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MIDTERM EXAMINATION IN ELECTION LAW Read the facts carefully. Answer briefly and concisely the questions that follow. Always explain or support your answer. CASE NO. 1 :  The petitioner, Alfredo Guieb and the private respondent, Manuel Asuncion, were candidates for the position of Punong Barangay of Barangay Nilombot, Sta. Barbara, Pangasinan, in the barangay election of 9 May 1994. After the canvass of votes in the said barangay, the former was proclaimed as the winning candidate. The latter then seasonably filed an election protest with the Municipal Trial Court (MTC) of Sta. Barbara, Pangasinan. On 27 May 1994, the MTC, per Judge Lilia C. Español, rendered a decision confirming the proclamation of the petitioner and dismissing the protest of the private respondent. The private respondent appealed the decision to the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Dagupan City. The case was assigned to Branch 42 thereof. In its decision of 31 August 1994, the RTC, per respondent Judge Luis M. Fontanilla, reversed the decision of the MTC, annulled the proclamation of the petitioner, and declared the private respondent as the winning c andidate with a plurality of four votes over the petitioner. After the petitioner's motion for reconsideration of the decision was denied on 25 November 1994, the private respondent immediately filed a motion for the issuance of a writ of execution. In its order of 8 December 1994, 5 the RTC declared that the motion should be properly filed with the court of origin and that the decision of 31 August 1994 had already become final; it then ordered the remand of the records of the case to the MTC of Sta. Barbara, Pangasinan, for proper disposition. On 12 December 1994, the petitioner filed with this Court a motion for extension of time to file a petition for review on certiorari. On 29 December 1994, he sent by registered mail his petition, which this Court received only on 25 January 1995. It turned out, however, that his motion for extension of time to file a petition had already been denied on 4 January 1995 for his failure to submit an affidavit of service of that motion. On 8 February 1995, he filed a motion for the reconsideration of the denial. Meanwhile, on 20 December 1994, the private respondent filed with the MTC a motion for the issuance of a writ of execution. 6 In its order of 19 January 1995, the MTC deferred action on the said motion and required the petitioner's counsel to inform the court of the status of his petit ion with this Court. For failure of the petiti oner's counsel to compl y with the said order, the court issued an order on 7 February 1995 granting the issuance of a writ of execution. On 13 February 1995, howev er, the court received the said counsel's Compliance dated 9 February 1995 9 wherein he informed the court of the petitioner's motion to reconsider this Court's resolution denying the motion for extension of time to file his petition. In the resolution of 8 February 1995, this Court required the respondent to comment on the petition. On 16 February 1995, the petitioner filed with the MTC an Urgent Motion to Stay and/or Suspend Execution. This motion was, however, denied on the ground that the writ, having been hand-carried by the private respondent to the office of the sheriff, must have already been implemented and, therefore, the motion to stay or suspend the same has become moot and academic.  On 20 March 1995, the sheriff returned the writ of execution with the information that in the presence of a barangay kagawad and barangay residents, he enforced the writ and proclaimed the private respondent as Punong Barangay of Barangay Nilombot, Sta. Barbara, Pangasinan. QUESTION 1.On the basis of the above facts, who should be the rightful punong barangay of Nilombot? Support your answer. ANSWE NO. 1: Alfredo Guieb is the rightful punong barangay.The decision in the MTC in favor of Guieb had become final, considering that his opponent made the wrong appeal to the RTC.( GUIEB vs. FONTANILLA, ET AL. (G.R. No. 118118 August 14, 1995) CASE NO. 2: Facts: In its Minu te Resolutio n No. 96-3076 of 29 October 1996, the Commission on Elections (COME LEC) resolved to file an information for violation of Section 261(i) of the Omnibus Election Code against private respondents Diosdada Amor, a public school principal, and Esbel Chua and Ruben Magluyoan, both public school teachers, for having engaged in partisan political activities. The COMELEC authorized its Regional Director in Region VIII to handle the prosecution of the c ases. Forthwith, nine informations for violation of Section 261(i) of the Omnibus Election were filed with Branch 23 of the Regional Trial Court of Alien, Northern Samar, and docketed therein as follows: a) Cr iminal Cases Nos. A- 1439 and A-1442, ag ai nst pri vate respondent s Diosdada Amor , Esbel Ch ua, and Ruben Magluyoan. b) Cr iminal Case No. A -1443, against pri vate r espondents Esbel Chua and Ruben Magluyoan. c) Cr iminal Cases Nos. A-1444 an d A- 1445, agai nst pr ivat e respondent Esbel Chua on ly; d) Cr iminal Cases Nos. A- 1446 t o A- 1449, agai nst pr ivat e respondent Diosdada Amor onl y. In an Order 2 issued on 25 August 1997, respondent Judge Tomas B. Noynay, as presiding judge of Branch 23, motu proprio ordered the records of the cases to be withdrawn and directed the COMELEC Law Department to file the cases with the appropriate Municipal Trial Court on the ground that pursuant to Section 32 of B.P. Blg. 129 as amended by R.A. No. 7691, the Regional Trial Court has no jurisdiction over the cases since the maximum imposable penalty in each of the cases does not exceed six years of imprisonment. Pertinent portions of the Order read as follows: 1 1

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MIDTERM EXAMINATION IN ELECTION LAWRead the facts carefully. Answer briefly and concisely the questions that follow.Always explain or support your answer.

CASE NO. 1:  The petitioner, Alfredo Guieb and the private respondent, Manuel Asuncion, were candidates for the position

of Punong Barangay of Barangay Nilombot, Sta. Barbara, Pangasinan, in the barangay election of 9 May 1994. After the canvass of votes in the said barangay, the former was proclaimed as the winning candidate. The latter then seasonably filed an election protestwith the Municipal Trial Court (MTC) of Sta. Barbara, Pangasinan.

On 27 May 1994, the MTC, per Judge Lilia C. Español, rendered a decision confirming the proclamation of the petitioneand dismissing the protest of the private respondent.

The private respondent appealed the decision to the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Dagupan City. The case was assigned toBranch 42 thereof.

In its decision of 31 August 1994, the RTC, per respondent Judge Luis M. Fontanilla, reversed the decision of the MTCannulled the proclamation of the petitioner, and declared the private respondent as the winning candidate with a plurality of four votesover the petitioner.

After the petitioner's motion for reconsideration of the decision was denied on 25 November 1994, the private respondenimmediately filed a motion for the issuance of a writ of execution.

In its order of 8 December 1994, 5 the RTC declared that the motion should be properly filed with the court of origin and thatthe decision of 31 August 1994 had already become final; it then ordered the remand of the records of the case to the MTC of Sta.Barbara, Pangasinan, for proper disposition.

On 12 December 1994, the petitioner filed with this Court a motion for extension of time to file a petition for review oncertiorari. On 29 December 1994, he sent by registered mail his petition, which this Court received only on 25 January 1995. It turnedout, however, that his motion for extension of time to file a petition had already been denied on 4 January 1995 for his failure to

submit an affidavit of service of that motion. On 8 February 1995, he filed a motion for the reconsideration of the denial.Meanwhile, on 20 December 1994, the private respondent filed with the MTC a motion for the issuance of a writ ofexecution. 6

In its order of 19 January 1995, the MTC deferred action on the said motion and required the petitioner's counsel to informthe court of the status of his petition with this Court. For failure of the petitioner's counsel to comply with the said order, the courissued an order on 7 February 1995 granting the issuance of a writ of execution. On 13 February 1995, however, the court receivedthe said counsel's Compliance dated 9 February 1995 9 wherein he informed the court of the petitioner's motion to reconsider thisCourt's resolution denying the motion for extension of time to file his petition.

In the resolution of 8 February 1995, this Court required the respondent to comment on the petition.On 16 February 1995, the petitioner filed with the MTC an Urgent Motion to Stay and/or Suspend Execution. This motion

was, however, denied on the ground that the writ, having been hand-carried by the private respondent to the office of the sheriffmust have already been implemented and, therefore, the motion to stay or suspend the same has become moot and academic.

 On 20 March 1995, the sheriff returned the writ of execution with the information that in the presence of a barangay

kagawad and barangay residents, he enforced the writ and proclaimed the private respondent as Punong Barangay of Barangay

Nilombot, Sta. Barbara, Pangasinan.QUESTION 1.On the basis of the above facts, who should be the rightful punong barangay of Nilombot? Support youranswer.

ANSWE NO. 1: Alfredo Guieb is the rightful punong barangay.The decision in the MTC in favor of Guieb had become final,considering that his opponent made the wrong appeal to the RTC.( GUIEB vs. FONTANILLA, ET AL. (G.R. No. 118118 Augus14, 1995)

CASE NO. 2: Facts: In its Minute Resolution No. 96-3076 of 29 October 1996, the Commission on Elections (COMELEC

resolved to file an information for violation of Section 261(i) of the Omnibus Election Code against private respondents DiosdadaAmor, a public school principal, and Esbel Chua and Ruben Magluyoan, both public school teachers, for having engaged in partisanpolitical activities. The COMELEC authorized its Regional Director in Region VIII to handle the prosecution of the cases.

Forthwith, nine informations for violation of Section 261(i) of the Omnibus Election were filed with Branch 23 of the RegionaTrial Court of Alien, Northern Samar, and docketed therein as follows:

a) Criminal Cases Nos. A-1439 and A-1442, against private respondents Diosdada Amor, Esbel Chua, andRuben Magluyoan.b) Criminal Case No. A-1443, against private respondents Esbel Chua and Ruben Magluyoan.c) Criminal Cases Nos. A-1444 and A-1445, against private respondent Esbel Chua only;d) Criminal Cases Nos. A-1446 to A-1449, against private respondent Diosdada Amor only.

In an Order 2 issued on 25 August 1997, respondent Judge Tomas B. Noynay, as presiding judge of Branch 23, motuproprio ordered the records of the cases to be withdrawn and directed the COMELEC Law Department to file the cases with theappropriate Municipal Trial Court on the ground that pursuant to Section 32 of B.P. Blg. 129 as amended by R.A. No. 7691, theRegional Trial Court has no jurisdiction over the cases since the maximum imposable penalty in each of the cases does not exceedsix years of imprisonment. Pertinent portions of the Order read as follows:

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It is worth pointing out that all the accused are uniformly charged for [sic] Violation of Sec. 261(i) of the Omnibus ElectionCode, which under Sec. 264 of the same Code carries a penalty of not less than one (1) year but not more than six (6) years ofimprisonment and not subject to Probation plus disqualification to hold public office or deprivation of the right of suffrage.

Sec. 31 [sic] of the Judiciary Reorganization Act of 1980 (B.P.) Blg. 129 as Amended by Rep. Act. 6691 [sic] (ExpandedJurisdiction) states: Sec. 32. Jurisdiction Metropolitan Trial Courts, Municipal Circuit Trial Courts, Municipal Trial Courts in CriminalCases Except [in] cases falling within the exclusive original jurisdiction of the Regional Trial Courts and the Sandiganbayan, theMunicipal Trial Courts, Metropolitan Trial Courts and the Municipal Circuit Trial Courts shall exercise:

(1) Exclusive original jurisdiction over all violations of city or municipal ordinance committed within theirespective territorial jurisdiction; and

(2) Exclusive original jurisdiction over all offenses punishable with an imprisonment of not exceeding six (6years irrespective of the amount or fine and regardless of other imposable accessory and other penalties including the civiliability arising from such offenses or predicated thereon, irrespective of time [sic], nature, value and amount thereof,Provided, However, that in offenses including damages to property through criminal negligence, they shall have exclusiveoriginal jurisdiction thereof.

In light of the foregoing, this Court has therefore, no jurisdiction over the cases filed considering that the maximumpenalty imposable did not exceed six (6) years.The two motions for reconsideration separately filed by the COMELEC Regional Director of Region VIII and by the

COMELEC itself through its Legal Department having been denied by the public respondent in the Order of 17 October 1997, thepetitioner filed this special civil action. It contends that public respondent "has erroneously misconstrued the provisions of Rep. ActNo. 7691 in arguing that the Municipal Trial Court has exclusive original jurisdiction to try and decide election offenses" becausepursuant to Section 268 of the Omnibus Election Code and this Court's ruling in "Alberto [sic] vs. Judge Juan Lavilles, Jr.," RegionaTrial Courts have the exclusive original jurisdiction over election offenses.

QUESTION: Which Court, MTC or RTC has jurisdiction over the said offenses? Explain your ANSWER.

ANSWER NO.2: The RTC has jurisdiction. “We have explicitly ruled in Morales v. Court of Appealsi[7] that by virtue of theexception provided for in the opening sentence of Section 32, the exclusive original jurisdiction of Metropolitan Trial Courts, MunicipaTrial Courts, and Municipal Circuit Trial Courts does not cover those criminal cases which by specific provisions of law fall within theexclusive original jurisdiction of Regional Trial Courts and of the Sandiganbayan, regardless of the penalty prescribed thereforOtherwise stated, even if those excepted cases are punishable by imprisonment of not exceeding six (6) years ( i.e.,  prisioncorreccional, arresto mayor, or arresto menor ), jurisdiction thereon is retained by the Regional Trial Courts or the Sandiganbayan, asthe case may be.

Among the examples cited in Morales as falling within the exception provided for in the opening sentence of Section 32 arecases under (1) Section 20 of B.P. Blg. 129; (2) Article 360 of the Revised Penal Code, as amended; (3) the Decree on IntellectuaProperty;ii[8] and (4) the Dangerous Drugs Act of 1972,iii[9] as amended.

Undoubtedly, pursuant to Section 268 of the Omnibus Election Code, election offenses also fall within the exception.As we stated in Morales, jurisdiction is conferred by the Constitution or by Congress. Outside the cases enumerated in Section

5(2) of Article VIII of the Constitution, Congress has the plenary power to define, prescribe, and apportion the jurisdiction of variouscourts. Congress may thus provide by law that a certain class of cases should be exclusively heard and determined by one court

Such law would be a special law and must be construed as an exception to the general law on jurisdiction of courts, namely, theJudiciary Act of 1948, as amended, and the Judiciary Reorganization Act of 1980. R.A. No. 7691 can by no means be considered asa special law on jurisdiction; it is merely an amendatory law intended to amend specific sections of the Judiciary Reorganization Actof 1980. Hence, R.A. No. 7691 does not have the effect of repealing laws vesting upon Regional Trial Courts or the Sandiganbayanexclusive original jurisdiction to hear and decide the cases therein specified. That Congress never intended that R.A. No. 7691should repeal such special provisions is indubitably evident from the fact that it did not touch at all the opening sentence of Section32 of B.P. Blg. 129 providing for the exception.It is obvious that respondent judge did not read at all the opening sentence of Section 32 of B.P. Blg. 129, as amended. It isthus an opportune time, as any, to remind him, as well as other judges, of his duty to be studious of the principles of law, i

[10] to administer his office with due regard to the integrity of the system of the law itself, v[11] to be faithful to the law, and tomaintain professional competence.vi[12 ]”   COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS, petitioner,vs. HON. TOMAS B. NOYNAY, ActingPresiding Judge, Regional Trial Court, Branch 23, Allen, Northern Samar, and DIOSDADA F. AMOR, ESBEL CHUA, andRUBEN MAGLUYOAN, respondents. (G.R. No. 132365 July 9, 1998)

CASE NO. 3: Facts: After the results of the May 8, 1995 elections were canvassed in 73 precincts in the Municipality of

Matnog, Province of Sorsogon, petitioner Gerry B. Garay, a candidate for vice-mayor, was credited with 5,411 votes and privaterespondent Jaime Gata, Jr., his rival, 5,391 or a margin of twenty (20) votes in favor of petitioner. The said results, however, excludedthe votes from precinct 30-A of Barangay Culasi, Matnog, where armed men forcibly took the ballot box together with the electionreturns, other election papers, documents and/or paraphernalia.Because the votes in precinct 30-A would obviously affect the standing of the said candidates, the Municipal Board of Canvassers(MBC) did not proclaim the winner. Failing to convince said Board to proclaim him by virtue of a certificate of votes issued by theBoard of Election Inspectors (BEI) showing he garnered 116 votes against 68 votes for Garay in said precinct, respondent Gatabrought the matter to the respondent Commission. In his appeal, 3 respondent Gata included a copy of the Tally Board, duly

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authenticated by the BEI, showing the same count as the Certificate of Votes: that is, Gata 116 votes and Garay 68 votes. If thesewere added to the already canvassed votes, Gata would win by a 28-vote margin.

In the meantime, while the said appeal was pending, respondent COMELEC upon recommendation of Comm. JulioDesamito conducted a special election in precinct 30-A, 4 on the ground of failure of election due to the loss of the ballot box and theelection documents. Both petitioner Garay and respondent Gata actively participated in the election which was held on June 7, 1995Petitioner won handily in the said election and was thereafter proclaimed Vice-Mayor of Matnog.

The Comelec First Division denied due course to the appeal because of appellant's (Gata) failure "to furnish theCommission all pertinent documents necessary for the latter to rule on the matter." Respondent Gata's motion for reconsideration othis Comelec action is still pending before the Comelec First Division. Subsequently, the COMELEC En Banc issued a Resolution

promulgated on August 7, 1995 annulling the special election and directing the MBC to reconvene and to include "in the canvass, thevotes reflected on the Tally Board submitted by the Board of Election Inspectors . . . ." As a result, respondent Gata was declaredwinner. The Commissioner En Banc said that it was "convinced without taint of any doubt that the votes shown in the tally board andcertificate of votes reflect the true and genuine will of the electorate. . . ."QUESTION: 1.Discuss whether the COMELEC EN BANC is correct in its action.

ANSWER NO 3: Comelec en banc is wrong. After judicious deliberation and consultation, we hold that the Comelec En Bancgravely abused its discretion when it decided to set aside and annul the special election it had earlier called and conducted becauseof failure of election due to the forcible taking by armed men of the ballot box together with the election returns and other electiondocuments and paraphernalia.

The respondent Commission's plea that it is "convinced without taint of any doubt that the votes shown in the tally board andcertificate of votes reflect the true and genuine will of the electorate" is weak and unpersuasive because the Certificate of Votes andthe Tally Board were already in the possession of the COMELEC before it decided to call the special election. Note that privaterespondent Gata presented the Certificate before the Municipal Board of Canvassers (MBC) during the canvassing. When the latterejected it, Gata appealed to the COMELEC from the said ruling, attaching to his appeal a copy of the Tally Board. Nevertheless, the

respondent Commission still decided to hold the special election.The Certificate of Votes presented by Gata may have been obtained by him pursuant to Section 16 of R.A. No. 6646 (The

Electoral Reform Law of 1987).vii[7]

Thus, when the said Certificate was rejected by the MBC, it must have been because Gata not only failed to comply with theprocedure for its identification and offer as mandated in Section 17 of R.A. No. 6646 which reads:

"SEC. 17. Certificate of Votes as Evidence. - The provisions of Sections 235 and 236 of Batas Pambansa Blg. 881notwithstanding, the certificate of votes shall be admissible in evidence to prove tampering, alteration, falsification or any anomalycommitted in the election returns concerned, when duly authenticated by testimonial or documentary evidence presented to theboard of canvassers by at least two members of the board of election inspectors who issued the certificate: Provided, That failure topresent any certificate of votes shall not be a bar to the presentation of other evidence to impugn the authenticity of the electionreturns."but also because a certificate of votes can never be a valid basis for canvass. According to Section 17, a certificate of votes can onlybe "evidence to prove tampering, alteration, falsification or any other anomaly committed in the election returns concerned, when dulyauthenticated x x x." A certificate of votes does not constitute sufficient evidence of the true and genuine results of the election; onlyelection returns are, pursuant to Sections 231, 233-236, and 238 of B.P. Blg. 881.viii[8] 

In like manner, neither is the tally board sufficient evidence of the real results of the election. Moreover, in the instant case, thefact that the tally board made its appearance only when Gata attached it to his appeal makes it highly suspect and thereforeunreliable. Such appearance has not been convincingly explained even by Lyn M. Garil, chairman of the BEI. Her affidavit that theTally Board "dropped to the floor" as the armed men left the polling place is hearsay. Section 217 of B.P. Blg. 881 (The OmnibusElection Code) requires that the tally board or sheet shall, together with other election documents, be placed inside the ballot box:

"SEC. 217. Delivery of the ballot boxes, keys and election supplies and documents. - Upon the termination of the counting ofvotes, the board of election inspectors shall place in the compartment for valid ballots, the envelopes for used ballots hereinbeforereferred to, the unused ballots, the tally board or sheet, a copy of the election returns, and the minutes of its proceedings, and thenshall lock the ballot box with three padlocks and such safety devices as the Commission may prescribe. Immediately after the box islocked, the three keys of the pad locks in three separate envelopes and shall be sealed and signed by all the members of the boardof election inspectors. The authorized representatives of the Commission shall forthwith take delivery of said envelopes, signing areceipt therefore, and deliver without delay one envelope to the provincial treasurer, another to the provincial fiscal and the other tothe provincial election supervisor.

The ballot box, all supplies of the board of election inspectors and all pertinent papers and documents shall immediately bedelivered by the board of election inspectors and the watchers to the city or municipal treasurer who shall keep his office open al

night on the day of election if necessary for this purpose, and shall provide necessary facilities for said delivery at the expense of thecity or municipality. The book of voters shall be returned to the election registrar who shall keep it under his custody. The treasureand the election registrars, as the case may be, shall on the day after the election require the members of the board of electioninspectors who failed to send the objects referred to herein to deliver the same to him immediately and acknowledge receipt thereofin detail. "(Sec. 161, 1978 EC).

Since the ballot box, and necessarily, all the election documents contained therein, had been forcibly taken and had never beenrecovered, then the tally board must have been likewise lost.

The fact that the Comelec decided to hold the special election shows that it was not convinced of the authenticity and/orsufficiency of Gata's "certificate of votes" and "tally board."

The special election was called pursuant to Section 6 of the Omnibus Election Code, which requires notice and hearing before aspecial election may be held. There was no objection from any candidate or political party to the holding of the special election (asnone had questioned it). In fact, the main protagonists - the petitioner and private respondent Gata - even actively participated in the

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said election. The latter's active participation therein rendered his appeal from the ruling of the MBC moot and placed him inestoppel from relying again on his "certificate of votes" and "tally board." Therefore, the First Division of the COMELEC should havesimply dismissed Gata's appeal on the ground that it had become moot and academic, instead of dismissing it on the merits becauseof Gata's failure to "furnish the Commission all pertinent documents necessary for [the Division] to rule on the matter."

The COMELEC En Banc committed a more serious error, amounting to grave abuse of discretion, when it reversed its FirsDivision and gave due course to the appeal. Worse, it annulled the special election had declared that Gata's "certificate of votes" and"tally board" reflected the true and genuine will of the electorate." The latter declaration effectively overturned its earlier decision tohold the special election which decision was obviously based on its finding that the said "certificate of votes" and "tally board," thenalready before it, were insufficient or inadequate to prove that there was failure of election. Moreover, the decision to hold the specia

election and long become final; such election having already been held and the winner proclaimed, the COMELEC therefore had losits jurisdiction to revoke and set aside that decision. Additionally, it might be argued that in upholding the Certificate of Votes andTally Board as reflective of the will of the electorate, and annulling the special elections, the Comelec also in effect declared withoutadequate basis, said special elections as not reflective of such popular mandate.

On the other hand, if the position of the COMELEC were to be sustained, then we would in effect be ruling that it acted withoutor in excess of jurisdiction or with grave abuse of discretion when it called and conducted the special election, which was not at allraised as an issue in this case. So too, we would permit the COMELEC to reverse and set aside a final and already executeddecision to hold the special election; and allow it to decide a controversy - viz., the appeal from a ruling of the MBC - which had in facand in law been rendered moot and academic by the special election.While it is true that the respondent Commission has the power to annul special elections or declare a failure of specialelections where it is shown that no voting had taken place or the election therein resulted in a failure to elect; and the votesnot cast would affect the results of the.election,ix[9] nonetheless, in the instant case, the June 17, 1995 electoral exercise wasnot a failed election, as voting had taken place and the election did not result in a failure to elect. In other words, the peoplespoke freely and honestly in a contest voluntarily participated in by both parties herein. Hence, the popular will as clearlyexpressed in the votes cast and counted should prevail over dubious election documents of a previous failed election in the

same precinct. Since the validity and binding force of this special election has not been put at issue and since for all it isworth, such electoral exercise, both in the casting and canvassing of votes, was conducted regularly and peacefully, thenthis Court's duty is to resolve the issue "in a manner that would give effect to the will of the majority" as expressed in suchspecial election, for it is merely sound public policy to cause elective offices to be filled by those who are the unquestionedchoice of the majority.x[ (GERRY B. GARAY vs. COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS, ET AL. G.R. No. 121331 August 28, 1996)

CASE NO. 4:FACTS: Petitioner SULTAN MOHAMAD L. MITMUG and private respondent DATU GAMBAI DAGALANGIT

were among the candidates for the mayoralty position of Lumba-Bayabao during the 11 may 1992 election. There were sixty-seven(67) precincts in the municipality.

As was heretofore stated, voter turnout was rather low, particularly in forty-nine (49) precincts where the average voteturnout was 22.26%, i.e., only 2,330 out of 9,830 registered voters therein cast their votes. Five (5) of these precincts did not conducactual voting at all.

Consequently, COMELEC ordered the holding of a special election on 30 May 1992 in the five (5) precincts which failed to

function during election day. On 30 July 1992 another special election was held for a sixth precinct.In the interim, petitioner filed a petition seeking the annulment of the special election conducted on 30 May 1992 alleging

various irregularities such as the alteration, tampering and substitution of ballots. But on 13 July 1992, COMELEC considered thepetition moot since the votes in the subject precincts were already counted.

Other petitions seeking the declaration of failure of election in some or all precincts of Lumba-Bayabao were also filed withCOMELEC by other mayoralty candidates, to wit:

1. SPA No. 92-324: On 6 June 1992, private respondent Datu Gamba Dagalangit filed an urgent petitionpraying for the holding of a special election in Precinct No. 22-A alleging therein that when the ballot box was opened,ballots were already torn to pieces. On 14 July 1992, the petition was granted and a special election for Precinct No. 22-Awas set for 25 July 1992. 4

2. SPC No. 92-336: On 16 June 19992, Datu Elias Abdusalam, another mayoralty candidate, filed a petitionto declare failure of election in twenty-nine (29) more precincts as a result of alleged tampering of ballots 5 and clustering ofprecincts. 6 On 16 July 1992, the petition was dismissed. COMELEC ruled that there must be a situation where there isabsolute inability to vote before a failure of election can be declared. 7 Since voting was actually conducted in the contested

precincts, there was no basis for the petition.

3. SPA No 92-368: On 20 June 1992, private respondent filed another petition, this time seeking to excludefrom the counting the ballots cast in six (6) precincts on the ground that the integrity of the ballot boxes therein was violated8 Again, on 14 July 1992, COMELEC considered the petition moot, as the issue raised therein was related to that of SPANo. 92-311 which on 9 July 1992 was already set aside as moot. 9

4. SPA No. 92-347: On 1 July 1992, Datu Bagato Khalid Lonta, a fourth mayoralty candidate, filed a petitionwhich in the main sought the declaration of failure of election in all sixty-seven (67) precincts of Lumba-Bayabao, Lanao deSur, on the ground of massive disenfranchisement of voters. 10 On 9 July 1992, COMELEC dismissed the petition, rulingthat the allegations therein did not support a case of failure of election.

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On 8 July 1992, petitioner filed a motion to intervene in these four (4) petitions. 12 But COMELEC treated the same as amotion for reconsideration and promptly denied it considering that under the COMELEC Rules of Procedure such motion was aprohibited pleading. 13

Thereafter, a new board of Election Inspectors was formed to conduct the special election set for 25 July 1992. Petitionerimpugned the creation of this Board. Nevertheless, on 30 July 1992, the new Board convened and began the canvassing of votes.Finally, on 31 July 1992, private respondent was proclaimed the duly elected Mayor of Lumba-Bayabao, Lanao del Sur.

