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SECTION 1

G.R. No. 88211, September 15, 1989


Marcos, petitioner
VS.
Manglapus, respondent (Part 1)
Facts:
Former President Ferdinand E. Marcos was deposed from the presidency via the nonviolent people power revolution and was forced into exile. Marcos, in his deathbed, has
signified his wish to return to the Philippines to die. But President Corazon Aquino,
considering the dire consequences to the nation of his return at a time when the stability
of government is threatened from various directions and the economy is just beginning
to rise and move forward, has stood firmly on the decision to bar the return of Marcos
and his family.
Aquino barred Marcos from returning due to possible threats & following supervening
events:
1.

failed Manila Hotel coup in 1986 led by Marcos leaders

2.

channel 7 taken over by rebels & loyalists

3.
plan of Marcoses to return w/ mercenaries aboard a chartered plane of a
Lebanese arms dealer. This is to prove that they can stir trouble from afar
4.

Honasans failed coup

5.

Communist insurgency movements

6.

secessionist movements in Mindanao

7.

devastated economy because of

1.

accumulated foreign debt

2.

plunder of nation by Marcos & cronies

Marcos filed for a petition of mandamus and prohibition to order the respondents to issue
them their travel documents and prevent the implementation of President Aquinos
decision to bar Marcos from returning in the Philippines. Petitioner questions Aquinos
power to bar his return in the country. He also questioned the claim of the President that
the decision was made in the interest of national security, public safety and health.
Petitioner also claimed that the President acted outside her jurisdiction.
According to the Marcoses, such act deprives them of their right to life, liberty, property
without due process and equal protection of the laws. They also said that it deprives
them of their right to travel which according to Section 6, Article 3 of the constitution,
may only be impaired by a court order.

Issue:
1.
Whether or not, in the exercise of the powers granted by the Constitution, the
President may prohibit the Marcoses from returning to the Philippines.
2.
Whether or not the President acted arbitrarily or with grave abuse of discretion
amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction when she determined that the return of the
Marcoses to the Philippines poses a serious threat to national interest and welfare and
decided to bar their return.
Decision:
No to both issues. Petition dismissed.
Ratio:
Separation of power dictates that each department has exclusive powers. According to
Section 1, Article VII of the 1987 Philippine Constitution, the executive power shall be
vested in the President of the Philippines. However, it does not define what is meant by
executive power although in the same article it touches on exercise of certain powers
by the President, i.e., the power of control over all executive departments, bureaus and
offices, the power to execute the laws, the appointing power to grant reprieves,
commutations and pardons (art VII secfs. 14-23). Although the constitution outlines
tasks of the president, this list is not defined & exclusive. She has residual &
discretionary powers not stated in the Constitution which include the power to protect the
general welfare of the people. She is obliged to protect the people, promote their welfare
& advance national interest. (Art. II, Sec. 4-5 of the Constitution). Residual powers,
according to Theodore Roosevelt, dictate that the President can do anything which is not
forbidden in the Constitution (Corwin, supra at 153), inevitable to vest discretionary
powers on the President (Hyman, American President) and that the president has to
maintain peace during times of emergency but also on the day-to-day operation of the
State.
The rights Marcoses are invoking are not absolute. Theyre flexible depending on the
circumstances. The request of the Marcoses to be allowed to return to the Philippines
cannot be considered in the light solely of the constitutional provisions guaranteeing
liberty of abode and the right to travel, subject to certain exceptions, or of case law which
clearly never contemplated situations even remotely similar to the present one. It must
be treated as a matter that is appropriately addressed to those residual unstated powers
of the President which are implicit in and correlative to the paramount duty residing in
that office to safeguard and protect general welfare. In that context, such request or
demand should submit to the exercise of a broader discretion on the part of the
President to determine whether it must be granted or denied.
For issue number 2, the question for the court to determine is whether or not there exist
factual basis for the President to conclude that it was in the national interest to bar the
return of the Marcoses in the Philippines. It is proven that there are factual bases in her
decision. The supervening events that happened before her decision are factual. The
President must take preemptive measures for the self-preservation of the country &
protection of the people. She has to uphold the Constitution.
Fernan, Concurring

1.
The presidents power is not fixed. Limits would depend on the imperatives of
events and not on abstract theories of law. We are undergoing a critical time and the
current problem can only be answerable by the President.
2.
Threat is real. Return of the Marcoses would pose a clear & present danger.
Thus, its the executives responsibility & obligation to prevent a grave & serious threat to
its safety from arising.
3.
We cant sacrifice public peace, order, safety & our political & economic gains to
give in to Marcos wish to die in the country. Compassion must give way to the other
state interests.
Cruz, Dissenting
1.
As a citizen of this country, it is Marcos right to return, live & die in his own
country. It is a right guaranteed by the Consti to all individuals, whether patriot,
homesick, prodigal, tyrant, etc.
2.
Military representatives failed to show that Marcos return would pose a threat to
national security. Fears were mere conjectures.
3.
Residual powers but the executives powers were outlined to limit her powers &
not expand.
Paras, Dissenting
1.
AFP has failed to prove danger which would allow State to impair Marcos right to
return to the Philippines. .
2.
Family can be put under house arrest & in the event that one dies, he/she should
be buried w/in 10 days.
3.
Untenable that without a legislation, right to travel is absolute & state is
powerless to restrict it. Its w/in police power of the state to restrict this right if national
security, public safety/health demands that such be restricted. It cant be absolute &
unlimited all the time. It cant be arbitrary & irrational.
4.
No proof that Marcos return would endanger national security or public safety.
Fears are speculative & military admits that its under control. Filipinos would know how
to handle Marcos return.
Padilla, Dissenting
Sarmiento, Dissenting
1.
Presidents determination that Marcos return would threaten national security
should be agreed upon by the court. Such threat must be clear & present.
G.R. No. 88211, October 27, 1989
Marcos, petitioner
VS.

Manglapus, respondent (Part 2)


Facts:
In its decision dated September 15, 1989, the Court by a vote of eight to seven,
dismissed the petition, after finding that the President did not act arbitrarily or with grave
abuse of discretion in determining that the return of former President Marcos and his
family pose a threat to national interest and welfare and in prohibiting their return to the
Philippines. On September 28, 1989, Marcos died in Honolulu, Hawaii.
President Corazon Aquino issued a statement saying that in the interest of the safety of
those who will take the death of Marcos in widely and passionately conflicting ways, and
for the tranquility and order of the state and society, she did not allow the remains of
Marcos to be brought back in the Philippines.
A motion for Reconsideration was filed by the petitioners raising the following arguments:
1.
Barring their return would deny them their inherent right as citizens to return to
their country of birth and all other rights guaranteed by the Constitution to all Filipinos.
2.
The President has no power to bar a Filipino from his own country; if she has,
she had exercised it arbitrarily.
3.

There is no basis for barring the return of the family of former President Marcos.

Issue:
Whether or not the motion for reconsideration that the Marcoses be allowed to return in
the Philippines be granted.
Decision:
No. The Marcoses were not allowed to return. Motion for Reconsideration denied
because of lack of merit.
Ratio:
1.

Petitioners failed to show any compelling reason to warrant reconsideration.

2.
Factual scenario during the time Court rendered its decision has not changed.
The threats to the government, to which the return of the Marcoses has been viewed to
provide a catalytic effect, have not been shown to have ceased. Imelda Marcos also
called President Aquino illegal claiming that it is Ferdinand Marcos who is the legal
president.
3.
President has unstated residual powers implied from grant of executive power.
Enumerations are merely for specifying principal articles implied in the definition; leaving
the rest to flow from general grant that power, interpreted in conformity with other parts
of the Constitution (Hamilton). Executive unlike Congress can exercise power from
sources not enumerates so long as not forbidden by constitutional text (Myers vs. US).
This does not amount to dictatorship. Amendment No. 6 expressly granted Marcos
power of legislation whereas 1987 Constitution granted Aquino with implied powers.
4.

It is within Aquinos power to protect & promote interest & welfare of the people.

She bound to comply w/ that duty and there is no proof that she acted arbitrarily

G.R. No. 146738 Estrada vs. Arroyo


G.R. No 146710-15 Estrada vs. Desierto
March 2, 2001
FACTS:

Estrada was inaugurated as president of the Republic of the Philippines on June 30,
1998 with Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo as his Vice President.
In October 2000, Ilocos Sur governor Luis Chavit Singson, a close friend of the
President, alleged that he had personally given Estrada money as payoff from jueteng
hidden in a bank account known as Jose Velarde a grassroots-based numbers game.
Singsons allegation also caused controversy across the nation, which culminated in the
House of Representatives filing of an impeachment case against Estrada on November
13, 2000. House Speaker Manny Villar fast-tracked the impeachment complaint. The
impeachment suit was brought to the Senate and an impeachment court was formed,
with Chief Justice Hilario Davide, Jr. as presiding officer. Estrada, pleaded not guilty.
The expos immediately ignited reactions of rage. On January 18, a crowd continued to
grow at EDSA, bolstered by students from private schools and left-wing organizations.
Activists from the group Bayan and Akbayan as well as lawyers of the Integrated Bar of
the Philippines and other bar associations joined in the thousands of protesters.
On January 19, The Philippine National Police and the Armed Forces of the Philippines
also withdrew their support for Estrada and joined the crowd at EDSA Shrine.
At 2:00pm, Estrada appeared on television for the first time since the beginning of the
protests and maintains that he will not resign. He said that he wanted the impeachment
trial to continue, stressing that only a guilty verdict will remove him from office.
At 6:15pm, Estrada again appeared on television, calling for a snap presidential election
to be held concurrently with congressional and local elections on May 14, 2001. He
added that he will not run in this election.
OnJanuary 20, the Supreme Court declared that the seat of presidency was vacant,
saying that Estrada constructively resigned his post. Noon of the same day, Gloria
Macapagal-Arroyo took her oath of office in the presence of the crowd at EDSA,
becoming the 14th president of the Philippines.
At 2:00 pm, Estrada released a letter saying he had strong and serious doubts about
the legality and constitutionality of her proclamation as president, but saying he would
give up his office to avoid being an obstacle to healing the nation. Estrada and his family
later left Malacaang Palace.
A heap of cases then succeeded Estradas leaving the palace, which he countered by
filing a peition for prohibition with a prayer for a writ of preliminary injunction. It sought to

enjoin the respondent Ombudsman from conducting any further proceedings in cases
filed against him not until his term as president ends. He also prayed for judgment
confirming petitioner to be the lawful and incumbent President of the Republic of the
Philippines temporarily unable to discharge the duties of his office, and declaring
respondent to have taken her oath as and to be holding the Office of the President, only
in an acting capacity pursuant to the provisions of the Constitution.
ISSUE:
1.) Whether or not the case at bar a political or justiciable issue. If justiciable, whether
or not petitioner Estrada was a president-on-leave or did he truly resign.
2.)

