; and if the people shall
approve and ratify such amendment or amendments by a majority of the electors qualified
to vote for members of the Legislature voting thereon, such amendment or amendments
shall become a part of the Constitution.

purpose, otherwise the general court shall direct the sense of the people to be taken, and
then proceed in the manner before mentioned. The delegates to be chosen in the same
manner, and proportioned, as the representatives to the general court; provided that no
alterations shall be made in this constitution, before the same shall be laid before the
towns and unincorporated places, and approved by two thirds of the qualified voters
present and voting on the subject.
12. Oklahoma (1907) Art. XXIV. Constitutional Amendments.
Sec. 1. Amendments proposed by legislature; submission to vote. Any amendment or
amendments to this Constitution may he proposed in either branch of the Legislature, and
if the same shall be agreed to by a majority of all the members elected to each of the two
houses, such proposed amendment or amendments shall, with the yeas and nays thereon,
he entered in their journals and referred by the Secretary of State to the people for their
approval or rejection, at the next regular general election, except when the Legislature, by
a two-thirds vote of each house, shall order a special election for that purpose. If a
majority of all the electors voting at such election shall vote in favor of any amendment
thereto, it shall thereby become a part of this Constitution.
If two or more amendments are proposed they shall be submitted in such manner that
electors may vote for or against them separately.
No proposal for the amendment or alteration of this Constitution which is submitted to the
voters shall embrace more than one general subject and the voters shall vote separately
for or against each proposal submitted; provided, however, that in the submission of
proposals for the amendment of this Constitution by articles, which embrace one general
subject, each proposed article shall be deemed a single proposals or proposition.

Sec. 2. Convention for revision of constitution; procedure. If at any time the Legislature by
a vote of two-thirds of the Members elected to each house, shall determine that it is
necessary to cause a revision of this entire Constitution they shall recommend to the
electors at the next election for Members of the Legislature, to vote for or against a
convention, and if it shall appear that a majority of the electors voting at such election,
shall have voted in favor of calling a Convention, the Legislature shall, at its next session
provide by law for calling a Convention to be holden within six months after the passage of
such law, and such Convention shall consist of a number of Members not less than that of
both branches of the Legislature. In determining what is a majority of the electors voting at
such election, reference shall be had to the highest number of votes cast at such election
for the candidates for any office or on any question.

Sec. 2. Constitutional convention to propose amendments or new constitution. No


convention shall be called by the Legislature to propose alterations, revisions, or
amendments to this Constitution, or to propose a new Constitution, unless the law
providing for such convention shall first be approved by the people on a referendum vote
at a regular or special election, and any amendments, alterations, revisions, or new
Constitution, proposed by such convention, shall be submitted to the electors of the State
at a general or special election and be approved by a majority of the electors voting
thereon, before the same shall become effective Provided, That the question of such
proposed convention shall be submitted to the people at least once in every twenty years.

11. New Hampshire (1784)

Sec. 1. Method of amending constitution. Any amendment or amendments to this


Constitution may be proposed in either branch of the legislative assembly, and if the same
shall be agreed to by a majority of all the members elected to each of the two houses,
such proposed amendment or amendments shall, with the yeas and nays thereon, be
entered in their journals and referred by the secretary of state to the people for their
approval or rejection, at the next regular general election, except when the legislative
assembly shall order a special election for that purpose. If a majority of the electors voting
on any such amendment shall vote in favor thereof, it shall thereby become a part of this
Constitution. The votes for and against such amendment, or amendments, severally,
whether proposed by the legislative assembly or by initiative petition, shall be canvassed
by the secretary of state in the presence of the governor, and if it shall appear to the
governor that the majority of the votes cast at said election on said amendment, or
amendments, severally, are cast in favor thereof, it shall be his duty forthwith after such
canvass, by his proclamation, to declare the said amendment, or amendments, severally,
having received said majority of votes to have been adopted by the people of Oregon as