On 3 August 1992, petitioner instituted the instant proceedings seeking the declaration of failure of election in forty-nine (49)precincts where less than a quarter of the electorate were able to cast their votes. He also prayed for the issuance of a temporaryrestraining order to enjoin private respondent from assuming office.

On 10 August 1992, petitioner lodged an election protest with the Regional trial Court of Lanao del Sur disputing the resulnot only of some but all the precincts of Lumba-Bayabao, del Sur.Respondents, on the other hand, assert that with the filing of an election protest, petitioner is already deemed to have

abandoned the instant petition.It may be noted that when petitioner filed his election protest with the Regional Trial Court of Lanao del Sur, he informed the

trial court of the pendency of these proceedings. Paragraph 3 of his protest states "[T]hat on August 3, 1992, your protestant filed aPetition for Certiorari with the Supreme Court . . . docketed as G.R. No. 106270 assailing the validity of the proclamation of the hereinprotestee. . . ." Evidently, petitioner did not intend to abandon his recourse with this Court. On the contrary, he intended to pursue itWhere only an election protest ex abundante ad cautela is filed, the Court retains jurisdiction to hear the petition seeking to annul anelection.

QUESTION:1. Whether respondent COMELEC acted with grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack of jurisdictionin denying motu proprio and without due notice and hearing the petitions seeking to declare a failure of election in some orall of the precincts in Lumba-Bayabao, Lanao del Sur. After all, petitioner argues, he has meritorious grounds in supportthereto, viz., the massive disenfranchisement of voters due to alleged terrorism and unlawful clustering of precincts, whichCOMELEC should have at least heard before rendering its judgment.

2. Is a low turn out of voters in an election a ground for a failure of election?

Answer NO. 4: The main issue is whether respondent COMELEC acted with grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack of jurisdiction in denying motu proprio and without due notice and hearing the petitions seeking to declare a failure of electionin some or all of the precincts in Lumba-Bayabao, Lanao del Sur. After all, petitioner argues, he has meritorious grounds insupport thereto, viz., the massive disenfranchisement of voters due to alleged terrorism and unlawful clustering oprecincts, which COMELEC should have at least heard before rendering its judgment.

Incidentally, a petition to annul an election is not a pre-proclamation controversy. Consequently, the proclamation of awinning candidate together with his subsequent assumption of office is not an impediment to the prosecution of the case toits logical conclusion. 17Under the COMELEC Rules of Procedure, within twenty-four (24) hours from the filing of a verified petition to declare afailure to elect, notices to all interested parties indicating therein the date of hearing should be served through the fastestmeans available. 18 The hearing of the case will also be summary in nature. 19

Based on the foregoing, the clear intent of the law is that a petition of this nature must be acted upon with dispatch onlyafter hearing thereon shall have been conducted. Since COMELEC denied the other petitions 20 which sought to includeforty-three (43) more precincts in a special election without conducting any hearing, it would appear then that there indeedmight have been grave abuse of discretion in denying the petitions.However, a closer examination of the COMELEC Rules of Procedure, particularly Sec. 2, Rule 26, thereof which was liftedfrom Sec. 6, B.P. 881, otherwise known as the Omnibus Election Code of the Philippines, indicates otherwise. It reads

Sec. 2. Failure of election. If, on account of force majeure, violence, terrorism, fraud or other analogous causes theelection in any precinct has not been held on the date fixed, or had been suspended before the hour fixed by law for theclosing of the voting, or after the voting and during the preparation and the transmission of the election returns or in thecustody of canvass thereof, such election results in a failure to elect, and in any of such cases the failure or suspension ofelection would affect the result of the election, the Commission shall, on the basis of a verified petition by any interestedparty and after due notice and hearing, call for the holding or continuation of the election not held, suspended or whichresulted in a failure to elect on a date reasonably close to the date of the election not held, suspended or which resulted in afailure to elect but not later than thirty (30) days after the cessation of the cause of such postponement or suspension of the

election or failure to elect.

Before COMELEC can act on a verified petition seeking to declare a failure of election, two (2) conditions must concur: firstno voting has taken place in the precinct or precincts on the date fixed by law or, even if there was voting, the electionnevertheless results in failure to elect; and, second, the votes not cast would affect the result of the election. 21In the case before us, it is indubitable that the votes not cast will definitely affect the outcome of the election. But, the firstrequisite is missing, i.e., that no actual voting took place, or even if there is, the results thereon will be tantamount to afailure to elect. Since actual voting and election by the registered voters in the questioned precincts have taken place, theresults thereof cannot be disregarded and excluded. 22 COMELEC therefore did not commit any abuse of discretion, muchless grave, in denying the petitions outright. There was no basis for the petitions since the facts alleged therein did noconstitute sufficient grounds to warrant the relief sought. For, the language of the law expressly requires the concurrenceof these conditions to justify the calling of a special election. 23

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Indeed, the fact that a verified petition is filed does not automatically mean that a hearing on the case will be held beforeCOMELEC will act on it. The verified petition must still show on its face that the conditions to declare a failure to elect arepresent. In the absence thereof, the petition must be denied outright.Considering that there is no concurrence of the two (2) conditions in the petitions seeking to declare failure of election inforty-three (43) more, precincts, there is no more need to receive evidence on alleged election irregularities.

Instead, the question of whether there have been terrorism and other irregularities is better ventilated in an election contestThese irregularities may not as a rule be invoked to declare a failure of election and to disenfranchise the electorate

through the misdeeds of a relative few. 24 Otherwise, elections will never be carried out with the resultandisenfranchisement of innocent voters as losers will always cry fraud and terrorism.There can be failure of election in a political unit only if the will of the majority has been defiled and cannot be ascertainedBut, if it can be determined, it must be accorded respect. After all, there is no provision in our election laws which requiresthat a majority of registered voters must cast their votes. All the law requires is that a winning candidate must be elected bya plurality of valid votes, regardless of the actual number of ballots cast. 25 Thus, even if less than 25% of the electorate inthe questioned precincts cast their votes, the same must still be respected. There is prima facie showing that privaterespondent was elected through a plurality of valid votes of a valid constituency. MOHAMAD L. MITMUG vs. COMMISSIONON ELECTIONS, ET AL. (G.R. No. 106270-73 February 10, 1994)

CASE NO. 5: FACTS: RICARDO "BOY" CANICOSA and SEVERINO LAJARA were candidates for mayor in Calamba

Laguna, during the 8 May 1995 elections. After obtaining a majority of some 24,000 votes Lajara was proclaimed winner by theMunicipal Board of Canvassers. On 15 May 1995 Canicosa filed with the Commission on Elections (COMELEC) a Petition to Declare

Failure of Election and to Declare Null and Void the Canvass and Proclamation because of alleged widespread frauds and anomaliesin casting and counting of votes, preparation of election returns, violence, threats, intimidation, vote buying, unregistered votersvoting, and delay in the delivery of election documents and paraphernalia from the precincts to the Office of the Municipal TreasurerCanicosa particularly averred that: (a) the names of the registered voters did not appear in the list of voters in their precincts; (bmore than one-half of the legitimate registered voters were not able to vote with strangers voting in their stead; (c) he was creditedwith less votes than he actually received; (d) control data of the election returns was not filed up in some precincts; (e) ballot boxesbrought to the Office of the Municipal Treasurer were unsecured, i.e., without padlocks nor self-locking metal seals; and, (f) there wasdelay in the delivery of election returns. But the COMELEC en banc dismissed the petition on the ground that the allegations thereindid not justify a declaration of failure of election.QUESTIONS:1.Canicosa bewails that the names of the registered voters in the various precincts did not appear in their respective lists of voters.What is the proper remedy on this aspect?2.Canicosa also avers that more than one-half (1/2) of the legitimate registered voters were not able to vote, instead, strangers votedin their behalf. Is this a ground for failure of election?3.Canicosa complains that the election returns were delivered late and the ballot boxes brought to the Office of the Municipa

Treasurer unsecured, i.e., without padlocks nor self-locking metal seals. Is this also a ground for failure of election?4.Canicosa finally insists that it was error on the part of COMELEC sitting en banc to rule on his petition. He maintains that hispetition should have first been heard by a division of COMELEC and later by the COMELEC en banc upon motion foreconsideration, pursuant to Sec. 3, Art. IX-C, of the Constitution. Is his contention correct?5.In totality, was there a failure of election, in the case at bar?

ANSWER NO 5: Indeed, the grounds cited by Canicosa do not warrant a declaration  of failure of election. Section 6 of BP Blg881, otherwise known as the Omnibus Election Code, reads:

Sec. 6. Failure of election. - If, on account of  force majeure, violence, terrorism, fraud, or other analogous causes theelection in any polling place has not been held on the date fixed, or had been suspended before the hour fixed by law for the closingof the voting, or after the voting and during the preparation and the transmission of the election returns or in the custody or canvassthereof, such election results in a failure to elect, and in any of such cases the failure or suspension of election would affect the resulof the election, the Commission shall, on the basis of a verified petition by any interested party and after due notice and hearing, calfor the holding or continuation of the election not held, suspended or which resulted in a failure to elect on a date reasonably close tothe date of the election not held, suspended or which resulted in a failure to elect but not later than thirty days after the cessation of

the cause of such postponement or suspension of the election or failure to elect.Clearly, there are only three (3) instances where a failure of election may be declared, namely: (a) the election in any polling

 place has not been held on the date fixed  on account of force majeure, violence, terrorism, fraud, or other analogous causes; (bthe election in any polling place had been suspended before the hour fixed by law for the closing of the voting  on account of  forcemajeure, violence, terrorism, fraud, or other analogous causes; or (c) after the voting and during the preparation and transmission othe election returns or in the custody or canvass thereof, such election results in a failure to elect  on account of  force majeureviolence, terrorism, fraud, or other analogous causes.

None of the grounds invoked by Canicosa falls under any of those enumerated.Canicosa bewails that the names of the registered voters in the various precincts did not appear in their respective lists of

voters. But this is not a ground to declare a failure of election. The filing of a petition for declaration of failure of election therefore isnot the proper remedy. The day following the last day for registration of voters, the poll clerk delivers a certified list of voters to theelection registrar, election supervisor and the COMELEC, copies of which are open to public inspection. On the same day, the pol

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clerk posts a copy of the list of registered voters in each polling place. Each member of the board of election inspectors retains acopy of the list which may be inspected by the public in their residence or in their office during office hours.xi[2]

Fifteen (15) days before the regular elections on 8 May 1995 the final list of voters was posted in each precinct pursuant to Sec148 of RA No. 7166. Based on the lists thus posted Canicosa could have filed a petition for inclusion of registered voters with theregular courts. The question of inclusion or exclusion from the list of voters involves the right to vote xii[3] which is not within the poweand authority of COMELEC to rule upon. The determination of whether one has the right to vote is a justiciable issue properlycognizable by our regular courts. Section 138, Art. XII, of the Omnibus Election Code states:

Sec. 138. Jurisdiction in inclusion and exclusion cases. - The municipal and metropolitan trial courts shall have original andexclusive jurisdiction over all matters of inclusion and exclusion of voters from the list in their respective municipalities or cities

Decisions of the municipal or metropolitan trial courts may be appealed directly by the aggrieved party to the proper regional triacourt within five days from receipts of notice thereof, otherwise said decision of the municipal or metropolitan trial court shall decidethe appeal within ten days from the time the appeal was received and its decision shall be immediately final and executory. Nomotion for reconsideration shall be entertained by the courts (Sec. 37, PD 1896, as amended).

On the other hand, Canicosa could have also filed with the COMELEC a verified complaint seeking the annulment of the bookof voters pursuant to Sec. 10, of RA No. 7166:

Sec. 10. Annulment of the List of Voters. - Any book of voters the preparation of which has been affected with fraud, briberyforgery, impersonation, intimidation, force or any other similar irregularity or which is statistically improbable may be annulled afterdue notice and hearing by the Commission motu propio or after the filing of a verified complaint: Provided, that no order, ruling odecision annulling a book of voters shall be executed within sixty (60) days before an election.If indeed the situation herein described was common in almost all of the 557 precincts as alleged by Canicosa ,xiii[4] then it was moreexpedient on his part to avail of the remedies provided by law in order to maintain the integrity of the election. Since Canicosa failedto resort to any of the above options, the permanent list of voters as finally corrected before the election remains conclusive on thequestion as to who had the right to vote in that election, although not in subsequent elections.xiv[5]

Canicosa also avers that more than one-half (1/2) of the legitimate registered voters were not able to vote, instead, strangers

voted in their behalf. Again, this is not a ground which warrants a declaration of failure of election. Canicosa was allowed to appoina watcher in every precinct. The watcher is empowered by law to challenge any illegal voter. Thus, Secs. 199 and 202, Art. XVII, othe Omnibus Election Code, provide:

Sec. 199. Challenge of illegal voters. - (a) Any voter, or watcher may challenge any person offering to vote for not beingregistered, for using the name of another or suffering from existing disqualification. In such case, the board of election inspectorsshall satisfy itself as to whether or not the ground for the challenge is true by requiring proof of registration or identity of the voter x x xx

Sec. 202. Record of challenges and oaths. - The poll clerk shall keep a prescribed record of challenges and oaths taken inconnection therewith and the resolution of the board of election inspectors in each case and, upon the termination of the voting, shalcertify that it contains all the challenges made x x x x

The claim of Canicosa that he was credited with less votes than he actually received and that the control data of the electionreturns was not filled up should have been raised in the first instance before the board of election inspectors or board of canvassers.Section 179, Art. XV, of the Omnibus Election Code clearly provides for the rights and duties of watchers -

Sec. 179. Rights and duties of watchers. - x x x x The watchers x x x shall have the right to witness and informthemselves of the proceedings of the board of election inspectors x x x to file a protest against any irregularity or violationof law which they believe may have been committed by the board of election inspectors or by any of its members or byany persons, to obtain from the board of election inspectors a certificate as to the filing of such protest and/or of theresolution thereon x x x and to be furnished with a certificate of the number of votes in words and figures cast for eachcandidate, duly signed and thumbmarked by the chairman and all the members of the board of election inspectors x x x x

To safeguard and maintain the sanctity of election returns, Sec. 212, Art. XVIII, of the Omnibus Election Code states -

Sec. 212. Election returns. - x x x x Immediately upon the accomplishment of the election returns, each copy thereof shall be sealed in the presence of the watchers and the public, and placed in the proper envelope, which shall likewise besealed and distributed as herein provided.

Furthermore, it is provided in Sec. 215 of the Omnibus Election Code that -

Sec. 215. Board of election inspectors to issue a certificate of the number of votes polled by the candidates for anoffice to the watchers. - After the announcement of the results of the election and before leaving the polling place, it shallbe the duty of the board of election inspectors to issue a certificate of the number of votes received by a candidate uponrequest of the watchers. All members of the board of election inspectors shall sign the certificate.

Supplementing the preceding provisions, Secs. 16 and 17 of RA No. 6646 also require -

Sec. 16. Certification of votes. - After the counting of the votes cast in the precinct and announcement of the resultsof the election, and before leaving the polling place, the board of election inspectors shall issue a certificate of votes uponrequest of the duly accredited watchers x x x x

Sec. 17. Certificate of Votes as Evidence. - The provisions of Secs. 235 and 236 of Batas Pambansa Blg. 881notwithstanding, the certificate of votes shall be admissible in evidence to prove tampering, alteration, falsification or anomaly committed in the election returns concerned x x x x

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From the foregoing provisions, it is clear that in case of inconsistency as to the number of votes written in the election returnsand the certificate of votes, a petition for correction of election returns must immediately be filed with COMELEC by all or a majority othe members of the board of election inspectors or any candidate affected by the error or mistake. In order to make out a case focorrection of election returns, there must be an error and at least a majority of the members of the board of election inspectors agreesthat such error existed. Canicosa never mentioned that he petitioned for the correction of the election returns before the COMELEC

Canicosa complains that the election returns were delivered late and the ballot boxes brought to the Office of the MunicipaTreasurer unsecured, i.e., without padlocks nor self-locking metal seals. These bare allegations cannot impel us to declare failure oelection. Assuming that the election returns were delivered late, we still cannot see why we should declare a failure to elect. The latedeliveries did not convert the election held in Calamba into a mockery or farce to make us conclude that there was indeed a failure o

election.In fine, the grounds cited by Canicosa in his petition do not fall under any of the instances enumerated in Sec. 6 of theOmnibus Election Code. In Mitmug v. Commission on Elections xv[6] we ruled that before COMELEC can act on a verified petitionseeking to declare a failure of election, at least two (2) conditions must concur: (a) no voting has taken place in the precincts on thedate fixed by law, or even if there was voting, the election nevertheless resulted in failure to elect; and, (b) the votes that were notcast would affect the result of the election. From the face of the instant petition, it is readily apparent than an election took placeand that it did not result in a failure to elect.xvi[7]

Canicosa finally insists that it was error on the part of COMELEC sitting en banc  to rule on his petition. He maintains that hispetition should have first been heard by a division of COMELEC and later by the COMELEC en banc  upon motion foreconsideration, pursuant to Sec. 3, Art. IX-C, of the Constitution.xvii[8]

But this provision applies only when the COMELEC acts in the exercise of its adjudicatory or quasi-judicial functions and notwhen it merely exercises purely administrative functions. To reiterate, the grounds cited by Canicosa in his petition are that: (a) thenames of the registered voters did not appear in the list of voters in their respective precincts; (b) more than one-half of the legitimateregistered voters were not able to vote with strangers voting in their stead; (c) he was credited with less votes than he actuallyreceived; (d) the control data of the election returns was not filled up in some precincts; (e) ballot boxes brought to the Office of the

Municipal Treasurer were unsecured, i. e., without padlocks nor self-locking metal seals; and, (f) there was delay in the delivery ofelection returns.

Clearly, all these matters require the exercise by the COMELEC of its administrative functions. Section 2, Art. IX-C, of the 1987Constitution grants extensive administrative powers to the COMELEC with regard to the enforcement and administration of all lawsand regulations relative to the conduct of elections. Likewise, Sec. 52 of BP Blg. 881, otherwise known as the Omnibus ElectionCode, states:

Sec. 52. Powers and functions of the Commission on Elections. - In addition to the powers and functionsconferred upon it by the Constitution, the Commission shall have exclusive charge of the enforcement and administrationof all laws relative to the conduct of elections for the purpose of ensuring free, orderly and honest elections x x x xQuite obviously, it is only in the exercise of its adjudicatory or quasi-judicial powers that the COMELEC is mandated to hear and

decide cases first by Division and then, upon motion for reconsideration, by the COMELEC en banc. This is when it is jurisdictionalIn the instant case, as aforestated, the issues presented demand only the exercise by the COMELEC of its administrative functions.

The COMELEC exercises direct and immediate supervision and control over national and local officials or employees, includingmembers of any national or local law enforcement agency and instrumentality of the government required by law to perform dutiesrelative to the conduct of elections. Its power of direct supervision and control includes the power to review, modify or set aside any

act of such national and local officials. xviii[9] It exercises immediate supervision and control over the members of the boards oelection inspectors and canvassers. Its statutory power of supervision and control includes the power to revise, reverse or set asidethe action of the boards, as well as to do what the boards should have done, even if questions relative thereto have not beenelevated to it by an aggrieved party, for such power includes the authority to initiate motu proprio or by itself such steps oactions as may be required pursuant to law.xix[10]

Specifically, Canicosa alleged that he was credited with less votes than he actually received. But he did not raise any objectionbefore the Municipal Board of Canvassers; instead, he went directly to the COMELEC. He now claims, after the COMELEC enbanc  dismissed his petition, that it was error on the part of COMELEC to rule on his petition while sitting en banc.

We have already disposed of this issue in Castromayor  v . Commission on Elections xx[11] thus should be pinpointed out, in thisconnection, that what is involved here is a simple problem of arithmetic. The Statement of Votes is merely a tabulation per precinct othe votes obtained by the candidates as reflected in the election returns. In making the correction in computation, the MBC will beacting in an administrative capacity, under the control and supervision of the COMELEC. Hence, any question pertaining to theproceedings of the MBC may be raised directly to the COMELEC en banc  in the exercise of its constitutional function to decidequestions affecting elections.

Moreover, it is expressly provided in Rule 27, Sec. 7, of the Comelec Rules of Procedure that any party dissatisfied with the

ruling of the board of canvassers shall have a right to appeal to the COMELEC en banc:Sec. 7. Correction of Errors in Tabulation or Tallying of Results by the Board of Canvassers. - (a) Where it is clearly shown

before proclamation that manifest errors were committed in the tabulation or tallying or election returns, or certificates of canvassduring the canvassing as where (1) a copy of the election returns of one precinct or two or more copies of a certificate of canvasswere tabulated more than once, (2) two copies of the election returns or certificate of canvass were tabulated separately, (3) therewas a mistake in the adding or copying of the figures into the certificate of canvass or into the statement of votes by precinct, o(4) so-called election returns from non-existent precincts were included in the canvass, the board may motu proprio, or upon verifiedpetition by any candidate, political party, organization or coalition of political parties, after due notice and hearing, correct theerrors committed x x x x (h) The appeal shall be heard and decided by the Commission en banc.

In Tatlonghari v. Commission on Elections xxi[12] it was made to appear in the Certificate of Canvass of Votes and Proclamationof the Winning Candidates that respondent therein received 4,951 votes or more than what he actually obtained. In resolving thecase we ruled that the correction of the manifest mistake in mathematical addition calls for a mere clerical task of the board of

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canvassers. The remedy invoked was purely administrative. In Feliciano v. Lugay  xxii[13]  we categorized the issue concerningregistration of voters, which Canicosa cited as a ground in his petition for declaration of failure of election, as an administrativequestion. Likewise, questions as to whether elections have been held or whether certain returns were falsified or manufactured andtherefore should be excluded from the canvass do not involve the right to vote. Such questions are properly within the  administrative

 jurisdiction of COMELEC, xxiii[14] hence, may be acted upon directly by the COMELEC en banc  without having to pass through any oits divisions.

CASE No. 6:  Facts: "It appears that Cong. Pedro P. Romualdo and Gov. Antonio R. Gallardo were both candidates in the

May 11, 1992 elections for the positions of congressmen and governor, respectively, of Camiguin. They belonged to opposingpolitical factions and were in a bitter electoral battle.

"On April 10, 1992 or about a month before the elections, Cong. Romualdo filed a petition docketed as Special Civil ActionNo. 465 before the Regional Trial Court of Camiguin (Br. 28) presided over by respondent Judge Tabamo against Gov. Gallardo, theProvincial Treasurer, the Provincial Auditor, the Provincial Engineer, and the Provincial Budget Officer as respondents. In this petitionCong. Romualdo sought to prohibit and restrain the respondents from undertaking and/or pursuing certain public works projects andfrom disbursing, releasing, and/or spending public funds for said projects, allegedly because, among other reasons, said projectswere undertaken in violation of the 45-day ban on public works imposed by the Omnibus Election Code (B.P. Blg. 881); that thepublic works projects were commenced without the approved detailed engineering plans and specification and correspondingprogram of works; that the expenditures of the 20% development fund for projects other than for maintenance violated the LocaGovernment Code; that locally funded projects had been pursued without the provincial budget having been first approved, andreviewed by the Department of Budget and Management; and that the illegal prosecution of the said public works projects requiringmassive outlay or public funds during the election period was done maliciously and intentionally to corrupt voters and induce them tosupport the candidacy of Gov. Gallardo and his ticket in the May 11, 1992 elections.

"In the afternoon of the same day that the petition was filed, Judge Tabamo issued a temporary restraining order as prayedfor by the petitioner Cong. Romualdo, as follows:'It appearing from the verified petition in this case that great and irreparable damage and/or injury shall be caused to the

petitioner as candidate and taxpayer, such damage or injury taking the form and shape occasioned by the alleged wanton, excessiveabusive and flagrant waste of public money, before the matter can be heard on notice, the respondents are hereby TemporarilyRestrained from pursuing or prosecuting the project itemized in Annexes 'A' and 'A-1' of the petition; from releasing, disbursing and/ospending any public funds for such projects; from issuing, using or availing of treasury warrants or any device undertaking futuredelivery of money, goods, or other things of value chargeable against public funds in connection with the said projects.'

"In the same Order of April 10, 1993 the judge gave the respondents ten (10) days from receipt of a copy of the petition toanswer the same, and set the prayer for the issuance of a preliminary injunction for hearing on April 24, 1992 at 8:30 A.M.

"Gov. Gallardo testified that when he received a copy of the restraining order and reviewed the petition filed, being a lawyerhe at once saw that the same was not within the jurisdiction of the Regional Trial Court. He said that the elections were nearing andall their projects were suspended, the laborers could not get their salaries, and the judge had set the hearing of the injunction on Apri24, 1992 or very close to the elections of May 11, 1992. Believing that he could not get justice from the respondent court, he decidedto go to the Supreme Court where he filed a petition for certiorari (docketed as G.R. No. L-104848) questioning the issuance of the

temporary restraining order and the jurisdiction of the court over Special Civil Action No. 465.QUESTION: 1. From your point of view, was the Judge correct in taking cognizance of the case and was his act of

issuing the Temporary Restraining Order correct under the circumstances? Or would you agree with Gov. Gallardo that theRTC has no jurisdiction over the case? Reason out your answer.

Answer NO 6:The Judge was wrong. Needless to say, the acts sought to be restrained in Special Civil Action No465 before the court a quo are matters falling within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Commission. As a matter of fact, thespecific allegations in the petition therein of violations of paragraphs (a), (b), (v) and (w), Section 261 of the OmnibusElection Code provide a stronger basis and reason for the application of the Zaldivar doctrine. At most, the facts in thelatter case do not illustrate as clearly the announced doctrine as the facts in this case do. In Zaldivar, no specific provisionof the Revised Election Code then in force was alleged to have been violated. What was sought to be enjoined was thealleged wielding by Zaldivar, then a municipal mayor, of the power, by virtue of his office, to appoint special policemen oragents to terrorize voters into supporting the congressional candidate of his choice. In holding that the then Court of FirstInstance did not have jurisdiction over the case, this Court considered the constitutional power of the Commission onElections to have exclusive charge of the enforcement and administration of all laws relative to the conduct of elections and

to exercise all other functions which may be conferred by law. We likewise relied on the provisions of the Revised ElectionCode vesting upon the COMELEC (a) direct and immediate supervision over municipal, city and provincial officialsdesignated by law to perform duties relative to the conduct of elections and (b) authority to suspend them from theperformance of such duties for failure to comply with its instructions, orders, decisions or rulings and recommend to thePresident their removal if found guilty of non-feasance, malfeasance or misfeasance in connection with the performance oftheir duties relative to the conduct of elections. 20

Under the present law, however, except in case of urgent need, the appointment or hiring of new employees orthe creation or filling up of new positions in any government office, agency or instrumentality, whether national or local,including government-owned or controlled corporations, is banned during the period of forty-five (45) days before a regulaelection and thirty (30) days before a special election if made without the prior authority of the Commission on Elections. Aviolation thereof constitutes an election offense. 21 Then too, no less than the present Constitution and not just the

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Election Law as was the case at the time of Zaldivar expressly provides that the Commission may "[R]ecommend to thePresident the removal of any officer or employee it has deputized, or the imposition of any other disciplinary action, forviolation or disregard of, or disobedience to its directive, order, or decision." 22

Moreover, the present Constitution also invests the Commission with the power to "investigate and, whereappropriate, prosecute cases of violations of election laws, including acts or omissions constituting election fraudsoffenses, and malpractices." 23

It may thus be said without fear of contradiction that this vast array of powers and functions now enjoyed by the

Commission under the present Constitution provides a stronger foundation for, and adds vigor and vitality to, the Zaldivardoctrine.

