Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Facts:
On 27 November 1990, Cory issued EO 438 which imposed, in addition to any other duties,
taxes and charges imposed by law on all articles imported into the Philippines, an additional duty of 5% ad
valorem. This additional duty was imposed across the board on all imported articles, including crude oil
and other oil products imported into the Philippines. In 1991, EO 443 increased the additional duty to 9%.
In the same year, EO 475 was passed reinstating the previous 5% duty except that crude oil and other oil
products continued to be taxed at 9%. Garcia, a representative from Bataan, avers that EO 475 and 478 are
unconstitutional for they violate Sec 24 of Art 6 of the Constitution which provides: " All appropriation,
revenue or tariff bills, bills authorizing increase of the public debt, bills of local application, and private
bills shall originate exclusively in the House of Representatives, but the Senate may propose or concur with
amendments." He contends that since the Constitution vests the authority to enact revenue bills in
Congress, the President may not assume such power of issuing Executive Orders Nos. 475 and 478 which
are in the nature of revenue-generating measures.
Issue:
whether or not EO 475 and 478 are unconstitutional
Held:
Under Section 24, Article VI of the Constitution, the enactment of appropriation, revenue and
tariff bills, like all other bills is, of course, within the province of the Legislative rather than the Executive
Department. It does not follow, however, that therefore Executive Orders Nos. 475 and 478, assuming they
may be characterized as revenue measures, are prohibited to the President, that they must be enacted
instead by the Congress of the Philippines. Section 28(2) of Article VI of the Constitution provides as
follows: "(2) The Congress may, by law, authorize the President to fix within specified limits, and subject
to such limitations and restrictions as it may impose, tariff rates, import and export quotas, tonnage and
wharfage dues, and other duties or imposts within the framework of the national development program of
the Government." There is thus explicit constitutional permission to Congress to authorize the President
"subject to such limitations and restrictions as [Congress] may impose" to fix "within specific limits" "tariff
rates . . . and other duties or imposts . . . ."
FACTS:
Cu-Unjieng was convicted of criminal charges by the trial court of Manila. He filed a motion for
reconsideration and four motions for new trial but all were denied. He then elevated to the Supreme Court
of United States for review, which was also denied. The SC denied the petition subsequently filed by CuUnjieng for a motion for new trial and thereafter remanded the case to the court of origin for execution of
the judgment. CFI of Manila referred the application for probation of the Insular Probation Office which
recommended denial of the same. Later, 7th branch of CFI Manila set the petition for hearing. The Fiscal
filed an opposition to the granting of probation to Cu Unjieng, alleging, among other things, that Act No.
4221, assuming that it has not been repealed by section 2 of Article XV of the Constitution, is nevertheless
violative of section 1, subsection (1), Article III of the Constitution guaranteeing equal protection of the
laws. The private prosecution also filed a supplementary opposition, elaborating on the alleged
unconstitutionality on Act No. 4221, as an undue delegation of legislative power to the provincial boards of
several provinces (sec. 1, Art. VI, Constitution).
ISSUE:
Whether or not there is undue delegation of powers.
RULING:
Yes. SC conclude that section 11 of Act No. 4221 constitutes an improper and unlawful delegation of
legislative authority to the provincial boards and is, for this reason, unconstitutional and void.
The challenged section of Act No. 4221 in section 11 which reads as follows: "This Act shall apply only in
those provinces in which the respective provincial boards have provided for the salary of a probation
officer at rates not lower than those now provided for provincial fiscals. Said probation officer shall be
appointed by the Secretary of Justice and shall be subject to the direction of the Probation Office."
The provincial boards of the various provinces are to determine for themselves, whether the Probation Law
shall apply to their provinces or not at all. The applicability and application of the Probation Act are
entirely placed in the hands of the provincial boards. If the provincial board does not wish to have the Act
applied in its province, all that it has to do is to decline to appropriate the needed amount for the salary of a
probation officer.
The clear policy of the law, as may be gleaned from a careful examination of the whole context, is to make
the application of the system dependent entirely upon the affirmative action of the different provincial
boards through appropriation of the salaries for probation officers at rates not lower than those provided for
provincial fiscals. Without such action on the part of the various boards, no probation officers would be
appointed by the Secretary of Justice to act in the provinces. The Philippines is divided or subdivided into
provinces and it needs no argument to show that if not one of the provinces and this is the actual
situation now appropriate the necessary fund for the salary of a probation officer, probation under Act
No. 4221 would be illusory. There can be no probation without a probation officer. Neither can there be a
probation officer without the probation system.
FACTS:
The petitions challenge the constitutionality of RA No. 8180 entitled An Act Deregulating the
Downstream Oil Industry and For Other Purposes. The deregulation process has two phases: (a) the
transition phase (Aug. 12, 1996) and the (b) full deregulation phase (Feb. 8, 1997 through EO No. 372).
Sec. 15 of RA No. 8180 constitutes an undue delegation of legislative power to the President and the Sec.
of Energy because it does not provide a determinate or determinable standard to guide the Executive
Branch in determining when to implement the full deregulation of the downstream oil industry, and the law
does not provide any specific standard to determine when the prices of crude oil in the world market are
considered to be declining nor when the exchange rate of the peso to the US dollar is considered stable.
ISSUE:
HELD/RULING:
(a) NO. Sec. 15 can hurdle both the completeness test and the sufficient standard test. RA No. 8180
provided that the full deregulation will start at the end of March 1997 regardless of the occurrence of any
event. Thus, the law is complete on the question of the final date of full deregulation.
Sec. 15 lays down the standard to guide the judgment of the Presidenthe is to time it as far as practicable
when the prices of crude oil and petroleum in the world market are declining and when the exchange rate of
the peso to the US dollar is considered stable.
Webster defines practicable as meaning possible to practice or perform, decline as meaning to take a
downward direction, and stable as meaning firmly established.
(b) YES. Sec. 15 did not mention the depletion of the OPSF fund as a factor to be given weight by the
Executive before ordering full deregulation. The Executive department failed to follow faithfully the
standards set by RA No. 8180 when it co0nsidered the extraneous factor of depletion of the OPSF fund.
The Executive is bereft of any right to alter either by subtraction or addition the standards set in RA No.
8180 for it has no powers to make laws.
THE FACTS
Several laws pertaining to the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) were enacted by
Congress. Republic Act (RA) No. 6734 is the organic act that established the ARMM and scheduled the first regular
elections for the ARMM regional officials. RA No. 9054 amended the ARMM Charter and reset the regular elections
for the ARMM regional officials to the second Monday of September 2001. RA No. 9140 further reset the first
regular elections to November 26, 2001. RA No. 9333 reset for the third time the ARMM regional elections to the
2nd Monday of August 2005 and on the same date every 3 years thereafter.
Pursuant to RA No. 9333, the next ARMM regional elections should have been held on August 8, 2011.
COMELEC had begun preparations for these elections and had accepted certificates of candidacies for the various
regional offices to be elected. But on June 30, 2011, RA No. 10153 was enacted, resetting the next ARMM regular
elections to May 2013 to coincide with the regular national and local elections of the country.
In these consolidated petitions filed directly with the Supreme Court, the petitioners assailed the
constitutionality of RA No. 10153.
II. THE ISSUES:
1.
2.
Does the 1987 Constitution mandate the synchronization of elections [including the ARMM elections]?
Does the passage of RA No. 10153 violate the three-readings-on-separate-days rule under Section 26(2), Article VI
of the 1987 Constitution?
3. Is the grant [to the President] of the power to appoint OICs constitutional?
III. THE RULING
[The Supreme Court] DISMISSED the petitions and UPHELD the constitutionality of RA No. 10153 in
toto.]
1.
the constitutional mandate to hold synchronized national and local elections, starting the second Monday of May
1992 and for all the following elections.
In this case, the ARMM elections, although called regional elections, should be included among the
elections to be synchronized as it is a local election based on the wording and structure of the Constitution.
Thus, it is clear from the foregoing that the 1987 Constitution mandates the synchronization of elections,
including the ARMM elections.
2.
NO, the passage of RA No. 10153 DOES NOT violate the three-readings-on-separate-days requirement in Section
26(2), Article VI of the 1987 Constitution.
The general rule that before bills passed by either the House or the Senate can become laws they must pass
through three readings on separate days, is subject to the EXCEPTION when the President certifies to the necessity
of the bills immediate enactment. The Court, in Tolentino v. Secretary of Finance, explained the effect of the
Presidents certification of necessity in the following manner:
The presidential certification dispensed with the requirement not only of printing but also that of reading the
bill on separate days. The phrase "except when the President certifies to the necessity of its immediate enactment,
etc." in Art. VI, Section 26[2] qualifies the two stated conditions before a bill can become a law: [i] the bill has
passed three readings on separate days and [ii] it has been printed in its final form and distributed three days before it
is finally approved.
In the present case, the records show that the President wrote to the Speaker of the House of Representatives
to certify the necessity of the immediate enactment of a law synchronizing the ARMM elections with the national
and local elections. Following our Tolentino ruling, the Presidents certification exempted both the House and the
Senate from having to comply with the three separate readings requirement.
3.