Art. 99. Revision of constitution provided for. It shall be the duty of the selectmen, and
assessors, of the several towns and places in this state, in warning the first annual
meetings for the choice of senators, after the expiration of seven years from the adoption
of this constitution, as amended, to insert expressly in the warrant this purpose, among
the others for the meeting, to wit, to take the sense of the qualified voters on the subject
of a revision of the constitution; and, the meeting being warned accordingly, and not
otherwise, the moderator shall take the sense of the qualified voters present as to the
necessity of a revision; and a return of the number of votes for and against such necessity,
shall be made by the clerk sealed up, and directed to the general court at their then next
session; and if, it shall appear to the general court by such return, that the sense of the
people of the state has been taken, and that, in the opinion of the majority of the qualified
voters in the state, present and voting at said meetings, there is a necessity for a revision
of the constitution, it shall be the duty of the general court to call a convention for that

13. Oregon (1859) Art. XVII. Amendments and Revisions.

88

part of the Constitution thereof, and the same shall be in effect as a part of the
Constitution from the date of such proclamation. When two or more amendments shall be
submitted in the manner aforesaid to the voters of this state at the same election, they
shall be so submitted that each amendment shall be voted on separately. No convention
shall be called to amend or propose amendments to this Constitution, or to propose a new
Constitution, unless the law providing for such convention shall first be approved by the
people on a referendum vote at a regular general election. This article shall not be
construed to impair the right of the people to amend this Constitution by vote upon an
initiative petition therefor.
Sec. 2. Method of revising constitution. (1) In addition to the power to amend this
Constitution granted by section 1, Article IV, and section 1 of this Article, a revision of all or
part of this Constitution may be proposed in either house of the Legislative Assembly and,
if the proposed revision is agreed to by at least two- thirds of all the members of each
house, the proposed revision shall, with the yeas and nays thereon, be entered in their
journals and referred by the Secretary of State to the people for their approval or rejection,
notwithstanding section 1, Article IV of this Constitution, at the next regular state-wide
primary election, except when the Legislative Assembly orders a special election for that
purpose. A proposed revision may deal with more than one subject and shall be voted
upon as one question. The votes for and against the proposed revision shall be canvassed
by the Secretary of State in the presence of the Governor and, if it appears to the Governor
that the majority of the votes cast in the election on the proposed revision are in favor of
the proposed revision, he shall, promptly following the canvass, declare, by his
proclamation, that the proposed revision has received a majority of votes and has been
adopted by the people as the Constitution of the State of Oregon or as a part of the
Constitution of the State of Oregon, as the case may be. The revision shall be in effect as
the Constitution or as a part of this Constitution from the date of such proclamation.
14. Utah (1896) Art. 23. Amendments.
Sec. 1. Amendments; method of proposal and approval. Any amendment or amendments
to this Constitution may be proposed in either house of the Legislature, and if two-thirds of
all the members elected to each of the two houses, shall vote in favor thereof, such
proposed amendment or amendments shall be entered on their respective journals with
the yeas and nays taken thereon; and the Legislature shall cause the same to be published
in at least one newspaper in every county of the State, where a newspaper is published,
for two months immediately preceding the next general election, at which time the said
amendment or amendments shall be submitted to the electors of the State, for their
approval or rejection, and if a majority of the electors voting thereon shall approve the
same, such amendment or amendments shall become part of this Constitution. If two or
more amendments are proposed, they shall be so submitted as to enable the electors to
vote on each of them separately.
Sec. 2. Revision of the constitution by convention. Whenever two- thirds of the members,
elected to each branch of the Legislature, shall deem it necessary to call a convention to
revise or amend this Constitution, they shall recommend to the electors to vote at the next
general election, for or against a convention, and, if a majority of all the electors, voting at
such election, shall vote for a convention, The Legislature, at its next session, shall provide
by law for calling the same. The convention shall consist of not less than the number of
members in both branches of the Legislature.
15. Wyoming (1890) Art. XX. Amendments.
Sec. 1. Procedure for amendments. Any amendment or amendments to this constitution
may be proposed in either branch of the legislature, and, if the same shall be agreed to by