Whether or not petitioner may invokeimmunity from suits.

HELD:
The Court defines a political issue as those questions which, under the Constitution, are
to be decided by the people in their sovereign capacity, or in regard to which full
discretionary authority has been delegated to the legislative or executive branch of the
government. It is concerned with issues dependent upon the wisdom, not legality of a
particular measure.
The Court made a distinction between the Aquino presidency and the Arroyo presidency.
The Court said that while the Aquino government was a government spawned by the
direct demand of the people in defiance to the 1973 Constitution, overthrowing the old
government entirely, the Arroyo government on the other hand was a government
exercising under the 1987 constitution, wherein only the office of the president was
affected. In the former, it The question of whether the previous president (president
Estrada) truly resigned subjects it to judicial review. The Court held that the issue is legal
and not political.
For the president to be deemed as having resigned, there must be an intent to resign
and the intent must be coupled by acts of relinquishment. It is important to follow the
succession of events that struck petitioner prior his leaving the palace. Furthermore, the
quoted statements extracted from the Angara diaries, detailed Estradas implied
resignation On top of all these, the press release he issued regarding is
acknowledgement of the oath-taking of Arroyo as president despite his questioning of its
legality and his emphasis on leaving the presidential seat for the sake of peace. The
Court held that petitioner Estrada had resigned by the use of the totality test: prior,
contemporaneous and posterior facts and circumstantial evidence bearing a material
relevance on the issue.
As to the issue of the peitioners contention that he is immuned from suits, the Court held
that petitioner is no longer entitled to absolute immunity from suit. The Court added that,
given the intent of the 1987 Constitution to breathe life to the policy that a public office is
a public trust, the petitioner, as a non-sitting President, cannot claim executive immunity
for his alleged criminal acts committed while a sitting President. From the deliberations,
the intent of the framers is clear that the immunity of the president from suit is concurrent
only with his tenure(the term during which the incumbent actually holds office) and not
his term (time during which the officer may claim to hold the office as of right, and fixes
the interval after which the several incumbents shall succeed one another).
Government of the Philippine Islands vs Milton Springer

FACTS:
Sometime in the 1900s, the National Coal Company (NCC) was created by the
Philippine Congress. The law created it (Act No. 2822) provides that: The voting power
shall be vested exclusively in a committee consisting of the Governor-General, the
President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of Representatives.
In November 1926, the Governor-General (Leonard Wood) issued E.O. No. 37 which
divested the voting rights of the Senate President and House Speaker in the NCC. The
EO emphasized that the voting right should be solely lodged in the Governor-General
who is the head of the government (President at that time was considered the head of
state but does not manage government affairs). A copy of the said EO was furnished to
the Senate President and the House Speaker.
However, in December 1926, NCC held its elections and the Senate President as well as
the House Speaker, notwithstanding EO No. 37 and the objection of the GovernorGeneral, still elected Milton Springer and four others as Board of Directors of NCC.
Thereafter, a quo warranto proceeding in behalf of the government was filed against
Springer et al questioning the validity of their election into the Board of NCC.
ISSUE: Whether or not the Senate President as well as the House Speaker can validly
elect the Board Members of NCC.
HELD: No. E.O. No 37 is valid. It is in accordance with the doctrine of separation of
powers. The Supreme Court emphasized that the legislature creates the public office but
it has nothing to do with designating the persons to fill the office. Appointing persons to a
public office is essentially executive. The NCC is a government owned and controlled
corporation. It was created by Congress. To extend the power of Congress into allowing
it, through the Senate President and the House Speaker, to appoint members of the
NCC is already an invasion of executive powers. The Supreme Court however notes that
indeed there are exceptions to this rule where the legislature may appoint persons to fill
public office. Such exception can be found in the appointment by the legislature of
persons to fill offices within the legislative branch this exception is allowable because it
does not weaken the executive branch.
SECTION 4
SIXTO S. BRILLANTES, JR., petitioner,
JOSE CONCEPCION, JR., JOSE DE VENECIA, EDGARDO J. ANGARA, DR. JAIME Z.
GALVEZ-TAN, FRANKLIN M. DRILON, FRISCO SAN JUAN, NORBERTO M.
GONZALES, HONESTO M. GUTIERREZ, ISLETA, AND JOSE A. BERNAS, Petitionersin-Intervention,
vs.COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS, respondent.

Facts:
Comelec issued resolutions adopting an Automated Elections System including the
assailed resolution, Resolution 6712, which provides for the electronic transmission of
advanced result of unofficial count. Petitioners claimed that the resolution would allow

the preemption and usurpation of the exclusive power of Congress to canvass the votes
for President and Vice-President and would likewise encroach upon the authority of
NAMFREL, as the citizens accredited arm, to conduct the "unofficial" quick count as
provided under pertinent election laws. Comelec contended that the resolution was
promulgated in the exercise of its executive and administrative power "to ensure free,
orderly, honest, peaceful and credible elections Comelec added that the issue is beyond
judicial determination.

Issue:
Whether or not Comelec's promulgation of Resolution 6712 was justified.

Ruling:

The Comelec committed grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of


jurisdiction in issuing Resolution 6712. The issue squarely fell within the ambit of the
expanded jurisdiction of the court.

Article VII, Section 4 of the Constitution, further bolstered by RA 8436, vest upon
Congress the sole and exclusive authority to officially canvass the votes for the elections
of President and Vice-President. Section 27 of Rep. Act No. 7166, as amended by Rep.
Act No. 8173, and reiterated in Section 18 of Rep. Act No. 8436, solely authorize
NAMFREL, the duly-accredited citizens arm to conduct the unofficial counting of votes
for the national or local elections. The quick count under the guise of an unofficial
tabulation would not only be preemptive of the authority of congress and NAMFREL, but
would also be lacking constitutional and/or statutory basis. Moreover, the assailed
COMELEC resolution likewise contravened the constitutional provision that "no money
shall be paid out of the treasury except in pursuance of an appropriation made by law." It
being unofficial, any disbursement of public fund would be contrary to the provisions of
the Constitution and Rep. Act No. 9206, which is the 2003 General Appropriations Act.

The Omnibus Election Code in providing the powers and functions of the Commission
subjects the same to certain conditions with respect to the adoption of the latest
technological and electronic devices, to wit: (1)consideration of the area and available
funds (2) notification to all political parties and candidates. The aforementioned
conditions were found to have not been substantially met.
Resolution 6712 was null and void.

PORMENTO VS ESTRADA
THE FACTS

Private respondent Joseph Erap Ejercito Estrada was elected President of the
Republic of the Philippines in the general elections held on May 11, 1998. He was
however ousted [resigned according to the decision of the Supreme Court in Estrada
vs. Arroyo, G.R. No. 146738, March 2, 2001] from office and was not able to finish his
term. He sought the presidency again in the general elections held on May 10, 2010.
Petitioner Atty. Evillo C. Pormento opposed Eraps candidacy and filed a petition for the
latters disqualification, which was however denied by the COMELEC 2nd Division. His
motion for reconsideration was subsequently denied by the COMELEC en banc.
Petitioner filed the instant petition for certiorari on May 7, 2010. However, under the
Rules of Court, the filing of such petition would not stay the execution of the judgment,
final order or resolution of the COMELEC that is sought to be reviewed. Besides,
petitioner did not even pray for the issuance of a temporary restraining order or writ of
preliminary injunction. Hence, private respondent was able to participate as a candidate
for the position of President in the May 10, 2010 elections where he garnered the
second highest number of votes.

II.

THE ISSUE

What is the proper interpretation of the following provision of Section 4, Article VII of the
Constitution: [t]he President shall not be eligible for any re-election?

III. THE RULING

[The petition was DENIED DUE COURSE and thereby DISMISSED by the Supreme
Court.]

Private respondent was not elected President the second time he ran [in the May 2010
elections]. Since the issue on the proper interpretation of the phrase any reelection will
be premised on a persons second (whether immediate or not) election as President,
there is no case or controversy to be resolved in this case. No live conflict of legal rights
exists. There is in this case no definite, concrete, real or substantial controversy that
touches on the legal relations of parties having adverse legal interests. No specific relief
may conclusively be decreed upon by this Court in this case that will benefit any of the
parties herein. As such, one of the essential requisites for the exercise of the power of
judicial review, the existence of an actual case or controversy, is sorely lacking in this
case.

As a rule, this Court may only adjudicate actual, ongoing controversies. The Court is not
empowered to decide moot questions or abstract propositions, or to declare principles or
rules of law which cannot affect the result as to the thing in issue in the case before it. In
other words, when a case is moot, it becomes non-justiciable.

An action is considered moot when it no longer presents a justiciable controversy


because the issues involved have become academic or dead or when the matter in
dispute has already been resolved and hence, one is not entitled to judicial intervention
unless the issue is likely to be raised again between the parties. There is nothing for the
court to resolve as the determination thereof has been overtaken by subsequent events.

Assuming an actual case or controversy existed prior to the proclamation of a President


who has been duly elected in the May 10, 2010 elections, the same is no longer true
today. Following the results of that elections, private respondent was not elected
President for the second time. Thus, any discussion of his reelection will simply be
hypothetical and speculative. It will serve no useful or practical purpose.

SECTION 13
DOROMAL VS. SANDIGANBAYAN, G. R. No. 85468, 07 September 1989
Topic: Prohibitions [Article VII: Sections 13]
Ponente: GRIO-AQUINO, J.

MATERIAL FACTS:
Quintin S. Doromal, a public officer and being a Commissioner of the Presidential
Commission
on Good Government, participated in a business through the Doromal International
Trading
Corporation (DITC), a family corporation of which he is the President, and which
company
participated in the biddings conducted by the Department of Education, Culture and
Sports
(DECS) and the National Manpower & Youth Council (NMYC).

In connection with his shareholdings and position as president and director of the
Doromal
International Trading Corporation which submitted bids to supply P61 million worth of
electronic, electrical, automotive, mechanical and airconditioning equipment to theN THE
Department of Education, Culture and Sports and the National Manpower and Youth
Council.

An information was then filed by the Tanodbayan against Doromal for the said
violation and a
preliminary investigation was conducted.