The rationale of the said doctrine needs to be stressed here so that henceforth, no judge will lose his bearingswhen confronted with the same issue. Otherwise, he should be held to account for either the sheer ignorance of the law orthe callous disregard of pronouncements by this Court to accommodate partisan political feelings. We declared in the saidcase:

The question may be asked: Why should not the judiciary be aco-participant in this particular instance ofenforcing the Election Code as its authority was invoked? The obvious answer is the literal language of the Constitutionwhich empowers the Commission on Elections to "have exclusive charge of the enforcement and administration of all lawsrelative to the conduct of the elections." Moreover, as was so aptly observed by the then Justice Frankfurter, although thesituation confronting the United States Supreme Court was of a different character: "Nothing is clearer than that thiscontroversy concerns matters that brings courts into immediate and active relations with party contests. From thedetermination of such issues this Court has traditionally held aloof. It is hostile to a democratic system to involve the

 judiciary in the politics of the people. And it is not less pernicious if such judicial intervention in an essentially politicalcontest be dressed up in the abstract phrases of the law." 24 Then, too, reference by analogy may be made to the principlethat sustains Albano v. Arranz. For even without the express constitutional prescription that only this Court may review thedecisions, orders and rulings of the Commission on Elections, it is easy to understand why no inference whatsoever withthe performance of the Commission on Elections of its functions should be allowed unless emanating from this Court. Theobservation of Acting Chief Justice J.B.L. Reyes in Albano v. Arranz, 25 while not precisely in point, indicates the properapproach. Thus: "It is easy to realize the chaos that would ensue if the Court of First Instance of each and every provincewere to arrogate unto itself the power to disregard, suspend, or contradict any order of the Commission on Elections; thatconstitutional body would be speedily reduced to impotence."

This conclusion finds' support from a consideration of weight and influence. What happened in this case couldbe repeated elsewhere. It is not improbable that courts of first instance would be resorted to by leaders of candidates orpolitical factions entertaining the belief whether rightly or wrongly that local officials would employ all the power at theircommand to assure the victory of their candidates. Even if greater care and circumspection, than did exist in this casewould be employed by judges thus appealed to, it is not unlikely that the shadow of suspicion as to alleged partisanship

would fall on their actuations, whichever way the matter before them is decided. It is imperative that the faith in theimpartiality of the judiciary be preserved unimpaired. Whenever, therefore, the fear may be plausibly entertained that anassumption of jurisdiction would lead to a lessening of the undiminished trust that should be reposed in the courts and theabsence of authority discernible the from the wording of applicable statutory provisions and the trend of judicial decisionseven if no constitutional mandate as that present in this case could be relied upon, there should be no hesitancy indeclining to act. 26

The foregoing disquisitions should have rendered unnecessary the resolution of the remaining collateral issuesraised in this petition. In view, however, of their importance, they will be dealt with in a general way.

It is not true that, as contended by the petitioners, the jurisdiction of the Regional Trial Court under the electionlaws is limited to criminal actions for violations of the Omnibus Election Code. The Constitution itself grants to it exclusiveoriginal jurisdiction over contests involving elective municipal officials. 27 Neither can We agree with the petitioners'assertion that the Special Civil Action filed in the court below involves the prosecution of election offenses; the said actionseeks some reliefs incident to or in connection with alleged election offenses; specifically, what is sought is the preventionof the further commission of these offenses which, by their alleged nature, are continuing.

There is as well no merit in the petitioners' claim that the private respondent has no legal standing to initiate thefiling of a complaint for a violation of the Omnibus Election Code. There is nothing in the law to prevent any citizen fromexposing the commission of an election offense and from filing a complaint in connection therewith. On the contrary, undethe COMELEC Rules of Procedure, initiation of complaints for election offenses may be done motu propio by theCommission on Elections or upon written complaint by any citizen, candidate or registered political party or organizationunder the party-list system or any of the accredited citizens arms of the Commission. 28 However, such written complaintsshould be filed with the "Law Department of the Commission; or with the offices of the Election Registrars, ProvincialElection Supervisors or Regional Election Directors, or the State Prosecutor, Provincial Fiscal or City Fiscal." 29 As earlierintimated, the private respondent was not seriously concerned with the criminal aspect of his alleged grievances. He merelysought a stoppage of the public works projects because of their alleged adverse effect on his candidacy. Indeed, while he

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may have had reason to fear and may have even done the right thing, he committed a serious procedural misstep andinvoked the wrong authority.

We have, therefore, no alternative but to grant this petition on the basis Our resolution of the principal issueNevertheless, it must be strongly emphasized that in so holding that the trial court has no jurisdiction over the subjectmatter of Special Civil Action No. 465, We are not to be understood as approving of the acts complained of by the privaterespondent. If his charges for the violation of paragraphs (a), (b), (v) and (w), Section 261 of the Omnibus Election Code aretrue, then no one should be spared from the full force of the law. No government official should flout laws designed toensure the holding of free, orderly, honest, peaceful and credible elections or make a mockery of our electoral processes.

The bitter lessons of the past have shown that only elections of that nature or character can guarantee a peaceful andorderly change. It is then his duty to respect, preserve and enhance an institution which is vital in any democratic societyANTONIO GALLARDO, ET AL. vs. SINFOROSO V. TABAMO, JR., ET AL. G.R. No. 104848 January 29, 1993

CASE NO. 7 . Facts:This petition for certiorari under Rule 65 of the 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure seeks to annul and set

aside, for having been rendered with grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction, the 17 May 1996Resolution of the COMELEC 2nd Division in Sunga v. Trinidad, SPA No. 95-213 1 dismissing the petition for disqualification againsprivate respondent Ferdinand B. Trinidad pursuant to COMELEC Resolution No. 2050 promulgated 3 November 1988, as amendedby COMELEC Resolution No. 2050-A promulgated 8 August 1990, and 30 July 1996 Resolution of the COMELEC En Banc affirmingthe 17 May 1996 Resolution of the COMELEC 2nd Division.

Petitioner Manuel C. Sunga was one of the candidates for the position of Mayor in the Municipality of Iguig, Province of Cagayanin the 8 May 1995 elections. Private respondent Ferdinand B. Trinidad, then incumbent mayor, was a candidate for re-election in thesame municipality.

On 22 April 1995 Sunga filed with the COMELEC a letter-complaint 2 for disqualification against Trinidad, accusing him ofusing three (3) local government vehicles in his campaign, in violation of Sec. 261, par. (o), Art. XXII, of BP Blg. 881 (OmnibusElection Code, as amended). On 7 May 1995, Sunga filed another letter-complaint 3 with the COMELEC charging Trinidad this timewith violation of Sec. 261, par. (e) (referring to threats, intimidation, terrorism or other forms of coercion) of the Omnibus ElectionCode, in addition to the earlier violation imputed to him in the first letter-complaint. This was followed by an Amended Petition 4 fordisqualification consolidating the charges in the two (2) letters-complaint, including vote buying, and providing more specific details othe violations committed by Trinidad. The case was docketed as SPA No. 95-213.

In a Minute Resolution dated 25 May 1995, 5 the COMELEC 2nd Division referred the complaint to its Law Department forinvestigation. Hearings were held wherein Sunga adduced evidence to prove his accusations. Trinidad, on the other hand, opted notto submit any evidence at all.

Meanwhile, the election results showed that Trinidad garnered the highest number of votes, while Sunga trailed second.On 10 May 1995 Sunga moved for the suspension of the proclamation of Trinidad. However, notwithstanding the motion,

Trinidad was proclaimed the elected mayor, prompting Sunga to file another motion to suspend the effects of the proclamation. Bothmotions were not acted upon by the COMELEC 2nd Division.

On 28 June 1995 the COMELEC Law Department submitted its Report to the COMELEC En Banc recommending tha

Trinidad be charged in court for violation of the following penal provisions of the Omnibus Election Code: (a) Sec. 261, par. (a), onvote buying; (b) Sec. 261, par. (e), on threats, intimidation, terrorism or other forms of coercion; and, (c) Sec. 261, par. (o), on use ofany equipment, vehicle owned by the government or any of its political subdivisions. The Law Department likewise recommended torecall and revoke the proclamation of Ferdinand B. Trinidad as the duly elected Mayor of Iguig, Cagayan; proclaim Manuel C. Sungaas the duly elected Mayor; and, direct Sunga to take his oath and assume the duties and functions of the office.

The COMELEC En Banc approved the findings of the Law Department and directed the filing of the correspondinginformations in the Regional Trial Court against Trinidad. Accordingly, four (4) informations 7 for various elections offenses were filedin the Regional Trial Court of Tuguegarao, Cagayan. The disqualification case, on the other hand, was referred to the COMELEC 2ndDivision for hearing.

On 2 May 1996 Sunga filed a Second Urgent Motion to Suspend the Effects and Annul the Proclamation with Urgent Motionfor Early Resolution of the Petition. But in its 17 May 1996 Resolution, the COMELEC 2nd Division dismissed the petition fordisqualification, holding in its Resolution No. 2050 that

1. Any complaint for disqualification of a duly registered candidate based upon any of the grounds specificallyenumerated under Sec. 68 of the Omnibus Election Code, filed directly with the Commission before an election in which respondenis a candidate, shall be inquired into by the Commission for the purpose of determining whether the acts complained of have in fact

been committed . . . .In case such complaint was not resolved before the election, the Commission may motu propio, or on motion of any of the

parties, refer the complaint to the Law Department of the Commission as the instrument of the latter in the exercise of its exclusivepower to conduct a preliminary investigation of all cases involving criminal infractions of the electionlaws . . . .

2. Any complaint for disqualification based on Sec. 68 of the Omnibus Election Code in relation to Sec. 6 of RepublicAct No. 6646 filed after the election against a candidate who has already been proclaimed as a winner shall be dismissed as adisqualification case. However, the complaint shall be referred for preliminary investigation to the Law Department of thisCommission.

Where a similar complaint is filed after election but before proclamation of the respondent candidate, the complaint shall,nevertheless, be dismissed as a disqualification case. However, the complaint shall be referred for preliminary investigation to theLaw Department. If, before proclamation, the Law Department makes a prima facie finding of guilt and the corresponding informationhas been filed with the appropriate trial court, the complainant may file a petition for suspension of the proclamation of the

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respondent with the court before which the criminal case is pending and said court may order the suspension of the proclamationif the evidence of guilt is strong.

As interpreted in the case of Silvestre v. Duavit, SPA 94-003, Resolution No. 2050 provides for the outright dismissal of thedisqualification case in three cases: (1) The disqualification case was filed before the election but remains unresolved until after theelection; (2) The disqualification case was filed after the election and before the proclamation of winners; and (3) The disqualificationcase was filed after election and after proclamation.

If the instant case is deemed to have been filed upon receipt by the COMELEC of the letter-complaint on April 26 1995, inevertheless remained pending until after the election. If it is deemed to have been filed upon filing of the amended petition on 11May 1995, it was clearly filed after the election. In either case, Resolution No. 2050 mandates the dismissal of the disqualification

case. His motion for reconsideration having been denied by the COMELEC En Banc, Sunga filed the instant petition contendingthat the COMELEC committed grave abuse of discretion in dismissing the petition for disqualification in that: first, Sec. 6 of RA No.6646 requires the COMELEC to resolve the disqualification case even after the election and proclamation, and the proclamation andassumption of office by Trinidad did not deprive the COMELEC of its jurisdiction; second COMELEC Resolution No. 2050 is null andvoid as it contravenes Sec. 6 of R.A. No. 6646; third, the fact that COMELEC authorized the filing of four (4) informations againstprivate respondent for violation of the penal provisions of the Omnibus Election Code shows more than sufficient and substantialevidence to disqualify Trinidad, and he should have been so disqualified; and fourth, since Trinidad was a disqualified candidate, it isas if petitioner was the only candidate entitled to be proclaimed as the duly elected mayor.

Private respondent, on the other hand, postulates inter alia that Sunga's letters-complaint of 22 April 1995 and 7 May 1995were not petitions for disqualification because no filing fee was paid by Sunga; the letters-complaint were never docketed by theCOMELEC; and, no summons was ever issued by the COMELEC and private respondent was not required to answer the letters-complaint. It was only on 13 May 1995 when petitioner filed the so-called Amended Petition, docketed for the first time as SPA No.95-213. Thus, the COMELEC correctly dismissed the disqualification case for having been filed only after the 8 May 1995 electionsand the proclamation of private respondent on 10 May 1995, pursuant to COMELEC Resolution No. 2050.

COMELEC filed its Comment on 21 April 1997 relying heavily on Resolution No. 2050 and the Silvestre v. Duavit ruling insupport of the dismissal of the disqualification case. The COMELEC insisted that the outright dismissal of a disqualification case waswarranted under any of the following circumstances: (a) the disqualification case was filed before the election but was still pending(unresolved) after the election; (b) the disqualification case was filed after the election but before the proclamation of the winner; and(c) the disqualification case was filed after the election and after the proclamation of the winner.QUESTIONS: 1.The issue in this case is whether the COMELEC committed grave abuse of discretion when it dismissed thedisqualification case against private respondent Trinidad.On the basis of the facts, didthe COMELEC commit grave abuseof discretion?

2.Trinidad further avers that the COMELEC was correct in summarily dismissing the disqualification casebecause the docket fees were not duly paid. Is the contention correct?

3.Sunga claims that, in the event of Trinidad’s disqualification, he should be proclaimed as mayor? Is hecorrect?

4.In this case who should be the rightful mayor? Explain.

Answer NO 7: The petition is partly meritorious.

We find private respondent’s arguments on the propriety of the letters-complaint puerile. COMELEC itself impliedly recognizedin its Resolution that the petition was filed before the 8 May 1995 election in the form of letters-complaint, thus –

This case originally came to the attention of this Commission on 26 April 1995 in a form of letter from petitioner accusingrespondent of utilizing government properties in his campaign and praying for the latter’s immediate disqualification. Another lettedated 7 May 1995 and addressed to the COMELEC Regional Director of Region II reiterated petitioner’s prayer while alleging thatrespondent and his men committed acts of terrorism and violated the gun ban. Finally, on 11 May 1995, an Amended Petition wasfiled with the Clerk of Court of the Commission containing substantially the same allegations as the previous letters but supported byaffidavits and other documentary evidence.

That the Amended Petition was filed only on 11 May 1995, or after the elections, is of no consequence. It was merely areiteration of the charges filed by petitioner against private respondent on 26 April 1995 and 7 May 1995 or before the electionsConsequently, the Amended Petition retroacted to such earlier dates. An amendment which merely supplements and amplifies factsoriginally alleged in the complaint relates back to the date of the commencement of the action and is not barred by the statute olimitations which expired after the service of the original complaint.xxiv[9]

The fact that no docket fee was paid therefor was not a fatal procedural lapse on the part of petitioner. Sec. 18, Rule 42, of theCOMELEC Rules of Procedure provides, “If the fees above described are not paid, the Commission may refuse to take action

thereon until they are paid and may dismiss the action or proceeding.” The use of the word “may” indicates that it is permissive onlyand operates to confer a discretion on the COMELEC whether to entertain the petition or not in case of non-payment of legal feesThat the COMELEC acted on and did not dismiss the petition outright shows that the non-payment of fees was not considered by ias a legal obstacle to entertaining the same. Be that as it may, the procedural defects have been cured by the subsequent paymenof docket fees, and private respondent was served with summons, albeit belatedly, and he submitted his answer to the complaint.Hence, private respondent has no cause to complain that no docket fee was paid, no summons served upon him, or that he was notrequired to answer.

Neither do we agree with the conclusions of the COMELEC. We discern nothing in COMELEC Resolution No. 2050 declaringordering or directing the dismissal of a disqualification case filed before the election but which remained unresolved after the electionWhat the Resolution mandates in such a case is for the Commission to refer the complaint to its Law Department for investigation todetermine whether the acts complained of have in fact been committed by the candidate sought to be disqualified. The findings othe Law Department then become the basis for disqualifying the erring candidate. This is totally different from the other two

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situations contemplated by Resolution No. 2050, i.e., a disqualification case filed after the election but before the proclamation of winners and that filed after the election and the proclamation of winners, wherein it was specifically directed by the same Resolutionto be dismissed as a disqualification case.

Moreover, Resolution No. 2050 as interpreted in Silvestre v. Duavit infringes on Sec. 6 of RA No. 6646,xxv[10] which provides:SEC. 6. Effects of Disqualification Case. - Any candidate who has been declared by final judgment to be disqualified shall no

be voted for, and the votes cast for him shall not be counted. If for any reason a candidate is not declared by final judgment beforean election to be disqualified and he is voted for and receives the winning number of votes in such election, the Court or Commissionshall continue with the trial and hearing of the action, inquiry or protest  and, upon motion of the complainant or any intervenor, mayduring the pendency thereof order the suspension of the proclamation of such candidate whenever the evidence of his guilt is strong

(underscoring supplied).Clearly, the legislative intent is that the COMELEC should continue the trial and hearing of the disqualification case to itsconclusion, i.e., until judgment is rendered thereon. The word “shall” signifies that this requirement of the law is mandatory, operatingto impose a positive duty which must be enforced. xxvi[11] The implication is that the COMELEC is left with no discretion but to proceedwith the disqualification case even after the election. Thus, in providing for the outright dismissal of the disqualification case whichremains unresolved after the election, Silvestre v. Duavit in effect disallows what RA No. 6646 imperatively requires. This amountsto a quasi-judicial legislation by the COMELEC which cannot be countenanced and is invalid for having been issued beyond thescope of its authority. Interpretative rulings of quasi-judicial bodies or administrative agencies must always be in perfect harmonywith statutes and should be for the sole purpose of carrying their general provisions into effect. By such interpretative oradministrative rulings, of course, the scope of the law itself cannot be limited. Indeed, a quasi-judicial body or an administrativeagency for that matter cannot amend an act of Congress. Hence, in case of a discrepancy between the basic law and aninterpretative or administrative ruling, the basic law prevails.

Besides, the deleterious effect of the Silvestre ruling is not difficult to foresee. A candidate guilty of election offenses wouldbe undeservedly rewarded, instead of punished, by the dismissal of the disqualification case against him simply because theinvestigating body was unable, for any reason caused upon it, to determine before the election if the offenses were indeed committed

by the candidate sought to be disqualified. All that the erring aspirant would need to do is to employ delaying tactics so that thedisqualification case based on the commission of election offenses would not be decided before the election. This scenario isproductive of more fraud which certainly is not the main intent and purpose of the law.

The fact that Trinidad was already proclaimed and had assumed the position of mayor did not divest the COMELEC of authorityand jurisdiction to continue the hearing and eventually decide the disqualification case. In Aguam v. COMELECxxvii[12] this Court held-

Time and again this Court has given its imprimatur on the principle that COMELEC is with authority to annul any canvass andproclamation which was illegally made. The fact that a candidate proclaimed has assumed office, we have said, is no bar to theexercise of such power. It of course may not be availed of where there has been a valid proclamation. Since private respondent’spetition before the COMELEC is precisely directed at the annulment of the canvass and proclamation, we perceive that inquiry intothis issue is within the area allocated by the Constitution and law to COMELEC x x x x Really, were a victim of a proclamation to beprecluded from challenging the validity thereof after that proclamation and the assumption of office thereunder, baneful effects mayeasily supervene.

It must be emphasized that the purpose of a disqualification proceeding is to prevent the candidate from running or, if elected,from serving, or to prosecute him for violation of the election laws. Obviously, the fact that a candidate has been proclaimed

elected does not signify that his disqualification is deemed condoned and may no longer be the subject of a separate investigation.It is worth to note that an election offense has criminal as well as electoral aspects. Its criminal aspect involves the

ascertainment of the guilt or innocence of the accused candidate. Like in any other criminal case, it usually entails a full-blownhearing and the quantum of proof required to secure a conviction is beyond reasonable doubt. Its electoral aspect, on the othehand, is a determination of whether the offender should be disqualified from office. This is done through an administrativeproceeding which is summary in character and requires only a clear preponderance of evidence. Thus, under Sec. 4 of theCOMELEC Rules of Procedure, petitions for disqualification "shall be heard summarily after due notice." It is the electoral aspecthat we are more concerned with, under which an erring candidate may be disqualified even without prior criminal conviction.xxviii[13]

It is quite puzzling that the COMELEC never acted on Sunga’s motion to suspend the proclamation of Trinidad. The lassentence of Sec. 6 of RA No. 6646 categorically declares that the Commission may order the suspension of the proclamation of acandidate sought to be disqualified whenever the evidence of his guilt is strong. And there is not a scintilla of doubt that theevidence of Trinidad’s guilt was strong as shown in the Report and Recommendation of the COMELEC Law Department –

Parenthetically, there is merit to petitioner’s petition against the respondent for disqualification for the alleged commission ofelection offenses under Sec. 68 of the Omnibus Election Code, such as use of armed men and act of terrorism, intimidation andcoercion of voters, massive vote-buying and others, duly supported by affidavits of witnesses and other documents. Consequently

the petitioner’s evidence supporting the disqualification of respondent remain unrebutted simply because respondent has expresslywaived his right to present evidence in SPA No. 95-213 in his Manifestation and objection to the presentation of evidence in SPA No95-213 dated 16 June 1995, thus the waiver is the intentional relinquishing of a known right of respondent TRINIDAD.

In fact, on the basis of this Report and Recommendation the COMELEC directed the filing of four (4) criminal informationsagainst Trinidad before the Regional Trial Court, an indication that there was indeed  prima facie evidence of violation of electionlaws.

However, Sunga’s contention that he is entitled to be proclaimed as the duly elected Mayor of the Municipality of Iguig, Provinceof Cagayan, in the event that Trinidad is disqualified finds no support in law and jurisprudence. The fact that the candidate whoobtained the highest number of votes is later disqualified for the office to which he was elected does not entitle the candidate whoobtained the second highest number of votes to be declared the winner of the elective office. The votes cast for a disqualifiedperson may not be valid to install the winner into office or maintain him there. But in the absence of a statute which clearlyasserts a contrary political and legislative policy on the matter, if the votes were cast in the sincere belief that the candidate was

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qualified, they should not be treated as stray, void or meaningless.xxix[14] Sunga totally miscontrued the nature of our democratic electoral process as well as the sociological and psychological elements

behind voters’ preferences. Election is the process of complete ascertainment of the expression of the popular will. Its ultimatepurpose is to give effect to the will of the electorate by giving them direct participation in choosing the men and women who will runtheir government. Thus, it would be extremely repugnant to the basic concept of the constitutionally guaranteed right to suffrage if acandidate who has not acquired the majority or plurality of votes is proclaimed winner and imposed as the representative of aconstituency, the majority of whom have positively declared through their ballots that they do not choose him.xxx[15] 

While Sunga may have garnered the second highest number of votes, the fact remains that he was not the choice of the peopleof Iguig, Cagayan. “The wreath of victory cannot be transferred from the disqualified winner to the repudiated loser because the law

then as now only authorizes a declaration of election in favor of the person who has obtained a plurality of votes and does noentitle a candidate receiving the next highest number of votes to be declared elected.”xxxi[16] In Aquino v. COMELEC,xxxii[17] this Courmade the following pronouncement:

To simplistically assume that the second placer would have received the other votes would be to substitute our judgment for themind of the voter. The second placer is just that, a second placer. He lost the elections. He was repudiated by either a majority oplurality of voters. He could not be considered the first among qualified candidates because in a field which excludes the disqualifiedcandidate, the conditions would have substantially changed. We are not prepared to extrapolate the results under suchcircumstances.

Also, what Sunga wants us to do is to disregard the express mandate of Sec. 44, RA No. 7160,xxxiii[18] which provides in part -Sec. 44. Permanent vacancies in the office of the Governor, Vice-Governor, Mayor, Vice-Mayor. - (a) If a permanent vacancy

occurs in the office of the Governor or Mayor , the Vice-Governor or Vice-Mayor  concerned shall become the Governor or Mayor  xx x x

For purposes of this chapter, a permanent vacancy arises when an elective local official fills a higher vacant office, refuses toassume office, fails to qualify , dies, is removed from office, voluntarily resigns or is otherwise permanently incapacitated to dischargethe functions of his office x x x x

This provision is echoed in Art. 83 of the Implementing Rules and Regulations of the Local Government Code of 1991. The language of the law is clear, explicit and unequivocal, thus admits no room for interpretation but merely applicationThis is the basic legal precept. Accordingly, in the event that Trinidad is adjudged to be disqualified, a permanent vacancywill be created for failure of the elected mayor to qualify for the said office. In such eventuality, the duly elected vice-mayoshall succeed as provided by law.xxxiv[19] . MANUEL C. SUNGA, petitioner,vs.COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS and FERDINANDB. TRINIDAD, respondents. EN BANC (G.R. No. 125629 March 25, 1998)

CASE NO. 8 : FACTS:This case involves the power of the Commission on Elections (COMELEC) to annul the proclamation

of a winning candidate for Municipal Councilor in view of an error in the computation of totals in the Statement of Votes which wasmade the basis of the proclamation, and to direct the Municipal Board of Canvassers to reconvene and proclaim the rightful winner.

On 9 May 1995 the Municipal Board of Canvassers of Tanza, Cavite, issued a Certificate of Canvass of Votes andProclamation of the Winning Candidates for Municipal Offices (Municipal Councilors) as follows: (1) Wilfredo A. Nuñez, 14,888 votes(2) Yuri A. Pacumio, 13,445 votes; (3) Rogelino A. Dones, 12,428 votes; (4) Francisco C. Pasco, 12,218 votes; (5) Rosauro I. Torres12,055 votes; (6) Rosalita C. Cenizal, 12,035 votes; (7) Eliseo R. Arcaira Jr., 11,939 votes; (8) Policarpio A. Bocalan, 11,790 votesAccordingly, petitioner Atty. Rosauro I. Torres was proclaimed as the fifth winning candidate for councilor. 1

Two (2) days after or on 11 May 1995 the same Municipal Board of Canvassers requested the COMELEC for correction ofthe number of votes garnered by petitioner who was earlier proclaimed as the fifth winning candidate for councilor. The letter-requeswas signed by Rudolph Melon and Norma Abril as Vice Chairman and Secretary, respectively. The letter reads :

The undersigned members of the Board of Canvassers, Tanza, Cavite, respectfully request for the correction of votesgarnered by Mr. Rosauro I. Torres who was proclaimed as the fifth winning candidate for Councilor instead of Mr. VicenteRafael A. de Peralta who landed in the number eight (8th) position. The votes intended for MR. BERNARDO C. DIMAALA inthe sub-total as reflected in the Statement of Votes by precinct was erroneously added to Mr. Torres for a total of NineHundred Thirty Four (934) votes. Mr. Torres should have been number ten (10) in the winning column and that if correction

shall be made Mr. Torres shall garner a total of Eleven Thousand One Hundred Twenty One (11,121) votes while Mr. dePeralta garnered a total of Eleven Thousand Six Hundred Ten (11,610) votes. 2 

On 16 May 1995 the COMELEC set the case for hearing. Summonses with notices of hearing were sent to petitioner Atty. Rosauro ITorres and private respondent Vicente Rafael A. de Peralta requiring them to file their respective answers to the letter of theMunicipal Board of Canvassers.

Petitioner filed his answer alleging that the subject matter of the letter-petition of the Municipal Board of Canvassers, which was thecorrection of votes garnered by him, properly falls within the jurisdiction of the Regional Trial Court pursuant to Sec. 251 ofthe Omnibus Election Code. On the other hand, private respondent argued for the annulment of the proclamation ofpetitioner and prayed for his (private respondent) proclamation as the winning candidate.

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On 28 June 1995 respondent COMELEC issued the assailed En Banc resolution granting the letter-request of the Municipal Boardof Canvassers for the correction of the number of votes garnered by petitioner. Respondent Comelec also ordered theMunicipal Board of Canvassers to reconvene and proclaim private respondent Vicente Rafael A. de Peralta as the eighthwinning councilor of Tanza, Cavite.