two-thirds of all the members of each of the two houses, voting separately, such proposed
amendment or amendments shall, with the yeas and nays thereon, be entered on their
journals, and it shall be the duty of the legislature to submit such amendment or
amendments to the electors of the state at the next general election, and cause the same
to be published without delay for at least twelve (12) consecutive weeks, prior to said
election, in at least one newspaper of general circulation, published in each county, and if
a majority of the electors shall ratify the same, such amendment or amendments shall
become a part of this constitution.
Sec. 2. How voted for. If two or more amendments are proposed, they shall be submitted in
such manner that the electors shall vote for or against each of them separately.
Sec. 3. Constitutional convention; provision for. Whenever two- thirds of the members
elected to each branch of the legislature shall deem it necessary to call a convention to
revise or amend this constitution, they shall recommend to the electors to vote at the next
general election for or against a convention, and if a majority of all the electors voting at
such election shall have voted for a convention, the legislature shall at the next session
provide by law for calling the same; and such convention shall consist of a number of
members, not less than double that of the most numerous branch of the legislature.
Sec. 4. New constitution. Any constitution adopted by such convention shall have no
validity until it has been submitted to and adopted by the people.

JAVELLANA v EXECUTIVE SEC


Case Digest...The Facts, The Issue, The Resolution. Oh i forgot, after that is
The InDigestion.
I just finished my first stage of the Law School Initiation (again)- Making a Case Digest of
Javellana vs. Executive Secretary. Well, the InDigestion comes tomorrow. Hopefully my
Digest can help me out in our Socratic discussion which will lead me in a state of aporia.
They should change the name of the process to Case Dissect. After you dissect then that's
the time you digest it.
Anyway, for whoever may benefit from it (aside from me of course), here's what i
dissected.
_______________________________
Javellana vs. The Executive Secretary
The Facts:
Sequence of events that lead to the filing of the Plebiscite then Ratification Cases.
The Plebiscite Case
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 the
said Convention was held on November 10, 1970, and the 1971 Constitutional Convention
began to perform its functions on June 1, 1971.

89

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.
On December 7, 1972, Charito Planas filed a case 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 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 no sufficient time to inform the people of
the contents thereof."
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 the
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, 1978, 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."
Because 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 appropriate funds therefor, which Congress
unquestionably could do, particularly in view of the formal postponement of the plebiscite
by the President reportedly after consultation with, among others, the leaders of Congress
and the Commission on Elections the Court deemed it more imperative to defer its final
action on these cases.
"In the afternoon of January 12, 1973, the petitioners in Case G.R. No. L-35948 filed an
"urgent motion," praying that said case be decided "as soon as possible, preferably not
later than January 15, 1973."
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 than 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 riled 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."
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:
____________________________
"BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE PHILIPPINES
"PROCLAMATION NO. 1102
"ANNOUNCING THE RATIFICATION BY THE FILIPINO PEOPLE OF THE CONSTITUTION
PROPOSED BY THE 1971 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION.
"WHEREAS, the Constitution proposed by the nineteen hundred seventy-one Constitutional
Convention is subject to ratification by the Filipino people;
"WHEREAS, Citizens Assemblies were created in barrios, in municipalities and in
districts/wards in chartered cities pursuant to Presidential Decree No. 86, dated December
31, 1972, composed of all persons who are residents of the barrio, district or ward for at
least six months, fifteen years of age or over, citizens of the Philippines and who are
registered in the list of Citizen Assembly members kept by the barrio, district or ward
secretary;
"WHEREAS, the said Citizens Assemblies were established precisely to broaden the base of
citizen participation in the democratic process and to afford ample opportunity for the
citizenry to express their views on important national issues;
"WHEREAS, responding to the clamor of the people and pursuant to Presidential Decree
No. 86-A, dated January 5, 1973, the following questions were posed before the Citizens
Assemblies or Barangays: Do you approve of the New Constitution? Do you still want a
plebiscite to be called to ratify the new Constitution?
"WHEREAS, fourteen million nine hundred seventy-six thousand five hundred sixty-one
(14,976,561) members of all the Barangays (Citizens Assemblies) voted for the adoption of
the proposed Constitution, as against seven hundred forty-three thousand eight hundred
sixty-nine (743,869) who voted for its rejection; while on the question as to whether or not
the people would still like a plebiscite to be called to ratify the new Constitution, fourteen
million two hundred ninety-eight thousand eight hundred fourteen (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;
"WHEREAS, since the referendum results show that more than ninety-five (95) per cent of