The petitioner then filed a petition for certiorari and prohibition questioning the
jurisdiction of
the Tanodbayan to file the information without the approval of the Ombudsman.

ISSUES:
Whether or not the act of Doromal would constitute a violation of the Constitution.

RULE:
Article VII, Section 13 (1) of the Constitution provides:
The President, Vice-President, the Members of the Cabinet, and their deputies or
assistants
shall not, unless otherwise provided in this Constitution, hold any other office or
employment during
their tenure. They shall not, during said tenure, directly or indirectly, practice any other
profession, participate in any business, or be financially interested in any contract with,
or in any
franchise, or special privilege granted by the Government or any subdivision, agency, or
instrumentality thereof, including government-owned or controlled corporations or their
subsidiaries.
They shall strictly avoid conflict of interest in the conduct of their office.

APPLICATION:
The presence of a signed document bearing the signature of Doromal as part of the
application to bid shows that he can rightfully be charged with having participated in a
business which act is absolutely prohibited by Section 13 of Article VII of the
Constitution"
because "the DITC remained a family corporation in which Doromal has at least an
indirect
interest."

That admission allegedly belies the averment in the information that the petitioner
"participated' in the business of the DITC in which he is prohibited by the Constitution or
by law
from having any interest. (Sec. 3-h, RA No. 3019)

duties of PTA General Manager andVice-Chairman of its Board of Directors and had
been acknowledged as such by various governmentoffices, including the Office of the
President. He complains that his resignation was demanded byrespondent Garrucho as
the new Secretary of Tourism.On January 4, 1990, President Aquino sent respondent
Garrucho a memorandum stating that petitioner's designation is invalid since it was
designated not by the President but only by the Secretaryof Tourism. Garrucho is then
designated as General Manager until the President can appoint a person toserve in the
said office in a permanent capacity. Garrucho took over as the General Manager of the
PTAand thereafter Pres. Aquino appointed Jose A. Capistrano as General Manager of
PTA.

ISSUES:
Whether or not petitioner had been removed without just cause in violation of security of
tenure

HELD: No, the designation is considered only on an acting or temporary appointment


which does not confer security of tenure. Petitioner was not appointed by the President
of the Philippines but only designated by the Minister of Tourism. There is a clear
distinction between appointment and designation that the petitioner has failed to
consider. Appointment may be defined as the selection, by the authority vested with the

power, of an individual who is to exercise the functions of a given office. When


completed, usually with its confirmation, the appointment results in security of tenure for
the person chosen unless he is replaceable at pleasure because of the nature of his
office. Designation, on the other hand, connotes merely the imposition by law of
additional duties on an incumbent official, as where, in the case before us, the Secretary
of Tourism is designated Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Philippine Tourism
Authority, or where, under the Constitution, three Justices of the Supreme Court are
designated by the Chief Justice to sit in the Electoral Tribunal of the Senate or the House
of Representatives. It is said that appointment is essentially executive while designation
is legislative in nature.

Designation may also be loosely defined as an appointment because it likewise involves


the naming of a particular person to a specified public office. That is the common
understanding of the term. However, where the person is merely designated and not
appointed, the implication is that he shall hold the office only in a temporary capacity and
may be replaced at will by the appointing authority. In this sense, the designation is
considered only an acting or temporary appointment, which does not confer security of
tenure on the person named.

Even if so understood, that is, as an appointment, the designation of the


petitioner cannot sustain his claim that he has been illegally removed. The reason is that
the decree clearly provides that the appointment of the General Manager of the
Philippine Tourism Authority shall be made by the President of the Philippines, not by
any other officer. Appointment involves the exercise of discretion, which because of its
nature cannot be delegated. Legally speaking, it was not possible for Minister Gonzales
to assume the exercise of that discretion as an alter ego of the President. The
appointment (or designation) of the petitioner was not a merely mechanical or ministerial
act that could be validly performed by a subordinate even if he happened as in this case
to be a member of the Cabinet.

Civil Liberties Union vs Executive Secretary


194 SCRA 317 Political Law Ex Officio Officials Members of the Cabinet
Singularity of Office EO 284
FACTS:
In July 1987, then President Corazon Aquino issued Executive Order No. 284 which
allowed members of the Cabinet, their undersecretaries and assistant secretaries to hold
other government offices or positions in addition to their primary positions subject to
limitations set therein. The Civil Liberties Union (CLU) assailed this EO averring that
such law is unconstitutional. The constitutionality of EO 284 is being challenged by CLU
on the principal submission that it adds exceptions to Sec 13, Article 7 of the Constitution
which provides:
Sec. 13. The President, Vice-President, the Members of the Cabinet, and their deputies
or assistants shall not, unless otherwise provided in this Constitution, hold any other

office or employment during their tenure. They shall not, during said tenure, directly or
indirectly practice any other profession, participate in any business, or be financially
interested in any contract with, or in any franchise, or special privilege granted by the
Government or any subdivision, agency, or instrumentality thereof, including
government-owned or controlled corporations or their subsidiaries. They shall strictly
avoid conflict of interest in the conduct of their office.
CLU avers that by virtue of the phrase unless otherwise provided in this Constitution,
the only exceptions against holding any other office or employment in Government are
those provided in the Constitution, namely: (i) The Vice-President may be appointed as a
Member of the Cabinet under Sec 3, par. (2), Article 7; and (ii) the Secretary of Justice is
an ex-officio member of the Judicial and Bar Council by virtue of Sec 8 (1), Article 8.
ISSUE: Whether or not EO 284 is constitutional.
HELD: No, it is unconstitutional. It is clear that the 1987 Constitution seeks to prohibit the
President, Vice-President, members of the Cabinet, their deputies or assistants from
holding during their tenure multiple offices or employment in the government, except in
those cases specified in the Constitution itself and as above clarified with respect to
posts held without additional compensation in an ex-officio capacity as provided by law
and as required by the primary functions of their office, the citation of Cabinet members
(then called Ministers) as examples during the debate and deliberation on the general
rule laid down for all appointive officials should be considered as mere personal opinions
which cannot override the constitutions manifest intent and the peoples understanding
thereof.
In the light of the construction given to Sec 13, Art 7 in relation to Sec 7, par. (2), Art IX-B
of the 1987 Constitution, EO 284 is unconstitutional. Ostensibly restricting the number of
positions that Cabinet members, undersecretaries or assistant secretaries may hold in
addition to their primary position to not more than 2 positions in the government and
government corporations, EO 284 actually allows them to hold multiple offices or
employment in direct contravention of the express mandate of Sec 13, Art 7 of the 1987
Constitution prohibiting them from doing so, unless otherwise provided in the 1987
Constitution itself
Dela Cruz vs. Commission on Audit (G.R. No. 138489, November 29, 2001)
FACTS:
This petition for certiorari assails the Decision No. 98-381 dated September 22, 1998,
rendered by the Commission on Audit (COA), denying petitioners appeal from the Notice
of Disallowance No. 97-011-061 issued by the NHA Resident Auditor on October 23,
1997. Such Notice disallowed payment to petitioners of their representation allowances
and per diems for the period from August 19, 1991 to August 31, 1996 in the total
amount of P276,600.00.
Petitioners, numbering 20, were members of the Board of Directors of the National
Housing Authority (NHA) from 1991 to 1996.
On September 19, 1997, the COA issued Memorandum No. 97-038 directing all unit
heads/auditors/team leaders of the national government agencies and governmentowned and controlled corporations which have effected payment of any form of
additional compensation or remuneration to cabinet secretaries, their deputies and

assistants, or their representatives, in violation of the rule on multiple positions, to (a)


immediately cause the disallowance of such additional compensation or remuneration
given to and received by the concerned officials, and (b) effect the refund of the same
from the time of the finality of the Supreme Court En Banc Decision in the consolidated
cases of Civil Liberties Union vs. Exexcutive Secretary and Anti-Graft League of the
Philippines, Inc. et al. vs. Secretary of Agrarian Reform, et al., promulgated on February
22, 1991. The COA Memorandum further stated that the said Supreme Court Decision,
which became final and executory on August 19, 1991, declared Executive Order No.
284 unconstitutional insofar as it allows Cabinet members, their deputies and assistants
to hold other offices, in addition to their primary offices, and to receive compensation
therefor.
Accordingly, on October 23, 1997, NHA Resident Auditor Salvador J. Vasquez issued
Notice of Disallowance No. 97-011-061 disallowing in audit the payment of
representation allowances and per diems of "Cabinet members who were the ex- officio
members of the NHA Board of Directors and/or their respective alternates who actually
received the payments." The total disallowed amount of P276,600 paid as representation
allowances and per diems to each of the petitioners, covering the period from August 19,
1991 to August 31, 1996.
ISSUE: Whether the COA did gravely abuse its discretion.
RULING:
The Court rule that in rendering its challenged Decision, the COA did not gravely abuse
its discretion.
The ex-officio position being actually and in legal contemplation part of the principal
office, it follows that the official concerned has no right to receive additional
compensation for his services in the said position. The reason is that these services are
already paid for and covered by the compensation attached to his principal office. It
should be obvious that if, say, the Secretary of Finance attends a meeting of the
Monetary Board as an ex-officio member thereof, he is actually and in legal
contemplation performing the primary function of his principal office in defining policy in
monetary banking matters, which come under the jurisdiction of his department. For
such attendance, therefore, he is not entitled to collect any extra compensation, whether
it be in the form of a per diem or an honorarium or an allowance, or some other such
euphemism. By whatever name it is designated, such additional compensation is
prohibited by the Constitution.
Since the Executive Department Secretaries, as ex-oficio members of the NHA Board,
are prohibited from receiving extra (additional) compensation, whether it be in the form
of a per diem or an honorarium or an allowance, or some other such euphemism," it
follows that petitioners who sit as their alternates cannot likewise be entitled to receive
such compensation. A contrary rule would give petitioners a better right than their
principals.