On 5 July 1995 the Municipal Board of Canvassers issued a corrected Certificate of Canvass of Votes and Proclamation of theWinning Candidates which included private respondent Vicente Rafael A. de Peralta as the eighth winning councilor andexcluded petitioner from the new list of winning candidates. 3

Petitioner came up to this Court alleging that public respondent COMELEC acted without or in excess of its jurisdiction in granting the

request of the Municipal Board of Canvassers to correct the votes garnered by petitioner and in ordering the proclamation oprivate respondent as the eighth winning candidate thereby ousting petitioner from the new list of winners. Petitioner alsoargues that the Municipal Board of Canvassers had no legal personality to file the action motu proprio before the Comelecfor correction; that corrections are allowed only when there has been no proclamation yet, citing Respicio v. Cusi; andfinally, that once the Municipal Board of Canvassers has declared and proclaimed the winners in an election its functions arefinished and its existence is terminated.

The Office of the Solicitor General submits that respondent COMELEC acted beyond the limits of its power and authority when iordered the Municipal Board of Canvassers to reconvene and correct its alleged mistake in counting the votes cast for candidateDimaala in favor of petitioner; that by having done so, respondent COMELEC had exercised original jurisdiction over a municipalelection contest contrary to what the Constitution mandates; that Art. IX-C, Sec. 2, par 2, of the Constitution provides that theCommission on Elections shall exercise appellate jurisdiction overall contests involving elective municipal officials decided by trialcourts of general jurisdiction, or involving elective barangay officials decided by trial courts of limited jurisdiction.

Respondent COMELEC filed its own comment alleging that the proclamation of petitioner was flawed from the beginning for being

tainted with clerical error or mathematical mistake in the addition of votes; that pursuant to the ruling in Villaroya v. Comelec5 public respondent has original jurisdiction on all matters relating to election returns, including the verification of the numbeof votes received by opposing candidates in the election returns as compared to the statement of votes in order to ensurethat the true will of the people is known; and, that according to Tatlonghari v. Comelec, 6 when what is involved is purelymathematical and/or mechanical error in the operation of the adding machine committed by the board of canvassers butdoes not involve any opening of ballot boxes, examination and appreciation of ballots and/or election returns, all that isrequired is to reconvene the board of canvassers to rectify the error it inadvertently committed. Respondent COMELEC alsocontends that since it has the direct control and supervision over the municipal board of canvassers, the former hasauthority to direct the latter to reconvene and continue its assigned task in proclaiming the rightful winner for municipacouncilor.

QUESTION: On the basis of the facts at bar, did the COMELEC commit grave abuse of discretion to merit a reversal of itsdecision? Explain and support your answer.

ANSWER NO 8: Petitioner's contentions must fail. The position of COMELEC is well-taken. Sec. 7, Rule 27, of the COMELEC

Rules of Procedure provides —Sec. 7. Correction of Errors in Tabulation or Tallying of Results by the Board of Canvassers . — (a) where it is clearly

shown before proclamation that manifest errors were committed in the tabulation or tallying of election returns, or certificates ocanvass, during the canvassing as where (1) a copy of the election returns of one precinct or two or more copies of a certificate ofcanvass were tabulated more than once, (2) two copies of the election returns or certificate of canvass were tabulated separately, (3there was a mistake in the adding or copying of the figures into the certificate of canvass or into the statement of votes by precinct, o(4) so-called election returns from non-existent precincts were included in the canvass, the board may motu proprio or upon verifiedpetition by any candidate, political party, organization or coalition of political parties, after due notice and hearing, correct the errorscommitted.

In Castromayor v. Comelec xxxv[7] we held that although the above provision applies to pre-proclamation controversies, and evenif the proclamation of a winning candidate has already been made, there is nothing to prevent its application to cases like the one abar in which the validity of the proclamation is precisely in question. In Duremdes v. COMELEC ,xxxvi[8] this Court sustained the poweof the COMELEC En Banc to order a correction of the Statement of Votes to make it conform to the election returns in accordancewith a procedure similar to the procedure now embodied in Sec. 7, Rule 27, of the COMELEC Rules of Procedure. Since theStatement of Votes forms the basis of the Certificate of Canvass and of the proclamation, any error in the statement ultimately affects

the validity of the proclamation.It may be argued that because petitioner has already been proclaimed as winning candidate the remedy of the losing party is an

election protest over which the Regional Trial Court — and not the COMELEC nor the Municipal Board of Canvassers — has origina jurisdiction. However, as this Court already ruled in Duremdes –

It is Duremdes’  further submission that his proclamation could not be declared null and void because a pre-proclamationcontroversy is not proper after a proclamation has been made, the proper recourse being an election protest. This is on theassumption, however, that there has been a valid proclamation. Where a proclamation is null and void, the proclamation is noproclamation at all and the proclaimed candidate's assumption of office cannot deprive the COMELEC of the power to declare suchnullity and annul the proclamation ( Aguam v. COMELEC , L-28955, 28 May 1968, 23 SCRA 883)xxxvii[9]

The Statement of Votes is merely a tabulation per precinct of the votes obtained by the candidates as reflected in theelection returns. What is involved in the instant case is simple arithmetic. In making the correction in the computation theMunicipal Board of Canvassers acted in an administrative capacity under the control and supervision of the COMELEC.

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Pursuant to its constitutional function to decide questions affecting elections, the COMELEC En Banc has authority toresolve any question pertaining to the proceedings of the Municipal Board of Canvassers.xxxviii[10] . ATTY. ROSAURO ITORRES, petitioner,vs.COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS and VICENTE RAFAEL A. DE PERALTA, respondents. EN BANC G.RNo. 121031March 26, 1997

CASE NO. 9 : Facts: Manuel Milla and Regina Balmores-Laxa were candidates for councillor of Gerona, Tarlac in the May

14, 2001 elections. On May 18, 2001, Manuel Milla was proclaimed as the 8 th wining candidate by the Municipal Board oCanvassers (BOC) based on the Statement of Votes and the Certificate of Canvass. One month after his proclamation or onJune 18, 2001, Regina filed a petition with the COMELEC against Manuel and the BOC for correction of entries in theStatement of Votes based on fraud or irregularities in the canvassing of votes, specifically the entries for the 4 precincts inthe Statement of Votes did not correspond to the election returns for the respective precincts.On June 29, 2001, Manuel took his oath of office and assumed office.The BOC admits the erroneous tally, and prays that it it be allowed to reconvene to effect the correction of entries in theStatement of Votes, inorder to give way for Regina’s winning as the eight councillor of Gerona.In its Resolution of December 18, 2001, the COMELEC EN BANC, denied the BOC’s motion to reconvene, declaredManuel’s proclamation as null and void and proclaimed Regina as the eight winning candidate.Manuel argued that: 1) the petition of Regina was filed beyond the reglementary period of five days from proclamation 2)pre-proclamation cases should be terminated after proclamation and assumption of office 3) padding of statement of votesisnot a proper subject of a pre-proclamation case 4) that the COMELECen banc did not have jurisdiction over the petition oRegina.

QUESTION: Resolve the issues raised by Manuel.

Answer NO 9: Petitioner maintains that the COMELEC has no jurisdiction over the petition as it was filed beyond thereglementary period. For, so petitioner contends, since the proclamation was made on May 18, 2001, the petition to correct theStatement of Votes should have been filed within 5 days thereafter conformably with Section 5, Rule 27 of the COMELEC Rules ofProcedure1[25] which reads:

Sec. 5. Pre-proclamation Controversies Which May Be Filed Directly With the Commission.   – (a) The following preproclamation controversies may be filed directly with the Commission:

1) x x x2) When the issue involves the correction of manifest errors in the tabulation or tallying of the results during the canvassing as

where (1) a copy of the election returns or certificate of canvass was tabulated more than once, (2) two or more copies of theelection returns of one precinct, or two or more copies of certificate of canvass were tabulated separately, (3) there has been amistake in the copying of the figures into the statement of votes or into the certificate of canvass, or (4) so-called returns from nonexistent precincts were included in the canvass, and such errors could not have been discovered during the canvassing despite theexercise of due diligence and proclamation of the winning candidates had already been made.

b) x x xIf the petition is for correction, it must be filed not later than five (5) days following the date of proclamation and must implead a

candidates who may be adversely affected thereby.x x x (Underscoring supplied)In holding that it validly assumed jurisdiction over the petition, the COMELEC asserts that “[a] proclamation that is based on a

clerical or mathematical mistake (or a blatant padding of votes) is not a valid proclamation [h]ence, the same can be challenged evenafter the proclaimed candidate has assumed office.” 2[26]

The Statement of Votes forms the basis of the Certificate of Canvass and of the proclamation. Any error in the statemenultimately affects the validity of the proclamation.3[27]

If a candidate’s proclamation is based on a Statement of Votes which contains erroneous entries, it is null and void. It is noproclamation at all and the proclaimed candidate’s assumption of office cannot deprive the COMELEC of the power to annul theproclamation.4[28]

In the case at bar, as the Statement of Votes contained erroneous entries, the COMELEC rightfully assumed jurisdiction overrespondent’s petition for the correction thereof and declaration of nullity of petitioner’s proclamation. While our election laws aresilent when such and similar petitions may be filed directly with the COMELEC,5[29] the above-quoted Section 5, Rule 27 of the Rules

of Procedure sets a prescriptive period of five (5) days following the date of proclamation. The COMELEC, however, could suspendits own Rules of Procedure so as not to defeat the will of the electorate.6[30] For adherence to technicality that would put a stamp on apalpably void proclamation, with the inevitable result of frustrating the people’s will, cannot be countenanced.7[31]

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Petitioner nevertheless posits that even assuming that the COMELEC may suspend the application of Section 5, Rule 27 of its  Rules of Procedure, it can no longer exercise jurisdiction after his proclamation, oath and assumption of office8[32] in view oSection 16 of Republic Act 71669[33] which states:

Sec. 16. Pre-Proclamation Cases Involving Provincial, City and Municipal Offices. – Pre-proclamation cases involvingprovincial, city and municipal offices shall be allowed and shall be governed by Sections 17, 18, 19, 20, 21 and 22 hereof. All preproclamation cases pending before the Commission shall be deemed terminated at the beginning of the term of the officeinvolved and the rulings of the boards of canvassers concerned shall be deemed affirmed, without prejudice to the filing of a regularelection protest by the aggrieved party. However, proceedings may continue when on the basis of evidence thus far presentedthe Commission determined that the petition appears meritorious and accordingly issues an order for the proceeding to

continue or when an appropriate order has been issued by the Supreme Court in a petition for certiorari. (Emphasis supplied)By petitioner’s claim, there is no showing that respondent’s petition falls under the exception in the above-quoted provision as“the petition has not been determined by the COMELEC to be meritorious” and “no order has been issued for the proceeding tocontinue.”10[34] The claim does not lie. The COMELEC issued Resolution No. 4493 on June 29, 2001 declaring the termination of apre-proclamation cases except those included in the list annexed thereto which list included SPC No. 01-311, respondent’s petitionbefore the COMELEC subject of the present petition.

Petitioner additionally claims that the COMELEC, in assuming original jurisdiction over a case involving municipal officials, actedbeyond the limits of its power under the Constitution, particularly Section 2, paragraph 2 of Article IX-C11[35] which provides:

Sec. 2. The Commission on Elections shall exercise the following powers and functions:(1)…(2) Exercise exclusive original jurisdiction over all contests relating to the elections, returns, and qualifications of all elective

regional, provincial, and city officials, and appellate jurisdiction over all contests involving elective municipal officials decided by triacourts of general jurisdiction, or involving elective barangay officials decided by trial courts of limited jurisdiction.

Decisions, final orders, or rulings of the Commission on election contests involving elective municipal and barangay offices shalbe final, executory and not appealable .

(3)… (Emphasis and underscoring supplied)Petitioner’s above-claim does not likewise lie. By his admission, the petition filed by respondent before the COMELEC involves

a pre-proclamation controversy, not an election contest and indeed it is not, for while the petition alleged fraud and statisticaimprobability, the remedy sought was merely for correction of erroneous entries in the Statement of Votes which were based on theelection returns.

As the petition then of respondent involves a pre-proclamation controversy, following Sec. 3 of Art. IX-C of the 1987 Constitutionwhich provides:

Sec. 3. The Commission on Elections may sit en banc or in two divisions, and shall promulgate its rules of procedure in order toexpedite disposition of election cases, including pre-proclamation controversies. All such election cases shall be heard anddecided in division, provided that motions for reconsideration of decisions shall be decided by the Commission en banc . (Emphasisand underscoring supplied)it should have first been heard and decided by a division of the COMELEC,37 and then by the En Banc if a motion for reconsiderationof the decision of the division were filed.Since, as reflected above, the COMELEC sitting en banc acted on respondent’s petition which was not first passed upon bya division, it acted without jurisdiction, or with grave abuse of discretion.12[36] The assailed Resolution of the COMELEC

dated December 18, 2001 is thus null and void and it is in this light that the present petition is GRANTED. This leaves iunnecessary to pass on petitioner’s second assigned error. Manuel Milla v. Regina BALMORES-LAXA, (G.R. No. 151216,July18, 2003)

CASE NO. 10 : Facts: Atty. Romulo Macalintal files a petition for certiorari and prohibition before the Supreme Court

seeking a declaration that certain provisions of Republic Act No. 9189 (The Overseas Absentee Voting Act of 2003) sufferfrom constittuiona infirmity. He raises the following questions:1) Does Sec. 5(d) of said Act allowing the registration of voters who are immigrants or permanent residents in othe

countries by their mere act of executing an affidavit expressing their intention to return to the Philippines, violate theresidency requirement in Section 1 of Art. V of the Constitution?

2) Does Sec. 18.5 of the same law empowering the COMELEC to proclaim the winning candidates for national offices (i.esenators, pres. and vice pres.) and party list representatives violate the constitutional mandate under Art. VII, SEC. 4 o

the Constitution that the winning candidates for Pres. and Vice Pres. shall be proclaimed as winners by Congress?3) May Congress, through the Joint Congressional Oversight Committee created in Sec. 25 of said Act, exercise the

power to review, revise, amend and approve the Implementing Rules and Regulations that the COMELEC shalpromulgate without violating the independence of theCOMELEC under Section 1, Art. IX-A of the 1987 Constitution?

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Resolve the questions posed by Macalintal.

ANSWER NO 10: The seed of the present controversy is the interpretation that is given to the phrase, “qualified citizens of thePhilippines abroad” as it appears in R.A. No. 9189, to wit:

SEC. 2. Declaration of Policy . – It is the prime duty of the State to provide a system of honest and orderly overseas absenteevoting that upholds the secrecy and sanctity of the ballot. Towards this end, the State ensures equal opportunity to all qualifiedcitizens of the Philippines abroad in the exercise of this fundamental right.

SEC. 3. Definition of Terms. – For purposes of this Act:

a) “Absentee Voting” refers to the process by which qualified citizens of the Philippines abroad, exercise their right to vote;. . . (Emphasis supplied)f) “Overseas Absentee Voter” refers to a citizen of the Philippines who is qualified to register and vote under this Act, no

otherwise disqualified by law, who is abroad on the day of elections. (Emphasis supplied)SEC. 4. Coverage. – All citizens of the Philippines abroad, who are not otherwise disqualified by law , at least eighteen

(18) years of age on the day of elections, may vote for president, vice-president, senators and party-list representatives. (Emphasissupplied)in relation to Sections 1 and 2, Article V of the Constitution which read:

SEC. 1. Suffrage may be exercised by all citizens of the Philippines not otherwise disqualified by law, who are at least eighteenyears of age, and who shall have resided in the Philippines for at least one year and in the place wherein they propose to vote for atleast six months immediately preceding the election. No literacy, property, or other substantive requirement shall be imposed on theexercise of suffrage.

SEC. 2. The Congress shall provide a system for securing the secrecy and sanctity of the ballot as well as a system foabsentee voting by qualified Filipinos abroad.

. . . . . . . . . (Emphasis supplied)

Section 1, Article V of the Constitution specifically provides that suffrage may be exercised by (1) all citizens of the Philippines(2) not otherwise disqualified by law, (3) at least eighteen years of age, (4) who are residents in the Philippines for at least one yearand in the place where they propose to vote for at least six months immediately preceding the election. Under Section 5(d) of R.ANo. 9189, one of those disqualified from voting is an immigrant or permanent resident who is recognized as such in the host countryunless he/she executes an affidavit declaring that he/she shall resume actual physical permanent residence in the Philippines notlater than three years from approval of his/her registration under said Act.

Petitioner questions the rightness of the mere act of execution of an affidavit to qualify the Filipinos abroad who are immigrantsor permanent residents, to vote. He focuses solely on Section 1, Article V of the Constitution in ascribing constitutional infirmity toSection 5(d) of R.A. No. 9189, totally ignoring the provisions of Section 2 empowering Congress to provide a system for absenteevoting by qualified Filipinos abroad.

A simple, cursory reading of Section 5(d) of R.A. No. 9189 may indeed give the impression that it contravenes Section 1, ArticleV of the Constitution. Filipino immigrants and permanent residents overseas are perceived as having left and abandoned thePhilippines to live permanently in their host countries and therefore, a provision in the law enfranchising those who do not possessthe residency requirement of the Constitution by the mere act of executing an affidavit expressing their intent to return to thePhilippines within a given period, risks a declaration of unconstitutionality. However, the risk is more apparent than real.

The Constitution is the fundamental and paramount law of the nation to which all other laws must conform and in accordancewith which all private rights must be determined and all public authority administered.13[23] Laws that do not conform to the Constitutionshall be stricken down for being unconstitutional.

Generally, however, all laws are presumed to be constitutional. In Peralta vs. COMELEC , the Court said:. . . An act of the legislature, approved by the executive, is presumed to be within constitutional limitations. The responsibility o

upholding the Constitution rests not on the courts alone but on the legislature as well. The question of the validity of every statute isfirst determined by the legislative department of the government itself.14[24]

Thus, presumption of constitutionality of a law must be overcome convincingly:. . . To declare a law unconstitutional, the repugnancy of that law to the Constitution must be clear and unequivocal, for even if a

law is aimed at the attainment of some public good, no infringement of constitutional rights is allowed. To strike down a law theremust be a clear showing that what the fundamental law condemns or prohibits, the statute allows it to be done.15[25] 

As the essence of R.A. No. 9189 is to enfranchise overseas qualified Filipinos, it behooves the Court to take a holistic view ofthe pertinent provisions of both the Constitution and R.A. No. 9189. It is a basic rule in constitutional construction that theConstitution should be construed as a whole. In Chiongbian vs. De Leon,16[26] the Court held that a constitutional provision shouldfunction to the full extent of its substance and its terms, not by itself alone, but in conjunction with all other provisions of that great

document. Constitutional provisions are mandatory in character unless, either by express statement or by necessary implication, adifferent intention is manifest.17[27] The intent of the Constitution may be drawn primarily from the language of the document itself.Should it be ambiguous, the Court may consider the intent of its framers through their debates in the constitutional convention.18[28]

R.A. No. 9189 was enacted in obeisance to the mandate of the first paragraph of Section 2, Article V of the Constitution that

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Congress shall provide a system for voting by qualified Filipinos abroad. It must be stressed that Section 2 does not provide for the parameters of the exercise of legislative authority in enacting said law. Hence, in the absence of restrictions, Congress ispresumed to have duly exercised its function as defined in Article VI (The Legislative Department) of the Constitution.

To put matters in their right perspective, it is necessary to dwell first on the significance of absentee voting. The concept oabsentee voting is relatively new. It is viewed thus:

The method of absentee voting has been said to be completely separable and distinct from the regular system of voting, and tobe a new and different manner of voting from that previously known, and an exception to the customary and usual manner of voting.The right of absentee and disabled voters to cast their ballots at an election is  purely statutory ; absentee voting was unknown toand not recognized at, the common law.

Absentee voting is an outgrowth of modern social and economic conditions devised to accommodate those engaged in militaryor civil life whose duties make it impracticable for them to attend their polling places on the day of election, and the privilege ofabsentee voting may flow from constitutional provisions or be conferred by statutes, existing in some jurisdictions, which providein varying terms for the casting and reception of ballots by soldiers and sailors or other qualified voters absent on election day fromthe district or precinct of their residence.

Such statutes are regarded as conferring a privilege and not a right, or an absolute right. When the legislature chooses togrant the right by statute, it must operate with equality among all the class to which it is granted; but statutes of this naturemay be limited in their application to particular types of elections. The statutes should be construed in the light of anyconstitutional provisions affecting registration and elections, and with due regard to their texts prior to amendment and topredecessor statutes and the decisions thereunder; they should also be construed in the light of the circumstances underwhich they were enacted ; and so as to carry out the objects thereof, if this can be done without doing violence to their provisionsand mandates. Further, in passing on statutes regulating absentee voting, the court should look to the whole and every partof the election laws, the intent of the entire plan, and reasons and spirit of their adoption, and try to give effect to every

 portion thereof .19[29] (Emphasis supplied)Ordinarily, an absentee is not a resident and vice versa; a person cannot be at the same time, both a resident and an

absentee.20[30]

However, under our election laws and the countless pronouncements of the Court pertaining to elections, an absenteeremains attached to his residence in the Philippines as residence is considered synonymous with domicile.

In Romualdez-Marcos,21[31] the Court enunciated:Article 50 of the Civil Code decrees that “[f]or the exercise of civil rights and the fulfillment of civil obligations, the domicile of

natural persons is their place of habitual residence.” In Ong vs. Republic, this court took the concept of domicile to mean anindividual’s “permanent home,” “a place to which, whenever absent for business or for pleasure, one intends to return, and dependson facts and circumstances in the sense that they disclose intent.” Based on the foregoing, domicile includes the twin elements o“the fact of residing or physical presence in a fixed place” and animus manendi , or the intention of returning there permanently.

Residence, in its ordinary conception, implies the factual relationship of an individual to a certain place. It is the physicapresence of a person in a given area, community or country. The essential distinction between residence and domicile in law is tharesidence involves the intent to leave when the purpose for which the resident has taken up his abode ends. One may seek a placefor purposes such as pleasure, business, or health. If a person’s intent be to remain, it becomes his domicile; if his intent is to leaveas soon as his purpose is established it is residence. It is thus, quite perfectly normal for an individual to have different residences invarious places. However, a person can only have a single domicile, unless, for various reasons, he successfully abandons hisdomicile in favor of another domicile of choice. In Uytengsu vs. Republic, we laid this distinction quite clearly:

“There is a difference between domicile and residence. ‘Residence’ is used to indicate a place of abode, whether permanent otemporary; ‘domicile’ denotes a fixed permanent residence to which, when absent, one has the intention of returning. A man mayhave a residence in one place and a domicile in another. Residence is not domicile, but domicile is residence coupled with theintention to remain for an unlimited time. A man can have but one domicile for the same purpose at any time, but he may havenumerous places of residence. His place of residence is generally his place of domicile, but it is not by any means necessarily sosince no length of residence without intention of remaining will constitute domicile.”

For political purposes the concepts of residence and domicile are dictated by the peculiar criteria of political laws. As theseconcepts have evolved in our election law, what has clearly and unequivocally emerged is the fact that residence for election

 purposes is used synonymously with domicile.22[32]  (Emphasis supplied)Aware of the domiciliary legal tie that links an overseas Filipino to his residence in this country, the framers of the Constitution

considered the circumstances that impelled them to require Congress to establish a system for overseas absentee voting, thus:MR. OPLE. With respect to Section 1, it is not clear whether the right of suffrage, which here has a residential restriction, is not

denied to citizens temporarily residing or working abroad. Based on the statistics of several government agencies, there ought to beabout two million such Filipinos at this time. Commissioner Bernas had earlier pointed out that these provisions are really lifted fromthe two previous Constitutions of 1935 and 1973, with the exception of the last paragraph. They could not therefore have foreseen at

that time the phenomenon now described as the Filipino labor force explosion overseas.According to government data, there are now about 600,000 contract workers and employees, and although the major portions

of these expatriate communities of workers are to be found in the Middle East, they are scattered in 177 countries in the world.In a previous hearing of the Committee on Constitutional Commissions and Agencies, the Chairman of the Commission on

Elections, Ramon Felipe, said that there was no insuperable obstacle to making effective the right of suffrage for Filipinos overseasThose who have adhered to their Filipino citizenship notwithstanding strong temptations are exposed to embrace a more convenien

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foreign citizenship. And those who on their own or under pressure of economic necessity here, find that they have to detachthemselves from their families to work in other countries with definite tenures of employment. Many of them are on contractemployment for one, two, or three years. They have no intention of changing their residence on a permanent basis, but aretechnically disqualified from exercising the right of suffrage in their countries of destination by the residential requirement in Section 1which says:

Suffrage shall be exercised by all citizens of the Philippines not otherwise disqualified by law, who are eighteen years of age orover, and who shall have resided in the Philippines for at least one year and in the place wherein they propose to vote for at least sixmonths preceding the election.

I, therefore, ask the Committee whether at the proper time they might entertain an amendment that will make this exercise of

the right to vote abroad for Filipino citizens an effective, rather than merely a nominal right under this proposed Constitution.FR. BERNAS. Certainly, the Committee will consider that. But more than just saying that, I would like to make a comment onthe meaning of “residence” in the Constitution because I think it is a concept that has been discussed in various decisions of theSupreme Court, particularly in the case of Faypon vs. Quirino, a 1954 case which dealt precisely with the meaning of “residence” inthe Election Law. Allow me to quote:

A citizen may leave the place of his birth to look for greener pastures, as the saying goes, to improve his lot and that, of courseincludes study in other places, practice of his avocation, reengaging in business. When an election is to be held, the citizen who lefhis birthplace to improve his lot may decide to return to his native town, to cast his ballot, but for professional or business reasons, ofor any other reason, he may not absent himself from the place of his professional or business activities.

So, they are here registered as voters as he has the qualifications to be one, and is not willing to give up or lose the opportunityto choose the officials who are to run the government especially in national elections. Despite such registration, the animusrevertendi to his home, to his domicile or residence of origin has not forsaken him.

This may be the explanation why the registration of a voter in a place other than his residence of origin has not been deemedsufficient to consider abandonment or loss of such residence of origin.

In other words, “residence” in this provision refers to two residence qualifications: “residence” in the Philippines and “residence”

in the place where he will vote. As far as residence in the Philippines is concerned, the word “residence” means domicile, but as faras residence in the place where he will actually cast his ballot is concerned, the meaning seems to be different. He could have adomicile somewhere else and yet he is a resident of a place for six months and he is allowed to vote there. So that there may beserious constitutional obstacles to absentee voting, unless the vote of the person who is absent is a vote which will beconsidered as cast in the place of his domicile.

MR. OPLE. Thank you for citing the jurisprudence.It gives me scant comfort thinking of about two million Filipinos who should enjoy the right of suffrage, at least a substantia

segment of these overseas Filipino communities. The Committee, of course, is aware that when this Article of the Constitutionexplicitly and unequivocally extends the right of effective suffrage to Filipinos abroad, this will call for a logistical exercise of globaproportions. In effect, this will require budgetary and administrative commitments on the part of the Philippine government, mainlythrough the COMELEC and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and perhaps, a more extensive elaboration of this mechanism that will beput in place to make effective the right to vote. Therefore, seeking shelter in some wise jurisprudence of the past may not besufficient to meet the demands of the right of suffrage for Filipinos abroad  that I have mentioned. But I want to thank theCommittee for saying that an amendment to this effect may be entertained at the proper time. . . . . . . . . .23[33] (Emphasis supplied)

Thus, the Constitutional Commission recognized the fact that while millions of Filipinos reside abroad principally for economicreasons and hence they contribute in no small measure to the economic uplift of this country, their voices are marginal insofar as thechoice of this country’s leaders is concerned.

The Constitutional Commission realized that under the laws then existing and considering the novelty of the system of absenteevoting in this jurisdiction, vesting overseas Filipinos with the right to vote would spawn constitutional problems especially because theConstitution itself provides for the residency requirement of voters:

MR. REGALADO. Before I act on that, may I inquire from Commissioner Monsod if the term “absentee voting” also includestransient voting; meaning, those who are, let us say, studying in Manila need not go back to their places of registration, for instance,in Mindanao, to cast their votes.