YES, the grant [to the President] of the power to appoint OICs in the ARMM is constitutional
[During the oral arguments, the Court identified the three options open to Congress in order to resolve the
problem on who should sit as ARMM officials in the interim [in order to achieve synchronization in the 2013
elections]: (1) allow the [incumbent] elective officials in the ARMM to remain in office in a hold over capacity until
those elected in the synchronized elections assume office; (2) hold special elections in the ARMM, with the terms of
those elected to expire when those elected in the [2013] synchronized elections assume office; or (3) authorize the
President to appoint OICs, [their respective terms to last also until those elected in the 2013 synchronized elections
assume office.]
3.1.
1st option: Holdover is unconstitutional since it would extend the terms of office of the incumbent ARMM officials
We rule out the [hold over] option since it violates Section 8, Article X of the Constitution . This provision
states:
Section 8. The term of office of elective local officials, except barangay officials, which shall be determined by
law, shall be three years and no such official shall serve for more than three consecutive terms. [emphases ours]
Since elective ARMM officials are local officials, they are covered and bound by the three-year term limit
prescribed by the Constitution; they cannot extend their term through a holdover. xxx.
If it will be claimed that the holdover period is effectively another term mandated by Congress, the net result
is for Congress to create a new term and to appoint the occupant for the new term. This view like the extension of
the elective term is constitutionally infirm because Congress cannot do indirectly what it cannot do directly, i.e., to
act in a way that would effectively extend the term of the incumbents. Indeed, if acts that cannot be legally done
directly can be done indirectly, then all laws would be illusory. Congress cannot also create a new term and
effectively appoint the occupant of the position for the new term. This is effectively an act of appointment by
Congress and an unconstitutional intrusion into the constitutional appointment power of the President. Hence,
holdover whichever way it is viewed is a constitutionally infirm option that Congress could not have undertaken.
Even assuming that holdover is constitutionally permissible, and there had been statutory basis for it (namely
Section 7, Article VII of RA No. 9054) in the past, we have to remember that the rule of holdover can only apply as
an available option where no express or implied legislative intent to the contrary exists; it cannot apply where such
contrary intent is evident.
Congress, in passing RA No. 10153, made it explicitly clear that it had the intention of suppressing the
holdover rule that prevailed under RA No. 9054 by completely removing this provision. The deletion is a policy
decision that is wholly within the discretion of Congress to make in the exercise of its plenary legislative powers; this
Court cannot pass upon questions of wisdom, justice or expediency of legislation, except where an attendant
unconstitutionality or grave abuse of discretion results.
3.2.
2nd option: Calling special elections is unconstitutional since COMELEC, on its own, has no authority to order
special elections.
The power to fix the date of elections is essentially legislative in nature. [N]o elections may be held on any
other date for the positions of President, Vice President, Members of Congress and local officials, except when so
provided by another Act of Congress, or upon orders of a body or officer to whom Congress may have delegated
either the power or the authority to ascertain or fill in the details in the execution of that power.
Notably, Congress has acted on the ARMM elections by postponing the scheduled August 2011 elections and
setting another date May 13, 2011 for regional elections synchronized with the presidential, congressional and
other local elections. By so doing, Congress itself has made a policy decision in the exercise of its legislative
wisdom that it shall not call special elections as an adjustment measure in synchronizing the ARMM elections with
the other elections.
After Congress has so acted, neither the Executive nor the Judiciary can act to the contrary by ordering
special elections instead at the call of the COMELEC. This Court, particularly, cannot make this call without thereby
supplanting the legislative decision and effectively legislating. To be sure, the Court is not without the power to
declare an act of Congress null and void for being unconstitutional or for having been exercised in grave abuse of
discretion. But our power rests on very narrow ground and is merely to annul a contravening act of Congress; it is
not to supplant the decision of Congress nor to mandate what Congress itself should have done in the exercise of its
legislative powers.
Thus, in the same way that the term of elective ARMM officials cannot be extended through a holdover, the
term cannot be shortened by putting an expiration date earlier than the three (3) years that the Constitution itself
commands. This is what will happen a term of less than two years if a call for special elections shall prevail. In
sum, while synchronization is achieved, the result is at the cost of a violation of an express provision of the
Constitution.
3.3.
3rd option: Grant to the President of the power to appoint ARMM OICs in the interim is valid.
The above considerations leave only Congress chosen interim measure RA No. 10153 and the
appointment by the President of OICs to govern the ARMM during the pre-synchronization period pursuant to
Sections 3, 4 and 5 of this law as the only measure that Congress can make. This choice itself, however, should be
examined for any attendant constitutional infirmity.
At the outset, the power to appoint is essentially executive in nature, and the limitations on or qualifications
to the exercise of this power should be strictly construed; these limitations or qualifications must be clearly stated in
order to be recognized. The appointing power is embodied in Section 16, Article VII of the Constitution, which
states:
Section 16. The President shall nominate and, with the consent of the Commission on Appointments, appoint
the heads of the executive departments, ambassadors, other public ministers and consuls or officers of the armed
forces from the rank of colonel or naval captain, and other officers whose appointments are vested in him in this
Constitution. He shall also appoint all other officers of the Government whose appointments are not otherwise
provided for by law, and those whom he may be authorized by law to appoint. The Congress may, by law, vest the
appointment of other officers lower in rank in the President alone, in the courts, or in the heads of departments,
agencies, commissions, or boards. [emphasis ours]
This provision classifies into four groups the officers that the President can appoint. These are:
First, the heads of the executive departments; ambassadors; other public ministers and consuls; officers of the
Armed Forces of the Philippines, from the rank of colonel or naval captain; and other officers whose appointments
are vested in the President in this Constitution;
Second, all other officers of the government whose appointments are not otherwise provided for by law;
Third, those whom the President may be authorized by law to appoint; and
Fourth, officers lower in rank whose appointments the Congress may by law vest in the President alone.
Since the Presidents authority to appoint OICs emanates from RA No. 10153, it falls under the third group
of officials that the President can appoint pursuant to Section 16, Article VII of the Constitution. Thus, the assailed
law facially rests on clear constitutional basis.
If at all, the gravest challenge posed by the petitions to the authority to appoint OICs under Section 3 of RA
No. 10153 is the assertion that the Constitution requires that the ARMM executive and legislative officials to be
elective and representative of the constituent political units. This requirement indeed is an express limitation whose
non-observance in the assailed law leaves the appointment of OICs constitutionally defective.
After fully examining the issue, we hold that this alleged constitutional problem is more apparent than real
and becomes very real only if RA No. 10153 were to be mistakenly read as a law that changes the elective and
representative character of ARMM positions. RA No. 10153, however, does not in any way amend what the organic
law of the ARMM (RA No. 9054) sets outs in terms of structure of governance. What RA No. 10153 in fact only
does is to appoint officers-in-charge for the Office of the Regional Governor, Regional Vice Governor and
Members of the Regional Legislative Assembly who shall perform the functions pertaining to the said offices until
the officials duly elected in the May 2013 elections shall have qualified and assumed office. This power is far
different from appointing elective ARMM officials for the abbreviated term ending on the assumption to office of the
officials elected in the May 2013 elections.
[T]he legal reality is that RA No. 10153 did not amend RA No. 9054. RA No. 10153, in fact, provides only
for synchronization of elections and for the interim measures that must in the meanwhile prevail. And this is how
RA No. 10153 should be read in the manner it was written and based on its unambiguous facial terms. Aside from
its order for synchronization, it is purely and simply an interim measure responding to the adjustments that the
synchronization requires.
On August 1, 1989 or two years after the effectivity of the 1987 Constitution, Congress acted through Republic Act
(RA) No. 6734 entitled "An Act Providing for an Organic Act for the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao."The
initially assenting provinces were Lanao del Sur,Maguindanao, Sulu and Tawi-tawi.RA No. 6734 scheduled the first
regular elections for the regional officials of the ARMM on a date not earlier than 60 days nor later than 90 days after
its ratification.
Thereafter, R.A. No. 9054 was passed to further enhance the structure of ARMM under R.A. 6734. Along with it is
the reset of the regular elections for the ARMM regional officials to the second Monday of September 2001.
RA No. 9333was subsequently passed by Congress to reset the ARMM regional elections to the 2 ndMonday of
August 2005, and on the same date every 3 years thereafter. Unlike RA No. 6734 and RA No. 9054, RA No. 9333
was not ratified in a plebiscite.
Pursuant to RA No. 9333, the next ARMM regional elections should have been held onAugust 8, 2011. COMELEC
had begun preparations for these elections and had accepted certificates of candidacies for the various regional
offices to be elected.But onJune 30, 2011, RA No. 10153 was enacted, resetting the ARMM elections to May 2013,
to coincide with the regular national and local elections of the country.With the enactment into law of RA No. 10153,
the COMELEC stopped its preparations for the ARMM elections.
Several cases for certiorari, prohibition and madamus originating from different parties arose as a consequence of
the passage of R.A. No. 9333 and R.A. No. 10153 questioning the validity of said laws.
OnSeptember 13, 2011, the Court issued a temporary restraining order enjoining the implementation of RA No.
10153 and ordering the incumbent elective officials of ARMM to continue to perform their functions should these
cases not be decided by the end of their term onSeptember 30, 2011.