Funa v. Agra, G.R. No. 191644, February 19, 2013


FACTS:

These prohibitions under the Constitution are at the core of this special civil action for
certiorari and prohibition commenced on April 7, 2010 to assail the designation of
respondent Hon. Alberto C. Agra, then the Acting Secretary of Justice, as concurrently
the Acting Solicitor General.
The petitioner alleges that on March 1, 2010, President Gloria M. Macapagal-Arroyo
appointed Agra as the Acting Secretary of Justice following the resignation of Secretary
Agnes VST Devanadera in order to vie for a congressional seat in Quezon Province; that
on March 5, 2010, President Arroyo designated Agra as the Acting Solicitor General in a
concurrent capacity;1 that on April 7, 2010, the petitioner, in his capacity as a taxpayer, a
concerned citizen and a lawyer, commenced this suit to challenge the constitutionality of
Agras concurrent appointments or designations, claiming it to be prohibited under
Section 13, Article VII of the 1987 Constitution; that during the pendency of the suit,
President Benigno S. Aquino III appointed Atty. Jose Anselmo I. Cadiz as the Solicitor
General; and that Cadiz assumed as the Solicitor General and commenced his duties as
such on August 5, 2010.
ISSUE: Whether the designation of Agra as the Acting Secretary of Justice violate the
constitutional prohibition against dual or multiple offices for the Members of the Cabinet
and their deputies and assistants.
RULING:
In order to be clear, therefore, the Court holds that all official actions of Agra as a de
facto Acting Secretary of Justice, assuming that was his later designation, were
presumed valid, binding and effective as if he was the officer legally appointed and
qualified for the office. 54 This clarification is necessary in order to protect the sanctity of
the dealings by the public with persons whose ostensible authority emanates from the
State. 55 Agra's official actions covered by this claritlcation extend to but are not limited
to the promulgation of resolutions on petitions for review filed in the Department of
Justice, and the issuance of department orders, memoranda and circulars relative to the
prosecution of criminal cases.
Accordingly, the Court grants the petition for certiorari and prohibition; annuls and voids
the designation of Hon. Alberto C. Agra as the Acting Secretary of Justice in a concurrent
capacity with his position as the Acting Solicitor General for being unconstitutional and
violative of Section 13, Article VII of the 1987 Constitution; and declares that l-Ion.
Alberto C. Agra was a de facto officer during his tenure as Acting Secretary of Justice.

AYTONA VS CASTILLO

FACTS:
On December 29, 1961, Outgoing President Carlos Garcia appointed petitioner
Dominador Aytona as ad interim Governor of the Central Bank. Aytona took the
corresponding oath. On the same day, at noon, President-elect Diosdado Macapagal
assumed office; and on the next day, he issued administrative order no. 2 recalling,
withdrawing, and cancelling all ad interim appointments made by former President
Garcia. There were all-in all, 350 midnight or last minute appointments made by the

former President Garcia. On January 1, President Macapagal appointed Andres Castillo


as ad interim Governor of the Central Bank. Aytona instituted a case (quo warranto)
against Castillo, contending that he was validly appointed, thus the subsequent
appointment to Castillo by the new President, should be considered void.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the 350 midnight appointments of former President Garcia were valid.

RULING:
No. After the proclamation of the election of President Macapagal, previous President
Garcia administration was no more than a care-taker administration. He was duty bound
to prepare for the orderly transfer of authority the incoming President, and he should not
do acts which he ought to know, would embarrass or obstruct the policies of his
successor. It was not for him to use powers as incumbent President to continue the
political warfare that had ended or to avail himself of presidential prerogatives to serve
partisan purposes. The filling up vacancies in important positions, if few, and so spaced
to afford some assurance of deliberate action and careful consideration of the need for
the appointment and the appointee's qualifications may undoubtedly be permitted. But
the issuance of 350 appointments in one night and planned induction of almost all of
them a few hours before the inauguration of the new President may, with some reason,
be regarded by the latter as an abuse Presidential prerogatives, the steps taken being
apparently a mere partisan effort to fill all vacant positions irrespective of fitness and
other conditions, and thereby deprive the new administration of an opportunity to make
the corresponding appointments.

In re: Valenzuela

Facts:

On March 30, 1998, The President signed appointments of Hon. Mateo


Valenzuela and Hon. Placido Vallarta as Judges of RTC-Bago City and Cabanatuan City,
respectively. These appointments were deliberated, as it seemed to be expressly
prohibited by Art 7 Sec 15 of the Constitution:

Two months immediately before the next presidential elections and up to the end of his
term, a President or Acting President shall not make appointments, except temporary
appointments to executive positions when continued vacancies therein will prejudice
public service or endanger public safety.

A meeting was held on March 9, 1998 by the Judicial and Bar Council to discuss the
constitutionality of appointments to the Court of Appeals (CA) in light of the forthcoming
1998 Presidential elections. Senior Associate Justice Florenz Regalado, Consultant of
the Council and Member of the 1986 Constitutional Commission, was in the position that
election ban had no application to the CA based on the Commissions records. This
hypothesis was then submitted to the President for consideration together with the
Councils nominations for 8 vacancies in the CA.

The Chief Justice (CJ) received on April 6, 1998, an official communication


from the Executive Secretary transmitting the appointments of 8 Associate Justices of
CA duly signed on March 11, 1998 (day immediately before the commencement of the
ban on appointments), which implies that the Presidents Office did not agree with the
hypothesis.

The President, addressed to the JBC, requested on May 4, 1998 the


transmission of the list of final nominees for the vacancy in view of the 90 days
imposed by the Constitution (from Feb 13, date present vacancy occurred). In behalf of
the JBC, CJ sent the reply on May 6 that no session has been scheduled after the May
elections for the reason that they apparently did not share the same view (hypothesis)
proposed by the JBC shown by the uniformly dated March 11, 1998 appointments.
However, it appeared that the Justice Secretary and the other members of the Council
took action without waiting for the CJ reply. This prompted CJ to call for a meeting on
May 7. On this day, CJ received a letter from the President in reply of the May 6 letter
where the President expressed his view that Article 7 Sec 15 only applied to executive
appointments, the whole article being entitled EXECUTIVE DEPT. He posited that
appointments in the Judiciary have special and specific provisions, as follows:

Article 8 Sec 4

The Supreme Court shall be composed of a Chief Justice and fourteen Associate
Justices. It may sit en banc or in its discretion, in divisions of three, five, or seven
Members. Any vacancy shall be filled within ninety days from the occurrence thereof.

Article 8 Sec 9

The Members of the Supreme Court and judges in lower courts shall be appointed by
the President from the list of at least three nominees prepared by the Judicial and Bar
Council for every vacancy. Such appointments need no confirmation.

On May 12, CJ received from Malacaang, the appointments of the 2 Judges

of the RTC mentioned. Considering the pending proceedings and deliberations on this
matter, the Court resolved by refraining the appointees from taking their oaths.
However, Judge Valenzuela took oath in May 14, 1998 claiming he did so without
knowledge on the on-going deliberations. It should be noted that the originals of the
appointments for both judges had been sent to and received by the CJ on May 12 and is
still in the latters office and had not been transmitted yet. According to Judge
Valenzuela, he did so because of the May 7 Malacaang copy of his appointment.

In construing Article 7 and 8: when there are no presidential elections, Art. 8


shall apply where vacancies in SC shall be filled within 90 days otherwise prohibition in
Art. 7 must be considered where the President shall not make any appointments.
According to Fr. Bernas, the reason for prohibition is in order not to tie the hands of the
incoming Pres through midnight appointments.

Issue:

whether, during the period of the ban on appointments imposed by Section 15,
Article VII of the, Constitution, the President is nonetheless required to fill vacancies in
the judiciary, in view of Sections 4(1) and 9 of Article VIII; whether he can make
appointments to the judiciary during the period of the ban in the interest of public service.

Held:

The provisions of the Constitution material to the inquiry at bar read as follows:
3

Sec. 15, Article VII:

Two months immediately before the next presidential elections and up to the end of his
term, a President or Acting President shall not make appointments,except temporary
appointments to executive positions when continued vacancies therein will prejudice
public service or endanger public safety.

Sec. 4 (1), Article VIII :

The Supreme Court shall be composed of a Chief Justice and fourteen Associate
Justices. It may sit en banc or in its discretion, in divisions of three, five, or seven
Members. Any vacancy shall be filled within ninety days from the occurrence thereof.

Sec. 9, Article VIII :

The members of the Supreme Court and judges in lower courts shall be appointed by
the President from a list of at least three nominees prepared by the Judicial and Bar
Council for, every vacancy. Such appointments need no confirmation.

For the lower courts, the President shall issue the appointments within ninety days from
the submission of the list.

During the period stated in Section 15. Article VII of the Constitution (t)wo months
immediately before the next presidential elections and up to the end his term the
President is neither required to make appointments to the courts nor allowed to do so;
and that Sections 4(1) and 9 of Article VIII simply mean that the President is required to
fill vacancies in the courts within the time frames provided therein unless prohibited by
Section 15 of Article VII. It is not noteworthy that the prohibition on appointments comes
into effect only once every six years.

Section 15, Article VI is directed against two types of appointments: (1) those made for
buying votes and (2) those made for partisan considerations. The first refers to those
appointments made within the two months preceding a Presidential election and are
similar to those which are declared elections offenses in the Omnibus Election Code,
viz.:

Sec. 261. Prohibited Acts. The following shall be guilty of an election offense:

Vote-buying and vote-selling. (1) Any person who gives, offer or promises
money or anything of value gives or promises any office or employment,
franchise or grant, public or private, or makes or offers to make an expenditure,
directly or indirectly, or cause an expenditure to be made to any person,
association, corporation, entity, or community in order to induce anyone or the
public in general to vote for or against any candidate or withhold his vote in the
election, or to vote for or against any aspirant for thenomination or choice of a
candidate in a convention or similar selection process of a political parties.

140 SCRA 153 Political Law Congress Singularity of Office/Position

Cicero Punsalan and Estelito Mendoza were the vice governor and the governor of
Pampanga respectively. Both belong to KBL. On 17 May 1984, Mendoza tendered his
resignation as the governor but the same should only be effective at the Presidents
pleasure. On 30 June 1984, Mendoza was appointed as the Minister of Justice by the
president. On 14 July 1984, he was concurrently appointed as a member of the Batasan
Pambansa. On 16 July 1984, he filed a request to the Minister of Local Government
(MLG) to consider him as the governor-on-leave of Pampanga while the President was
considering his resignation. The request was subsequently approved by the MLG.
Mendoza advised Punsalan to take the governorship temporarily while his resignation is
being considered. Punsalan subsequently took his oath of office not as the acting
governor but as the governor and thereafter assumed office. About 6 months later
however, Mendoza resigned from his Batasan Membership and upon the result of the
KBLs caucus, he returned to Pampanga to assume his governorship. Punsalan
denounced Mendozas return claiming that he has already vacated his office by virtue of
his resignation which was impliedly approved by the President. Punsalan also pointed
out that when Mendoza was a member of the Batasan, he was barred from holding
governorship because there is an inhibition against Batasan Members from holding two
elective positions; this is a constitutional provision which cannot be compromised.
Further, Punsalan claimed that Mendoza had forfeited his right and title to the office
when he accepted his appointment as Minister of Justice and that of appointive
Batasan Member because of the incompatibility of the positions with the Governors
office.