MR. MONSOD. I think our provision is for absentee voting by Filipinos abroad.MR. REGALADO. How about those people who cannot go back to the places where they are registered?MR. MONSOD. Under the present Election Code, there are provisions for allowing students and military people who are

temporarily in another place to register and vote. I believe that those situations can be covered by the Omnibus Election Code. Thereason we want absentee voting to be in the Constitution as a mandate to the legislature is that there could beinconsistency on the residence rule if it is just a question of legislation by Congress. So, by allowing it and saying that this

is possible, then legislation can take care of the rest .24[34] (Emphasis supplied)Thus, Section 2, Article V of the Constitution came into being to remove any doubt as to the inapplicability of the residencyrequirement in Section 1. It is precisely to avoid any problems that could impede the implementation of its pursuit to enfranchise thelargest number of qualified Filipinos who are not in the Philippines that the Constitutional Commission explicitly mandated Congressto provide a system for overseas absentee voting.

The discussion of the Constitutional Commission on the effect of the residency requirement prescribed by Section 1, Article V ofthe Constitution on the proposed system of absentee voting for qualified Filipinos abroad is enlightening:

MR. SUAREZ. May I just be recognized for a clarification. There are certain qualifications for the exercise of the right of suffragelike having resided in the Philippines for at least one year and in the place where they propose to vote for at least six months

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preceding the elections. What is the effect of these mandatory requirements on the matter of the exercise of the right of suffrageby the absentee voters like Filipinos abroad?

THE PRESIDENT. Would Commissioner Monsod care to answer?MR. MONSOD. I believe the answer was already given by Commissioner Bernas, that the domicile requirements as well as the

qualifications and disqualifications would be the same.THE PRESIDENT. Are we leaving it to the legislature to devise the system?FR. BERNAS. I think there is a very legitimate problem raised there.THE PRESIDENT. Yes.MR. BENGZON. I believe Commissioner Suarez is clarified.

FR. BERNAS. But I think it should be further clarified with regard to the residence requirement or the place where they vote inpractice; the understanding is that it is flexible. For instance, one might be a resident of Naga or domiciled therein, but he satisfiesthe requirement of residence in Manila, so he is able to vote in Manila.

MR. TINGSON. Madam President, may I then suggest to the Committee to change the word “Filipinos” to QUALIFIEDFILIPINO VOTERS. Instead of “VOTING BY FILIPINOS ABROAD,” it should be QUALIFIED FILIPINO VOTERS. If the Committeewants QUALIFIED VOTERS LIVING ABROAD, would that not satisfy the requirement?

THE PRESIDENT. What does Commissioner Monsod say?MR. MONSOD. Madam President, I think I would accept the phrase “QUALIFIED FILIPINOS ABROAD” because “QUALIFIED

would assume that he has the qualifications and none of the disqualifications to vote.MR. TINGSON. That is right. So does the Committee accept?FR. BERNAS. “QUALIFIED FILIPINOS ABROAD”?THE PRESIDENT. Does the Committee accept the amendment?MR. REGALADO. Madam President.THE PRESIDENT. Commissioner Regalado is recognized.MR. REGALADO. When Commissioner Bengzon asked me to read my proposed amendment, I specifically stated that the

National Assembly shall prescribe a system which will enable qualified citizens, temporarily absent from the Philippines, to voteAccording to Commissioner Monsod, the use of the phrase “absentee voting” already took that into account as its meaning. That isreferring to qualified Filipino citizens temporarily abroad.

MR. MONSOD. Yes, we accepted that. I would like to say that with respect to registration we will leave it up to the legislativeassembly, for example, to require where the registration is. If it is, say, members of the diplomatic corps who may be continuouslyabroad for a long time, perhaps, there can be a system of registration in the embassies. However, we do not like to preempt thelegislative assembly.

THE PRESIDENT. Just to clarify, Commissioner Monsod’s amendment is only to provide a system.MR. MONSOD. Yes.THE PRESIDENT. The Commissioner is not stating here that he wants new qualifications for these absentee voters.MR. MONSOD. That is right. They must have the qualifications and none of the disqualifications.THE PRESIDENT. It is just to devise a system by which they can vote.MR. MONSOD. That is right, Madam President.25[35] (Emphasis supplied)Clearly therefrom, the intent of the Constitutional Commission is to entrust to Congress the responsibility of devising a system o

absentee voting. The qualifications of voters as stated in Section 1 shall remain except for the residency requirement. This is in fac

the reason why the Constitutional Commission opted for the term qualified Filipinos abroad with respect to the system of absenteevoting that Congress should draw up. As stressed by Commissioner Monsod, by the use of the adjective qualified with respect toFilipinos abroad, the assumption is that they have the “qualifications and none of the disqualifications to vote.” In fine-tuning theprovision on absentee voting, the Constitutional Commission discussed how the system should work:

MR. SUAREZ. For clarification purposes, we just want to state for the record that in the case of qualified Filipino citizensresiding abroad and exercising their right of suffrage, they can cast their votes for the candidates in the place where they wereregistered to vote in the Philippines. So as to avoid any complications, for example, if they are registered in Angeles City, they couldnot vote for a mayor in Naga City.

In other words, if that qualified voter is registered in Angeles City, then he can vote only for the local and national candidates inAngeles City. I just want to make that clear for the record.

MR. REGALADO. Madam President.THE PRESIDENT. What does Commissioner Regalado say?MR. REGALADO. I just want to make a note on the statement of Commissioner Suarez that this envisions Filipinos residing abroad. The

understanding in the amendment is that the Filipino is temporarily abroad. He may not be actually residing abroad; he may just bethere on a business trip. It just so happens that the day before the elections he has to fly to the United States, so he could not cas

his vote. He is temporarily abroad, but not residing there. He stays in a hotel for two days and comes back. This is not limited onlyto Filipinos temporarily residing abroad. But as long as he is temporarily abroad on the date of the elections, then he canfall within the prescription of Congress in that situation.

MR. SUAREZ. I thank the Commissioner for his further clarification. Precisely, we need this clarification on record.MR. MONSOD. Madam President, to clarify what we mean by “temporarily abroad,” it need not be on very short trips. One can be

abroad on a treaty traders visa. Therefore, when we talk about registration, it is possible that his residence is in Angeles and hewould be able to vote for the candidates in Angeles, but Congress or the Assembly may provide the procedure for registrationlike listing one’s name, in a registry list in the embassy abroad . That is still possible under the system.

FR. BERNAS. Madam President, just one clarification if Commissioner Monsod agrees with this.Suppose we have a situation of a child of a diplomatic officer who reaches the voting age while living abroad and he has never registered

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here. Where will he register? Will he be a registered voter of a certain locality in the Philippines?MR. MONSOD. Yes, it is possible that the system will enable that child to comply with the registration requirements in an embassy in the

United States and his name is then entered in the official registration book in Angeles City, for instance.FR. BERNAS. In other words, he is not a registered voter of Los Angeles, but a registered voter of a locality here.MR. MONSOD. That is right. He does not have to come home to the Philippines to comply with the registration procedure here.FR. BERNAS. So, he does not have to come home.MR. BENGZON. Madam President, the Floor Leader wishes to inquire if there are more clarifications needed from the body.

Also, the Floor Leader is happy to announce that there are no more registered Commissioners to propose amendments. So move that we close the period of amendments.26[36]

(Emphasis supplied)It is clear from these discussions of the members of the Constitutional Commission that they intended to enfranchise as muchas possible all Filipino citizens abroad who have not abandoned their domicile of origin. The Commission even intended to extend toyoung Filipinos who reach voting age abroad whose parents’ domicile of origin is in the Philippines, and consider them qualified asvoters for the first time.

It is in pursuance of that intention that the Commission provided for Section 2 immediately after the residency requirement ofSection 1. By the doctrine of necessary implication in statutory construction, which may be applied in construing constitutionaprovisions,27[37] the strategic location of Section 2 indicates that the Constitutional Commission provided for an exception to the actuaresidency requirement of Section 1 with respect to qualified Filipinos abroad. The same Commission has in effect declared thaqualified Filipinos who are not in the Philippines may be allowed to vote even though they do not satisfy the residency requirement inSection 1, Article V of the Constitution.

That Section 2 of Article V of the Constitution is an exception to the residency requirement found in Section 1 of the sameArticle was in fact the subject of debate when Senate Bill No. 2104, which became R.A. No. 9189, was deliberated upon on theSenate floor, thus:

Senator Arroyo. Mr. President, this bill should be looked into in relation to the constitutional provisions. I think the sponsor and I would

agree that the Constitution is supreme in any statute that we may enact.Let me read Section 1, Article V, of the Constitution entitled, “Suffrage.” It says:Section 1. Suffrage may be exercised by all citizens of the Philippines not otherwise disqualified by law, who are at leas

eighteen years of age, and who shall have resided in the Philippines for at least one year and in the place wherein they propose tovote for at least six months immediately preceding the election.

Now, Mr. President, the Constitution says, “who shall have resided in the Philippines.” They are permanent immigrants. They havechanged residence so they are barred under the Constitution. This is why I asked whether this committee amendment which in facdoes not alter the original text of the bill will have any effect on this?

Senator Angara. Good question, Mr. President. And this has been asked in various fora. This is in compliance with the ConstitutionOne, the interpretation here of “residence” is synonymous with “domicile.”

As the gentleman and I know, Mr. President, “domicile” is the intent to return to one’s home. And the fact that a Filipino may have been physically absent from the Philippines and may be physically a resident of the United States, for example, but has a clearintent to return to the Philippines, will make him qualified as a resident of the Philippines under this law .

This is consistent, Mr. President, with the constitutional mandate that we – that Congress – must provide a franchise to overseas Filipinos.If we read the Constitution and the suffrage principle literally as demanding physical presence, then there is no way we can

 provide for offshore voting to our offshore kababayan, Mr. President.Senator Arroyo. Mr. President, when the Constitution says, in Section 2 of Article V, it reads: “The Congress shall provide a system fo

securing the secrecy and sanctity of the ballot as well as a system for absentee voting by qualified Filipinos abroad.”The key to this whole exercise, Mr. President, is “qualified.” In other words, anything that we may do or say in granting our

compatriots abroad must be anchored on the proposition that they are qualified. Absent the qualification, they cannot vote And “residents” (sic) is a qualification.

I will lose votes here from permanent residents so-called “green-card holders”, but the Constitution is the Constitution. We cannocompromise on this. The Senate cannot be a party to something that would affect or impair the Constitution.

Look at what the Constitution says – “In the place wherein they propose to vote for at least six months immediately preceding the election.”Mr. President, all of us here have run (sic) for office.I live in Makati. My neighbor is Pateros where Senator Cayetano lives. We are separated only by a creek. But one who votes in Makat

cannot vote in Pateros unless he resides in Pateros for six months. That is how restrictive our Constitution is. I am not talking evenabout the Election Code. I am talking about the Constitution.

As I have said, if a voter in Makati would want to vote in Pateros, yes, he may do so. But he must do so, make the transfer six monthsbefore the election, otherwise, he is not qualified to vote.

That is why I am raising this point because I think we have a fundamental difference here.Senator Angara. It is a good point to raise, Mr. President. But it is a point already well-debated even in the constitutional commission o

1986.  And the reason Section 2 of Article V was placed immediately after the six-month/one-year residency requirement isto demonstrate unmistakably that Section 2 which authorizes absentee voting is an exception to the six-month/one-yearresidency requirement . That is the first principle, Mr. President, that one must remember.

The second reason, Mr. President, is that under our jurisprudence – and I think this is so well-entrenched that one need not argue about it – “residency” has been interpreted as synonymous with “domicile.”

But the third more practical reason, Mr. President, is, if we follow the interpretation of the gentleman, then it is legally andconstitutionally impossible to give a franchise to vote to overseas Filipinos who do not physically live in the country, which

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is quite ridiculous because that is exactly the whole point of this exercise – to enfranchise them and empower them tovote. 28[38] (Emphasis supplied)

Accordingly, Section 4 of R.A. No. 9189 provides for the coverage of the absentee voting process, to wit:SEC. 4. Coverage. – All citizens of the Philippines abroad, who are not otherwise disqualified by law, at least eighteen (18

years of age on the day of elections, may vote for president, vice-president, senators and party-list representatives.which does not require physical residency in the Philippines; and Section 5 of the assailed law which enumerates those who aredisqualified, to wit:

SEC. 5. Disqualifications. – The following shall be disqualified from voting under this Act:

a) Those who have lost their Filipino citizenship in accordance with Philippine laws;b) Those who have expressly renounced their Philippine citizenship and who have pledged allegiance to a foreign country;c) Those who have committed and are convicted in a final judgment by a court or tribunal of an offense punishable by

imprisonment of not less than one (1) year, including those who have committed and been found guilty of Disloyalty as defined underArticle 137 of the Revised Penal Code, such disability not having been removed by plenary pardon or amnesty: Provided , howeverThat any person disqualified to vote under this subsection shall automatically acquire the right to vote upon expiration of five (5) yearsafter service of sentence; Provided , further , That the Commission may take cognizance of final judgments issued by foreign courts otribunals only on the basis of reciprocity and subject to the formalities and processes prescribed by the Rules of Court on executionof judgments;

d) An immigrant or a permanent resident who is recognized as such in the host country, unless he/she executes, uponregistration, an affidavit prepared for the purpose by the Commission declaring that he/she shall resume actual physical permanentresidence in the Philippines not later than three (3) years from approval of his/her registration under this Act. Such affidavit shall alsostate that he/she has not applied for citizenship in another country. Failure to return shall be cause for the removal of the name othe immigrant or permanent resident from the National Registry of Absentee Voters and his/her permanent disqualification to vote inabsentia.

e) Any citizen of the Philippines abroad previously declared insane or incompetent by competent authority in the Philippines oabroad, as verified by the Philippine embassies, consulates or foreign service establishments concerned, unless such competentauthority subsequently certifies that such person is no longer insane or incompetent.

As finally approved into law, Section 5(d) of R.A. No. 9189 specifically disqualifies an immigrant or  permanent resident who is“recognized as such in the host country” because immigration or permanent residence in another country implies renunciation oone’s residence in his country of origin. However, same Section allows an immigrant and permanent resident abroad to register asvoter for as long as he/she executes an affidavit to show that he/she has not abandoned his domicile in pursuance of theconstitutional intent expressed in Sections 1 and 2 of Article V that “all citizens of the Philippines not otherwise disqualified by lawmust be entitled to exercise the right of suffrage and, that Congress must establish a system for absentee voting; for otherwise, iactual, physical residence in the Philippines is required, there is no sense for the framers of the Constitution to mandate Congress toestablish a system for absentee voting.

Contrary to the claim of petitioner, the execution of the affidavit itself is not the enabling or enfranchising act. The affidavirequired in Section 5(d) is not only proof of the intention of the immigrant or permanent resident to go back and resume residency inthe Philippines, but more significantly, it serves as an explicit expression that he had not in fact abandoned his domicile of origin.Thus, it is not correct to say that the execution of the affidavit under Section 5(d) violates the Constitution that proscribes “provisiona

registration or a promise by a voter to perform a condition to be qualified to vote in a political exercise.”To repeat, the affidavit is required of immigrants and permanent residents abroad because by their status in their host countries

they are presumed to have relinquished their intent to return to this country; thus, without the affidavit, the presumption oabandonment of Philippine domicile shall remain.

Further perusal of the transcripts of the Senate proceedings discloses another reason why the Senate required the execution osaid affidavit. It wanted the affiant to exercise the option to return or to express his intention to return to his domicile of origin and noto preempt that choice by legislation. Thus:

Senator Villar. Yes, we are going back.It states that: “For Filipino immigrants and those who have acquired permanent resident status abroad,” a requirement for the registration

is the submission of “a Sworn Declaration of Intent to Return duly sworn before any Philippine embassy or consulate officialauthorized to administer oath…”

Mr. President, may we know the rationale of this provision? Is the purpose of this Sworn Declaration to include only those who have theintention of returning to be qualified to exercise the right of suffrage? What if the Filipino immigrant has no purpose of returning? Is heautomatically disbarred from exercising this right to suffrage?

Senator Angara.  The rationale for this, Mr. President, is that we want to be expansive and all-inclusive in this law. That as long

as he is a Filipino, no matter whether he is a green-card holder in the U.S. or not, he will be authorized to vote. But if he isalready a green-card holder, that means he has acquired permanent residency in the United States, then he must indicatean intention to return. This is what makes for the definition of “domicile.” And to acquire the vote, we thought that we wouldrequire the immigrants and the green-card holders . . . Mr. President, the three administration senators are leaving, maybe we mayask for a vote [Laughter].

Senator Villar. For a merienda, Mr. President.Senator Angara. Mr. President, going back to the business at hand. The rationale for the requirement that an immigrant or a green-card

holder should file an affidavit that he will go back to the Philippines is that, if he is already an immigrant or a green-card  holder, thameans he may not return to the country any more and that contradicts the definition of “domicile” under the law.

But what we are trying to do here, Mr. President, is really provide the choice to the voter . The voter, after consulting his lawyer o

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after deliberation within the family, may decide “No, I think we are risking our permanent status in the United States if we file anaffidavit that we want to go back.” But  we want to give him the opportunity to make that decision. We do not want to makethat decision for him. 29[39] (Emphasis supplied)

The jurisprudential declaration in Caasi vs. Court of Appeals that green card holders are disqualified to run for any electiveoffice finds no application to the present case because the Caasi case did not, for obvious reasons, consider the absentee votingrights of Filipinos who are immigrants and permanent residents in their host countries.

In the advent of The Overseas Absentee Voting Act of 2003 or R.A. 9189, they may still be considered as a “qualified citizen ofthe Philippines abroad” upon fulfillment of the requirements of registration under the new law for the purpose of exercising their righof suffrage.

It must be emphasized that Section 5(d) does not only require an affidavit or a promise to “resume actual physical permanenresidence in the Philippines not later than three years from approval of his/her registration,” the Filipinos abroad must also declarethat they have not applied for citizenship in another country. Thus, they must return to the Philippines; otherwise, their failure toreturn “shall be cause for the removal” of their names “from the National Registry of Absentee Voters and his/her permanentdisqualification to vote in absentia.”  

Thus, Congress crafted a process of registration by which a Filipino voter permanently residing abroad who is at least eighteenyears old, not otherwise disqualified by law, who has not relinquished Philippine citizenship and who has not actually abandonedhis/her intentions to return to his/her domicile of origin, the Philippines, is allowed to register and vote in the Philippine embassyconsulate or other foreign service establishments of the place which has jurisdiction over the country where he/she has indicatedhis/her address for purposes of the elections, while providing for safeguards to a clean election.

Thus, Section 11 of R.A. No. 9189 provides:SEC. 11. Procedure for Application to Vote in Absentia. –11.1. Every qualified citizen of the Philippines abroad whose application for registration has been approved, including

those previously registered under Republic Act No. 8189, shall, in every national election, file with the officer of the embassyconsulate or other foreign service establishment authorized by the Commission, a sworn written application to vote in a form

prescribed by the Commission. The authorized officer of such embassy, consulate or other foreign service establishment shatransmit to the Commission the said application to vote within five (5) days from receipt thereof. The application form shall beaccomplished in triplicate and submitted together with the photocopy of his/her overseas absentee voter certificate of registration.

11.2. Every application to vote in absentia may be done personally at, or by mail to, the embassy, consulate or foreignservice establishment, which has jurisdiction over the country where he/she has indicated his/her address for purposes of theelections.

11.3. Consular and diplomatic services rendered in connection with the overseas absentee voting processes shall bemade available at no cost to the overseas absentee voter.

Contrary to petitioner’s claim that Section 5(d) circumvents the Constitution, Congress enacted the law prescribing a system ofoverseas absentee voting in compliance with the constitutional mandate. Such mandate expressly requires that Congress provide asystem of absentee voting that necessarily presupposes that the “qualified citizen of the Philippines abroad” is not physically presentin the country. The provisions of Sections 5(d) and 11 are components of the system of overseas absentee voting established byR.A. No. 9189. The qualified Filipino abroad who executed the affidavit is deemed to have retained his domicile in the PhilippinesHe is presumed not to have lost his domicile by his physical absence from this country. His having become an immigrant opermanent resident of his host country does not necessarily imply an abandonment of his intention to return to his domicile of origin,

the Philippines. Therefore, under the law, he must be given the opportunity to express that he has not actually abandoned hisdomicile in the Philippines by executing the affidavit required by Sections 5(d) and 8(c) of the law.

Petitioner’s speculative apprehension that the implementation of Section 5(d) would affect the credibility of the elections isinsignificant as what is important is to ensure that all those who possess the qualifications to vote on the date of the election aregiven the opportunity and permitted to freely do so. The COMELEC and the Department of Foreign Affairs have enough resourcesand talents to ensure the integrity and credibility of any election conducted pursuant to R.A. No. 9189.

As to the eventuality that the Filipino abroad would renege on his undertaking to return to the Philippines, the penalty ofperpetual disenfranchisement provided for by Section 5(d) would suffice to serve as deterrence to non-compliance with his/heundertaking under the affidavit.

Petitioner argues that should a sizable number of “immigrants” renege on their promise to return, the result of the electionswould be affected and could even be a ground to contest the proclamation of the winning candidates and cause further confusion anddoubt on the integrity of the results of the election. Indeed, the probability that after an immigrant has exercised the right to vote, heshall opt to remain in his host country beyond the third year from the execution of the affidavit, is not farfetched. However, it is not fothis Court to determine the wisdom of a legislative exercise. As expressed in Tañada vs. Tuvera,30[40] the Court is not called upon torule on the wisdom of the law or to repeal it or modify it if we find it impractical.

Congress itself was conscious of said probability and in fact, it has addressed the expected problem. Section 5(d) itselprovides for a deterrence which is that the Filipino who fails to return as promised stands to lose his right of suffrage. Under Section9, should a registered overseas absentee voter fail to vote for two consecutive national elections, his name may be ordered removedfrom the National Registry of Overseas Absentee Voters.

Other serious legal questions that may be raised would be: what happens to the votes cast by the qualified voters abroad whowere not able to return within three years as promised? What is the effect on the votes cast by the non-returnees in favor of thewinning candidates? The votes cast by qualified Filipinos abroad who failed to return within three years shall not be invalidatedbecause they were qualified to vote on the date of the elections, but their failure to return shall be cause for the removal of the namesof the immigrants or permanent residents from the National Registry of Absentee Voters and their permanent disqualification to vote

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in absentia.In fine, considering the underlying intent of the Constitution, the Court does not find Section 5(d) of R.A. No. 9189 as

constitutionally defective.B. Is Section 18.5 of R.A. No. 9189 in relation to Section 4 of the same Act in contravention of Section 4, Article VII ofthe Constitution? 

Section 4 of R.A. No. 9189 provides that the overseas absentee voter may vote for president, vice-president, senators andparty-list representatives.

Section 18.5 of the same Act provides:SEC. 18. On-Site Counting and Canvassing. –

. . . . . . . . .18. 5 The canvass of votes shall not cause the delay of the proclamation of a winning candidate if the outcome of theelection will not be affected by the results thereof. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Commission is empowered to order theproclamation of winning candidates despite the fact that the scheduled election has not taken place in a particular country orcountries, if the holding of elections therein has been rendered impossible by events, factors and circumstances peculiar to suchcountry or countries, in which events, factors and circumstances are beyond the control or influence of the Commission. (Emphasissupplied)

Petitioner claims that the provision of Section 18.5 of R.A. No. 9189 empowering the COMELEC to order the proclamation ofwinning candidates insofar as it affects the canvass of votes and proclamation of winning candidates for president and vice-presidentis unconstitutional because it violates the following provisions of paragraph 4, Section 4 of Article VII of the Constitution:

SEC. 4 . . .The returns of every election for President and Vice-President, duly certified by the board of canvassers of each province or

city, shall be transmitted to the Congress, directed to the President of the Senate. Upon receipt of the certificates of canvass, thePresident of the Senate shall, not later than thirty days after the day of the election, open all the certificates in the presence of theSenate and the House of Representatives in joint public session, and the Congress, upon determination of the authenticity and due

execution thereof in the manner provided by law, canvass the votes.The person having the highest number of votes shall be proclaimed elected, but in case two or more shall have an equal and

highest number of votes, one of them shall forthwith be chosen by the vote of a majority of all the Members of both Houses of theCongress, voting separately.

The Congress shall promulgate its rules for the canvassing of the certificates.. . .

which gives to Congress the duty to canvass the votes and proclaim the winning candidates for president and vice-president.The Solicitor General asserts that this provision must be harmonized with paragraph 4, Section 4, Article VII of the Constitution

and should be taken to mean that COMELEC can only proclaim the winning Senators and party-list representatives but not thePresident and Vice-President.31[41] 

Respondent COMELEC has no comment on the matter.Indeed, the phrase, proclamation of winning candidates, in Section 18.5 of R.A. No. 9189 is far too sweeping that it necessarily

includes the proclamation of the winning candidates for the presidency and the vice-presidency.Section 18.5 of R.A. No. 9189 appears to be repugnant to Section 4, Article VII of the Constitution only insofar as said Section

totally disregarded the authority given to Congress by the Constitution to proclaim the winning candidates for the positions of

president and vice-president.In addition, the Court notes that Section 18.4 of the law, to wit:18.4. . . . Immediately upon the completion of the canvass, the chairman of the Special Board of Canvassers shall transmit via

facsimile, electronic mail, or any other means of transmission equally safe and reliable the Certificates of Canvass and theStatements of Votes to the Commission, . . . [Emphasis supplied]clashes with paragraph 4, Section 4, Article VII of the Constitution which provides that the returns of every election for President andVice-President shall be certified by the board of canvassers to Congress.

Congress could not have allowed the COMELEC to usurp a power that constitutionally belongs to it or, as aptly stated bypetitioner, to encroach “on the power of Congress to canvass the votes for president and vice-president and the power to proclaimthe winners for the said positions.” The provisions of the Constitution as the fundamental law of the land should be read as part ofThe Overseas Absentee Voting Act of 2003 and hence, the canvassing of the votes and the proclamation of the winning candidatesfor president and vice-president for the entire nation must remain in the hands of Congress.C. Are Sections 19 and 25 of R.A. No. 9189 in violation of Section 1, Article IX-A of the Constitution? 

Petitioner avers that Sections 19 and 25 of R.A. No. 9189 violate Article IX-A (Common Provisions) of the Constitution, to wit:Section 1. The Constitutional Commissions, which shall be independent, are the Civil Service Commission, the Commission on

Elections, and the Commission on Audit. (Emphasis supplied)He submits that the creation of the Joint Congressional Oversight Committee with the power to review, revise, amend and approvethe Implementing Rules and Regulations promulgated by the COMELEC, R.A. No. 9189 intrudes into the independence of theCOMELEC which, as a constitutional body, is not under the control of either the executive or legislative departments of government;that only the COMELEC itself can promulgate rules and regulations which may be changed or revised only by the majority of itsmembers; and that should the rules promulgated by the COMELEC violate any law, it is the Court that has the power to review thesame via the petition of any interested party, including the legislators.

It is only on this question that respondent COMELEC submitted its Comment. It agrees with the petitioner that Sections 19 and25 of R.A. No. 9189 are unconstitutional. Like the petitioner, respondent COMELEC anchors its claim of unconstitutionality of saidSections upon Section 1, Article IX-A of the Constitution providing for the independence of the constitutional commissions such as

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the COMELEC. It asserts that its power to formulate rules and regulations has been upheld in Gallardo vs. Tabamo, Jr .32[42] wherethis Court held that the power of the COMELEC to formulate rules and regulations is implicit in its power to implement regulationsunder Section 2(1) of Article IX-C33[43] of the Constitution. COMELEC joins the petitioner in asserting that as an independenconstitutional body, it may not be subject to interference by any government instrumentality and that only this Court may reviewCOMELEC rules and only in cases of grave abuse of discretion.