The petitioners assailing RA No. 9140, RA No. 9333 and RA No. 10153 assert that these laws amend RA No. 9054
and thus, have to comply with the supermajority vote and plebiscite requirements prescribed under Sections 1 and 3,
Article XVII of RA No. 9094 in order to become effective.
The petitions assailing RA No. 10153 further maintain that it is unconstitutional for its failure to comply with the
three-reading requirement of Section 26(2), Article VI of the Constitution.Also cited as grounds are the alleged
violations of the right of suffrage of the people of ARMM, as well as the failure to adhere to the "elective and
representative" character of the executive and legislative departments of the ARMM. Lastly, the petitioners
challenged the grant to the President of the power to appoint OICs to undertake the functions of the elective ARMM
officials until the officials elected under the May 2013 regular elections shall have assumed office. Corrolarily, they
also argue that the power of appointment also gave the President the power of control over the ARMM, in complete
violation of Section 16, Article X of the Constitution.
ISSUE:
A. Whether or not the 1987 Constitution mandates the synchronization of elections
B. Whether or not the passage of RA No. 10153 violates the provisions of the 1987 Constitution
HELD:
Court dismissed the petition and affirmed the constitutionality of R.A. 10153 in toto. The Court agreed with
respondent Office of the Solicitor General (OSG) on its position that the Constitution mandates synchronization,
citing Sections 1, 2 and 5, Article XVIII (Transitory Provisions) of the 1987 Constitution. While the Constitution
does not expressly state that Congress has to synchronize national and local elections, the clear intent towards this
objective can be gleaned from the Transitory Provisions (Article XVIII) of the Constitution,which show the extent to
which the Constitutional Commission, by deliberately making adjustments to the terms of the incumbent officials,
sought to attain synchronization of elections.
The objective behind setting a common termination date for all elective officials, done among others through the
shortening the terms of the twelve winning senators with the least number of votes, is to synchronize the holding of
all future elections whether national or local to once every three years.This intention finds full support in the
discussions during the Constitutional Commission deliberations. Furthermore, to achieve synchronization,
Congressnecessarilyhas to reconcile the schedule of the ARMMs regular elections (which should have been held in
August 2011 based on RA No. 9333) with the fixed schedule of the national and local elections (fixed by RA No.
7166 to be held in May 2013).
InOsme v. Commission on Elections, the court thus explained:
It is clear from the aforequoted provisions of the 1987 Constitution that the terms of office of Senators, Members of
the House of Representatives, the local officials, the President and the Vice-President have been synchronized to end
on the same hour, date and year noon of June 30, 1992.
It is likewise evident from the wording of the above-mentioned Sections that the term ofsynchronizationis used
synonymously as the phraseholding simultaneouslysince this is the precise intent in terminating their Office Tenure
on the sameday or occasion.This common termination date will synchronize future elections to once every three
years (Bernas, the Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines, Vol. II, p. 605).
That the election for Senators, Members of the House of Representatives and the local officials (under Sec. 2, Art.
XVIII) will have to be synchronized with the election for President and Vice President (under Sec. 5, Art. XVIII) is
likewise evident from the x x xrecords of the proceedings in the Constitutional Commission. [Emphasis supplied.]
Although called regional elections, the ARMM elections should be included among the elections to be synchronized
as it is a "local" election based on the wording and structure of the Constitution. Regional elections in the ARMM for
the positions of governor, vice-governor and regional assembly representatives fall within the classification of "local"
elections, since they pertain to the elected officials who will serve within the limited region of ARMM. From the
perspective of the Constitution, autonomous regions are considered one of the forms of local governments, as evident
from Article Xof the Constitution entitled "Local Government."Autonomous regions are established and discussed
under Sections 15 to 21 of this Article the article wholly devoted to Local Government.
Second issue: Congress, in passing RA No. 10153, acted strictly within its constitutional mandate. Given an array of
choices, it acted within due constitutional bounds and with marked reasonableness in light of the necessary
adjustments that synchronization demands. Congress, therefore, cannot be accused of any evasion of a positive duty
or of a refusal to perform its duty nor is there reason to accord merit to the petitioners claims of grave abuse of
discretion.
In relation with synchronization, both autonomy and the synchronization of national and local elections are
recognized and established constitutional mandates, with one being as compelling as the other.If their compelling
force differs at all, the difference is in their coverage; synchronization operates on and affects the whole country,
while regional autonomy as the term suggests directly carries a narrower regional effect although its national effect
cannot be discounted.
In all these, the need for interim measures is dictated by necessity; out-of-the-way arrangements and approaches
were adopted or used in order to adjust to the goal or objective in sight in a manner that does not do violence to the
Constitution and to reasonably accepted norms.Under these limitations, the choice of measures was a question of
wisdom left to congressional discretion.
However, the holdover contained in R.A. No. 10153, for those who were elected in executive and legislative
positions in the ARMM during the 2008-2011 term as an option that Congress could have chosen because a holdover
violates Section 8, Article X of the Constitution. In the case of the terms of local officials, their term has been fixed
clearly and unequivocally, allowing no room for any implementing legislation with respect to the fixed term itself
and no vagueness that would allow an interpretation from this Court. Thus, the term of three years for local officials
should stay at three (3) years as fixed by the Constitution and cannot be extended by holdover by Congress.
RA No. 10153, does not in any way amend what the organic law of the ARMM(RA No. 9054) sets outs in terms of
structure of governance.What RA No. 10153 in fact only does is to"appoint officers-in-charge for the Office of the
Regional Governor, Regional Vice Governor and Members of the Regional Legislative Assembly who shall perform
the functions pertaining to the said offices until the officials duly elected in the May 2013 elections shall have
qualified and assumed office."This power is far different from appointing elective ARMM officials for the
abbreviated term ending on the assumption to office of the officials elected in the May 2013 elections. It must be
therefore emphasized that the law must be interpreted as an interim measure to synchronize elections and must not be
interpreted otherwise.
FACTS:
Jose Angara and Pedro Ynsua, Miguel Castillo and Dionisio Mayor were candidates voted for the position
of member of the National Assembly for the 1st district of Tayabas province.
On Oct 17 1935, the provincial board of canvassers proclaimed Angara as member-elect of the Nat'l
Assembly for garnering the most number of votes. He then took his oath of office on Nov 15th. On Dec
3rd, Nat'l Assembly passed Res. No 8 which declared with finality the victory of Angara. On Dec 8, Ynsua
filed before the Electoral Commission a motion of protest against the election of Angara, that he be
declared elected member of the Nat'l Assembly. Electoral Commission passed a resolution in Dec 9th as the
last day for the filing of the protests against the election, returns and qualifications of the members of the
National Assembly. On Dec 20, Angara filed before the Elec. Commission a motion to dismiss the protest
that the protest in question was filed out of the prescribed period. The Elec. Commission denied Angara's
petition.
Angara prayed for the issuance of writ of prohibition to restrain and prohibit the Electoral Commission
taking further cognizance of Ynsua's protest. He contended that the Constitution confers exclusive
jurisdiction upon the said Electoral Commissions as regards the merits of contested elections to the Nat'l
Assembly and the Supreme Court therefore has no jurisdiction to hear the case.
ISSUE:
Whether or not the SC has jurisdiction over the Electoral Commission and the subject matter of the
controversy;
Whether or not The Electoral Commission has acted without or in excess of its jurisdiction.
RULING:
In this case, the nature of the present controversy shows the necessity of a final constitutional arbiter to
determine the conflict of authority between two agencies created by the Constitution. The court has
jurisdiction over the Electoral Commission and the subject matter of the present controversy for the
purpose of determining the character, scope and extent of the constitutional grant to the Electoral
Commission as "the sole judge of all contests relating to the election, returns and qualifications of the
members of the National Assembly." (Sec 4 Art. VI 1935 Constitution). It is held, therefore, that the
Electoral Commission was acting within the legitimate exercise of its constitutional prerogative in
assuming to take cognizance of the election protest filed by Ynsua.
GARCIA vs MACARAIG
39 SCRA 106 Political Law Separation of Powers
Judge Catalino Macaraig, Jr. took his oath as Judge of the CFI of Laguna and San Pablo City on June 29,
1970. The court, being one of the 112 newly created CFI branches, had to be organized from scratch. From
July 1, 1970 to February 28, 1971, Macaraig was not able to assume the duties and functions of a judge due
to the fact that his Court Room can not be properly established due to problems as to location and as to
appropriations to make his Court up and running. When Macaraig realized that it would be some time
before he could actually preside over his court, he applied for an extended leave (during the 16 years he
had worked in the Department of Justice, he had, due to pressure of duties, never gone on extended leave,
resulting in his forfeiting all the leave benefits he had earned beyond the maximum ten months allowed by
the law). The Secretary of Justice, however, convinced Macaraig to forego his leave and instead to assist
the Secretary, without being extended a formal detail, whenever he was not busy attending to the needs of
his court.
Paz Garcia on the other hand filed a complaint alleging that Macaraig is incompetent, dishonest and has
acted in violation of his oath as a judge. Garcia said that Macaraig has not submitted the progress of his
Courts as required by law. And that Macaraig has received salaries as a judge while he is fully aware that
he has not been performing the duties of a judge. Also questioned was the fact that a member of the
judiciary is helping the the DOJ, a department of the executive oi charge of prosecution of cases.