ISSUE: Whether or not Mendoza can still return to his governorship.

HELD: Section 10, Article 8 of the 1973 Constitution provides:

A Member of the Batasang Pambansa shall not hold any other office or employment in
the Government, or any subdivision, agency or instrumentality thereof, including
government-owned or controlled corporations, during his tenure except that of Prime
Minister, Member of the Cabinet or Deputy Minister. Neither shall he, during the term for
which he was elected, be appointed to any civil office which may have been created or
emoluments thereof increased while he was a Member of the Batasang Pambansa.

Punsalan anchored his contention upon the above provision but he failed to ascertain
that the Constitution made a distinction. The Constitution itself divided the Batasan
membership into three categories: The elective provincial/city/district representative; the
sectoral representatives who are either elected or selected as may be provided by law;
and those chosen from Members of the Cabinet. It is the SCs opinion that the
prohibition in question does not extend to the third group of members, those chosen
from the Cabinet. The prohibitions, undoubtedly, deal with a Member who enters the

Batasan primarily as a legislator voted into office by the electorate of his constituency,
the elected provincial or city or district representative with a fixed term (6 years) of
office i.e an elected governor who, while in office, was elected as a member of the
Batasan cannot concurrently hold those two elective positions. Mendoza was elected as
the governor but was not elected as a member of the Batasan; he was appointed.
Punsalans contention that Mendozas resignation was impliedly approved by the
president is not tenable. The president in fact needed more time to consider the validity
of the resignation and upon the KBLs recommendation, he instead chose to approve
Mendozas return to his governorship.

Adaza v. Pacana
135 SCRA 431

FACTS:
Adaza is the governor of Misamis Oriental and Pacana is the vice-governor. Their
respective term of office expires on March 3, 1986. Both parties ran in the Batasang
Pambansa (BP) elections in 1984 and respondent lost to petitioner. On July 23, 1984,
Pacana took his oath of office as the governor. Petitioner has brought this petition to
exclude respondent therefrom, claiming to be the lawful occupant of the position.

ISSUE:
1) Whether or not a provincial governor who was elected as Mababatas Pambansa (MP)
can exercise the functions of both simultaneously; and 2) whether or not a vice-governor
who ran for the position of MP but lost, can continue serving as vice governor and
subsequently succeed to the office of governor if said office is vacated.

HELD:
Section 10, Article VIII of the Constitution is clear and unambiguous. A member of the BP
may not hold any other office in the government. A public office is a public trust. A holder
thereof is subject to regulations and conditions as the law may impose and he cannot
complain of any restrictions on his holding of more than one office. The contention that
Pacana, as a mere private citizen, runs afoul of BP Blg. 697 which provides that
governors, or members of sangguniang or barangay officials, upon filing a certificate of
candidacy be considered on forced leave of absence from office. When respondent
reassumed the position of vice-governor after the BP elections, he was acting within the
law. Thus, the instant petition is denied.

SECTION 16
ATTY. ELPIDIO SORIANO III VS. REUBEN LISTA, ET AL.
G.R. No. 153881. March 24, 2003

Facts: Eight officers of the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) were promoted by the
President to Vice Admiral, Rear Admiral, Commodore, Naval Captain, and they assumed
office without confirmation by the Commission on Appointments (COA). Petitioner, as a
taxpayer, filed a petition with the Supreme Court questioning the constitutionality of their
assumption of office, which requires confirmation of the COA.

Held: Petitioner has no locus standi. A party bringing a suit challenging the
constitutionality of an act or statute must show not only that the law or act is invalid, but
also that he has sustained, or is in immediate or imminent danger of sustaining some
direct injury as a result of its enforcement and not merely that he suffers thereby in some
indefinite way. The instant petition cannot even be classified as a taxpayers suit
because petitioner has no interest as such and this case does not involve the exercise
by Congress of its taxing power.
Pursuant to Executive Order of President Ramos, the PCG was transferred from the
Department of National Defense to the Office of the President, and later to the
Department of Transportation and Communication (DOTC).
Pobre vs. Mendieta [G.R. No. 106677, July 23, 1993]
Facts: These consolidated petitions under Rules 45 and 65 of the Rules of Court were
filed by Hermogenes Pobre to set aside the decision dated August 5, 1992 and writ of
prohibitory injunction dated August 19, 1992 issued by Judge (now Court of Appeals
Justice) Corona Ibay-Somera, in Civil Case No. 92-60272 entitled, "Mariano A.
Mendieta, petitioner v. Hermogenes P. Pobre, respondent," annulling the appointment
extended by President Corazon C. Aquino to the petitioner, Hermogenes Pobre, as
Commissioner/Chairman of the Professional Regulation Commission (hereafter PRC for
brevity) and enjoining him from discharging the duties and functions of that office.

The controversy began on January 2, 1992, when the term of office of Honorable Julio
B. Francia as PRC Commissioner/Chairman expired. At that time, Mariano A. Mendieta
was the senior Associate Commissioner and Hermogenes P. Pobre was the second
Associate Commissioner of the PRC.
Issue: Whether the president may appoint as Commissioner/Chairman of the PRC
another Associate Commissioner or any person other than the Senior Associate
Commissioner.
Held:
THE POWER OF APPOINTMENT CANNOT BE RESTRICTED TO THE POINT THAT
THE OFFICER LOSES THE DISCRETION. The Court finds unacceptable the view that

every vacancy in the Commission (except the position of "junior" Associate


Commissioner) shall be filled by "succession" or by "operation of law" for that would
deprive the President of his power to appoint a new PRC Commissioner and Associate
Commissioners "all to be appointed by the President" under P.D. No. 223. The absurd
result would be that the only occasion for the President to exercise his appointing power
would be when the position of junior (or second) Associate Commissioner becomes
vacant. We may not presume that when the President issued P.D. No. 223, he
deliberately clipped his prerogative to choose and appoint the head of the PRC and
limited himself to the selection and appointment of only the associate commissioner
occupying the lowest rung of the ladder in that agency. Since such an absurdity may not
be presumed, the Court should so construe the law as to avoid it.

"The duty devolves on the court to ascertain the true meaning where the language of a
statute is of doubtful meaning, or where an adherence to the strict letter would lead to
injustice, absurdity, or contradictory provisions, since an ambiguity calling for
construction may arise when the consequence of a literal interpretation of the language
is an unjust, absurd, unreasonable, or mischievous result, or one at variance with the
policy of the legislation as a whole; and the real meaning of the statute is to be
ascertained and declared, even though it seems to conflict with the words of the statute."
(82 CJS 589-590; Emphasis supplied.)

Flores v Drilon (223 SCRA 568)

FACTS:

The constitutionality of Sec. 13, par. (d), of R.A. 7227, otherwise known as the "Bases
Conversion and Development Act of 1992," under which respondent Mayor Richard J.
Gordon of Olongapo City was appointed Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the
Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority (SBMA), is challenged with prayer for prohibition,
preliminary injunction and temporary restraining order. Said provision provides the
President the power to appoint an administrator of the SBMA provided that in the first
year of its operation, the Olongapo mayor shall be appointed as chairman and chief of
executive of the Subic Authority. Petitioners maintain that such infringes to the
constitutional provision of Sec. 7, first par., Art. IX-B, of the Constitution, which states
that "no elective official shall be eligible for appointment or designation in any capacity to
any public officer or position during his tenure," The petitioners also contend that
Congress encroaches upon the discretionary power of the President to appoint.

ISSUE:

Whether or not said provision of the RA 7227 violates the constitutional prescription
against appointment or designation of elective officials to other government posts.

RULING:

The court held the Constitution seeks to prevent a public officer to hold multiple functions
since they are accorded with a public office that is a full time job to let them function
without the distraction of other governmental duties.

The Congress gives the President the appointing authority which it cannot limit by
providing the condition that in the first year of the operation the Mayor of Olongapo City
shall assume the Chairmanship. The court points out that the appointing authority the
congress gives to the President is no power at all as it curtails the right of the President
to exercise discretion of whom to appoint by limiting his choice.

Luego v. Civil Service Commission (G. R. No. L-69137)

FACTS: Petitioner was appointed Administrative Officer II, Office of the City Mayor, Cebu
City, by Mayor Florentino Solon on 18 February 1983. The appointment was described
as permanent but the Civil Service Commission approved it as temporary. On 22
March 1984, the Civil Service Commission found the private respondent better qualified
than the petitioner for the contested position and accordingly directed herein private
respondent in place of petitioners position. The private respondent was so appointed on
28 June 1984, by the new mayor; Mayor Ronald Duterte. The petitioner is now invoking
his earlier permanent appointment as well as to question the Civil Service Commissions
order and the private respondents title.
ISSUE: Whether or not the Civil Service Commission is authorized to disapprove a
permanent appointment on the ground that another person is better qualified than the
appointee and, on the basis of this finding, order his replacement by the latter?
HELD: The Supreme Court ruled in the negative. The Civil Service Commission is not
empowered to determine the kind or nature of the appointment extended by the
appointing officer, its authority being limited to approving or reviewing the appointment in
the light of the requirements of the Civil Service Law. When the appointee is qualified
and the other legal requirements are satisfied, the Commission has no choice but to
attest to the appointment in accordance with the Civil Service Laws. Hence, the Civil
Service Commissions resolution is set aside.
MATIBAG VS. BENIPAYOG.R. No. 149036, April 2, 2002FACTS:
On February 1999, petitioner Matibag was appointed Acting Director IV of the
ComelecsEID by then Comelec Chairperson Harriet Demetriou in a temporary capacity.
OnMarch 2001, respondent Benipayo was appointed Comelec Chairman together

withother commissioners in an ad interim appointment. While on such ad


interimappointment, respondent Benipayo in his capacity as Chairman issued a
Memorandumaddress transferring petitioner to the Law Department. Petitioner
requested Benipayo toreconsider her relief as Director IV of the EID and her
reassignment to the LawDepartment. She cited Civil Service Commission Memorandum
Circular No. 7 dated April 10, 2001, reminding heads of government offices that "transfer
and detail of employees are prohibited during the election period. Benipayo denied her
request for reconsideration on April 18, 2001, citing COMELEC Resolution No. 3300
datedNovember 6, 2000, exempting Comelec from the coverage of the said Memo
Circular.Petitioner appealed the denial of her request for reconsideration to the
COMELEC
enbanc.
She also filed an administrative and criminal complaint
16
with the LawDepartment
17
against Benipayo, alleging that her reassignment violated Section 261 (h)of the Omnibus
Election Code, COMELEC Resolution No. 3258, Civil ServiceMemorandum Circular No.
07, s. 001, and other pertinent administrative and civil servicelaws, rules and
regulations.During the pendency of her complaint before the Law Department, petitioner
filed theinstant petition questioning the appointment and the right to remain in office of
Benipayo,Borra and Tuason, as Chairman and Commissioners of the COMELEC,
respectively.Petitioner claims that the
ad interim
appointments of Benipayo, Borra and Tuason violatethe constitutional provisions on the
independence of the COMELEC.
ISSUES:
Whether or not the assumption of office by Benipayo, Borra and Tuason on the basis of
the
ad interim
appointments issued by the President amounts to a temporaryappointment prohibited by
Section 1 (2), Article IX-C of the Constitution.
RULING:
We find petitioners argument without merit. An
ad interim
appointment is a permanent appointment because it takes effectimmediately and can no
longer be withdrawn by the President once the appointee hasqualified into office. The
fact that it is subject to confirmation by the Commission on Appointments does not alter

its permanent character. The Constitution itself makesan


ad interim
appointment permanent in character by making it effective untildisapproved by the
Commission on Appointments or until the next adjournment of Congress.
472 SCRA 587 Political Law Commission on Appointment Ad Interim
Appointments vs Appointments in an Acting Capacity