The COMELEC adds, however, that another provision, vis-à-vis its rule-making power, to wit:SEC. 17. Voting by Mail. –17.1. For the May, 2004 elections, the Commission shall authorize voting by mail in not more than three (3) countries, subjec

to the approval of the Congressional Oversight Committee. Voting by mail may be allowed in countries that satisfy the following

conditions:a) Where the mailing system is fairly well-developed and secure to prevent occasion for fraud;b) Where there exists a technically established identification system that would preclude multiple or proxy voting; andc) Where the system of reception and custody of mailed ballots in the embassies, consulates and other foreign service

establishments concerned are adequate and well-secured.Thereafter, voting by mail in any country shall be allowed only upon review and approval of the Joint Congressional Oversight

Committee.. . . . . . . . . (Emphasis supplied)

is likewise unconstitutional as it violates Section 1, Article IX-A mandating the independence of constitutional commissions.The Solicitor General takes exception to his prefatory statement that the constitutional challenge must fail and agrees with the

petitioner that Sections 19 and 25 are invalid and unconstitutional on the ground that there is nothing in Article VI of the Constitutionon Legislative Department that would as much as imply that Congress has concurrent power to enforce and administer election lawswith the COMELEC; and by the principles of  exclusio unius est exclusio alterius and expressum facit cessare tacitum, theconstitutionally enumerated powers of Congress circumscribe its authority to the exclusion of all others.

The parties are unanimous in claiming that Sections 19, 25 and portions of Section 17.1 are unconstitutional. Thus, there is no

actual issue forged on this question raised by petitioner.However, the Court finds it expedient to expound on the role of Congress through the Joint Congressional Oversight Committee

(JCOC) vis-à-vis the independence of the COMELEC, as a constitutional body.R.A. No. 9189 created the JCOC, as follows:SEC. 25. Joint Congressional Oversight Committee. – A Joint Congressional Oversight Committee is hereby created

composed of the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Constitutional Amendments, Revision of Codes and Laws, and seven (7)other Senators designated by the Senate President, and the Chairman of the House Committee on Suffrage and Electoral Reformsand seven (7) other Members of the House of Representatives designated by the Speaker of the House of Representatives:Provided, That, of the seven (7) members to be designated by each House of Congress, four (4) should come from the majority andthe remaining three (3) from the minority.

The Joint Congressional Oversight Committee shall have the power to monitor and evaluate the implementation of thisAct. It shall review, revise, amend and approve the Implementing Rules and Regulations promulgated by the Commission.(Emphasis supplied)

SEC. 19.  Authority of the Commission to Promulgate Rules . – The Commission shall issue the necessary rules and regulationsto effectively implement the provisions of this Act within sixty (60) days from the effectivity of this Act. The Implementing Rules and

Regulations shall be submitted to the Joint Congressional Oversight Committee created by virtue of this Act for prioapproval.

. . . . . . . . . (Emphasis supplied)Composed of Senators and Members of the House of Representatives, the Joint Congressional Oversight Committee (JCOC) is apurely legislative body. There is no question that the authority of Congress to “monitor and evaluate the implementation” of R.A. No9189 is geared towards possible amendments or revision of the law itself and thus, may be performed in aid of its legislation.

However, aside from its monitoring and evaluation functions, R.A. No. 9189 gives to the JCOC the following functions: (a) to“review, revise, amend and approve the Implementing Rules and Regulations” (IRR) promulgated by the COMELEC [Sections 25 and19]; and (b) subject to the approval of the JCOC [Section 17.1], the voting by mail in not more than three countries for the May 2004elections and in any country determined by COMELEC.

The ambit of legislative power under Article VI of the Constitution is circumscribed by other constitutional provisions. One suchprovision is Section 1 of Article IX-A of the 1987 Constitution ordaining that constitutional commissions such as the COMELEC shalbe “independent.”

Interpreting Section 1, Article X of the 1935 Constitution providing that there shall be an independent COMELEC, the Court hasheld that “[w]hatever may be the nature of the functions of the Commission on Elections, the fact is that the framers of the

Constitution wanted it to be independent from the other departments of the Government.”34[44] In an earlier case, the Court elucidated:The Commission on Elections is a constitutional body. It is intended to play a distinct and important part in our scheme of

government. In the discharge of its functions, it should not be hampered with restrictions that would be fully warranted in the case of aless responsible organization. The Commission may err, so may this court also. It should be allowed considerable latitude indevising means and methods that will insure the accomplishment of the great objective for which it was created – free, orderly and honest elections. We may not agree fully with its choice of means, but unless these are clearly illegal or constitute gross abuse ofdiscretion, this court should not interfere. Politics is a practical matter, and political questions must be dealt with realistically – notfrom the standpoint of pure theory. The Commission on Elections, because of its fact-finding facilities, its contacts with politica

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strategists, and its knowledge derived from actual experience in dealing with political controversies, is in a peculiarlyadvantageous position to decide complex political questions.35[45] (Emphasis supplied)

The Court has no general powers of supervision over COMELEC which is an independent body “except those specificallygranted by the Constitution,” that is, to review its decisions, orders and rulings.36[46] In the same vein, it is not correct to hold thatbecause of its recognized extensive legislative power to enact election laws, Congress may intrude into the independence of theCOMELEC by exercising supervisory powers over its rule-making authority.

By virtue of Section 19 of R.A. No. 9189, Congress has empowered the COMELEC to “issue the necessary rules andregulations to effectively implement the provisions of this Act within sixty days from the effectivity of this Act.” This provision of law

follows the usual procedure in drafting rules and regulations to implement a law – the legislature grants an administrative agency theauthority to craft the rules and regulations implementing the law it has enacted, in recognition of the administrative expertise of thatagency in its particular field of operation.37[47] Once a law is enacted and approved, the legislative function is deemed accomplishedand complete. The legislative function may spring back to Congress relative to the same law only if that body deems it proper toreview, amend and revise the law, but certainly not to approve, review, revise and amend the IRR of the COMELEC.

By vesting itself with the powers to approve, review, amend, and revise the IRR for The Overseas Absentee Voting Act of 2003Congress went beyond the scope of its constitutional authority. Congress trampled upon the constitutional mandate of independenceof the COMELEC. Under such a situation, the Court is left with no option but to withdraw from its usual reticence in declaring aprovision of law unconstitutional.

The second sentence of the first paragraph of Section 19 stating that “[t]he Implementing Rules and Regulations shall besubmitted to the Joint Congressional Oversight Committee created by virtue of this Act for prior approval,” and the second sentenceof the second paragraph of Section 25 stating that “[i]t shall review, revise, amend and approve the Implementing Rules andRegulations promulgated by the Commission,” whereby Congress, in both provisions, arrogates unto itself a function not specificallyvested by the Constitution, should be stricken out of the subject statute for constitutional infirmity. Both provisions brazenly violatethe mandate on the independence of the COMELEC.

Similarly, the phrase, “subject to the approval of the Congressional Oversight Committee” in the first sentence of Section 17.1which empowers the Commission to authorize voting by mail in not more than three countries for the May, 2004 elections; and thephrase, “only upon review and approval of the Joint Congressional Oversight Committee” found in the second paragraph of the samesection are unconstitutional as they require review and approval of voting by mail in any country after the 2004 elections. Congressmay not confer upon itself the authority to approve or disapprove the countries wherein voting by mail shall be allowed, asdetermined by the COMELEC pursuant to the conditions provided for in Section 17.1 of R.A. No. 9189.38[48] Otherwise, Congresswould overstep the bounds of its constitutional mandate and intrude into the independence of the COMELEC.

During the deliberations, all the members of the Court agreed to adopt the separate opinion of Justice Reynato S. Puno as parof the ponencia on the unconstitutionality of Sections 17.1, 19 and 25 of R.A. No. 9189 insofar as they relate to the creation of andthe powers given to the Joint Congressional Oversight Committee.

WHEREFORE, the petition is partly GRANTED. The following portions of R.A. No. 9189 are declared VOID for beingUNCONSTITUTIONAL:a) The phrase in the first sentence of the first paragraph of Section 17.1, to wit: “subject to the approval of the JointCongressional Oversight Committee;”b) The portion of the last paragraph of Section 17.1, to wit: “only upon review and approval of the Joint Congressional

Oversight Committee;”c) The second sentence of the first paragraph of Section 19, to wit: “The Implementing Rules and Regulations shall besubmitted to the Joint Congressional Oversight Committee created by virtue of this Act for prior approval ;” and

d) The second sentence in the second paragraph of Section 25, to wit: “It shall review, revise, amend and approve theImplementing Rules and Regulations promulgated by the Commission” of the same law;

for being repugnant to Section 1, Article IX-A of the Constitution mandating the independence of constitutional commissionsuch as COMELEC.

The constitutionality of Section 18.5 of R.A. No. 9189 is UPHELD with respect only to the authority given to the COMELEC toproclaim the winning candidates for the Senators and party-list representatives but not as to the power to canvass the votes andproclaim the winning candidates for President and Vice-President which is lodged with Congress under Section 4, Article VII of theConstitution.

The constitutionality of Section 5(d) is UPHELD.Pursuant to Section 30 of R.A. No. 9189, the rest of the provisions of said law continues to be in full force and effect

(Romulo Macalintal v. Comelec, G.R. No. 157013, July 10, 2003)

 

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CASE NO. 11.  Facts: Rosalina Lopez was born in Australia in 1943 to a Filipino father and anAustralia mother. She is

married to a Filipino.In 1988 she registered herself with the Bureau of Immigration as an Autralian national and was issued an AlienCertificate of Residence .She was issued an Australian Passport. On January 15, 1992 she renounced her Australian citizenship.Question: Did Lopez’ application for ACR and ICR and her being a holder of an Australian passport constitute her renunciation ofPhil. Citizenship?

Answer NO 11: Valles v. COMELEC, 337 SCRA 543 Ruling: No. Under CA No. 63, renunciation of citizenship must beexpress. Her application for ACR and ICR did not amount to express renunciation or repudiation of her citizenship.

CASE NO. 12 . Rico Balde was born in 1934 in Chicago, USA, as a legitimate son of a Filipino father and an American

mother (hence was admittedly both a Filipino and an American). He was continuously a resident in the Philippines. In 1958 at the ageof 24 and in 1979 at the age of 45, he applied with the Bureau of Immigration for an ALIEN CERTIFICATE OF REGISTRATION(ACR) and IMMIGRANT CERTIFICATE OF RESIDENCE (ICR) and was granted. He had been participating in elections in thePhilippines as a voter, however, and was issued a Phil. Passport in 1987.Question: By registering twice with the BID (Bureau of Immigration and Deportation) as an alien, did he lose his Filipino citizenship?

Answer: NO 12. AZNAR v. COMELEC , 185 scra 708 Ruling: No. Under COMMONWEALTH ACT No. 63, there are three modesto lose Filipino citizenship, which are relevant to him, namely: by naturalization, by express renunciation and bysubscribing to an oath of allegiance to a foreign country. His application for an ACR and ICR is not one of them to make himlose his Phil. Citizenship. The mere fact that he was a holder of a certificate stating that he is an American did not mean thahe is no longer a Filipino. An application for an ACR is not tantamount to a renunciation of Philippine citizenship.

CASE NO. 13 : FACTS: Petitioner Ernesto S. Mercado and private respondent Eduardo B. Manzano were candidates for

vice mayor of the City of Makati in the May 11, 1998 elections. The other one was Gabriel V. Daza III. The results of the election wereas follows:

Eduardo B. Manzano=103,853; Ernesto S. Mercado=100,894; Gabriel V. Daza III=54,275.

The proclamation of private respondent was suspended in view of a pending petition for disqualification filed by a certainErnesto Mamaril who alleged that private respondent was not a citizen of the Philippines but of the United States.

In its resolution, dated May 7, 1998, 2 the Second Division of the COMELEC granted the petition of Mamaril and ordered thecancellation of the certificate of candidacy of private respondent on the ground that he is a dual citizen and, under §40(d) of the LocaGovernment Code, persons with dual citizenship are disqualified from running for any elective position. The COMELEC's SecondDivision said:

“What is presented before the Commission is a petition for disqualification of Eduardo Barrios Manzanoas candidate for the office of Vice-Mayor of Makati City in the May 11, 1998 elections. The petition is based onthe ground that the respondent is an American citizen based on the record of the Bureau of Immigration and misrepresented himself as a natural-born Filipino citizen.

In his answer to the petition filed on April 27, 1998, the respondent admitted that he is registered as aforeigner with the Bureau of Immigration under Alien Certificate of Registration No. B-31632 and alleged that heis a Filipino citizen because he was born in 1955 of a Filipino father and a Filipino mother. He was born in theUnited States, San Francisco, California, September 14, 1955, and is considered in American citizen under US Laws. But notwithstanding his registration as an American citizen, he did not lose his Filipino citizenship.

Judging from the foregoing facts, it would appear that respondent Manzano is born a Filipino and a US citizen. In other words, he holds dual citizenship.

The question presented is whether under our laws, he is disqualified from the position for which he filed his certificate of candidacy. Is he eligible for the office he seeks to be elected? 

Under Section 40(d) of the Local Government Code, those holding dual citizenship are disqualified fromrunning for any elective local position.

WHEREFORE, the Commission hereby declares the respondent Eduardo Barrios ManzanoDISQUALIFIED as candidate for Vice-Mayor of Makati City.” 

QUESTION: Is the COMELEC ruling correct? Explain.

Answer NO 13: COMELEC IS WRONG.ERNESTO S. MERCADO, petitioner,vs.EDUARDO BARRIOS MANZANO and theCOMMISSION ON ELECTIONS, respondents. G.R. No. 135083 May 26, 1999

The disqualification of private respondent Manzano is being sought under §40 of the Local Government Code of 1991 (R.A. No. 7160)

which declares as “disqualified from running for any elective local position: . . . (d) Those with dual citizenship.” This provision is incorporated inthe Charter of the City of Makati.xxxix[8]

Invoking the maxim dura lex sed lex, petitioner, as well as the Solicitor General, who sides with him in this case, contends that through§40(d) of the Local Government Code, Congress has “command[ed] in explicit terms the ineligibility of persons possessing dual allegiance to hold

local elective office.”

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To begin with, dual citizenship is different from dual allegiance. The former arises when, as a result of the concurrent application of the

different laws of two or more states, a person is simultaneously considered a national by the said states.xl[9] For instance, such a situation may arisewhen a person whose parents are citizens of a state which adheres to the principle of  jus sanguinis is born in a state which follows the doctrine of

 jus soli. Such a person, ipso facto and without any voluntary act on his part, is concurrently considered a citizen of both states. Considering thecitizenship clause (Art. IV) of our Constitution, it is possible for the following classes of citizens of the Philippines to possess dual citizenship:

(1) Those born of Filipino fathers and/or mothers in foreign countries which follow the principle of jus soli;(2) Those born in the Philippines of Filipino mothers and alien fathers if by the laws of their fathers’ country such children are citizens of 

that country;(3) Those who marry aliens if by the laws of the latter’s country the former are considered citizens, unless by their act or omission they are

deemed to have renounced Philippine citizenship.There may be other situations in which a citizen of the Philippines may, without performing any act, be also a citizen of another state; but the

above cases are clearly possible given the constitutional provisions on citizenship.Dual allegiance, on the other hand, refers to the situation in which a person simultaneously owes, by some positive act, loyalty to two or

more states. While dual citizenship is involuntary, dual allegiance is the result of an individual’s volition.With respect to dual allegiance, Article IV, §5 of the Constitution provides: “Dual allegiance of citizens is inimical to the national interest

and shall be dealt with by law.” This provision was included in the 1987 Constitution at the instance of Commissioner Blas F. Ople who explainedits necessity as follows:xli[10]

. . . I want to draw attention to the fact that dual allegiance is not dual citizenship. I have circulated a memorandum to the Bernas

Committee according to which a dual allegiance − and I reiterate a dual allegiance − is larger and more threatening than that of mere doublecitizenship which is seldom intentional and, perhaps, never insidious. That is often a function of the accident of mixed marriages or of birth onforeign soil. And so, I do not question double citizenship at all.

What we would like the Committee to consider is to take constitutional cognizance of the problem of dual allegiance. For example, we al

know what happens in the triennial elections of the Federation of Filipino-Chinese Chambers of Commerce which consists of about 600 chaptersall over the country. There is a Peking ticket, as well as a Taipei ticket. Not widely known is the fact that the Filipino-Chinese community i

represented in the Legislative Yuan of the Republic of China in Taiwan. And until recently, the sponsor might recall, in Mainland China in thePeople’s Republic of China, they have the Associated Legislative Council for overseas Chinese wherein all of Southeast Asia including some

European and Latin countries were represented, which was dissolved after several years because of diplomatic friction. At that time, the FilipinoChinese were also represented in that Overseas Council.

When I speak of double allegiance, therefore, I speak of this unsettled kind of allegiance of Filipinos, of citizens who are already Filipinos but who, by their acts, may be said to be bound by a second allegiance, either to Peking or Taiwan. I also took close note of the concern expressed

  by some Commissioners yesterday, including Commissioner Villacorta, who were concerned about the lack of guarantees of thoroughassimilation, and especially Commissioner Concepcion who has always been worried about minority claims on our natural resources.

Dual allegiance can actually siphon scarce national capital to Taiwan, Singapore, China or Malaysia, and this is already happening. Some o

the great commercial places in downtown Taipei are Filipino-owned, owned by Filipino-Chinese   it is of common knowledge in Manila. It canmean a tragic capital outflow when we have to endure a capital famine which also means economic stagnation, worsening unemployment and

social unrest.

And so, this is exactly what we ask   that the Committee kindly consider incorporating a new section, probably Section 5, in the article onCitizenship which will read as follows: DUAL ALLEGIANCE IS INIMICAL TO CITIZENSHIP AND SHALL BE DEALT WITH

ACCORDING TO LAW.

In another session of the Commission, Ople spoke on the problem of these citizens with dual allegiance, thus:xlii[11]

. . . A significant number of Commissioners expressed their concern about dual citizenship in the sense that it implies a double allegianceunder a double sovereignty which some of us who spoke then in a freewheeling debate thought would be repugnant to the sovereignty which

 pervades the Constitution and to citizenship itself which implies a uniqueness and which elsewhere in the Constitution is defined in terms of rightsand obligations exclusive to that citizenship including, of course, the obligation to rise to the defense of the State when it is threatened, and back othis, Commissioner Bernas, is, of course, the concern for national security. In the course of those debates, I think some noted the fact that as aresult of the wave of naturalizations since the decision to establish diplomatic relations with the People’s Republic of China was made in 1975, a

good number of these naturalized Filipinos still routinely go to Taipei every October 10; and it is asserted that some of them do renew their oath ofallegiance to a foreign government maybe just to enter into the spirit of the occasion when the anniversary of the Sun Yat-Sen Republic is

commemorated. And so, I have detected a genuine and deep concern about double citizenship, with its attendant risk of double allegiance which irepugnant to our sovereignty and national security. I appreciate what the Committee said that this could be left to the determination of a future

legislature. But considering the scale of the problem, the real impact on the security of this country, arising from, let us say, potentially greanumbers of double citizens professing double allegiance, will the Committee entertain a proposed amendment at the proper time that will prohibit

in effect, or regulate double citizenship?

Clearly, in including §5 in Article IV on citizenship, the concern of the Constitutional Commission was not with dual citizens per se

but withnaturalized citizens who maintain their allegiance to their countries of origin even after their naturalization. Hence, the phrase “dual citizenship” inR.A. No. 7160, §40(d) and in R.A. No. 7854, §20 must be understood as referring to “dual allegiance.” Consequently, persons with mere dua

citizenship do not fall under this disqualification. Unlike those with dual allegiance, who must, therefore, be subject to strict process with respecto the termination of their status, for candidates with dual citizenship, it should suffice if, upon the filing of their certificates of candidacy, theyelect Philippine citizenship to terminate their status as persons with dual citizenship considering that their condition is the unavoidableconsequence of conflicting laws of different states. As Joaquin G. Bernas, one of the most perceptive members of the Constitutional Commission

 pointed out: “[D]ual citizenship is just a reality imposed on us because we have no control of the laws on citizenship of other countries. Werecognize a child of a Filipino mother. But whether or not she is considered a citizen of another country is something completely beyond ourcontrol.”xliii[12]

By electing Philippine citizenship, such candidates at the same time forswear allegiance to the other country of which they are also citizens

and thereby terminate their status as dual citizens. It may be that, from the point of view of the foreign state and of its laws, such an individual hasnot effectively renounced his foreign citizenship. That is of no moment as the following discussion on §40(d) between Senators Enrile and

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Pimentel clearly shows:xliv[13]

SENATOR ENRILE. Mr. President, I would like to ask clarification of line 41, page 17: “Any person with dual citizenship” is disqualified to run for anyelective local position. Under the present Constitution, Mr. President, someone whose mother is a citizen of the Philippines but his father is a

foreigner is a natural-born citizen of the Republic. There is no requirement that such a natural born citizen, upon reaching the age of majoritymust elect or give up Philippine citizenship.

On the assumption that this person would carry two passports, one belonging to the country of his or her father and one belonging to the Republic of thePhilippines, may such a situation disqualify the person to run for a local government position?

SENATOR PIMENTEL. To my mind, Mr. President, it only means that at the moment when he would want to run for public office, he has to repudiateone of his citizenships.

SENATOR ENRILE. Suppose he carries only a Philippine passport but the country of origin or the country of the father claims that personnevertheless, as a citizen? No one can renounce. There are such countries in the world.

SENATOR PIMENTEL. Well, the very fact that he is running for public office would, in effect, be an election for him of his desire to be considered asa Filipino citizen.

SENATOR ENRILE. But, precisely, Mr. President, the Constitution does not require an election. Under the Constitution, a person whose mother is acitizen of the Philippines is, at birth, a citizen without any overt act to claim the citizenship.

SENATOR PIMENTEL. Yes. What we are saying, Mr. President, is: Under the Gentleman’s example, if he does not renounce his other citizenshipthen he is opening himself to question. So, if he is really interested to run, the first thing he should do is to say in the Certificate of Candidacy that“I am a Filipino citizen, and I have only one citizenship.”

SENATOR ENRILE. But we are talking from the viewpoint of Philippine law, Mr. President. He will always have one citizenship, and that is the

citizenship invested upon him or her in the Constitution of the Republic.SENATOR PIMENTEL. That is true, Mr. President. But if he exercises acts that will prove that he also acknowledges other citizenships, then he wil

 probably fall under this disqualification.This is similar to the requirement that an applicant for naturalization must renounce “all allegiance and fidelity to any foreign prince,

 potentate, state, or sovereignty”xlv[14] of which at the time he is a subject or citizen before he can be issued a certificate of naturalization as a citizen

of the Philippines. In Parado v. Republic,xlvi[15]

it was held:[W]hen a person applying for citizenship by naturalization takes an oath that he renounces his loyalty to any other country or government andsolemnly declares that he owes his allegiance to the Republic of the Philippines, the condition imposed by law is satisfied and complied with. The

determination whether such renunciation is valid or fully complies with the provisions of our Naturalization Law lies within the province and is anexclusive prerogative of our courts. The latter should apply the law duly enacted by the legislative department of the Republic. No foreign law

may or should interfere with its operation and application. If the requirement of the Chinese Law of Nationality were to be read into our Naturalization Law, we would be applying not what our legislative department has deemed it wise to require, but what a foreign government hasthought or intended to exact. That, of course, is absurd. It must be resisted by all means and at all cost. It would be a brazen encroachment uponthe sovereign will and power of the people of this Republic.

III. PETITIONER'S ELECTION OF PHILIPPINE CITIZENSHIP

The record shows that private respondent was born in San Francisco, California on September 4, 1955, of Filipino parents. Since thePhilippines adheres to the principle of  jus sanguinis, while the United States follows the doctrine of  jus soli, the parties agree that, at birth at leasthe was a national both of the Philippines and of the United States. However, the COMELEC en banc held that, by participating in Philippine

elections in 1992, 1995, and 1998, private respondent “effectively renounced his U.S. citizenship under American law,” so that now he is solely aPhilippine national.

Petitioner challenges this ruling. He argues that merely taking part in Philippine elections is not sufficient evidence of renunciation and thatin any event, as the alleged renunciation was made when private respondent was already 37 years old, it was ineffective as it should have been

made when he reached the age of majority.In holding that by voting in Philippine elections private respondent renounced his American citizenship, the COMELEC must have in mind

§349 of the Immigration and Nationality Act of the United States, which provided that “A person who is a national of the United States, whether by birth or naturalization, shall lose his nationality by: . . . (e) Voting in a political election in a foreign state or participating in an election o

 plebiscite to determine the sovereignty over foreign territory.” To be sure this provision was declared unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme Courin Afroyim v. Rusk xlvii[16] as beyond the power given to the U.S. Congress to regulate foreign relations. However, by filing a certificate of candidacywhen he ran for his present post, private respondent elected Philippine citizenship and in effect renounced his American citizenship. Privaterespondent’s certificate of candidacy, filed on March 27, 1998, contained the following statements made under oath:

6. I AM A FILIPINO CITIZEN (STATE IF “NATURAL-BORN” OR “NATURALIZED”) NATURAL-BORN. . . .

10. I AM A REGISTERED VOTER OF PRECINCT NO. 747-A, BARANGAY SAN LORENZO, CITY/MUNICIPALITY OF MAKATIPROVINCE OF NCR .

11. I AM NOT A PERMANENT RESIDENT OF, OR IMMIGRANT TO, A FOREIGN COUNTRY.

12. I AM ELIGIBLE FOR THE OFFICE I SEEK TO BE ELECTED. I WILL SUPPORT AND DEFEND THE CONSTITUTION OF THEPHILIPPINES AND WILL MAINTAIN TRUE FAITH AND ALLEGIANCE THERETO; THAT I WILL OBEY THE LAWS, LEGAL ORDERSAND DECREES PROMULGATED BY THE DULY CONSTITUTED AUTHORITIES OF THE REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES; ANDTHAT I IMPOSE THIS OBLIGATION UPON MYSELF VOLUNTARILY, WITHOUT MENTAL RESERVATION OR PURPOSE OFEVASION. I HEREBY CERTIFY THAT THE FACTS STATED HEREIN ARE TRUE AND CORRECT OF MY OWN PERSONAL

KNOWLEDGE.The filing of such certificate of candidacy sufficed to renounce his American citizenship, effectively removing any disqualification he migh

have as a dual citizen. Thus, in Frivaldo v. COMELEC it was held:xlviii[17]

It is not disputed that on January 20, 1983 Frivaldo became an American. Would the retroactivity of his repatriation not effectively give him

dual citizenship, which under Sec. 40 of the Local Government Code would disqualify him “from running for any elective local position?” Weanswer this question in the negative, as there is cogent reason to hold that Frivaldo was really STATELESS at the time he took said oath ofallegiance and even before that, when he ran for governor in 1988. In his Comment, Frivaldo wrote that he “had long renounced and had long

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abandoned his American citizenship−long before May 8, 1995. At best, Frivaldo was stateless in the interim−when he abandoned andrenounced his US citizenship but before he was repatriated to his Filipino citizenship.”

On this point, we quote from the assailed Resolution dated December 19, 1995:“By the laws of the United States, petitioner Frivaldo lost his American citizenship when he took his oath of allegiance to the Philippine

Government when he ran for Governor in 1988, in 1992, and in 1995. Every certificate of candidacy contains an oath of allegiance to thePhilippine Government.”

These factual findings that Frivaldo has lost his foreign nationality long before the elections of 1995 have not been effectively rebutted byLee. Furthermore, it is basic that such findings of the Commission are conclusive upon this Court, absent any showing of capriciousness orarbitrariness or abuse.

There is, therefore, no merit in petitioner’s contention that the oath of allegiance contained in private respondent’s certificate of candidacy iinsufficient to constitute renunciation of his American citizenship. Equally without merit is petitioner’s contention that, to be effective, suchrenunciation should have been made upon private respondent reaching the age of majority since no law requires the election of Philippinecitizenship to be made upon majority age.