ISSUE: Whether or not Macaraig has acted with incompetence and dishonesty as Judge.
HELD: No. Macaraigs inability to perform his judicial duties under the circumstances mentioned above
does not constitute incompetence. Macaraig was, like every lawyer who gets his first appointment to the
bench, eager to assume his judicial duties and rid himself of the stigma of being a judge without a sala,
but forces and circumstances beyond his control prevented him from discharging his judicial duties.
On the other hand, none of these is to be taken as meaning that the Court looks with favor at the practice of
long standing, to be sure, of judges being detailed in the DOJ to assist the Secretary even if it were only in
connection with his work of exercising administrative authority over the courts. The line between what a
judge may do and what he may not do in collaborating or working with other offices or officers under the
other great departments of the government must always be kept clear and jealously observed, lest the
principle of separation of powers on which our government rests by mandate of the people thru the
Constitution be gradually eroded by practices purportedly motivated by good intentions in the interest of
the public service.
The fundamental advantages and the necessity of the independence of said three departments from each
other, limited only by the specific constitutional precepts on check and balance between and among them,
have long been acknowledged as more paramount than the serving of any temporary or passing
governmental conveniences or exigencies. It is thus of grave importance to the judiciary under our present
constitutional scheme of government that no judge of even the lowest court in this Republic should place
himself in a position where his actuations on matters submitted to him for action or resolution would be
subject to review and prior approval and, worst still, reversal, before they can have legal effect, by any
authority other than the Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court, as the case may be. Needless to say, the
Court feels very strongly that it is best that this practice is discontinued.
ISSUES:
(1) Whether or not Sec. 2, Art. XVII of the 1987 Constitution is a self-executing provision.
(2) Whether or not COMELEC Resolution No. 2300 regarding the conduct of initiative onamendments to the
Constitution is valid, considering the absence in the law of specific provisions onthe conduct of such initiative.
(3) Whether the lifting of term limits of elective officials would constitute a revision or anamendment of the
Constitution.
HELD:
Sec. 2, Art XVII of the Constitution is not self executory, thus, without implementing legislation the same cannot
operate. Although the Constitution has recognized or granted the right, the people cannot exercise it if Congress does
not provide for its implementation. The portion of COMELEC Resolution No. 2300 which prescribes rules and
regulations on the conduct of initiative on amendments to the Constitution, is void. It has been an established rule
that what has been delegated, cannot be delegated (potestas delegata non delegari potest). The delegation of the
power to the COMELEC being invalid, the latter cannot validly promulgate rules and regulations to implement the
exercise of the right to peoples initiative. The lifting of the term limits was held to be that of a revision, as it would
affect other provisions of the Constitution such as the synchronization of elections, the constitutional guarantee of
equal access to opportunities for public service, and prohibiting political dynasties. A revision cannot be done by
initiative. However, considering the Courts decision in the above Issue, the issue of whether or not the petition is a
revision or amendment has become academic.
Also, while the law provides subtitles for National Initiative and Referendum and for Local Initiative and Referendum, no
subtitle is provided for initiative on the Constitution. This means that the main thrust of the law is initiative and referendum on
national and local laws. If R.A. No. 6735 were intended to fully provide for the implementation of the initiative on amendments
to the Constitution, it could have provided for a subtitle therefor, considering that in the order of things, the primacy of interest,
or hierarchy of values, the right of the people to directly propose amendments to the Constitution is far more important than the
initiative on national and local laws.
While R.A. No. 6735 specially detailed the process in implementing initiative and referendum on national and local laws, it
intentionally did not do so on the system of initiative on amendments to the Constitution.
COMELEC Resolution No. 2300 is hereby declared void and orders the respondent to forthwith dismiss the Delfin Petition .
TRO issued on 18 December 1996 is made permanent.
WHEREFORE, petition is GRANTED.
Rubi and various other Manguianes (Mangyans) in the province of Mindoro were ordered by the provincial
governor of Mindoro to remove their residence from their native habitat and to established themselves on a
reservation in Tigbao, still in the province of Mindoro, and to remain there, or be punished by imprisonment if they
escaped. Manguianes had been ordered to live in a reservation made to that end and for purposes of cultivation under
certain plans. The Manguianes are a Non-Christian tribe who were considered to be of very low culture.
One of the Manguianes, a certain Dabalos, escaped from the reservation but was later caught and was placed in
prison at Calapan, solely because he escaped from the reservation. An application for habeas corpus was made on
behalf by Rubi and other Manguianes of the province, alleging that by virtue of the resolution of the provincial board
of Mindoro creating the reservation, they had been illegally deprived of their liberty. In this case, the validity of
Section 2145 of the Administrative Code, which provides:
With the prior approval of the Department Head, the provincial governor of any province in which nonChristian inhabitants are found is authorized, when such a course is deemed necessary in the interest of law
and order, to direct such inhabitants to take up their habitation on sites on unoccupied public lands to be
selected by him and approved by the provincial board was challenged.
ISSUE:
Whether or not Section 2145 of the Administrative Code constitutes undue delegation.
Whether or not the Manguianes are being deprived of their liberty.
HELD:
I. No. By a vote of five to four, the Supreme Court sustained the constitutionality of this section of the
Administrative Code. Under the doctrine of necessity, who else was in a better position to determine whether or not
to execute the law but the provincial governor. It is optional for the provincial governor to execute the law as
circumstances may arise. It is necessary to give discretion to the provincial governor. The Legislature may make
decisions of executive departments of subordinate official thereof, to whom it has committed the execution of certain
acts, final on questions of fact.
II. No. Among other things, the term non-Christian should not be given a literal meaning or a religious
signification, but that it was intended to relate to degrees of civilization. The term non-Christian it was said, refers
not to religious belief, but in a way to geographical area, and more directly to natives of the Philippine Islands of a
low grade of civilization. In this case, the Manguianes were being reconcentrated in the reservation to promote peace
and to arrest their seminomadic lifestyle. This will ultimately settle them down where they can adapt to the changing
times.
The Supreme Court held that the resolution of the provincial board of Mindoro was neither discriminatory nor class
legislation, and stated among other things: . . . one cannot hold that the liberty of the citizen is unduly interfered
with when the degree of civilization of the Manguianes is considered. They are restrained for their own good and the
general good of the Philippines. Nor can one say that due process of law has not been followed. To go back to our
definition of due process of law and equal protection of the laws, there exists a law; the law seems to be reasonable;
it is enforced according to the regular methods of procedure prescribed; and it applies alike to all of a class.
TUPAS vs Ople
137 SCRA 117
Political Law Delegation of Power Administrative Bodies Manner of Election and Selection of
Representatives
The Trade Unions of the Philippines and Allied Services (TUPAS) and the National Federation of Labor Unions
(NFLU) are unions representing the agricultural and industrial sectors. They alleged they represent over a
million workers all over the country. On the other hand, Batas Pambansa Blg. 697 is the implementing law of
the constitutional provision which states that 3 sectors are to be represented (youth, agricultural labor, industrial
labor).
Each sector must have four representatives, 2 from Luzon, one each from Visayas and Mindanao respectively.
These sectors can submit their nominees to the President for approval/appointment through the Minister of
Labor. TUPAS however questions the constitutionality of the said BP because it allegedly lacks duly published
rules on accreditation, nomination and appointment of industrial labor representatives. Being so, TUPAS
questioned the acts of BlasOple, then Minister of Labor, in accrediting certain nominations provided by other
industrial labor groups. TUPAS claims that since there are no rules clearly stated in the BP on how the
nominations must be handled, the said law has provided undue delegation to the Minister of Labor and has left
him with absolute discretion in carrying out the duty of accrediting such nominations. TUPAS did not submit
their nomination within the given 20 day period of nominating their representation; they instead proceeded to
question the constitutionality of the said BP and the legality of the acts of Ople. Because of their failure to
submit their nominees, Ople did not accredit them.
ISSUE: Whether or not there is undue delegation of power to the Minister of Labor by BP 697.
HELD: No. The lack of merit of the contention that there is an unlawful delegation of legislative power is quite
obvious. Appointment to office is intrinsically an executive act involving the exercise of discretion. What is
involved then is not a legislative power but the exercise of competence intrinsically executive. What is more,
the official who could make the recommendation is the Minister of Labor, an alter ego of the President. The
argument, therefore, that there is an unlawful delegation of legislative power is bereft of any persuasive force.
To further test the validity of the said BP, and to avoid the taint of unlawful delegation, there must be a standard,
which implies at the very least that the legislature itself determines matters of principle and lays down
fundamental policy. Otherwise, the charge of complete abdication may be hard to repel. A standard thus defines
legislative policy, marks its limits, maps out its boundaries and specifies the public agency to apply it. The
standard does not even have to be spelled out. It could be implied from the policy and purpose of the act
considered as a whole. Such standard is set forth with clarity in Article III, Section 6 of Batas Pambansa Blg.
697 which provides in full the limits and scope of the functions of the Minister of Labor in carrying out the said
provisions.