Law on Public Officers Modes and Kinds of Appointment

While Congress was in session, due to vacancies in the cabinet, then president Gloria
Macapagal-Arroyo (GMA) appointed Arthur Yap et al as secretaries of their respective
departments. They were appointed in an acting capacity only. Senator Aquilino Pimentel
together with 7 other senators filed a complaint against the appointment of Yap et al.
Pimentel averred that GMA cannot make such appointment without the consent of the
Commission on Appointment; that, in accordance with Section 10, Chapter 2, Book IV of
Executive Order No. 292, only the undersecretary of the respective departments should
be designated in an acting capacity and not anyone else.

On the contrary, then Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita averred that the president is
empowered by Section 16, Article VII of the 1987 Constitution to issue appointments in
an acting capacity to department secretaries without the consent of the Commission on
Appointments even while Congress is in session. Further, EO 292 itself allows the
president to issue temporary designation to an officer in the civil service provided that
the temporary designation shall not exceed one year.

During the pendency of said case, Congress adjourned and GMA issued ad interim
appointments re-appointing those previously appointed in acting capacity.

ISSUE: Whether or not the appointments made by ex PGMA is valid.

HELD: Yes. The argument raised by Ermita is correct. Further, EO 292 itself provided the
safeguard so that such power will not be abused hence the provision that the temporary
designation shall not exceed one year. In this case, in less than a year after the initial
appointments made by GMA, and when the Congress was in recess, GMA issued the ad
interim appointments this also proves that the president was in good faith.

It must also be noted that cabinet secretaries are the alter egos of the president. The

choice is the presidents to make and the president normally appoints those whom
he/she can trust. She cannot be constrained to choose the undersecretary. She has the
option to choose. An alter ego, whether temporary or permanent, holds a position of
great trust and confidence. Congress, in the guise of prescribing qualifications to an
office, cannot impose on the President who her alter ego should be.

The office of a department secretary may become vacant while Congress is in session.
Since a department secretary is the alter ego of the President, the acting appointee to
the office must necessarily have the Presidents confidence. That person may or may not
be the permanent appointee, but practical reasons may make it expedient that the acting
appointee will also be the permanent appointee.

Anent the issue that GMA appointed outsiders, such is allowed. EO 292 also provides
that the president may temporarily designate an officer already in the government
service or any other competent person to perform the functions of an office in the
executive branch. Thus, the President may even appoint in an acting capacity a person
not yet in the government service, as long as the President deems that person
competent.

Calderon v Carale
Gr No. 91636 April 23, 1992

Section 16. The President shall nominate and, with the consent of the Commission on
Appointments, appoint the heads of the executive departments, ambassadors, other
public ministers and consuls, or officers of the armed forces from the rank of colonel or
naval captain, and other officers whose appointments are vested in him in this
Constitution. He shall also appoint all other officers of the Government whose
appointments are not otherwise provided for by law, and those whom he may be
authorized by law to appoint. The Congress may, by law, vest the appointment of other
officers lower in rank in the President alone, in the courts, or in the heads of
departments, agencies, commissions, or boards.cralaw
The President shall have the power to make appointments during the recess of the
Congress, whether voluntary or compulsory, but such appointments shall be effective
only until disapproved by the Commission on Appointments or until the next adjournment
of the Congress.

PADILLA, J:
FACTS:
(1) This petition for prohibition questions the constitutionality and legality of the
permanent appointments extended by the President of the Philippines to the

respondents Chairman and Members of the National Labor Relations Commission


(NLRC), without submitting the same to the Commission on Appointments for
confirmation pursuant to Art. 215 of the Labor Code as amended by said RA 6715,
stating:

The Chairman, the Division Presiding Commissioners and other Commissioners shall all
be appointed by the President, subject to confirmation by the Commission on
Appointments. Appointments to any vacancy shall come from the nominees of the sector
which nominated the predecessor. The Executive Labor Arbiters and
Labor Arbiters shall also be appointed by the President, upon recommendation of the
Secretary of Labor and
Employment, and shall be subject to the Civil Service Law, rules and regulations.

(2) Petitioner claims that the Mison and Bautista rulings are not decisive of the issue in
this case for in the case at bar, the President issued permanent appointments to the
respondents without submitting them to the CA for confirmation despite passage of a law
(RA 6715) which requires the confirmation by the Commission on Appointments of such
appointments.The Solicitor General, on the other hand, contends that RA 6715 which
amended the Labor Code transgresses Section 16, Article VII by expanding the
confirmation powers of the Commission on Appointments without constitutional basis.

ISSUE:
Whether or not Congress may, by law, require confirmation by the Commission on
Appointments of appointments extended by the president to governmentofficers
additional to those expressly mentioned in the first sentence of Sec. 16, Art. VII of the
Constitution whoseappointments require confirmation by the Commission on
Appointments.

HELD:
WHEREFORE, the petition is DISMISSED. Art. 215 of the Labor Code as amended by
RA 6715 insofar as it requires the confirmation of the Commission on Appointments of
appointments of the Chairman and Members of the National Labor Relations
Commission (NLRC) is hereby declared unconstitutional and of no legal force and effect.

RATIO:
(1) To the extent that RA 6715 requires confirmation by the Commission on
Appointments of the appointments of respondents Chairman and Members of the

National Labor Relations Commission, it is unconstitutional because:


(1) It amends by legislation, the first sentence of Sec. 16, Art. VII of the Constitution by
adding thereto appointments requiring confirmation by the Commission on
Appointments; and
(2) It amends by legislation the second sentence of Sec. 16, Art. VII of the Constitution,
by imposing the confirmation of the Commission on Appointments on appointments
which are otherwise entrusted only with the President.

(2) It is the duty of the Court to apply the 1987 Constitution in accordance with what it
says and not in accordance with how the legislature or the executive would want it
interpreted.

Tarrosa vs. Singson


Facts:

Gabriel C. Singson was appointed Governor of the Bangko Sentral by President Fidel V.
Ramos in 1993. Jesus Armando Tarrosa, as a "taxpayer", filed a petition for prohibition
questioning the appointment of Singson for not having been confirmed by the
Commission on Appointments as required by the provisions of Section 6 of R.A. No.
7653, which established the Bangko Sentral as the Central Monetary Authority of the
Philippines. The Secretary of Budget and Management was impleaded for disbursing
public funds in payment of the salaries and emoluments of respondent Singson. In their
comment, respondents claim that Congress exceeded its legislative powers in requiring
the confirmation by the CA of the appointment of the Governor of the Bangko Sentral.
They contend that an appointment to the said position is not among the appointments
which have to be confirmed by the CA, citing Section 16 of Article VI of the Constitution.

Issue:

Whether or not the Governor of the BSP is subject to COAs confirmation.

Held:

No. Congress exceeded its legislative powers in requiring the confirmation by the COA
of the appointment of the Governor of the BSP. An appointment to the said position is not

among the appointments which have to be confirmed by the COA under Section 16 of
Article 7 of the Constitution. Congress cannot by law expand the confirmation powers of
the Commission on Appointments and require confirmation of appointment of other
government officials not expressly mentioned in the first sentence of Section 16 of Article
7 of the Constitution. (Tarrosa vs. Singson, G.R. No. 111243, May 25, 1994)

Sarmiento v Mison

FACTS:
Mison was appointed as the Commissioner of the Bureau of Customs and Carague as
the Secretary of the Department of Budget, without the confirmation of the Commission
on Appointments. Sarmiento assailed the appointments as unconstitutional by reason of
its not having been confirmed by CoA.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the appointment is valid.

RULING:
Yes. The President acted within her constitutional authority and power in appointing
Salvador Mison, without submitting his nomination to the CoA for confirmation. He is
thus entitled to exercise the full authority and functions of the office and to receive all the
salaries and emoluments pertaining thereto.

Under Sec 16 Art. VII of the 1987 Constitution, there are 4 groups of officers whom the
President shall appoint:
1st, appointment of executive departments and bureaus heads, ambassadors, other
public ministers, consuls, officers of the armed forces from the rank of colonel or naval
captain, and other officers with the consent and confirmation of the CoA.
2nd, all other Government officers whose appointments are not otherwise provided by
law;
3rd those whom the President may be authorized by the law to appoint;
4th, low-ranking officers whose appointments the Congress may by law vest in the
President alone.
First group of officers is clearly appointed with the consent of the Commission on
Appointments. Appointments of such officers are initiated by nomination and, if the
nomination is confirmed by the Commission on Appointments, the President appoints.

2nd, 3rd and 4th group of officers are the present bone of contention. By following the
accepted rule in constitutional and statutory construction that an express enumeration of
subjects excludes others not enumerated, it would follow that only those appointments to
positions expressly stated in the first group require the consent (confirmation) of the
Commission on Appointments.

