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Regalian Doctrine (Mas Detailed)
Regalian Doctrine (Mas Detailed)
has become one of the hottest, if not the hottest, topics in the business world.
During that confab, the country’s business sector conceded that the government
must regulate the mining industry.
While arguing that we can’t live without mining, famous businessman Manny V.
Pangilinan said that “the mining industry was not perfect”, thus it must be
regulated by both national and local governments.
A former government official said he was in favor of mining but under very strict
parameters.
In effect, what these influential people were saying is: “OK. Mining is good, but it
must be regulated and it must be for the good of society.”
This system is enshrined in the 1987 Constitution under Article 12, Section 2,
which states:
“All lands of the public domain, waters, minerals, coal, petroleum, and other
mineral oils, all forces of potential energy, fisheries, forests or timber, wildlife,
flora and fauna, and other natural resources are owned by the State.”
The above-mentioned Constitutional provision is the main reason why the
country’s mining industry is one of the most regulated industries in the world. In
fact, almost all mining countries of the world, except the United States, follow this
Regalian Doctrine.
In effect, it was this colonial principle that established and helped propagate the
feudal system in the 18th century, wherein most of the lands were owned by the
Catholic Church and by early feudal lords.
“Under the Regalian Doctrine, the Philippine Islands were Spanish possessions
and all lands therein were Crown lands disposable to individual, institutions, or
corporations as the Crown willed in the form of encomiendas and/or landed
estates called haciendas, together with the services and tributes of the native
inhabitants who had lived in the lands as their ancestral homelands.”[1]
The first victims of the doctrine were the early settlers who owned and occupied
their lands since time immemorial.
“The Maura Act highlighted the colonial regime’s insensitivity to the plight and
potential of the colony’s poor rural majority. By empowering the colonial officials
to deny legal recognition of community-based property rights, the Maura act
reneged on Spain’s thre-centuries-old (albeit largely ignored) commitment to
respect such traditions, thus disenfranchising several millions of rural
farmers.”[2]
This feudal system favored a few lucky men— the caciques— who acquired legal
titles through collaboration with the colonial regime. This government-sponsored
injustice, caused by inequitable allocation of legal rights to natural resources, led
to the first revolt against colonial rule in the country two years after the Maura
rule was implemented in 1894. However in 1898 Spain lost to the United States,
which ended its three-centuries-old rule in the Philippines.
Following the fall of the Spanish rule, the United States reinvented the Regalian
Doctrine as a “convenient legal pretext”. According to Lynch and Talbott, the U.S.
colonial regime, under the rule of the Democrats, concocted and promoted a
legal myth now called the “Regalian Doctrine” in order to “justify and perpetuate
the expropriations based on the Maura Act of 1894”.[3] This new lie asserted that
Ferdinand Magellan acquired the early settlers’ property rights and sovereignty
when he planted a cross on a small island known as Mactan in 1521.
“The mythical Regalian Doctrine provided the new colonial regime with a
convenient legal pretext for claiming ownership of more than 90 percent of the
Philippines’ total land mass. It likewise nurtured the largely unrealized hope of
senior U.S. colonial officials who believe that they could lure U.S. corporations—
especially sugar-cane-growing enterprises— to the Philippines by providing them
with legal rights over large tracts of fertile land.”[4]
Certainly those “senior U.S. colonial officials” were part of the then dominant
Democratic party in the United States. It must be noted that the American
society, from 1890s up to 1930s, had been undergoing drastic political changes
now known as the ‘progressive era’. During that dark period, the United States
dramatically departed from its founding principles— the Republican principles of
limited government, free market capitalism, and non-intervention.