90

the members of the Barangays (Citizens Assemblies) are in favor of the new Constitution,
the Katipunan ng Mga Barangay has strongly recommended that the new Constitution
should already be deemed ratified by the Filipino people;
"NOW, THEREFORE, I, FERDINAND E. MARCOS, President of the Philippines, by virtue of the
powers in me vested by the Constitution, do hereby certify and proclaim 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 WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the Republic
of the Philippines to be affixed.
"Done in the City of Manila, this 17th day of January, in the year of Our Lord, nineteen
hundred and seventy-three.
(Sgd.) FERDINAND E. MARCOS"President of the Philippines
"By the President:
"ALEJANDRO MELCHOR"Executive Secretar
The Ratification Case
On January 20, 1973, Josue Javellana filed Case G.R. No. L-36142 against the Executive
Secretary and the Secretaries of National Defense, Justice and Finance, to restrain said
respondents "and their subordinates or agents from implementing any of the provisions of
the propose Constitution not found in the present Constitution" referring to that of 1935.
The petition therein, filed by Josue Javellana, as a "Filipino citizen, and a qualified and
registered voter" and as "a class suit, for himself, and in behalf of all citizens and voters
similarly situated," was amended on or about January 24, 1973. After reciting in substance
the facts set forth in the decision in the plebiscite cases, Javellana alleged that the
President had announced "the immediate implementation of the New Constitution, thru his
Cabinet, respondents including," and that the latter "are acting without, or in excess of
jurisdiction in implementing the said proposed Constitution" upon the ground: "that the
President, as Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, 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."
The Issue:
1. Is the issue of the validity of Proclamation No. 1102 a justiciable, or political and
therefore non-justiciable, question?
2. Has the Constitution proposed by the 1971 Constitutional Convention been ratified
validly (with substantial, if not strict, compliance) conformably to the applicable
constitutional and statutory provisions?
3. Has the aforementioned proposed Constitution acquiesced in (with or without valid
ratification) by the people? (acquiesced - "permission" given by silence or passiveness.
Acceptance or agreement by keeping quiet or by not making objections.)
4. Are petitioners entitled to relief?
5. Is the aforementioned proposed Constitution in force?

(Justices Makalintal, Castro, Barredo, Makasiar, Antonio and Esguerra) voted to dismiss the
petition. Concepcion, together Justices Zaldivar, Fernando and Teehankee, voted to grant
the relief being sought, thus upholding the 1973 Constitution.
Details:
1. Is the issue of the validity of Proclamation No. 1102 a justiciable, or political
and therefore non-justiciable, question?
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 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 hands-off out of respect to the people's will,
but, in negative, the Court may determine from both factual and legal angles whether or
not Article XV of the 1935 Constitution been complied with." Justices Makasiar, Antonio,
Esguerra, or three (3) members of the Court hold that the issue is political and "beyond the
ambit of judicial inquiry."
2. Has the Constitution proposed by the 1971 Constitutional Convention been
ratified validly (with substantial, if not strict, compliance) conformably to the
applicable constitutional and statutory provisions?
On the second question of validity of the ratification, Justices Makalintal, Zaldivar, Castro,
Fernando, Teehankee and myself, or six (6) members of the Court also hold that the
Constitution proposed by the 1971 Constitutional Convention was not validly ratified in
accordance with Article XV, section 1 of the 1935 Constitution, which provides only one
way for ratification, i.e., "in an election or plebiscite held in accordance with law and
participated in only by qualified and duly registered voters.
Justice Barredo qualified his vote, stating that "(A)s to whether or not the 1973
Constitution has been validly ratified pursuant to Article XV, I still maintain that in the light
of traditional concepts regarding the meaning and intent of said Article, the referendum in
the Citizens' Assemblies, specially in the manner the votes therein were cast, reported and
canvassed, falls short of the requirements thereof. In view, however, of the fact that I have
no means of refusing to recognize as a judge that factually there was voting and that the
majority of the votes were for considering as approved the 1973 Constitution without the
necessity of the usual form of plebiscite followed in past ratifications, I am constrained to
hold that, in the political sense, if not in the orthodox legal sense, the people may be
deemed to have cast their favorable votes in the belief that in doing so they did the part
required of them by Article XV, hence, it may be said that in its political aspect, which is
what counts most, after all, said Article has been substantially complied with, and, in
effect, the 1973 Constitution has been constitutionally ratified."
Justices Makasiar, Antonio and Esguerra, or three (3) members of the Court hold that under
their view there has been in effect substantial compliance with the constitutional
requirements for valid ratification.