TUPAS and NFLU were free to submit their nominations to the President by merely writing a letter coursed
through respondent, and their nominees should have been submitted to the President. They did not do so. In
fact, as of May 30, 1984, which was still within the 20-day period, they wrote a letter to Ople which in effect
stated that they were not submitting any nomination and informing him that they were questioning the validity
of Sections 4, 5, and 6 of BP 697. Hence, if petitioners were not able to submit any nominee they had no one to
blame but themselves. And the law cannot be declared unconstitutional on such ground.
US vs Ang Tang Ho
43 Phil. 1 Political Law Delegation of Power Administrative Bodies
In July 1919, the Philippine Legislature (during special session) passed and approved Act No. 2868 entitled
An Act Penalizing the Monopoly and Hoarding of Rice, Palay and Corn. The said act, under extraordinary
circumstances, authorizes the Governor General (GG) to issue the necessary Rules and Regulations in
regulating the distribution of such products. Pursuant to this Act, in August 1919, the GG issued Executive
Order No. 53 which was published on August 20, 1919. The said EO fixed the price at which rice should be
sold. On the other hand, Ang Tang Ho, a rice dealer, sold a ganta of rice to Pedro Trinidad at the price of
eighty centavos. The said amount was way higher than that prescribed by the EO. The sale was done on the
6th of August 1919. On August 8, 1919, he was charged for violation of the said EO. He was found guilty as
charged and was sentenced to 5 months imprisonment plus a P500.00 fine. He appealed the sentence
countering that there is an undue delegation of power to the Governor General.
ISSUE: Whether or not there is undue delegation to the Governor General.
HELD: First of, Ang Tang Hos conviction must be reversed because he committed the act prior to the
publication of the EO. Hence, he cannot be ex post facto charged of the crime. Further, one cannot be
convicted of a violation of a law or of an order issued pursuant to the law when both the law and the order
fail to set up an ascertainable standard of guilt.
Anent the issue of undue delegation, the said Act wholly fails to provide definitely and clearly what the
standard policy should contain, so that it could be put in use as a uniform policy required to take the place
of all others without the determination of the insurance commissioner in respect to matters involving the
exercise of a legislative discretion that could not be delegated, and without which the act could not possibly
be put in use. The law must be complete in all its terms and provisions when it leaves the legislative branch
of the government and nothing must be left to the judgment of the electors or other appointee or delegate of
the legislature, so that, in form and substance, it is a law in all its details in presenti, but which may be left
to take effect in future, if necessary, upon the ascertainment of any prescribed fact or event.
In 1985, Presidential Dedree No. 1987 entitled An Act Creating the Videogram Regulatory Board was
enacted which gave broad powers to the VRB to regulate and supervise the videogram industry. The said
law sought to minimize the economic effects of piracy. There was a need to regulate the sale of videograms
as it has adverse effects to the movie industry. The proliferation of videograms has significantly lessened
the revenue being acquired from the movie industry, and that such loss may be recovered if videograms are
to be taxed. Section 10 of the PD imposes a 30% tax on the gross receipts payable to the LGUs.
In 1986, Valentin Tio assailed the said PD as he averred that it is unconstitutional on the following grounds:
1. Section 10 thereof, which imposed the 30% tax on gross receipts, is a rider and is not germane to the
subject matter of the law.
2. There is also undue delegation of legislative power to the VRB, an administrative body, because the law
allowed the VRB to deputize, upon its discretion, other government agencies to assist the VRB in
enforcing the said PD.
ISSUE: Whether or not the Valentin Tios arguments are correct.
HELD: No.
1. The Constitutional requirement that every bill shall embrace only one subject which shall be expressed
in the title thereof is sufficiently complied with if the title be comprehensive enough to include the general
purpose which a statute seeks to achieve. In the case at bar, the questioned provision is allied and germane
to, and is reasonably necessary for the accomplishment of, the general object of the PD, which is the
regulation of the video industry through the VRB as expressed in its title. The tax provision is not
inconsistent with, nor foreign to that general subject and title. As a tool for regulation it is simply one of the
regulatory and control mechanisms scattered throughout the PD.
2. There is no undue delegation of legislative powers to the VRB. VRB is not being tasked to legislate.
What was conferred to the VRB was the authority or discretion to seek assistance in the execution,
enforcement, and implementation of the law. Besides, in the very language of the decree, the authority of
the BOARD to solicit such assistance is for a fixed and limited period with the deputized agencies
concerned being subject to the direction and control of the [VRB].
One contention is that RA 7716 did not originate exclusively in the House of Representatives as required by Art. VI, Sec. 24 of
the Constitution, because it is in fact the result of the consolidation of 2 distinct bills, H. No. 11197 and S. No. 1630. There is
also a contention that S. No. 1630 did not pass 3 readings as required by the Constitution.
Issue:
Whether or not RA 7716 violates Art. VI, Secs. 24 and 26(2) ofthe Constitution
Held:
The argument that RA 7716 did not originate exclusively in the House of Representatives as required by Art. VI, Sec. 24 of the
Constitution will not bear analysis. To begin with, it is not the law but the revenue bill which is required by the Constitution to
originate exclusively in the House of Representatives. To insist that a revenue statute and not only the bill which initiated the
legislative process culminating in the enactment of the law must substantially be the same as the House bill would be to deny the
Senates power not only to concur with amendments but also to propose amendments. Indeed, what the Constitution simply
means is that the initiative for filing revenue, tariff or tax bills, bills authorizing an increase of the public debt, private bills and
bills of local application must come from the House of Representatives on the theory that, elected as they are from the districts,
the members of the House can be expected to be more sensitive to the local needs and problems. Nor does the
Constitutionprohibit the filing in the Senate of a substitute bill in anticipation of its receipt of the bill from the House, so long as
action by the Senate as a body is withheld pending receipt of the House bill.
The next argument of the petitioners was that S. No. 1630 did not pass 3 readings on separate days as required by the
Constitution because the second and third readings were done on the same day. But this was because the President had certified
S. No. 1630 as urgent. The presidential certification dispensed with the requirement not only of printing but also that of reading
the bill on separate days. That upon the certification of a billby the President the requirement of 3 readings on separate days and
of printing and distribution can be dispensed with is supported by the weightof legislative practice.
Held: In Vigan Electric Light Co., Inc. vs. Public Service Commission the Supreme Court said that although the rule-making power and even
the power to fix rates- when such rules and/or rates are meant to apply to all enterprises of a given kind throughout the Philippines-may partake
of a legislative character. Respondent Alcuaz no doubt contains all the attributes of a quasi-judicial adjudication. Foremost is the fact that said
order pertains exclusively to petitioner and to no other. The respondent admits that the questioned order was issued pursuant to its quasijudicial functions. It, however, insists that notice and hearing are not necessary since the assailed order is merely incidental to the entire
proceedings and, therefore, temporary in nature but the supreme court said that While respondents may fix a temporary rate pending final
determination of the application of petitioner, such rate-fixing order, temporary though it may be, is not exempt from the statutory procedural
requirements of notice and hearing. The Supreme Court Said that it is clear that with regard to rate-fixing, respondent has no authority to make
such order without first giving petitioner a hearing, whether the order be temporary or permanent. In the Case at bar the NTC didnt scheduled
hearing nor it did give any notice to the petitioner
PHILCOMSAT VS. ALCUAZ
180 SCRA 218 Political Law Delegation of Power Administrative Bodies
By virtue of Republic Act No. 5514, the Philippine Communications Satellite Corporation (PHILCOMSAT) was granted the
authority to construct and operate such ground facilities as needed to deliver telecommunications services from the communications satellite
system and ground terminal or terminals in the Philippines. PHILCOMSAT provides satellite services to companies like Globe Mackay (now
Globe) and PLDT.
Under Section 5 of the same law, PHILCOMSAT was exempt from the jurisdiction, control and regulation of the Public Service
Commission later known as the National Telecommunications Commission (NTC). However, Executive Order No. 196 was later promulgated
and the same has placed PHILCOMSAT under the jurisdiction of the NTC. Consequently, PHILCOMSAT has to acquire permit to operate
from the NTC in order to continue operating its existing satellites. NTC gave the necessary permit but it however directed PHILCOMSAT to
reduce its current rates by 15%. NTC based its power to fix the rates on EO 546.
PHILCOMSAT now sues NTC and its commissioner (Jose Luis Alcuaz) assailed the said directive and holds that the enabling act
(EO 546) of the NTC, empowering it to fix rates for public service communications, does not provide the necessary standards which were
constitutionally required, hence, there is an undue delegation of legislative power, particularly the adjudicatory powers of NTC.
PHILCOMSAT asserts that nowhere in the provisions of EO 546, providing for the creation of NTC and granting its rate-fixing powers, nor
of EO 196, placing PHILCOMSAT under the jurisdiction of NTC, can it be inferred that NTC is guided by any standard in the exercise of its
rate-fixing and adjudicatory powers. PHILCOMSAT subsequently clarified its said submission to mean that the order mandating a reduction of
certain rates is undue delegation not of legislative but of quasi-judicial power to NTC, the exercise of which allegedly requires an express
conferment by the legislative body.
HELD: No. There is no undue delegation. The power of the NTC to fix rates is limited by the requirements of public safety, public
interest, reasonable feasibility and reasonable rates, which conjointly more than satisfy the requirements of a valid delegation of
legislative power. Fundamental is the rule that delegation of legislative power may be sustained only upon the ground that some standard for
its exercise is provided and that the legislature in making the delegation has prescribed the manner of the exercise of the delegated power.