It is evident that the position of Commissioner of the Bureau of Customs (a bureau head)
is not one of those within the first group of appointments where the consent of the
Commission on Appointments is required. The 1987 Constitution deliberately excluded
the position of "heads of bureaus" from appointments that need the consent
(confirmation) of the Commission on Appointments
NOTE: the case assigned to me : ZaldyAmpatuan vs. Secretary Puno (G.R. No. 171396,
May 3, 2006) has different GR No. and date,
Please check this instead: Ampatuan vs Puno G.R. No. 190259, June 7, 2011

SECTION 17

Kilusang Bayan sa Paglilingkod ng mga Magtitinda ng Bagong Pamilihang Bayan


ng Muntinlupa, Inc. v. Dominguez
Facts:

Petitioners questopn the validity of the order of then Secretary of Agriculture


Hon. Carlos G. Dominguez which ordered: (1) the take-over by the Department of
Agriculture of the management of the petitioner Kilusang Bayan sa Paglilingkod Ng Mga
Magtitinda ng Bagong Pamilihang Bayan ng Muntilupa, Inc. (KBMBPM) pursuant to the
Departments regulatory and supervisory powers under Section 8 of P.D. No. 175, as
amended, and Section 4 of Executive Order No. 13, (2) the creation of a Management
Committee which shall assume the management of KBMBPM upon receipt of the order,
(3) the disbandment of the Board of Directors, and (4) the turn over of all assets,
properties and records of the KBMBPM the Management Committee.

The exordium of said Order unerringly indicates that its basis is the alleged
petition of the general membership of the KBMBPM requesting the Department for
assistance in the removal of the members of the Board of Directors who were not
elected by the general membership of the cooperative and that the ongoing financial
and management audit of the Department of Agriculture auditors shows that the
management of the KBMBPM is not operating that cooperative in accordance with P.D.
175, LOI 23, the Circulars issued by DA/BACOD and the provisions and by-laws of
KBMBPM. It is also professed therein that the Order was issued by the Department in

the exercise of its regulatory and supervisory powers under Section 8 of P.D. 175, as
amended, and Section 4 of Executive Order No. 113.

Issue:

whether or not the Order issued by the Secretary of Agriculture is illegal

Held:

Regulation 34 of Letter of Implementation No. 23 (implementing P.D. No. 175)


provides the procedure for the removal of directors or officers of cooperatives, thus:

An elected officer, director or committee member may be removed by a vote of majority


of the members entitled to vote at an annual or special general assembly. The person
involved shall have an opportunity to be heard.
BIRAOGO V. PHILIPPINE TRUTH COMMISSION 2010, G. R. No. 192935. December
7, 2010
TOPIC: POWERS OF THE EXECUTIVE

FACT:

E.O No. 1 establishing the Philippine Truth Commission (PTC) of 2010 was signed by
President Aquino. The said PTC is a mere branch formed under the Office of the
President tasked to investigate reports of graft and corruption committed by third-level
public officers and employees, their co-principals, accomplices and accessories during
the previous administration and submit their findings and recommendations to the
President, Congress and the Ombudsman. However, PTC is not a quasi-judicial body, it
cannot adjudicate, arbitrate, resolve, settle or render awards in disputes between
parties. Its job is to investigate, collect and asses evidences gathered and make
recommendations. It has subpoena powers but it has no power to cite people in
contempt or even arrest. It cannot determine for such facts if probable cause exist as to
warrant the filing of an information in our courts of law.

Petitioners contends the Constitutionality of the E.O. on the grounds that.

It violates separation of powers as it arrogates the power of Congress to create a public


office and appropriate funds for its operation;
The provisions of Book III, Chapter 10, Section 31 of the Administrative Code of 1987
cannot legitimize E.O. No. 1 because the delegated authority of the President to
structurally reorganize the Office of the President to achieve economy, simplicity, and
efficiency does not include the power to create an entirely new office was inexistent like
the Truth Commission;
The E.O illegally amended the Constitution when it made the Truth Commission and
vesting it the power duplicating and even exceeding those of the Office of the
Ombudsman and the DOJ.
It violates the equal protection clause

ISSUE:

WHETHER OR NOT the said E.O is unconstitutional.

RULING:

Yes, E.O No. 1 should be struck down as it is violative of the equal protection clause.
The Chief Executives power to create the Ad hoc Investigating Committee cannot be
doubted. Having been constitutionally granted full control of the Executive Department,
to which respondents belong, the President has the obligation to ensure that all
executive officials and employees faithfully comply with the law. With AO 298 as
mandate, the legality of the investigation is sustained. Such validity is not affected by the
fact that the investigating team and the PCAGC had the same composition, or that the
former used the offices and facilities of the latter in conducting the inquiry.

Constitutional Law 1Sec. 17 The President shall have control of all the executive
departments, bureaus, and offices. He shall ensure that the laws be faithfully
executed.Isidro C. Ang- Angco, petitioner, vs. Hon. Natalio P. Castillo, Et. Al.,
respondentsNo. L-17169. November 30,1963 (9 SCRA 619)
Facts :
February 12, 1960- Collector of Customs Isidro Ang-Angco was resigned
effective on the date of notice, with prejudice to reinstatement in the Bureau of
Customs,being found guilty of conduct prejudicial to the best interest of the service
byExecutive Secretary Natalio P. Castillo, by authority of the President.Upon learning of
the decision through the newpapers, Ang-Angco requested for reconsideration : calling

attention to the fact that the action taken by SecretaryCastillo in removing him from office
had the effect of depriving him of his statutory right to have his case originally decided by
the Commissioner of Civil Service, as well as his right to appeal to the Civil service
Board of Appeals, whose decision under Republic Act No. 2260 is final, besides the fact
that such decisions is in violation of the guaranty vouchsafed by the Constitution to
officers or employees in the civil service against removal or suspension except for cause
in the manner provided by law.Secretary Castillo, on authority of President Garcia
denied the appeal; he asserted that the President by virtue of his power of control over
all executive departments, bureaus and offices, can take direct action and dispose of the
administrative case in question inasmuch as the provisions of law that would seem to
vest final authority in subordinate officers of the executive branch of the government
over administrative matters falling under their jurisdiction cannot divestthe President of
his power of control nor diminish the same.After exhausting all administrative remedies
available for Ang-Angco to secure his reinstatement to the office from which he was
removed without valid cause orin violation of his right to due process of law, he filed
before the Supreme Court, a petition for certiorari, prohibition and mandamus with a
petition for theissuance of a preliminary mandatory injunction.Citing that Secretary
Castillo violated : Sec. 16 (i) of the Civil Service Act of 1959 which vests in the
Commissioner of Civil Service the original and exclusive jurisdiction to decide
administrative cases against officers and employees inthe classified service; deprived
him of his right to appeal under Section 18 (b) of the same Act of the Civil Service Board
of Appeals whose decision on the matter is final, and removed him from the service
without due process in violationof Section 32 of the same Act, and of Section 4, Article
XII of the Constitution, which provides No officer or employee in the civil service shall
be removed except for cause as provided for by law. Petitioner is an officer who belongs
to the classified civil service and is not a presidential appointee, but one appointed by
the Secretary of Finance under the Revised Administrative Code, he cannotbe removed
from the service in utter disregard of the provisions of the Civil Service Act of
1959.Respondent contended that whether the officers or employees concerned are
presidential appointees or belong to the classified civil service, if they are officers and
employees in the executive department, they all come under the control ofthe President
and therefore, his power of removal may be exercised over them directly without
distinction. They held, as in the case of Negado v. Castro, 55 OG., 10534, the President
may modify or set aside a decision of the Civil Service Board of Appeals at the instance
of the office concerned, or the employee, or mayeven do so motu proprio, there would
be in the final analysis no logical difference between removing petitioner by direct action
of the President and separating him from the service by ultimate action by the President
should an appeal be taken from the decision of the Civil Service Board of Appeals to
him, or if in his discretion he may motu proprio consider it necessary to review the
Boards decision.
Issue :
Whether or not the President has the power to take direct action on the case ofpetitioner
even if he belongs to the classified services, in spite of provisionsnow in force in the Civil
Service Act of 1959.
Held :
No, Section 16 9i) of the Civil Service Act of 1959, it is the Commissioner of the
Civil Service who has the original and exclusive jurisdiction to decide administrative
cases of all officers an employees in the classified service. The only limitation to this

power is that the decision of the Commissioner may be appealedto the Civil Service
Board of Appeals, in which case said Board shall have decided within a period of 90
days, whose decision in such case shall be final (Section 18, Republic Act 2260).The
only law that can be cited for the President to be empowered to remove officers and
employees in the classified civil service is Section 64 (b) of the revised Administrative
Code; but the phrase conformably to law is significant. It shows that the president does
not have blanket authority to remove any officer or employee of the government but that
his power is still subject to the law that maybe passed by the legislative body particularly
with regard to the procedure, cause and finality of the removal of the persons who may
be subject to the disciplinary action. The power of the President merely applies to the
exercise of control over the acts of the subordinate and not over the actor or agent
himself of the act. It means that the President may set aside the judgment or action
taken by a subordinate in the performance of his duties.It is still the Department Head,
pursuant to Section 79 (C ) who is given the direct control of all bureaus and offices
under his department by virtue of whichhe may repeal or modify decisions of the chiefs
of said bureaus or offices, and under section 74 of the same Code, the Presidents
control over the executive department refers to matters of general policy.The Civil
Service system has the beneficient purpose of giving stability to thetenure of office of
those who belong to the classified service.In conclusion, the direct action taken by
Secretary Castillo with authority of the President on the administrative case of the
petitioner, without submitting the same to the Commissioner of Civil Service is contrary
to law and should be setaside. The petitioner was reinstated to service, without prejudice
to submitting his case to the Commissioner of Civil Service to be dealt according to
law.Note :Section 32 of the Civil Service law of 1959 echoes the constitutionally
protected security of tenure: no officer or employee in the civil service shall be removed
or suspended except for cause as provided by law. Shall be entitled to a formal
investigation if he so desires. A civil service employee should be heard beforehe is
condemned. Jurisprudence has clung to this rule with such unrelentless grasp that by
now it would appear trite to make citation thereof (Perez v. Subido,et al., L 26791, June
22, 1968, 28 CSRA 1074).
Drilon vs Lim
Facts: The Secretary of Justice (on appeal to him of four oil companies and a taxpayer)
declared Ordinance No. 7794 (Manila Revenue Code) null and void for non-compliance
with the procedure in the enactment of tax ordinances and for containing certain
provisions contrary to law and public policy. The RTC revoked the Secretarys resolution
and sustained the ordinance. It declared Sec 187 of the LGC as unconstitutional
because it vests on the Secretary the power of control over LGUs in violation of the
policy of local autonomy mandated in the Constitution. The Secretary argues that the
annulled Section 187 is constitutional and that the procedural requirements for the
enactment of tax ordinances as specified in the Local Government Code had indeed not
been observed. (Petition originally dismissed by the Court due to failure to submit
certified true copy of the decision, but reinstated it anyway.)Issue: WON the lower court
has jurisdiction to consider the constitutionality of Sec 187 of the LGCHeld:Yes. BP 129
vests in the regional trial courts jurisdiction over all civil cases in which the subject ofthe
litigation is incapable of pecuniary estimation. Moreover, Article X, Section 5(2), of the
Constitution vests in the Supreme Court appellate jurisdiction over final judgments and
orders of lower courts in all cases in which the constitutionality or validity of any treaty,
international or executive agreement, law, presidential decree, proclamation, order,
instruction, ordinance, or regulation is in question.In the exercise of this jurisdiction,

lower courts are advised to act with the utmost circumspection, bearing in mind the
consequences of a declaration of unconstitutionality upon the stability of laws, no
lessthan on the doctrine of separation of powers. It is also emphasized that every court,
including this Court, is charged with the duty of a purposeful hesitation before declaring
a law unconstitutional, on the theory that the measure was first carefully studied by the
executive and the legislative departments and determined by them to be in accordance
with the fundamental law before it was finally approved. To doubtis to sustain. The
presumption of constitutionality can be overcome only by the clearest showing that there
was indeed an infraction of the Constitution