Doctrine repugnant to property right
In the landmark case Carino v. Insular Government, the Court declared that the
land occupied by the Philippines since time immemorial was never legally public
land. Justice Holmes, who penned the ponencia, stressed that even if Spanish
Crown refused to recognize the property rights of the early inhabitants, it did “not
follow that, in the view of the United States, [they] had lost all rights and [were]
merely trespasser[s].” However, contrary to the general notion that the Maura
Law mandated “the confiscation of a right”, Holmes clarified that the Spanish law
merely “withdraw the privilege to register rights.”[6]
The U.S. Court considered the doctrine repugnant, noting that the argument
“seems to amount to a denial of native titles for the want of ceremonies which the
Spaniards would not have permitted and had not the power to enforce.”[7]
Nealy 100 years later the ruling in Carino became the ‘philosophical’ basis of the
Indigenous People’s Rights Act (IPRA) of 1997.
The Carino doctrine states: “Every presumption is and ought to be against the
Government in a case like the present. It might, perhaps, be proper and sufficient
to say that when, as far back as testimony or memory goes, the land has been
held by individuals under a claim of private ownership, it will be presumed to
have been held in the same way from before the Spanish conquest, and never to
have been public land.”
I repeat: the Carino ruling simply affirmed and empowered the property rights of
every individual, not merely of so-called indigenous community people, and
strongly repudiated the statist idea that all lands of public domain belong to the
state.
The legality or constitutionality of IPRA was challenged before the Court in Cruz
v. DENR. The petitioner argued that the Act unlawfully deprived the State of
ownership over lands of the public domain as well as of minerals and other
natural resources therein, in violation of the Regalian Doctrine still embodied in
Section 2, Article XII of the Constitution. In ruling in favor of indigenous people’s
right to their ancestral lands and ancestral domain, the Supreme Court, in effect,
parodied King Philip’s royal mandate in 1594, wherein the latter specified that
“Grants of land to Spaniards be without injury to the natives and those which
have been granted to their loss and injury be returned to their lawful owners.”[8]
“First, it vests ownership and control of land— and the resources therein— in the
hand of the State, to the prejudice of the same communities [indigenous people].
The only generally recognized exceptions to this general rule are lands which are
already covered by documents of titles. Lands which are not so titled are treated
as part of the public or government lands, or of the public domain.
“Secondly, as a corollary to the above, the natural resources within these public
lands are consequently under the control of the State.”[9]
If during the Spanish rule the entire Philippine territory was considered property
of the Spanish Crown, today a reinvented Regalian Doctrine makes the State the
property owner of all lands of the public domain, and this is the reason why the
entire Philippine economy and almost all economic activities are heavily
regulated. This is the reason why the new and previous constitutions heavily
restricted foreign ownership of land and business. This royalist, colonial
doctrine—along with its allied principles, namely, social justice, social equality,
egalitarianism, national patrimony, and public welfare— is the reason why this
country remains poor. In fact, as most formerly socialistic countries in Asia
embark on economic openness and liberalization, the Philippines is moving
backwards, as its leaders refuse to give up these primitive, tribal principles.
The Supreme Court held: “In any case, the constitutional provision allowing the
President to enter into FTAAs with foreign-owned corporations is an exception to
the rule that participation in the nation’s natural resources is reserved exclusively
to Filipinos. Accordingly, such provision must be construed strictly against their
enjoyment by non-Filipinos.”
However, on December 1, 2004, the Supreme Court reversed its earlier ruling
(Jan. 17, 2004), by a vote of 10-4 with one abstention. The Court justified its
reversal by arguing that the “Constitution should be read in broad life-giving
strokes; it should not be used to strangulate economic growth or to serve narrow
parochial interest. This ruling, in effect upheld the constitutionality of the Mining
Act.
The mining industry, including all other industries, in this country should be free
from the shackles of these instruments of statism or collectivism.
With all due to respect to some of our industrialists and businessmen in the
mining industry who have clear conscience and who have honestly achieved
their economic success, the only solution is economic freedom under a free
market system— and the only way to achieve this goal is through constitutional
revision.
Contrary to views and advocacy of some of the country’s business elites, the
idea of public-private partnership will only give coercive political power to
politicians, both in the national and local government, to use the same power
against unarmed businessmen.