Finally, much is made of the fact that private respondent admitted that he is registered as an American citizen in the Bureau of Immigration

and Deportation and that he holds an American passport which he used in his last travel to the United States on April 22, 1997. There is no meriin this. Until the filing of his certificate of candidacy on March 21, 1998, he had dual citizenship. The acts attributed to him can be consideredsimply as the assertion of his American nationality before the termination of his American citizenship. What this Court said in  Aznar vCOMELEC xlix[18] applies mutatis mutandis to private respondent in the case at bar:

. . . Considering the fact that admittedly Osmeña was both a Filipino and an American, the mere fact that he has a Certificate stating he is anAmerican does not mean that he is not still a Filipino. . . . [T]he Certification that he is an American does not mean that he is not still a Filipino

 possessed as he is, of both nationalities or citizenships. Indeed, there is no express renunciation here of Philippine citizenship; truth to tell, there iseven no implied renunciation of said citizenship. When We consider that the renunciation needed to lose Philippine citizenship must be “express,”

it stands to reason that there can be no such loss of Philippine citizenship when there is no renunciation, either “express” or “implied .”To recapitulate, by declaring in his certificate of candidacy that he is a Filipino citizen; that he is not a permanent resident or immigrant of

another country; that he will defend and support the Constitution of the Philippines and bear true faith and allegiance thereto and that he does sowithout mental reservation, private respondent has, as far as the laws of this country are concerned, effectively repudiated his American citizenship

and anything which he may have said before as a dual citizen.On the other hand, private respondent’s oath of allegiance to the Philippines, when considered with the fact that he has spent his youth and

adulthood, received his education, practiced his profession as an artist, and taken part in past elections in this country, leaves no doubt of hiselection of Philippine citizenship.

His declarations will be taken upon the faith that he will fulfill his undertaking made under oath. Should he betray that trust, there areenough sanctions for declaring the loss of his Philippine citizenship through expatriation in appropriate proceedings. In Yu v. Defensor-Santiago ,[19] we sustained the denial of entry into the country of petitioner on the ground that, after taking his oath as a naturalized citizen, he applied for therenewal of his Portuguese passport and declared in commercial documents executed abroad that he was a Portuguese national. A similar sanctioncan be taken against any one who, in electing Philippine citizenship, renounces his foreign nationality, but subsequently does some act constitutingrenunciation of his Philippine citizenship

CASE NO. 14.FACTS: The facts are as follows:Pursuant to Art. X, §18 of the 1987 Constitution, Congress passed R.A. No. 6734, the Organic Act for the AutonomousRegion in Muslim Mindanao, calling for a plebiscite to be held in the provinces of Basilan, Cotobato, Davao del Sur, Lanaodel Norte, Lanao del Sur, Maguindanao, Palawan, South Cotabato, Sultan Kudarat, Sulu, Tawi-Tawi, Zamboanga del Norteand Zamboanga del Sur, and the cities of Cotabato, Dapitan, Dipolog, General Santos, Iligan, Marawi, Pagadian, PuertoPrincesa and Zamboanga. In the ensuing plebiscite held on November 16, 1989, four provinces voted in favor of creating anautonomous region. These are the provinces of Lanao del Sur, Maguindanao, Sulu and Tawi-Tawi. In accordance with theconstitutional provision, these provinces became the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao.

On the other hand, with respect to provinces and cities not voting in favor of the Autonomous Region, Art. XIX, § 13 of R.ANo. 6734 provides,

That only the provinces and cities voting favorably in such plebiscites shall be included in the Autonomous Region in MuslimMindanao. The provinces and cities which in the plebiscite do not vote for inclusion in the Autonomous Region shall remainin the existing administrative regions. Provided, however, that the President may, by administrative determination, merge the

existing regions.

Pursuant to the authority granted by this provision, then President Corazon C. Aquino issued on October 12, 1990 ExecutiveOrder No. 429, "providing for the Reorganization of the Administrative Regions in Mindanao." Under this Order, as amendedby E.O. No. 439

(1) Misamis Occidental, at present part of Region X, will become part of Region IX.(2) Oroquieta City, Tangub City and Ozamiz City, at present parts of Region X will become parts of Region IX.(3) South Cotobato, at present a part of Region XI, will become part of Region XII.(4) General Santos City, at present part of Region XI, will become part of Region XII.(5) Lanao del Norte, at present part of Region XII, will become part of Region IX.(6) Iligan City and Marawi City, at present part of Region XII, will become part of Region IX.

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Petitioners in G.R. No. 96754 are, or at least at the time of the filing of their petition, members of Congress representingvarious legislative districts in South Cotobato, Zamboanga del Norte, Basilan, Lanao del Norte and Zamboanga City. OnNovember 12, 1990, they wrote then President Aquino protesting E.O. No. 429. They contended that

There is no law which authorizes the President to pick certain provinces and cities within the existing regions some of whichdid not even take part in the plebiscite as in the case of the province of Misamis Occidental and the cities of Oroquieta,Tangub and Ozamiz and restructure them to new administrative regions. On the other hand, the law (Sec. 13, Art. XIX, R.A6734) is specific to the point, that is, that "the provinces and cities which in the plebiscite do not vote for inclusion in the

Autonomous Region shall remain in the existing administrative regions."

The transfer of the provinces of Misamis Occidental from Region X to Region IX; Lanao del Norte from Region XII to RegionIX, and South Cotobato from Region XI to Region XII are alterations of the existing structures of governmental units, in othewords, reorganization. This can be gleaned from Executive Order No. 429, thus

Whereas, there is an urgent need to reorganize the administrative regions in Mindanao to guarantee the effective delivery ofield services of government agencies taking into consideration the formation of the Autonomous Region in MuslimMindanao.

With due respect to Her Excellency, we submit that while the authority necessarily includes the authority to merge, theauthority to merge does not include the authority to reorganize. Therefore, the President's authority under RA 6734 to"merge existing regions" cannot be construed to include the authority to reorganize them. To do so will violate the rules ostatutory construction.

The transfer of regional centers under Executive Order 429 is actually a restructuring (reorganization) o

administrative regions. While this reorganization, as in Executive Order 429, does not affect the apportionment ocongressional representatives, the same is not valid under the penultimate paragraph of Sec. 13, Art. XIX of R.A. 6734 andOrdinance appended to the 1986 Constitution apportioning the seats of the House of Representatives of Congress of thePhilippines to the different legislative districts in provinces and cities.

As their protest went unheeded, while Inauguration Ceremonies of the New Administrative Region IX werescheduled on January 26, 1991, petitioners brought this suit for certiorari and prohibition.

On the other hand, the petitioner in G.R. No. 96673, Immanuel Jaldon, is a resident of Zamboanga City, who issuing in the capacity of taxpayer and citizen of the Republic of the Philippines.

Petitioners in both cases contend that Art. XIX, §13 of R.A. No. 6734 is unconstitutional because (1) it undulydelegates legislative power to the President by authorizing him to "merge [by administrative determination] the existingregions" or at any rate provides no standard for the exercise of the power delegated and (2) the power granted is notexpressed in the title of the law.

In addition, petitioner in G.R. No. 96673 challenges the validity of E.O. No. 429 on the ground that the powergranted by Art. XIX, §13 to the President is only to "merge regions IX and XII" but not to reorganize the entire administrative

regions in Mindanao and certainly not to transfer the regional center of Region IX from Zamboanga City to Pagadian City.QUESTIONS: 1. Given the set of facts, is it within the power of the President to merge administrative regions, transfer regionaseats? Explain.

2.Discuss the validity/invalidity of the issues raised by petitioner Jaldon.

Answer no. 14: JAMES L. CHIONGBIAN, ET AL. vs. OSCAR M. ORBOS, ET AL. (G.R. No. 96754 June 22, 1995) It is within thepolitical prerogatives of the president to merge administrative regions.Jaldon therefore is wrong.  POLITICAL LAWLOCAL GOVERNMENT; AUTONOMOUS REGIONS; POWER TO MERGE ADMINISTRATIVE AGENCIES; TRADITIONALLYLODGED WITH THE PRESIDENT TO FACILITATE THE EXERCISE OF THE POWER OF GENERAL SUPREVISION. — OnSeptember 9, 1968, R.A. No. 5435 was passed "authorizing the President of the Philippines, with the help of a Commissionon Reorganization, to reorganize the different executive departments, bureaus, offices, agencies and instrumentalities ofthe government, including banking or financial institutions and corporations owned or controlled by it." The purpose was topromote "simplicity, economy and efficiency in the government." The Commission on Reorganization created under the lawwas required to submit an integrated reorganization plan not later than December 31, 1969 to the President who was in turnrequired to submit the plan to Congress within forty days after the opening of its next regular session. The law provided

that any reorganization plan submitted would become effective only upon the approval of Congress. Accordingly, theReorganization Commission prepared an Integrated Reorganization Plan which divided the country into elevenadministrative regions. By P.D. No. 1, the Plan was approved and made part of the law of the land on September 24, 1972P.D. No. 1 was twice amended in 1975, first by P.D.No. 742 which "restructur[ed] the regional organization of MindanaoBasilan, Sulu and Tawi-Tawi" and later by P.D. No. 773 which further "restructur[ed] the regional organization of Mindanaoand divid[ed] Region IX into two sub-regions." In 1978, P.D. No. 1555 transferred the regional center of Region IX from Joloto Zamboanga City. Thus the creation and subsequent reorganization of administrative regions have been by the Presidentpursuant to authority granted to him by law. In conferring on the President the power "to merge [by administrativedetermination] the existing regions" following the establishment of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, Congressmerely followed the pattern set in previous legislation dating back to the initial organization of administrative regions in1972. The choice of the President as delegate is logical because the division of the country into regions is intended tofacilitate not only the administration of local governments but also the direction of executive departments which the law

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requires should have regional offices. As this Court observed in Abbas, "while the power to merge administrativeregions is not expressly provided for in the Constitution, it is a power which has traditionally been lodged with thePresident to facilitate the exercise of the power of general supervision over local governments [see Art. X, §4 of theConstitution]." The regions themselves are not territorial and political divisions like provinces, cities, municipalities andbarangays but are "mere groupings of contiguous provinces for administrative purposes." The power conferred on thePresident is similar to the power to adjust municipal boundaries which has been described in Pelaez v. Auditor Genera(122 Phil. 965, 973-4 [1965]) as "administrative in nature." There is, therefore, no abdication by Congress of its legislativepower in conferring on the President the power to merge administrative regions.PROVISION THAT PROVINCES AND CITIES WHICH DO NOT VOTE FOR INCLUSION THEREIN SHALL REMAIN IN THE

EXISTING ADMINISTRATIVE REGIONS; QUALIFIED. — While Art. XIX, §13 provides that "The provinces and cities which donot vote for inclusion in the Autonomous Region shall remain in the existing administrative regions," this provision issubject to the qualification that "the President may by administrative determination merge the existing regions." Thismeans that while non-assenting provinces and cities are to remain in the regions as designated upon the creation of theAutonomous Region, they may nevertheless be regrouped with contiguous provinces forming other regions as theexigency of administration may require. The regrouping is done only on paper. It involves no more than a redefinition of thelines separating administrative regions for the purpose of facilitating the administrative supervision of local governmentunits by the President and insuring the efficient delivery of essential services. There will be no "transfer" of locagovernments from one region to another except as they may thus be regrouped so that a province like Lanao del Nortewhich is at present part of Region XII, will become part of Region IX. The regrouping of contiguous provinces is not evenanalogous to a redistricting or to the division or merger of local governments, which all have political consequences on theright of people residing in those political units to vote and to be voted for. It cannot be overemphasized that administrativeregions are mere groupings of contiguous provinces for administrative purposes, not for political representationPetitioners nonetheless insist that only those regions, in which the provinces and cities which voted for inclusion in theAutonomous Region are located, can be "merged" by the President. To be sure Art. XIX, §13 is not so limited. But the more

fundamental reason is that the President's power cannot be so limited without neglecting the necessities of administrationIt is noteworthy that the petitioners do not claim that the reorganization of the regions in E.O. No. 429 is irrational. The factis that, as they themselves admit, the reorganization of administrative regions in E.O. No. 429 is based on relevant criteria,to wit: (1) contiguity and geographical features; (a) transportation and communication facilities; (3) cultural and languagegroupings; (4) land area and population; (5) existing regional centers adopted by several agencies; (6) socio-economicdevelopment programs in the regions and (7) number of provinces and cities. What has been said above applies to thechange of the regional center from Zamboanga City to Pagadian City. Petitioners contend that the determination oprovincial capitals has always been by act of Congress. But as, this Court said in Abbas, administrative regions are mere"groupings of contiguous provinces for administrative purposes. . . [They] are not territorial and political subdivisions likeprovinces, cities, municipalities and barangays." There is, therefore, no basis for contending that only Congress canchange or determine regional centers. To the contrary, the examples of P.D. Nos. 1, 742, 773 and 1555 suggest that thepower to reorganize administrative regions carries with it the power to determine the regional center. It may be that thetransfer of the regional center in Region IX from Zamboanga City to Pagadian City may entail the expenditure of large sumsof money for the construction of buildings and other infrastructures to house regional offices. That contention is addressedto the wisdom of the transfer rather than to its legality and it is settled that courts are not the arbiters of the wisdom or

expediency of legislation. In any event this is a question that we will consider only if fully briefed and upon a more adequaterecord than that presented by petitioners.

CASE No 15.Facts: Juan Calderon was born on 20 August 1939.His grandfather was Pedro Calderon, a Spanish national

who died in the Philippines on September 11, 1954.His father was Andoy Calderon who married on September 16, 1940 Jean Stuartan American national. The records futher showed that Andoy got married to Juana Calingasan on August 12, 1938.

Questions: 1. Juan Calderon would like to run as Vice-President of the Philippines in the next election. Is he qualified to run?Explain.

2.Granting that he filed his certificate of candidacy as Vice-President, can his opponent file an election protestagainst him before the Presidential Electoral Tribunal? Explain.

ANSWER no. 15: He is qualified considering that he is a Filipino citizen,his citizenship derived from his grandfather who wasconsidered by law as Filipino citizen under the Jones Law of 1902. ON the other hand, the election protest should be dismissedbecause of lack of jurisdiction. The PET has jurisdiction only until one of the candidates is already proclaimes president.In this caseno one is yet proclaimed.(TECSON V. COMELEC, 161434, March 3, 2004)

CASE NO. 16.Facts: Manuel S. Pineda was employed with the Philippine National Oil Co.-Energy Development Corp

(PNOC-EDC), as subsidiary of the Philippine National Oil Co., from September 17, 1981, when he was hired as clerk, to January 261989, when his employment was terminated. The events leading to his dismissal from his job are not disputed.

In November, 1987, while holding the position of Geothermal Construction Secretary, Engineering and ConstructionDepartment, at Tongonan Geothermal Project, Ormoc City, Pineda decided to run for councilor of the Municipality of Kananga, Leytein the local elections scheduled in January, 1988, and filed the corresponding certificate of candidacy for the position. Objection to

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Pineda's being a candidate while retaining his job in the PNOC-EDC was shortly thereafter registered by Mayor Arturo Cornejos of Kananga, Leyte. The mayor communicated with the PNOC-EDC thru Engr. Ernesto Patanao, Resident Manager, TongonanGeothermal Project to express the view that Pineda could not actively participate in politics unless he officially resigned from PNOCEDC. 1 Nothing seems to have resulted from this protest.

The local elections in Leyte, scheduled for January 1988, were reset to and held on February 1, 1988. Pineda was amongthe official candidates voted for, and eventually proclaimed elected to, the office of councilor. Some vacillation appears to have beenevinced by Pineda at about this time. On February 8, 1988, he wrote to the COMELEC Chairman, expressing his desire to withdrawfrom the political contest on account of what he considered to be election irregularities; and on March 19, 1988, he wrote to theSecretary of Justice seeking legal opinion on the question, among others, of whether or not he was "considered automatically

resigned upon . . . filing of . . . (his) certificate of candidacy," and whether or not, in case he was elected, he could "remain appointedto any corporate offspring of a government-owned or controlled corporation." Nevertheless, Pineda took his oath of office in June1988 as councilor-elect of the Municipality of Kananga, Leyte. And despite so qualifying as councilor, and assuming his duties assuch, he continued working for PNOC-EDC as the latter's Geothermal Construction Secretary, Engineering and ConstructionDepartment, at Tongonan Geothermal Project, Ormoc City.

QUESTIONS: 1. Does the Civil Service Commission cover Pineda’s appointment? Explain.2.Is he considered resigned from his employment with the PNOC when he filed his certificatet o

candidacy? Explain.

ANSWER no. 16: PNOC ENERGY DEV'T. CORP., ET AL. vs. NAT'L LABOR RELATIONS COMMISSION, ET AL. G.R. No.100947 May 31, 1993 1. CONSTITUTIONAL LAW; CIVIL SERVICE; GOVERNMENT-OWNED OR CONTROLLEDCORPORATIONS WITHOUT ORIGINAL CHARTERS, NOT EMBRACED THEREIN. — Section 2 (1), Article IX of the 1987Constitution provides as follows: "The civil service embraces all branches, subdivisions, instrumentalities, and agencies othe Government, including government-owned or controlled corporations with original charters." Implicit in the provision is

that government-owned or controlled corporations without original charters — i.e., organized under the general law, theCorporation Code - are not comprehended within the Civil Service, and their employees are not subject to Civil Service LawSo has this Court construed the provision. (NASECO, et. al. v. NLRC, et al., 166 SCRA 122, Lumanta, et. al. v. NLRC, et al.,170 SCRA 79, PNOC-EDC v. Leogardo, et. al., 175 SCRA 29).2. ID.; OMNIBUS ELECTION CODE; CANDIDATES HOLDING APPOINTIVE OFFICE OR POSITION CONSIDERED IPSOFACTO RESIGNED UPON FILING OF CERTIFICATE OF CANDIDACY; APPLIES TO OFFICERS AND EMPLOYEES INGOVERNMENT-OWNED AND CONTROLLED CORPORATION WITH OR WITHOUT ORIGINAL CHARTERS. — When theCongress of the Philippines reviewed the Omnibus Election Code of 1985, in connection with its deliberations on andsubsequent enactment of related and repealing legislation — i.e., Republic Acts Numbered 7166: "An Act Providing forSynchronized National and Local Elections and for Electoral Reforms, Authorizing Appropriations Therefor, and for OthePurposes" (effective November 26, 1991), 6646: "An Act Introducing Additional Reforms in the Electoral System and forOther Purposes" (effective January 5, 1988) and 6636: "An Act Resetting the Local Elections, etc." (effective November 6,1987), it was no doubt aware that in light of Section 2(1), Article IX of the 1987 Constitution: (a) government-owned orcontrolled corporations were of two (2) categories — those with original charters, and those organized under the generalaw — and (b) employees of these corporations were of two (2) kinds — those covered by the Civil Service Law, rules and

regulations because employed in corporations having original charters, and those not subject to Civil Service Law but tothe Labor Code because employed in said corporations organized under the general law, or the Corporation Code. YetCongress made no effort to distinguish between these two classes of government-owned or controlled corporations or theiemployees in the Omnibus Election Code or subsequent related statutes, particularly as regards the rule that an anyemployee "in government-owned or controlled corporations, shall be considered ipso facto resigned from his office uponthe filing of his certificate of candidacy." What all this imports is that Section 66 of the Omnibus Election Code applies toofficers and employees in government-owned or controlled corporations, even those organized under the general laws onincorporation and therefore not having an original or legislative charter, and even if they do not fall under the Civil ServiceLaw but under the Labor Code. In other words, Section 66 constitutes just cause for termination of employment in additionto those set forth in the Labor Code, as amended.

Case No. 17. Petitioner Luis Malaluan and private respondent Joseph Evangelista were both mayoralty candidates

in the Municipality of Kidapawan, North Cotabato, in the Synchronized National and Local Elections held on May 11, 1992Private respondent Joseph Evangelista was proclaimed by the Municipal Board of Canvassers as the duly elected Mayor forhaving garnered 10,498 votes as against petitioner’s 9,792 votes. Evangelista was, thus, said to have a winning margin o706 votes. But, on May 22, 1992, petitioner filed an election protest with the Regional Trial Court contesting 64 out of thetotal 181 precincts of the said municipality. The trial court declared petitioner as the duly elected municipal mayor oKidapawan, North Cotabato with a plurality of 154 votes. Acting without precedent, the court found private respondenliable not only for Malaluan’s protest expenses but also for moral and exemplary damages and attorney’s fees. On February3, 1994, private respondent appealed the trial court decision to the COMELEC.

Rule on the propriety of awarding moral and exemplary damages and attorney’s fees.

Answer no 17: NOT PROPER. What looms large as the issue in this case is whether or not the COMELEC gravely abused itsdiscretion in awarding the aforecited damages in favor of private respondent.

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The Omnibus Election Code provides that “actual or compensatory damages may be granted in all election contests or inquo warranto proceedings in accordance with law.”li[13] COMELEC Rules of Procedure provide that “in all election contests the Courtmay adjudicate damages and attorney’s fees as it may deem just and as established by the evidence if the aggrieved party hasincluded such claims in his pleadings.” lii[14] This appears to require only that the judicial award of damages be just and that the samebe borne out by the pleadings and evidence. The overriding requirement for a valid and proper award of damages, it must beremembered, is that the same is in accordance with law, specifically, the provisions of the Civil Code pertinent to damages.

Article 2199 of the Civil Code mandates that “except as provided by law or by stipulation, one is entitled to an adequatecompensation only for such pecuniary loss suffered by him as he has duly proved. Such compensation is referred to as actual orcompensatory damages.” The Civil Cod.e further prescribes the proper setting for allowance of actual or compensatory damages in

the following provisions:“ART. 2201. In contracts and quasi-contracts, the damages for which the obligor who acted in good faith is liable shall be thosethat are the natural and probable consequences of the breach of the obligation, and which the parties have foreseen or could havereasonably foreseen at the time the obligation was constituted.

In case of fraud, bad faith, malice or wanton attitude, the obligor shall be responsible for all damages which may be reasonablyattributed to the non-performance of the obligation.

ART. 2202. In crimes and quasi-delicts, the defendant shall be liable for all damages which are the natural and probableconsequences of the act or omission complained of. It is not necessary that such damages have been foreseen or could havereasonably been foreseen by the defendant.”

Considering that actual or compensatory damages are appropriate only in breaches of obligations in cases of contracts andquasi-contracts and on the - occasion of crimes and quasi-delicts where the defendant may be held liable for all damages theproximate cause of which is the act or omission complained of, the monetary claim of a party in an election case must necessarily behinged on either a contract or a quasi-contract or a tortious act or omission or a crime, in order to effectively recover actual orcompensatory damages.liii[15] In the absence of any or all of these, “the claimant must be able to point out a specific provision of lawauthorizing a money claim for election protest expenses against the losing party.” liv[16] For instance, the claimant may cite any of the

following provisions of the Civil Code under the chapter on human relations, which provisions create obligations not by contractcrime or negligence, but directly by law:

“ART. 19. Every person must in the exercise of his rights and in the performance of his duties, act with justice, give everyone hisdue, and observe honesty and good faith.

ART. 20. Every person who, contrary to law, willfully or negligently causes damage to another, shall indemnify the latter for thesame.

xxxxxx xxxART. 32. Any public officer or employee, or any private individual, who directly or indirectly obstructs, defeats, violates or in any

manner impedes or impairs any of the following rights and liberties of another person shall be liable to the latter for damages:xxxxxx xxx

(5) Freedom of suffrage;xxxxxx xxx

In any of the cases referred to in this article, whether or not the defendant’s act or omission constitutes a criminal offense, theaggrieved party has a right to commence an entirely separate and distinct civil action for damages, and for other relief. x x x”lv[17]

Claimed as part of the damages to which private respondent is allegedly entitled to, is P169,456.00 constituting salary and othe

emoluments from March, 1994 to April, 1995 that would have accrued to him had there not been an execution of the trial court’sdecision pending appeal therefrom in the COMELEC.

The long-standing rule in this jurisdiction is that notwithstanding his subsequent ouster as a result of an election protest, anelective official who has been proclaimed by the COMELEC as winner in an electoral contest and who assumed office and enteredinto the performance of the duties of that office, is entitled to the compensation, emoluments and allowances legally provided for theposition.lvi[18] We ratiocinated in the case of Rodriguez vs. Tan that:

“This is as it should be. This is in keeping with the ordinary course of events. This is simple justice. The emolument must go tothe person who rendered the service unless the contrary is provided. There is no averment in the complaint that he is linked with anyirregularity vitiating his election. This is the policy and the rule that has been followed consistently in this jurisdiction in connectionwith positions held by persons who had been elected thereto but were later ousted as a result of an election protest. The right of thepersons elected to compensation during their incumbency has always been recognized. We cannot recall of any precedent whereinthe contrary rule has been upheld.”lvii[19]

In his concurring opinion in the same case, however, Justice Padilla equally stressed that, while the general rule is that the oustedelective official is not obliged to reimburse the emoluments of office that he had received before his ouster, he would be liable fodamages in case he would be found responsible for any unlawful or tortious acts in relation to his proclamation. We quote the

pertinent portion of that opinion for emphasis:“Nevertheless, if the defendant, directly or indirectly, had committed unlawful or tortious acts which led to and resulted in his

proclamation as senator-elect, when in truth and in fact he was not so elected, he would be answerable for damages. In that eventhe salary, fees and emoluments received by or paid to him during his illegal incumbency would be a proper item of recoverabledamage.“lviii[20]

The criterion for ajustifiable award of election protest expenses and salaries and emoluments, thus, remains to be the existence of apertinent breach of obligations arising from contracts or quasi-contracts, tortious acts, crimes or a specific legal provision authorizingthe money claim in the context of election cases. Absent any of these, we could not even begin to contemplate liability for damagesin election cases, except insofar as attorney’s fees are concerned, since the Civil Code enumerates the specific instances when thesame may be awarded by the court.

“ART. 2208. In the absence of stipulation, attorney’s fees and expenses of litigation, other than judicial costs, cannot berecovered, except:

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(1) When exemplary damages are awarded;(2) When the defendant’s act or omission has compelled the plaintiff to litigate with third persons or to incur expenses to protec

his interest;(3) In criminal cases of malicious prosecution against the plaintiff;(4) In case of a clearly unfounded civil action or proceeding against the plaintiff;(5) Where the defendant acted in gross and evident bad faith in refusing to satisfy the plaintiff’s plainly valid, just and

demandable claim;(6) In actions for legal support;(7) In actions for the recovery of wages of household helpers, laborers and skilled workers;

(8) In actions for indemnity under workmen’s compensation and employer’s liability laws;(9) In a separate civil action to recover civil liability arising from a crime;(10) When at least double judicial costs are awarded;(11) In any other case where the court deems it just and equitable that attorney’s fees and expenses of litigation should be

recovered.”lix[21]

Given the aforecited laws, and jurisprudence on the matter at issue, let us now look into the basis of respondent COMELEC foawarding actual damages to private respondent in the form of reimbursement for attorney’s fees, actual expenses for xerox copiesand salary and other emoluments that should have accrued to him from March, 1994 to April, 1995 had the RTC not issued an orderfor execution pending appeal.

The First Division of the COMELEC ruled on private respondent’s claim for actual or compensatory damages in this wise:“x x x under the present legal setting, it is more difficult than in the past to secure an award of actual or compensatory damages

either against the protestant or the protestee because of the requirements of the law.In the instant case, however, We are disposed to conclude that the election protest filed by the protestant is clearly unfounded.

As borne out by the results of the appreciation of ballots conducted by this Commission, apparently the protest was filed in bad faithwithout sufficient cause or has been filed for the sole purpose of molesting the protestee-appellant for which he incurred expenses

The erroneous ruling of the Court which invalidated ballots which were clearly valid added more injury to the protestee-appellantThis would have been bearable since he was able to perfect his appeal to this Commission. The final blow, however, came when theCourt ordered the execution of judgment pending appeal which, from all indications, did not comply with the requirements of Section2, Rule 39 of the Rules of Court. There was no good and special reason at all to justify the execution ofjudgment pending appeabecause the protestee’s winning margin was 149 votes while that of the protestant - after the Court declared him a winner - was onlya margin of 154 votes. Clearly, the order of execution of judgment pending appeal was issued with grave abuse of discretion.