Therefore, when the administrative agency concerned, NTC in this case, establishes a rate, its act must both be non-confiscatory and must have
been established in the manner prescribed by the legislature; otherwise, in the absence of a fixed standard, the delegation of power becomes
unconstitutional. In case of a delegation of rate-fixing power, the only standard which the legislature is required to prescribe for the guidance of
the administrative authority is that the rate be reasonable and just. However, it has been held that even in the absence of an express requirement
as to reasonableness, this standard may be implied.
However, in this case, it appears that the manner of fixing the rates was done without due process since no hearing was made in ascertaining
the rate imposed upon PHILCOMSAT.
Facts:
Mario B. Crespo aka Mark Jimenez, a duly-elected congressman of the 6th district of Manila, was declared
ineligible for the position in which he was elected for lack of residency in the district and was ordered to
vacate his office. Ocampo then averred that since Crespo was declared as such, he should be declared the
winner, having garnered the second highest number of votes.
Issue:
Whether or not the candidate who has the second highest vote should be declared as winner considering
that the duly-elected representative is not eligible for the office.
Ruling:
No. The fact that the candidate who had the highest number of votes is later declared to be disqualified or
ineligible for office does not give rise to the right of the candidate who garnered the second highest vote to
be declared winner. To do otherwise would be anathema to the most basic precepts of republicanism and
democracy. Therefore, the only recourse to ascertain the new choice of the electorate is to hold another
election.
another component city is a matter of legislative discretion which violates neither the Constitution nor the voters
right of suffrage.
more, the provision of Section 5(2), Article VIII of the Constitution was intended to apply to vacancies in
the regular National Assembly, now BP, not to the IBP.
Facts:
Petitioner has filed a suit against the former Acting Auditor General of the Philippines and the Auditor of
the Congress of the Philippines seeking to permanently enjoin them from authorizing or passing in audit
the payment of the increased salaries authorized by RA 4134 to the Speaker and members of the House of
Representatives before December 30, 1969.
The 1965-1966 Budget implemented the increase in salary of the Speaker and members of the House of
Representatives set by RA 4134, approved just the preceding year 1964. Petitioner contends that such
implementation is violative of Article VI, Sec. 14(now Sec. 10) of the Constitution. The reason given being
that the term of the 8 senators elected in 1963, and who took part in the approval of RA 4134, would have
expired only on December 30, 1969; while the term of the members of the House who participated in the
approval of said Act expired on December 30, 1965.
Issue:
Does Sec. 14(now Sec. 10) of the Constitution require that not only the term of all the members of the
House but also that of all the Senators who approved the increase must have fully expired before the
increase becomes effective?
Held:
In establishing what might be termed a waiting period before the increased compensation for legislators
becomes fully effective, the Constitutional provision refers to all members of the Senate and the House of
Representatives in the same sentence, as a single unit, without distinction or separation between them.
This unitary treatment is emphasized by the fact that the provision speaks of the expiration of the full
term of the Senators and Representatives that approved the measure, using the singular form and not the
plural, thereby rendering more evident the intent to consider both houses for the purpose as indivisible
components of one single Legislature. The use of the word term in the singular, when combined with the
following phrase all the members of the Senate and the House, underscores that in the application of Art.
VI, Sec. 14(now Sec. 10), the fundamental consideration is that the terms of office of all members of the
Legislature that enacted the measure must have expired before the increase in compensation can become
operative.
The Court agreed with petitioner that the increased compensation provided by RA 4134 is not operative
until December 30, 1969, when the full term of all members of the Senate and House that approved it will
have expired.
PHILCONSA vs. HON. SALVADOR ENRIQUEZ, G.R. No. 113105 August 19, 1994
Facts:
House Bill No. 10900, the General Appropriation Bill of 1994 (GAB of 1994), was passed and
approved by both houses of Congress on December 17, 1993. As passed, it imposed conditions and limitations
on certain items of appropriations in the proposed budget previously submitted by the President. It also
authorized members of Congress to propose and identify projects in the pork barrels allotted to them and to
realign their respective operating budgets.
Pursuant to the procedure on the passage and enactment of bills as prescribed by the Constitution,
Congress presented the said bill to the President for consideration and approval.
On December 30, 1993, the President signed the bill into law, and declared the same to have become
Republic Act NO. 7663, entitled AN ACT APPROPRIATING FUNDS FOR THE OPERATION OF THE
GOVERNMENT OF THE PHILIPPINES FROM JANUARY ONE TO DECEMBER THIRTY ONE, NINETEEN
HUNDRED AND NINETY-FOUR, AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES (GAA of 1994). On the same day, the
President delivered his Presidential Veto Message, specifying the provisions of the bill he vetoed and on which
he imposed certain conditions, as follows:
1.
Provision on Debt Ceiling, on the ground that this debt reduction scheme cannot be validly done through the
1994 GAA. And that appropriations for payment of public debt, whether foreign or domestic, are automatically
appropriated pursuant to the Foreign Borrowing Act and Section 31 of P.D. No. 1177 as reiterated under
Section 26, Chapter 4, Book VI of E.O. No. 292, the Administrative Code of 1987.
2.
Special provisions which authorize the use of income and the creation, operation and maintenance of
revolving funds in the appropriation for State Universities and Colleges (SUCs),
3.
4.
Special provision on the purchase by the AFP of medicines in compliance with the Generics Drugs Law (R.A.
No. 6675).
5.
The President vetoed the underlined proviso in the appropriation for the modernization of the AFP of the
Special Provision No. 2 on the Use of Fund, which requires the prior approval of the Congress for the release
of the corresponding modernization funds, as well as the entire Special Provision No. 3 on the Specific
Prohibition which states that the said Modernization Fund shall not be used for payment of six (6) additional
S-211 Trainer planes, 18 SF-260 Trainer planes and 150 armored personnel carriers
6.
New provision authorizing the Chief of Staff to use savings in the AFP to augment pension and gratuity funds.
7.
Conditions on the appropriation for the Supreme Court, Ombudsman, COA, and CHR, the Congress.
Issue:
whether or not the conditions imposed by the President in the items of the GAA of 1994: (a) for the
Supreme Court, (b) Commission on Audit (COA), (c) Ombudsman, (d) Commission on Human Rights, (CHR),
(e) Citizen Armed Forces Geographical Units (CAFGUS) and (f) State Universities and Colleges (SUCs) are
constitutional; whether or not the veto of the special provision in the appropriation for debt service and the
automatic appropriation of funds therefore is constitutional
Held:
The veto power, while exercisable by the President, is actually a part of the legislative process.
There is, therefore, sound basis to indulge in the presumption of validity of a veto. The burden shifts on those
questioning the validity thereof to show that its use is a violation of the Constitution.
The vetoed provision on the debt servicing is clearly an attempt to repeal Section 31 of P.D. No. 1177
(Foreign Borrowing Act) and E.O. No. 292, and to reverse the debt payment policy. As held by the court in
Gonzales, the repeal of these laws should be done in a separate law, not in the appropriations law.
In the veto of the provision relating to SUCs, there was no undue discrimination when the President
vetoed said special provisions while allowing similar provisions in other government agencies. If some
government agencies were allowed to use their income and maintain a revolving fund for that purpose, it is
because these agencies have been enjoying such privilege before by virtue of the special laws authorizing
such practices as exceptions to the one-fund policy (e.g., R.A. No. 4618 for the National Stud Farm, P.D. No.
902-A for the Securities and Exchange Commission; E.O. No. 359 for the Department of Budget and
Managements Procurement Service).
The veto of the second paragraph of Special Provision No. 2 of the item for the DPWH is
unconstitutional. The Special Provision in question is not an inappropriate provision which can be the subject of
a veto. It is not alien to the appropriation for road maintenance, and on the other hand, it specifies how the said
item shall be expended 70% by administrative and 30% by contract.
The Special Provision which requires that all purchases of medicines by the AFP should strictly comply
with the formulary embodied in the National Drug Policy of the Department of Health is an appropriate
provision. Being directly related to and inseparable from the appropriation item on purchases of medicines by
the AFP, the special provision cannot be vetoed by the President without also vetoing the said item.
The requirement in Special Provision No. 2 on the use of Fund for the AFP modernization program
that the President must submit all purchases of military equipment to Congress for its approval, is an exercise
of the congressional or legislative veto. However the case at bench is not the proper occasion to resolve the
issues of the validity of the legislative veto as provided in Special Provisions Nos. 2 and 3 because the issues
at hand can be disposed of on other grounds. Therefore, being inappropriate provisions, Special Provisions
Nos. 2 and 3 were properly vetoed.
Furthermore, Special Provision No. 3, prohibiting the use of the Modernization fund for payment of the
trainer planes and armored personnel carriers, which have been contracted for by the AFP, is violative of the
Constitutional prohibition on the passage of laws that impair the obligation of contracts (Art. III, Sec. 10), more
so, contracts entered into by the Government itself. The veto of said special provision is therefore valid.
The Special Provision, which allows the Chief of Staff to use savings to augment the pension fund for
the AFP being managed by the AFP Retirement and Separation Benefits System is violative of Sections 25(5)
and 29(1) of the Article VI of the Constitution.