The Resolution:

3. Has the aforementioned proposed Constitution acquiesced in (with or without


valid ratification) by the people?

Summary:
The court was severely divided on the following issues raised in the petition: but when the
crucial question of whether the petitioners are entitled to relief, six members of the court

On the third question of acquiescence by the Filipino people in the aforementioned


proposed Constitution, no majority vote has been reached by the Court.
Four (4) of its members, namely, Justices Barredo, Makasiar, Antonio and Esguerra hold

91

that "the people have already accepted the 1973 Constitution."


Two (2) members of the Court, namely, Justice Zaldivar and myself hold that there can be
no free expression, and there has even been no expression, by the people qualified to vote
all over the Philippines, of their acceptance or repudiation of the proposed Constitution
under Martial Law. Justice Fernando states that "(I)f it is conceded that the doctrine stated
in some American decisions to the effect that independently of the validity of the
ratification, a new Constitution once accepted acquiesced in by the people must be
accorded recognition by the Court, I am not at this stage prepared to state that such
doctrine calls for application in view of the shortness of time that has elapsed and the
difficulty of ascertaining what is the mind of the people in the absence of the freedom of
debate that is a concomitant feature of martial law." 88
Three (3) members of the Court express their lack of knowledge and/or competence to rule
on the question. Justices Makalintal and Castro are joined by Justice Teehankee in their
statement that "Under a regime of martial law, with the free expression of opinions
through the usual media vehicle restricted, (they) have no means of knowing, to the point
of judicial certainty, whether the people have accepted the Constitution."
4. Are petitioners entitled to relief?
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. Justice
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, an 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. Is the aforementioned proposed Constitution in force?
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 VS THE EXECUTIVE SECRETARY
FACTS:
On January 20, 1973, Josue Javellana filed a prohibition case to restrain respondents from
implementing any of the provisions of the proposed constitution not found in the present
constitution. Javellana maintained that the respondents are acting without or in excess of
jurisdiction in implementing proposed constitution and that the president is without power
to proclaim the ratification of the constitution. Similar actions were filed by Vidal Tan,
Gerardo Roxas, among others. Petitioners pray for the nullification of Proclamation 1102
(Citizens Assemblies) and any order, decree, and proclamation which are similar in
objective.
ISSUES:
1. Is the validity of Proclamation No. 1102 justiciable?
2. Was the constitution proposed by the 1971 Constitutional Convention ratified validly in
compliance to applicable laws?
3. Was the proposed Constitution acquiesced by the people?
4. Are the petitioners entitled relief?
5. Is the proposed Constitution in force?
HELD:
Whether a constitutional amendment has been properly adopted according to an existing
constitution is a judicial question as it is the absolute duty of the judiciary to determine
whether the Constitution has been amended in the manner required by the constitution.
The Constitution proposed by the 1971 Convention was not validly ratified in accordance
with Article XV section 1 of the 1935 Constitution which provides only one way for
ratification (election or plebiscite held in accordance with law and only with qualified
voters). Due to the environmental and social conditions in the Philippines (i.e. martial law)
the Court cannot honestly say that the people acquiesced to the proposed Constitution.
The majority ruled to dismiss the cases as the effectivity of the proposed Constitution is
the basic issue posed by the cases which considerations other than judicial are relevant
and unavoidable. The new constitution is in force as there are not enough votes to say
otherwise.

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