There is a big distinction between political power and economic power. Political
power in business is that which empowers or authorizes any politician to
arbitrarily regulate economic activities and to crackdown on what some potential
‘central planners’ deem as ‘activities’ inimical to the interest of the whole society.
On the other hand, economic power is that power held by any businessman who
engages in business or any kind of economic activity. It is the power to persuade
or to convince the people— who are essentially the consumers— to buy or
patronize one’s product or service. Under a free market system, consumers vote
with their money, and every dollar spent on any product or service constitutes a
separate vote. That’s the only power held and enjoyed by every businessman.
To understand why economic freedom is the best and only moral solution to our
mining industry and to the country’s current economic ills, it is necessary to look
at the history of mining and of mining law and to know the unintended
consequences of political regulation of mining industry.
In the early years of the United States, which is the birthplace of free market
capitalism, some of its ceded states were acquired from Mexico and France—
both of which had long-established mining laws, which carried the influence of
the Regalian Doctrine. The sway of this colonial doctrine, which was paramount
in these countries, had been said to be at odds with the United States’ Anglo-
Saxon common-law system. The American common-law system gives a
landowner a right to the minerals beneath the surface of his land property.
According to Jesse Hoover, who wrote a compelling book titled ‘The Economics
of Mining’:
“The Regalian Doctrine did not prevail, and therefore a patent from the federal
government has ordinarily carried with it the right both to hold the surface of the
property and to mine all minerals beneath the surface. Title vests in the patentee
absolutely, and under most conditions the land becomes private property.”[10]
Mining claims and statist regulations of the mining industry were virtually non-
existent in the early free market years of the United States. Such mining claims
and regulations first existed in Europe and in Latin America, wherein the
Regalian Doctrine, or the notion that mineral wealth pertains to the Crown,
prevailed.
In 1807 the U.S. Congress started leasing mining lands, however, the results
were disappointing that it decided to abandon the system in 1847.
Hoover said that miners began to search for a mining sanctuary that guaranteed
them freedom from government restriction and intervention. He wrote:
“When miners from all parts of the world flocked to the Pacific Coast the mineral
lands were unsurveyed and there was no federal administration or restriction of
mining in the public domain. Regulations were worked out by small groups of
miners in the various districts. These men, ignorant of precedents and principles,
met together and passed rules which were the outgrowth of the needs of the hour
in rude times and were based merely upon expediency. These early codes have
been termed by R.W. Raymond, a writer of greatest authority, the “law of
lariat.”[11]
“With the lariat they measures the distance and assigned to each miner along the
gold-bearing gulch— a double portion to the discoverer, and a single portion to
his successors, in the order of their coming. With the lariat, they hung, after such
due process of law as was available, the rascal who stole a horse, or a bag of gold-
dust, or a mining claim, or killed another man without giving him a fair notice
and a fair notice and a chance to defend himself.”[12]
That statement reminds me of how the Philippine government and the anti-
mining, anti-mind, anti-reality mob treat people in the mining industry, particularly
foreign investors who are willing to share their technical know-how, technologies,
and wealth with Filipinos. These technical people are being publicly criticized by
Filipino throwbacks who just can’t understand the crucial, indispensable role of
mining in human life.
Yet what these clueless anti-mining leftists do not understand is that their lives
and survival on earth largely depend upon the people in the mining industry. Yes,
the future lies in the ability and willingness of some people to mine earth’s hidden
resource and then transform the same into an actual wealth.
America’s early mining industry did not succeed through government help or
government regulations. It succeeded by searching— and then valuing—
freedom, which was unfortunately eroded during America’s progressive era. It’s
no surprise that America became the most economically prosperous nation on
earth. All credit must go to America’s Founding Fathers who understood and
valued the concepts of limited government, individual rights, and economic
freedom.
The real enemy is this Regalian principle, which is one of the root causes of
injustice, poverty, and statism in the Philippines.