Regarding the deactivation of CAFGUS, we do not find anything in the language used in the challenged
Special Provision that would imply that Congress intended to deny to the President the right to defer or reduce
the spending, much less to deactivate 11,000 CAFGU members all at once in 1994. But even if such is the
intention, the appropriation law is not the proper vehicle for such purpose. Such intention must be embodied
and manifested in another law considering that it abrades the powers of the Commander-in-Chief and there are
existing laws on the creation of the CAFGUs to be amended.
On the conditions imposed by the President on certain provisions relating to appropriations to the
Supreme Court, constitutional commissions, the NHA and the DPWH, there is less basis to complain when the
President said that the expenditures shall be subject to guidelines he will issue. Until the guidelines are issued,
it cannot be determined whether they are proper or inappropriate. Under the Faithful Execution Clause, the
President has the power to take necessary and proper steps to carry into execution the law. These steps are
the ones to be embodied in the guidelines.
Facts:
Romeo G. Jalosjos is a full-fledged member of Congress who is now confined at the national penitentiary while his
conviction for statutory rape on two counts and acts of lasciviousness on six counts is pending appeal. Jalosjos, filed
a motion asking that he be allowed to fully discharge his duties of a Congressman including attendance at legislative
sessions and committee meetings despite his having convicted in the first instance including of a non-bailable
offense.
Jalosjos argument is the mandate of sovereign will which he states that he was re-elected as Congressman of Firs
District of Zamboanga del Norte by his constituents in order that their voices will be heard and since the accusedappellant is treated as bona fide member of the House of Representatives, the latter urges co-equal branch of
government to respect his mandate.
Issue:
Whether or not accused-appellant, Romeo G. Jalosjos, be allowed to discharge his mandate as member of the
House of Representatives.
Held/Ruling:
No. The immunity from arrest or detention of Senators or members of the House of Representatives arises from a
provision of the Constitution and shows that this privilege has always been granted in a restrictive sense.
It is true, that election is the expression of the sovereign power of the people. However, the rights and privileges from
being elected as public official may be restricted by law. Privilege has to be granted by law, not inferred from the
duties of a position, the higher the rank the greater the requirement of obedience rather that exemption.
The accused-appellant Romeo Jalosjos has not given any reason why he should be exempted from the operation of
Section 11 Article VI of the Constitution. The members of Congress cannot compel absent members to attend
sessions if the reason for the abuse is a legitimate one. The confinement of a Congressman with a crime punishable
imprisonment by more than six (6) months is not merely authorized by law, has constitutional foundations. Allowing
Jalosjos to attend in Congressional sessions and meetings for five (5) days in a week which will make him a free
man with all the privileges and would make his status to that of a special class, it also would be a making of the
purpose of the correction system.
RULING: The Supreme Court vote to dismiss the instant case, first, the case is moot and academic for it is
evident from the manifestation filed by petitioners dated April 6, 1992, that they seek to unseat the
respondent from his position as Congressman for the duration of his term of office commencing June 30,
1987 and ending June 30, 1992. Secondly, jurisdiction of this case rightfully pertains to the House Electoral
Tribunal. Under Section 17 of Article VI of the 1987 Constitution, it is the House Electoral Tribunal which
shall be the sole judge of all contests relating to the election returns and qualification of its members.
The petitioners appropriate remedy should have been to file a petition to cancel respondent Dazas
certificate of candidacy before the election or a quo warranto case with the House of Electoral Tribunal
within ten days after Dazas proclamation
In October 1988, Miriam Defensor Santiago, who was the then Commissioner of the Commission of Immigration
and Deportation (CID), approved the application for legalization of the stay of about 32 aliens. Her act was said to be
illegal and was tainted with bad faith and it ran counter against Republic Act No. 3019 (Anti-Graft and Corrupt
Practices Act). The legalization of such is also a violation of Executive Order No. 324 which prohibits the
legalization of disqualified aliens. The aliens legalized by Santiago were allegedly known by her to be disqualified.
Two other criminal cases were filed against Santiago. Pursuant to this information, Francis Garchitorena, a presiding
Justice of the Sandiganbayan, issued a warrant of arrest against Santiago. Santiago petitioned for provisional liberty
since she was just recovering from a car accident which was approved. In 1995, a motion was filed with the
Sandiganbayan for the suspension of Santiago, who was already a senator by then. The Sandiganbayan ordered the
Senate President (Maceda) to suspend Santiago from office for 90 days.
ISSUE: Whether or not Sandiganbayan can order suspension of a member of the Senate without violating the
Constitution.
HELD: Yes. it is true that the Constitution provides that each house may determine the rules of its proceedings,
punish its Members for disorderly behavior, and, with the concurrence of two-thirds of all its Members, suspend or
expel a Member. A penalty of suspension, when imposed, shall not exceed sixty days.
But on the other hand, Section 13 of RA 3019 provides:
Suspension and loss of benefits. any incumbent public officer against whom any criminal prosecution under a valid
information under this Act or under Title 7, Book II of the Revised Penal Code or for any offense involving fraud upon
government or public funds or property whether as a simple or as a complex offense and in whatever stage of execution and
mode of participation, is pending in court, shall be suspended from office. Should he be convicted by final judgment, he shall
lose all retirement or gratuity benefits under any law, but if he is acquitted, he shall be entitled to reinstatement and to the salaries
and benefits which he failed to receive during suspension, unless in the meantime administrative proceedings have been filed
against him.
In here, the order of suspension prescribed by RA. 3019 is distinct from the power of Congress to discipline its own
ranks under the Constitution. The suspension contemplated in the above constitutional provision is a punitive
measure that is imposed upon determination by the Senate or the Lower House, as the case may be, upon an erring
member. This is quite distinct from the suspension spoken of in Section 13 of RA 3019, which is not a penalty but a
preliminary, preventive measure, prescinding from the fact that the latter is not being imposed on petitioner for
misbehavior as a Member of the Senate.
Republic Act No. 3019 does not exclude from its coverage the members of Congress and that, therefore, the
Sandiganbayan did not err in thus decreeing the assailed preventive suspension order.
But Santiago committed the said act when she was still the CID commissioner, can she still be suspended as a
senator?
Section 13 of Republic Act No. 3019 does not state that the public officer concerned must be suspended only in the
office where he is alleged to have committed the acts with which he has been charged. Thus, it has been held that the
use of the word office would indicate that it applies to any office which the officer charged may be holding, and
not only the particular office under which he stands accused.
Santiago has not yet been convicted of the alleged crime, can she still be suspended?
The law does not require that the guilt of the accused must be established in a pre-suspension proceeding before trial
on the merits proceeds. Neither does it contemplate a proceeding to determine (1) the strength of the evidence of
culpability against him, (2) the gravity of the offense charged, or (3) whether or not his continuance in office could
influence the witnesses or pose a threat to the safety and integrity of the records another evidence before the court
could have a valid basis in decreeing preventive suspension pending the trial of the case. All it secures to the
accused is adequate opportunity to challenge the validity or regularity of the proceedings against him, such as, that
he has not been afforded the right to due preliminary investigation, that the acts imputed to him do not constitute a
specific crime warranting his mandatory suspension from office under Section 13 of Republic Act No. 3019, or that
the information is subject to quashal on any of the grounds set out in Section 3, Rule 117, of the Revised Rules on
Criminal procedure.
HELD: No. By a vote of 6 to 4, the SC held that they cannot take cognizance of the case. This is in view of
the separation of powers, the political nature of the controversy and the constitutional grant to the Senate of
the power to elect its own president, which power should not be interfered with, nor taken over, by the
judiciary. The SC should abstain in this case because the selection of the presiding officer affects only the
Senators themselves who are at liberty at any time to choose their officers, change or reinstate them.
Anyway, if, as the petition must imply to be acceptable, the majority of the Senators want petitioner to
preside, his remedy lies in the Senate Session Hall not in the Supreme Court.
Supposed the SC can take cognizance of the case, what will be the resolution?
There is unanimity in the view that the session under Senator Arranz was a continuation of the morning
session and that a minority of ten senators (Avelino et al) may not, by leaving the Hall, prevent the other
(Cuenco et al) twelve senators from passing a resolution that met with their unanimous endorsement. The
answer might be different had the resolution been approved only by ten or less.
**Two senators were not present that time. Sen. Soto was in a hospital while Sen. Confesor was in the
USA.
Is the rump session (presided by Cuenco) a continuation of the morning session (presided by
Avelino)? Are there two sessions in one day? Was there a quorum constituting such session?
The second session is a continuation of the morning session as evidenced by the minutes entered into the
journal. There were 23 senators considered to be in session that time (including Soto, excluding Confesor).
Hence, twelve senators constitute a majority of the Senate of twenty three senators. When the Constitution
declares that a majority of each House shall constitute a quorum, the House does not mean all the
members. Even a majority of all the members constitute the House. There is a difference between a
majority of all the members of the House and a majority of the House, the latter requiring less number
than the first. Therefore an absolute majority (12) of all the members of the Senate less one (23),
constitutes constitutional majority of the Senate for the purpose of a quorum. Furthermore, even if the
twelve did not constitute a quorum, they could have ordered the arrest of one, at least, of the absent
members; if one had been so arrested, there would be no doubt Quorum then, and Senator Cuenco would
have been elected just the same inasmuch as there would be eleven for Cuenco, one against and one
abstained.