For these reasons, protestee-appellant seeks to recover the following:‘1. Actual damages representing attorney’s fees for the new counsel who handled the Appeal and the Petition for Certiorar

before the Court of Appeals x x x -P3 72, 5 00.002. Actual expenses for xerox copying of Appellant’s Brief and the annexes (14 copies at P 1.50 x x x -P11,235.003. Actual expenses for xerox copying of ballots x x x - P3,919.204. Actual damages for loss of salary and other emoluments since March 1994 as per attached Certification issued by the

Municipal Account of Kidapawan x x x - P96,832.00 (up to October 1994 only)’Under Article 2208 of the New Civil Code attorney’s fees and expenses of litigation can be recovered (as actual damages) in

the case of clearly unfounded civil action or proceeding. And, while the case of Eulogio Rodriguez, Sr. vs. Carlos Tan (91 Phil. 724

disallowed recovery of salaries and allowances (as damages) from elected officials who were later ousted, under the theory thapersons elected has (sic) a right to compensation during their incumbency, the instant case is different. The protestee-appellant wasthe one elected. He was ousted not by final judgment but by an order of execution pending appeal which was groundless and issuedwith grave abuse of discretion. Protestant-appellee occupied the position in an illegal manner as a usurper and, not having beenelected to the office, but merely installed through a baseless court order, he certainly had no right to the salaries and emoluments ofthe office.

Actual damages in the form of reimbursement for attorney’s fees (P3 72,500.00), actual expenses for xerox copies(P15,154.00), unearned salary and other emoluments from March 1994 to April 1995 or 14 months at P12,104.00 a month(P169,456.00), totalled P557,110.00. To (sic) this amount, however, P3 00,000.00 representing that portion of attorney’s feesdenominated as ‘success fee’ must be deducted this being premised on a contingent event the happening of which was uncertainfrom the beginning. Moral damages and exemplary damages claimed are, of course, disallowed not falling within the purview ofSection 259 of the Omnibus Election Code.

It goes without saying that if the protestant-appellee fails to pay the actual damages of P257,110.00, the amount will beassessed, levied and collected from the bond of P500,000.00 which he put up before the Court as a condition for the issuance of theorder of execution of judgment pending appeal.”lx[22]

Petitioner filed a motion for reconsideration of the aforecited decision on March 29, 1995. The COMELEC en banc, howeverdid not find any new matter substantial in nature, persuasive in character or sufficiently provocative to compel reconsideration of saiddecision and accordingly affirmed in toto the said decision. Hence, this petition raises, among others, the issue now solely remainingand in need of final adjudication in view of the mootness of the other issues anent petitioner’s right to the contested office the term fowhich has already expired.

We have painstakingly gone over the records of this case and we can attribute to petitioner no breach of contract or quasicontract; or tortious act nor crime that may make him liable for actual damages. Neither has private respondent been “able to poinout to a specific provision of law authorizing a money claim for election protest expenses against the losing party. “lxi[23]

We find respondent COMELEC’s reasoning in awarding the damages in question to be fatally flawed. The COMELEC foundthe election protest filed by the petitioner to be clearly unfounded because its own appreciation of the contested ballots yieldedresults contrary to those of the trial court. Assuming, ex gratia argumentis, that this is a reasonable observation not without basis, iis nonetheless fallacious to conclude a malicious intention on the part of petitioner to molest private respondent on the basis of what

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respondent COMELEC perceived as an erroneous ruling of the trial court. In other words, the actuations of the trial court, after thefiling of a case before it, are its own, and any alleged error on its part does not, in the absence of clear proof, make the suit “clearlyunfounded” for which the complainant ought to be penalized. Insofar as the award of protest expenses and attorney’s fees areconcerned, therefore we find them to have been awarded by respondent COMELEC without basis, the election protest not havingbeen a clearly unfounded one under the aforementioned circumstances.

Respondent COMELEC also found the order granting execution of judgment pending appeal to be defective because of allegednon-compliance with the requirement that there be a good and special reason lxii[24] to justify execution pending appeal. We, howeverfind that the trial court acted judiciously in the exercise of its prerogatives under the law in issuing the order granting executionpending appeal. First, it should be noted that the applicability of the provisions of the Rules of Court, relating to execution pending

appeal, has ceased to be debatable after we definitively ruled in Garcia vs. de Jesus

lxiii[25]

that “Section 2, Rule 39 of the Rules ofCourt, which allows Regional Trial Courts to order executions pending appeal upon good reasons stated in a special order, may bemade to apply by analogy or suppletorily to election contests decided by them.”lxiv[26] It is not disputed that petitioner filed a bond in theamount of P500,000.00 as required under the Rules of Court.

It is also now a settled rule that “as much recognition should be given to the value of the decision of a judicial body as a basisfor the right to assume office as that given by law to the proclamation made by the Board of Canvassers.”lxv[27]

“x x x Why should the proclamation by the board of canvassers suffice as basis of the right to assume office, subject to futurecontingencies attendant to a protest, and not the decision of a court of justice? Indeed x x x the board of canvassers is composed opersons who are less technically prepared to make an accurate appreciation of the ballots, apart from their being more apt to yieldextraneous considerations x x x the board must act summarily, practically raising (sic) against time, while, on the other hand, the

 judge has the benefit of all the evidence the parties can offer and of admittedly better technical preparation and background, aparfrom his being allowed ample time for conscientious study and mature deliberation before rendering judgment x x x.” lxvi[28]

Without evaluating the merits of the trial court’s actual appreciation of the ballots contested in the election protest, we note onthe face of its decision that the trial court relied on the findings of the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) handwriting expertswhich findings private respondent did not even bother to rebut. We thus see no reason to disregard the presumption of regularity in

the performance of official duty on the part of the trial court judge. Capping this combination of circumstances which impel the granof immediate execution is the undeniable urgency involved in the political situation in the Municipality of Kidapawan, North CotabatoThe appeal before the COMELEC would undoubtedly cause the political vacuum in said municipality to persist, and so the trial courtreasonably perceived execution pending appeal to be warranted and justified. Anyway, the bond posted by petitioner could coveany damages suffered by any aggrieved party. It is true that mere posting of a bond is not enough reason to justify executionpending appeal, but the nexus of circumstances aforechronicled considered together and in relation to one another, is the dominantconsideration for the execution pending appeal.lxvii[29]

Finally, we deem the award of salaries and other emoluments to be improper and lacking legal sanction. RespondenCOMELEC ruled that inapplicable in the instant case is the ruling in Rodriguez vs. Tanlxviii[30] because while in that case the officiaousted was the one proclaimed by the COMELEC, in the instant case, petitioner was proclaimed winner only by the trial court andassumed office by virtue of an order granting execution pending appeal. Again, respondent COMELEC sweepingly concluded, in

 justifying the award of damages, that since petitioner was adjudged the winner in the elections only by the trial court and assumedthe functions of the office on the strength merely of an order granting execution pending appeal, the petitioner occupied the positionin an illegal manner as a usurper.

We hold that petitioner was not a usurper because, while a usurper is one who undertakes to act officially without any color of

right,lxix[31] the petitioner exercised the duties of an elective office under color of election thereto. lxx[32] It matters not that it was the triacourt and not the COMELEC that declared petitioner as the winner, because both, at different stages of the electoral process, havethe power to so proclaim winners in electoral contests. At the risk of sounding repetitive, if only to emphasize this point, we musreiterate that the decision of a judicial body is no less a basis than the proclamation made by the COMELEC-convened Board ofCanvassers for a winning candidate’s right to assume office, for both are undisputedly legally sanctioned. We deem petitionertherefore, to be a “de facto officer who, in good faith, has haa possession of the office and had discharged the duties pertainingthereto”lxxi[33] and is thus “legally entitled to the emoluments of the office.”lxxii[34]

To recapitulate, Section 259 of the Omnibus Election Code only provides for the granting in election cases of actual andcompensatory damages in accordance with law. The victorious party in an election case cannot be indemnified for expenses whichhe has incurred in an electoral contest in the absence of a wrongful act or omission or breach of obligation clearly attributable to thelosing party. Evidently, if any damage had been suffered by private respondent due to the execution ofjudgment pending appeal, thadamage may be said to be equivalent to damnum absque injuria, which is, damage without injury, or damage or injury inflictedwithout injustice, or loss or damage without violation of a legal right, or a wrong done to a man for which the law provides noremedy.lxxiii[35]

MALALUAN V. COMELEC, 120193, MARCH 6, 1996

CASE No. 18. Petitioner was proclaimed Mayor of Gloria, Oriental Mindoro during the May 8, 1995 elections.

In the same elections, private respondent was proclaimed Vice-Mayor of the same municipality.On May 19, 1995, petitioner’s rival candidate, the late Nicolas M. Jamilla, filed an election protest lxxiv[1] before the

Regional Trial Court of Pinamalayan, Oriental Mindoro.lxxv[2]

During the pendency of said contest, Jamilla died. lxxvi[3] Four days after such death or on December 19, 1995, the triacourt dismissed the election protest ruling as it did that “[a]s this case is personal, the death of the protestant extinguishesthe case itself. The issue or issues brought out in this protest have become moot and academic.”lxxvii[4]

On January 9, 1995, private respondent learned about the dismissal of the protest from one Atty. Gaudencio SSadicon, who, as the late Jamilla’s counsel, was the one who informed the trial court of his client’s demise.

On January 15, 1996, private respondent filed his Omnibus Petition/Motion (For Intervention and/or Substitution with

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Motion for Reconsideration).lxxviii[5] Opposition thereto was filed by petitioner on January 30, 1996.lxxix[6]

In an Order dated February 14, 1996, lxxx[7] the trial court denied private respondent’s Omnibus Petition/Motion andstubbornly held that an election protest being personal to the protestant, is ipso facto terminated by the latter’s death

Question: Is the ruling of the RTC correct?

Answer no 18: It is true that a public office is personal to the public officer and is not a property transmissible to his heirs upondeath.lxxxi[9] Thus, applying the doctrine of actio personalis moritur cum persona, upon the death of the incumbent, no heir of his maybe allowed to continue holding his office in his place.

But while the right to a public office is personal and exclusive to the public officer, an election protest is not purely personal and

exclusive to the protestant or to the protestee such that the death of either would oust the court of all authority to continue the protestproceedings.An election contest, after all, involves not merely conflicting private aspirations but is imbued with paramount public interests.

As we have held in the case of Vda. de De Mesa v. Mencias:lxxxii[10]

“x x x. It is axiomatic that an election contest, involving as it does not only the adjudication and settlement of the privateinterests of the rival candidates but also the paramount need of dispelling once and for all the uncertainty that beclouds the reachoice of the electorate with respect to who shall discharge the prerogatives of the offices within their gift, is a proceeding imbuedwith public interest which raises it onto a plane over and above ordinary civil actions. For this reason, broad perspectives of publicpolicy impose upon courts the imperative duty to ascertain by all means within their command who is the real candidate elected in asexpeditious a manner as possible, without being fettered by technicalities and procedural barriers to the end that the will of thepeople may not be frustrated (Ibasco vs. Ilao, et al., G.R. L-17512, December 29, 1960; Reforma vs. De Luna, G.R. L-13242, July 311958). So inextricably intertwined are the interests of the contestants and those of the public that there can be no gainsaying thelogic of the proposition that even the voluntary cessation in office of the protestee not only does not ipso facto divest him of thecharacter of an adversary in the contest inasmuch as he retains a party interest to keep his political opponent out of the office andmaintain therein his successor, but also does not in any manner impair or detract from the jurisdiction of the court to pursue the

proceeding to its final conclusion (De Los Angeles vs. Rodriguez, 46 Phil. 595, 597; Salcedo vs. Hernandez, 62 Phil. 584, 587Galves vs. Maramba, G.R. L-13206).

Upon the same principle, the death of the protestee De Mesa did not abate the proceedings in the election protest filed againsthim, and it may stated as a rule that an election contest survives and must be prosecuted to final judgment despite the death of theprotestee.”lxxxiii[11]

The death of the protestant, as in this case, neither constitutes a ground for the dismissal of the contest nor ousts the trial courof its jurisdiction to decide the election contest. Apropos is the following pronouncement of this court in the case of Lomugdang vJavier :lxxxiv[12]

“Determination of what candidate has been in fact elected is a matter clothed with public interest, wherefore, public policydemands that an election contest, duly commenced, be not abated by the death of the contestant. We have squarely so rule inSibulo Vda. de Mesa vs. Judge Mencias, G.R. No. L-24583, October 29, 1966, in the same spirit that led this Court to hold that theineligibility of the protestant is not a defense (Caesar  vs. Garrido, 53 Phil. 57), and that the protestee’s cessation in office is not aground for the dismissal of the contest nor detract the Courts jurisdiction to decide the case (Angeles vs. Rodriguez, 46 Phil. 595Salcedo vs. Hernandez, 62 Phil. 584).”lxxxv[13]

The asseveration of petitioner that private respondent is not a real party in interest entitled to be substituted in the election

protest in place of the late Jamilla, is utterly without legal basis. Categorical was our ruling in Vda. de Mesa and Lomugdang that:“x x x the Vice Mayor elect has the status of a real party in interest in the continuation of the proceedings and is entitled to

intervene therein. For if the protest succeeds and the protestee is unseated, the Vice-Mayor succeeds to the office of Mayor thabecomes vacant if the one duly elected can not assume the post.”lxxxvi[14]

To finally dispose of this case, we rule that the filing by private respondent of his Omnibus Petition/Motion on January 15, 1996well within a period of thirty days from December 19, 1995 when Jamilla’s counsel informed the trial court of Jamilla’s death, was incompliance with Section 17, Rule 3 of the Revised Rules of Court. Since the Rules of Court, though not generally applicable toelection cases, may however be applied by analogy or in a suppletory character,lxxxvii[15] private respondent was correct to rely thereonThe above jurisprudence is not ancient; in fact these legal moorings have been recently reiterated in the 1991 case of De la Victoriavs. COMELEC.lxxxviii[16] If only petitioner’s diligence in updating himself with case law is as spirited as his persistence in pursuing hislegal asseverations up to the highest court of the land, no doubt further derailment of the election protest proceedings could havebeen avoided. CASTRO V. COMELEC , 125249, FEB 1997

CASE NO. 19. Petitioner Arsenio A. Latasa, was elected mayor of the Municipality of Digos, Davao del Sur in the

elections of 1992, 1995, and 1998. During petitioner’s third term, the Municipality of Digos was declared a component cityto be known as the City of Digos. A plebiscite conducted on September 8, 2000 ratified Republic Act No. 8798 entitled, “An

 Act Converting the Municipality of Digos, Davao del Sur Province into a Component City to be known as the City of Digos”or the Charter of the City of Digos. This event also marked the end of petitioner’s tenure as mayor of the Municipality oDigos. However, under Section 53, Article IX of the Charter, petitioner was mandated to serve in a hold-over capacity asmayor of the new City of Digos. Hence, he took his oath as the city mayor.

On February 28, 2001, petitioner filed his certificate of candidacy for city mayor for the May 14, 2001 elections. Hestated therein that he is eligible therefor, and likewise disclosed that he had already served for three consecutive terms asmayor of the Municipality of Digos and is now running for the first time for the position of city mayor .

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Question: Is Latasa eligible to run as city mayor?

ANSWER no 19: As seen in the aforementioned provisions, this Court notes that the delineation of the metes and bounds ofthe City of Digos did not change even by an inch the land area previously covered by the Municipality of Digos. This Court also notesthat the elective officials of the Municipality of Digos continued to exercise their powers and functions until elections were held for thenew city officials.

True, the new city acquired a new corporate existence separate and distinct from that of the municipality. This does not meanhowever, that for the purpose of applying the subject Constitutional provision, the office of the municipal mayor would now beconstrued as a different local government post as that of the office of the city mayor. As stated earlier, the territorial jurisdiction of theCity of Digos is the same as that of the municipality. Consequently, the inhabitants of the municipality are the same as those in the

city. These inhabitants are the same group of voters who elected petitioner Latasa to be their municipal mayor for three consecutiveterms. These are also the same inhabitants over whom he held power and authority as their chief executive for nine years.

This Court must distinguish the present case from previous cases ruled upon this Court involving the same Constitutionaprovision.

In Borja, Jr. v. COMELEC ,39[18] the issue therein was whether a vice-mayor who became the mayor by operation of law and whoserved the remainder of the mayor’s term should be considered to have served a term in that office for the purpose of the three-termlimit under the Constitution. Private respondent in that case was first elected as vice-mayor, but upon the death of the incumbenmayor, he occupied the latter’s post for the unexpired term. He was, thereafter, elected for two more terms. This Court therein heldthat when private respondent occupied the post of the mayor upon the incumbent’s death and served for the remainder of the term,he cannot be construed as having served a full term as contemplated under the subject constitutional provision. The term servedmust be one “for which [the official concerned] was elected.”

It must also be noted that in Borja, the private respondent therein, before he assumed the position of mayor, first served as thevice-mayor of his local government unit. The nature of the responsibilities and duties of the vice-mayor is wholly different from that othe mayor. The vice-mayor does not hold office as chief executive over his local government unit. In the present case, petitionerupon ratification of the law converting the municipality to a city, continued to hold office as chief executive of the same territorial

  jurisdiction. There were changes in the political and economic rights of Digos as local government unit, but no substantial changeoccurred as to petitioner’s authority as chief executive over the inhabitants of Digos.

In Lonzanida v. COMELEC ,40[19] petitioner was elected and served two consecutive terms as mayor from 1988 to 1995. He thenran again for the same position in the May 1995 elections, won and discharged his duties as mayor. However, his opponencontested his proclamation and filed an election protest before the Regional Trial Court, which ruled that there was a failure ofelections and declared the position of mayor vacant. The COMELEC affirmed this ruling and petitioner acceded to the order tovacate the post. During the May 1998 elections, petitioner therein again filed his certificate of candidacy for mayor. A petition todisqualify him was filed on the ground that he had already served three consecutive terms. This Court ruled, however, that petitionetherein cannot be considered as having been duly elected to the post in the May 1995 elections, and that said petitioner did not fullyserve the 1995-1998 mayoral term by reason of involuntary relinquishment of office.

In the present case, petitioner Latasa was, without a doubt, duly elected as mayor in the May 1998 elections. Can he then beconstrued as having involuntarily relinquished his office by reason of the conversion of Digos from municipality to city? This Courbelieves that he did involuntarily relinquish his office as municipal mayor since the said office has been deemed abolished due to theconversion. However, the very instant he vacated his office as municipal mayor, he also assumed office as city mayor. Unlike in

Lonzanida, where petitioner therein, for even just a short period of time, stepped down from office, petitioner Latasa never ceasedfrom acting as chief executive of the local government unit. He never ceased from discharging his duties and responsibilities as chieexecutive of Digos.

In  Adormeo v. COMELEC ,41[20] this Court was confronted with the issue of whether or not an assumption to office through arecall election should be considered as one term in applying the three-term limit rule. Private respondent, in that case, was electedand served for two consecutive terms as mayor. He then ran for his third term in the May 1998 elections, but lost to his opponent. InJune 1998, his opponent faced recall proceedings and in the recall elections of May 2000, private respondent won and served for theunexpired term. For the May 2001 elections, private respondent filed his certificate of candidacy for the office of mayor. This wasquestioned on the ground that he had already served as mayor for three consecutive terms. This Court held therein that privaterespondent cannot be construed as having been elected and served for three consecutive terms. His loss in the May 1998 electionswas considered by this Court as an interruption in the continuity of his service as mayor. For nearly two years, private respondentherein lived as a private citizen. The same, however, cannot be said of petitioner Latasa in the present case.

Finally, in  Socrates v. COMELEC ,42[21] the principal issue was whether or not private respondent Edward M. Hagedorn wasqualified to run during the recall elections. Therein respondent Hagedorn had already served for three consecutive terms as mayofrom 1992 until 2001 and did not run in the immediately following regular elections. On July 2, 2002, the barangay officials of Puerto

Princesa convened themselves into a Preparatory Recall Assembly to initiate the recall of the incumbent mayor, Victorino Dennis M.Socrates. On August 23, 2002, respondent Hagedorn filed his certificate of candidacy for mayor in the recall election. A petition fohis disqualification was filed on the ground that he cannot run for the said post during the recall elections for he was disqualified fromrunning for a fourth consecutive term. This Court, however, ruled in favor of respondent Hagedorn, holding that the principle behindthe three-term limit rule is to prevent consecutiveness of the service of terms, and that there was in his case a break in suchconsecutiveness after the end of his third term and before the recall election.

It is evident that in the abovementioned cases, there exists a rest period or a break in the service of the local elective official. In

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Lonzanida, petitioner therein was a private citizen a few months before the next mayoral elections. Similarly, in  Adormeo andSocrates, the private respondents therein lived as private citizens for two years and fifteen months respectively. Indeed, the lawcontemplates a rest period during which the local elective official steps down from office and ceases to exercise power or authorityover the inhabitants of the territorial jurisdiction of a particular local government unit.

This Court reiterates that the framers of the Constitution specifically included an exception to the people’s freedom to choosethose who will govern them in order to avoid the evil of a single person accumulating excessive power over a particular territoria

 jurisdiction as a result of a prolonged stay in the same office. To allow petitioner Latasa to vie for the position of city mayor aftehaving served for three consecutive terms as a municipal mayor would obviously defeat the very intent of the framers when theywrote this exception. Should he be allowed another three consecutive terms as mayor of the City of Digos, petitioner would then be

possibly holding office as chief executive over the same territorial jurisdiction and inhabitants for a total of eighteen consecutiveyears. This is the very scenario sought to be avoided by the Constitution, if not abhorred by it.Finally, respondent Sunga claims that applying the principle in Labo v. COMELEC ,43[22] he should be deemed the mayoralty

candidate with the highest number of votes. On the contrary, this Court held in Labo that the disqualification of a winning candidatedoes not necessarily entitle the candidate with the highest number of votes to proclamation as the winner of the elections. As anobiter, the Court merely mentioned that the rule would have been different if the electorate, fully aware in fact and in law of acandidate’s disqualification so as to bring such awareness within the realm of notoriety, would nonetheless cast their votes in favor othe ineligible candidate. In such case, the electorate may be said to have waived the validity and efficacy of their votes by notoriouslymisapplying their franchise or throwing away their votes, in which case, the eligible candidate obtaining the next higher number ofvotes may be deemed elected. The same, however, cannot be said of the present case.This Court has consistently ruled that the fact that a plurality or a majority of the votes are cast for an ineligible candidate ata popular election, or that a candidate is later declared to be disqualified to hold office, does not entitle the candidate whogarnered the second highest number of votes to be declared elected. The same merely results in making the winningcandidate’s election a nullity.44[23] In the present case, moreover, 13,650 votes were cast for private respondent Sunga asagainst the 25,335 votes cast for petitioner Latasa.45[24] The second placer is obviously not the choice of the people in that

particular election. In any event, a permanent vacancy in the contested office is thereby created which should be filled bysuccession.46[25] LATASA V. COMELEC, 154829, DEC. 10, 2003

CASE NO. 20. Distinguish domicile from residence within the framework of election law.

Answer no 20: DOMINO V. COMELEC, 134015, JULY 19, 1999 It is doctrinally settled that the term “residence,” asused in the law prescribing the qualifications for suffrage and for elective office, means the same thing as

“domicile,” which imports not only an intention to reside in a fixed place but also personal presence in that

  place, coupled with conduct indicative of such intention.lxxxix[21] “Domicile” denotes a fixed permanenresidence to which, whenever absent for business, pleasure, or some other reasons, one intends to return. xc[22

“Domicile” is a question of intention and circumstances. In the consideration of circumstances, three rules

must be borne in mind, namely: (1) that a man must have a residence or domicile somewhere; (2) when onceestablished it remains until a new one is acquired; and (3) a man can have but one residence or domicile at atime.xci[23]

Records show that petitioner’s domicile of origin was Candon, Ilocos Sur xcii[24] and that sometime in 1991

he acquired a new domicile of choice at 24 Bonifacio St. Ayala Heights, Old Balara, Quezon City, as shown by his certificate of candidacy for the position of representative of the 3rd District of Quezon City in the May

1995 election. Petitioner is now claiming that he had effectively abandoned his “residence” in Quezon City

and has established a new “domicile” of choice at the Province of Sarangani.A person’s “domicile” once established is considered to continue and will not be deemed lost until a new

one is established.xciii[25] To successfully effect a change of domicile one must demonstrate an actual removal or

an actual change of domicile; a bona fide intention of abandoning the former place of residence and

establishing a new one and definite acts which correspond with the purpose.xciv[26] In other words, there must basically be animus manendi coupled with animus non revertendi. The purpose to remain in or at the

domicile of choice must be for an indefinite period of time; the change of residence must be voluntary; and

the residence at the place chosen for the new domicile must be actual.xcv[27]

It is the contention of petitioner that his actual physical presence in Alabel, Sarangani since December

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1996 was sufficiently established by the lease of a house and lot located therein in January 1997 and by theaffidavits and certifications under oath of the residents of that place that they have seen petitioner and his

family residing in their locality.

While this may be so, actual and physical is not in itself sufficient to show that from said date he hadtransferred his residence in that place. To establish a new domicile of choice, personal presence in the place

must be coupled with conduct indicative of that intention. While “residence” simply requires bodily presence

in a given place, “domicile” requires not only such bodily presence in that place but also a declared and

 probable intent to make it one’s fixed and permanent place of abode, one’s home.xcvi[28]

As a general rule, the principal elements of domicile, physical presence in the locality involved and

intention to adopt it as a domicile, must concur in order to establish a new domicile. No change of domicile

will result if either of these elements is absent. Intention to acquire a domicile without actual residence in thelocality does not result in acquisition of domicile, nor does the fact of physical presence without intention. xcv

[29]

The lease contract entered into sometime in January 1997, does not adequately support a change of

domicile. The lease contract may be indicative of DOMINO’s intention to reside in Sarangani but it does not

engender the kind of permanency required to prove abandonment of one’s original domicile. The mere

absence of individual from his permanent residence, no matter how long, without the intention to abandon itdoes not result in loss or change of domicile. xcviii[30] Thus the date of the contract of lease of a house and lot

located in the province of Sarangani, i.e., 15 January 1997, cannot be used, in the absence of othercircumstances, as the reckoning period of the one-year residence requirement.

Further, Domino’s lack of intention to abandon his residence in Quezon City is further strengthened by

his act of registering as voter in one of the precincts in Quezon City. While voting is not conclusive of

residence, it does give rise to a strong presumption of residence especially in this case where DOMINOregistered in his former barangay. Exercising the right of election franchise is a deliberate public assertion of

the fact of residence, and is said to have decided preponderance is a doubtful case upon the place the elector

claims as, or believes to be, his residence. xcix[31] The fact that a party continuously voted in a particular locality

is a strong factor in assisting to determine the status of his domicile.c[32]

His claim that his registration in Quezon City was erroneous and was caused by events over which he had

no control cannot be sustained. The general registration of voters for purposes of the May 1998 elections was

scheduled for two (2) consecutive weekends, viz .: June 14, 15, 21, and 22.ci[33]

While, Domino’s intention to establish residence in Sarangani can be gleaned from the fact that be bought

the house he was renting on November 4, 1997, that he sought cancellation of his previous registration in

Quezon City on 22 October 1997,cii[34] and that he applied for transfer of registration from Quezon City toSarangani by reason of change of residence on 30 August 1997, ciii[35] DOMINO still falls short of the one year

residency requirement under the Constitution.

In showing compliance with the residency requirement, both intent and actual presence in the district oneintends to represent must satisfy the length of time prescribed by the fundamental law. civ[36] Domino’s failure to

do so rendered him ineligible and his election to office null and void.cv[37]

End of the examination

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8/8/2019 Midterm Examination in Election Law 2007

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