MOTION FOR RECONSIDERATION (filed by Avelino on March 14, 1949)
Avelino and his group (11 senators in all) insist that the SC take cognizance of the case and that they are
willing to bind themselves to the decision of the SC whether it be right or wrong. Avelino contends that
there is no constitutional quorum when Cuenco was elected president. There are 24 senators in all. Two are
absentee senators; one being confined and the other abroad but this does not change the number of senators
nor does it change the majority which if mathematically construed is + 1; in this case 12 (half of 24) plus
1 or 13 NOT 12. There being only 12 senators when Cuenco was elected unanimously there was no
quorum.
The Supreme Court, by a vote of seven resolved to assume jurisdiction over the case in the light of
subsequent events which justify its intervention. The Chief Justice agrees with the result of the majoritys
pronouncement on the quorum upon the ground that, under the peculiar circumstances of the case, the
constitutional requirement in that regard has become a mere formalism, it appearing from the evidence that
any new session with a quorum would result in Cuencos election as Senate President, and that the Cuenco
group, taking cue from the dissenting opinions, has been trying to satisfy such formalism by issuing
compulsory processes against senators of the Avelino group, but to no avail, because of the Avelinos
persistent efforts to block all avenues to constitutional processes. For this reason, the SC believes that the
Cuenco group has done enough to satisfy the requirements of the Constitution and that the majoritys ruling
is in conformity with substantial justice and with the requirements of public interest. Therefore Cuenco has
been legally elected as Senate President and the petition is dismissed.
Justice Feria: (Concurring)
Art. 3 (4) Title VI of the Constitution of 1935 provided that the majority of all the members of the
National Assembly constitute a quorum to do business and the fact that said provision was amended in the
Constitution of 1939, so as to read a majority of each House shall constitute a quorum to do business,
shows the intention of the framers of the Constitution to base the majority, not on the number fixed or
provided for in the Constitution, but on actual members or incumbents, and this must be limited to
actual members who are not incapacitated to discharge their duties by reason of death, incapacity, or
absence from the jurisdiction of the house or for other causes which make attendance of the member
concerned impossible, even through coercive process which each house is empowered to issue to
compel its members to attend the session in order to constitute a quorum. That the amendment was
intentional or made for some purpose, and not a mere oversight, or for considering the use of the words of
all the members as unnecessary, is evidenced by the fact that Sec. 5 (5) Title VI of the original
Constitution which required concurrence of two-thirds of the members of the National Assembly to expel
a member was amended by Sec. 10 (3) Article VI of the present Constitution, so as to require the
concurrence of two-thirds of all the members of each House. Therefore, as Senator Confesor was in the
United States and absent from the jurisdiction of the Senate, the actual members of the Senate at its session
of February 21, 1949, were twenty-three (23) and therefore 12 constituted a majority.
was passed/approved on 01 March 1914 while the special session of the Commission was adjourned at
12MN on February 28, 1914. Since this is the case, Act 2381 should be null and void.
ISSUE: Whether or not the SC must go beyond the recitals of the Journals to determine if Act 2381 was
indeed made a law on February 28, 1914.
HELD: The SC looked into the Journals to ascertain the date of adjournment but the SC refused to go
beyond the recitals in the legislative Journals. The said Journals are conclusive on the Court and to inquire
into the veracity of the journals of the Philippine Legislature, when they are, as the SC have said, clear and
explicit, would be to violate both the letter and the spirit of the organic laws by which the Philippine
Government was brought into existence, to invade a coordinate and independent department of the
Government, and to interfere with the legitimate powers and functions of the Legislature. Pons witnesses
cannot be given due weight against the conclusiveness of the Journals which is an act of the legislature.
The journals say that the Legislature adjourned at 12 midnight on February 28, 1914. This settles the
question, and the court did not err in declining to go beyond these journals. The SC passed upon the
conclusiveness of the enrolled bill in this particular case.
the votes were already entered into the Journals of the respective House. As a result, the Resolution was
passed but it could have been otherwise were they allowed to vote. If these members of Congress had been
counted, the affirmative votes in favor of the proposed amendment would have been short of the necessary
three-fourths vote in either branch of Congress. Petitioners filed or the prohibition of the furtherance of the
said resolution amending the constitution. Respondents argued that the SC cannot take cognizance of the
case because the Court is bound by the conclusiveness of the enrolled bill or resolution.
ISSUE: Whether or not the Court can take cognizance of the issue at bar. Whether or not the said
resolution was duly enacted by Congress.
HELD: As far as looking into the Journals is concerned, even if both the journals from each House and an
authenticated copy of the Act had been presented, the disposal of the issue by the Court on the basis of the
journals does not imply rejection of the enrollment theory, for, as already stated, the due enactment of a law
may be proved in either of the two ways specified in section 313 of Act No. 190 as amended. The SC found
in the journals no signs of irregularity in the passage of the law and did not bother itself with considering
the effects of an authenticated copy if one had been introduced. It did not do what the opponents of the rule
of conclusiveness advocate, namely, look into the journals behind the enrolled copy in order to determine
the correctness of the latter, and rule such copy out if the two, the journals and the copy, be found in
conflict with each other. No discrepancy appears to have been noted between the two documents and the
court did not say or so much as give to understand that if discrepancy existed it would give greater weight
to the journals, disregarding the explicit provision that duly certified copies shall be conclusive proof of
the provisions of such Acts and of the due enactment thereof.
**Enrolled Bill that which has been duly introduced, finally passed by both houses, signed by the proper
officers of each, approved by the president and filed by the secretary of state.
Section 313 of the old Code of Civil Procedure (Act 190), as amended by Act No. 2210, provides: Official
documents may be proved as follows: . . . (2) the proceedings of the Philippine Commission, or of any
legislatives body that may be provided for in the Philippine Islands, or of Congress, by the journals of those
bodies or of either house thereof, or by published statutes or resolutions, or by copies certified by the clerk
of secretary, or printed by their order; Provided, That in the case of Acts of the Philippine Commission or
the Philippine Legislature, when there is an existence of a copy signed by the presiding officers and
secretaries of said bodies, it shall be conclusive proof of the provisions of such Acts and of the due
enactment thereof.
The SC is bound by the contents of a duly authenticated resolution (enrolled bill) by the legislature. In case
of conflict, the contents of an enrolled bill shall prevail over those of the journals.
Casco Philippine Chemical Co., Inc. (Casco) was engaged in the production of synthetic resin glues used
primarily in the production of plywood. The main components of the said glue are urea and formaldehyde
which are both being imported abroad. Pursuant to a Central Bank circular, Casco paid the required margin
fee for its imported urea and formaldehyde. Casco however paid in protest as it maintained that urea and
formaldehyde are tax exempt transactions. The Central Bank agreed and it issued vouchers for refund. The
said vouchers were submitted to Pedro Gimenez, the then Auditor General, who denied the tax refund.
Gimenez maintained that urea and formaldehyde, as two separate and distinct components are not tax
exempt; that what is tax exempt is urea formaldehyde (the synthetic resin formed by combining urea and
formaldehyde). Gimenez cited the provision of Sec. 2, par 18 of Republic Act No. 2609 which provides:
The margin established by the Monetary Board pursuant to the provision of section one hereof shall not be
imposed upon the sale of foreign exchange for the importation of the following:
xxx
xxx
xxx
XVIII. Urea formaldehyde for the manufacture of plywood and hardboard when imported by and for the
exclusive use of end-users.
Casco however averred that the term urea formaldehyde appearing in this provision should be construed
as urea and formaldehyde. It further contends that the bill approved in Congress contained the copulative
conjunction and between the terms urea and, formaldehyde, and that the members of Congress
intended to exempt urea and formaldehyde separately as essential elements in the manufacture of the
synthetic resin glue called urea formaldehyde, not the latter a finished product, citing in support of this
view the statements made on the floor of the Senate, during the consideration of the bill before said House,
by members thereof.
The enrolled bill however used the term urea formaldehyde
ISSUE: Whether or not the term urea formaldehyde should be construed as urea and formaldehyde.
HELD: No. Urea formaldehyde is not a chemical solution. It is the synthetic resin formed as a
condensation product from definite proportions of urea and formaldehyde under certain conditions relating
to temperature, acidity, and time of reaction. Urea formaldehyde is clearly a finished product, which
is patently distinct and different from urea and formaldehyde, as separate articles used in the
manufacture of the synthetic resin known as urea formaldehyde.
The opinions or statements of any member of Congress during the deliberation of the said law/bill do not
represent the entirety of the Congress itself. What is printed in the enrolled bill would be conclusive
upon the courts. The enrolled bill which uses the term urea formaldehyde instead of urea and
formaldehyde is conclusive upon the courts as regards the tenor of the measure passed by Congress and
approved by the President. If there has been any mistake in the printing of the bill before it was certified by
the officers of Congress and approved by the Executive on which the SC cannot speculate, without
jeopardizing the principle of separation of powers and undermining one of the cornerstones of our
democratic system the remedy is by amendment or curative legislation, not by judicial decree.