VILLENA VS SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR


G.R. No. L-46570 April 21 1939

FACTS:
Division of Investigation of the DOJ, upon the request of the Secretary of the Interior,
conducted an inquiry into the conduct of the Villena, mayor of Makati, Rizal, as a result
of which the latter was found to have committed bribery, extortion, malicious abuse of
authority ad unauthorized practice of the law profession. The respondent recommended
the suspension of Villena to the President of the Philippines, in which it was verbally
granted. The Secretary then suspended Villena from office. Villena filed a petition for
preliminary injunction against the Sec. to restrain him and his agents from proceeding
with the investigation.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the Secretary of the Interior has jurisdiction or authority to suspend and
order investigation over Villena.

RULING:
The Secretary of Interior has the power to order investigation and to suspend Mayor
Villena. As to the power to order investigation, it was provided in Section 79 (C) of RAC
that Department of Interior was given the authority to supervise bureaus and offices
under its jurisdiction. This was interpreted in relation to Section 86 of the same Code
which granted the said Department of executive supervision over administration of
provinces, municipalities and other political subdivisions. This supervision covers the
power to order investigation because supervision implies authority to inquire into facts
and conditions in order to render power real and effective.However, unlike this power to
order investigation, the power to suspend a mayor was not provided in any law. There
was no express grant of authority to the Secretary of Interior to suspend a Mayor.
Nevertheless, Section 2188 of the Administrative Code granted the provincial governor
the power of suspension. Yet this did not mean that the grant precluded the Secretary of
Interior.

The Doctrine of Qualified Political Agency which provides that the acts of the
department secretaries, performed and promulgated in the regular course of business,
are, unless disapproved or reprobated by the President, presumptively the acts of the
President. The power to suspend may be exercised by the President. It follows that the
heads of the Department under her may also exercise the same, unless the law required
the President to act personally or that situation demanded him so, because the heads of
the departments are assistants and agents of the President.

Lacson-Magallanes Co., Inc. vs. Jose Pao, et. al.

G.R. No. L-27811 ::

27 November 1967

Sanchez, J.

FACTS:
In 1932, Jose Magallanes was a permittee and actual occupant of a 1,103-hectare
pasture land situated in Davao. On 1953, Magallanes ceded his rights and interests to a
portion of the above public land to the plaintiff. On 1954, the same was officially
released from the forest zone as pasture land and declared agricultural land. On 1955,
Jose Pao and nineteen other claimants applied for the purchase of 90 hectares of the
released area. Plaintiff in turn filed its own sales application covering the entire released
area. The Director of Lands, following an investigation of the conflict, rendered a
decision on 1956 giving due course to the application of plaintiff corporation. When the
case was elevated to the President of the Philippines, Executive Secretary Juan Pajo, by
authority of the president, declared that it would be for public interest that appellants,
who are mostly landless farmers, be allocated that portion on which the petitioner have
made improvements.

ISSUES:

May the Executive Secretary, acting by authority of the President, reverse a decision of
the Director of Lands that had been affirmed by the Executive Secretary of Agriculture
and Natural Resources?

HELD:

YES. The Presidents duty to execute the law and control of all executive departments

are of constitutional origin. Naturally, he controls and directs their acts. Implicit then is
his authority to go over, confirm, modify or reverse the action taken by his department
secretaries. It may also be stated that the right to appeal to the President reposes upon
the Presidents power of control over the executive departments. He may delegate to
his Executive Secretary acts which the Constitution does not command that he perform
in person. As the Executive Secretary acts by authority of the President, his decision is
that of the Presidents. Such decision is to be given full faith and credit by our courts,
unless disapproved or reprobated by the Chief Executive.

Gascon v Arroyo
GR No. 78389, October 16, 1989

FACTS:
The Lopez family owned 2 television stations. When martial law was declared, the
stations were seized. After the Marcos
regime was toppled, the Presidential Committee on Good Governance (PCGG)
sequestered said stations. Mr Lopez requested the return of the stations. An agreement
to arbitrate was entered into regarding this matter. Thereupon, petitioners as taxpayers
sought to set aside the agreement to arbitrate.

ISSUE:
Whether petitioners as taxpayers have legal standing to sue

RULING:
No. Petitioners have not shown that they have a legal interest in the TV stations and that
they would be adversely affected if and when the station is returned to the Lopez family.
The present case is not an action to question the constitutionality or validity of a law.

97 Phil. 143 Political Law Control Power Revised Administrative Code


Supervision

Jose Mondano was the mayor of Mainit, Surigao. A complaint was filed against him for
rape and concubinage. The information reached the Assistant Executive Secretary who
ordered the governor to investigate the matter. Consequently, Governor Fernando
Silvosa then summoned Mondano and the latter appeared before him. Thereafter
Silvosa suspended Mondano. Mondano filed a petition for prohibition enjoining the
governor from further proceeding.

In his defense, Silvosa invoked the Revised Administrative Code which provided that he,
as part of the executive and by virtue o the order given by the Assistant Executive
Secretary, is with direct control, direction, and supervision over all bureaus and offices
under his jurisdiction . . . and to that end may order the investigation of any act or
conduct of any person in the service of any bureau or office under his Department and in
connection therewith may appoint a committee or designate an official or person who
shall conduct such investigations.

ISSUE: Whether or not the Governor, as agent of the Executive, can exercise the power
of control over a mayor.

HELD: No. (Note that Silvosa was asking as the agent of the Assistant Executive
Secretary who ordered him to investigate Mondano).

The Constitution provides:

The President shall have control of all the executive departments, bureaus, or offices,
exercise general supervision over all local governments as may be provided by law, and
take care that the laws be faithfully executed.

Under this constitutional provision the President has been invested with the power of
control of all the executive departments, bureaus, or offices, but not of all local
governments over which he has been granted only the power of general supervision as
may be provided by law. The Department head as agent of the President has direct
control and supervision over all bureaus and offices under his jurisdiction as provided for
in section 79(c) of the Revised Administrative Code, but he does not have the same
control of local governments as that exercised by him over bureaus and offices under his
jurisdiction.

Likewise, his authority to order the investigation of any act or conduct of any person in
the service of any bureau or office under his department is confined to bureaus or offices
under his jurisdiction and does not extend to local governments over which, as already
stated, the President exercises only general supervision as may be provided by law.

If the provisions of section 79 (c) of the Revised Administrative Code are to be construed
as conferring upon the corresponding department head direct control, direction, and
supervision over all local governments and that for that reason he may order the
investigation of an official of a local government for malfeasance in office, such

interpretation would be contrary to the provisions of par 1, sec 10, Article 7, of the 1935
Constitution.

In administrative law supervision means overseeing or the power or authority of an


officer to see that subordinate officers perform their duties. If the latter fail or neglect to
fulfill them the former may take such action or step as prescribed by law to make them
perform their duties.

Control, on the other hand, means the power of an officer to alter or modify or nullify or
set aside what a subordinate officer had done in the performance of his duties and to
substitute the judgment of the former for that of the latter.

The Congress has expressly and specifically lodged the provincial supervision over
municipal officials in the provincial governor who is authorized to receive and
investigate complaints made under oath against municipal officers for neglect of duty,
oppression, corruption or other form of maladministration of office, and conviction by
final judgment of any crime involving moral turpitude. And if the charges are serious, he
shall submit written charges touching the matter to the provincial board, furnishing a
copy of such charges to the accused either personally or by registered mail, and he may
in such case suspend the officer (not being the municipal treasurer) pending action by
the board, if in his opinion the charge be one affecting the official integrity of the officer in
question. Sec 86 of the Revised Administrative Code adds nothing to the power of
supervision to be exercised by the Department Head over the administration of
municipalities.

In this case, the governor can only investigate Mondano for crimes relating to Mondanos
office. If the issue is not related to his office but involves a rime of moral turpitude (such
as rape or concubinage as in this case), there must first be a final conviction before a
suspension may be issued. The point is, the governor must suspend a mayor not
because hes acting as an agent of the Executive but because of the power granted him
by the Revised Administrative Code.
Philip Sigfrid Fortun v. Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, et al., G.R. No. 190293, March 20,
2012 (and other consolidated cases)

SECTION 18
DAVIS VS MACAPAGAL - ARROYO
G.R. No. 171396, May 3 2006 [Legislative Department - Power to Declare War and
Delegate Emergency Power]

FACTS:
On February 24, 2006, President Arroyo issued PP No. 1017 declaring a state of
emergency, thus:

NOW, THEREFORE, I, Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, President of the Republic of the


Philippines and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, [calling-out
power] by virtue of the powers vested upon me by Section 18, Article 7 of the Philippine
Constitution which states that: The President. . . whenever it becomes necessary, . .
. may call out (the) armed forces to prevent or suppress. . .rebellion. . ., and in my
capacity as their Commander-in-Chief, do hereby command the Armed Forces of the
Philippines, to maintain law and order throughout the Philippines, prevent or suppress all
forms of lawless violence as well as any act of insurrection or rebellion ["take care"
power] and to enforce obedience to all the laws and to all decrees, orders and
regulations promulgated by me personally or upon my direction; and [power to take over]
as provided in Section 17, Article 12 of the Constitution do hereby declare a State of
National Emergency.

On the same day, PGMA issued G.O. No. 5 implementing PP1017, directing the
members of the AFP and PNP "to immediately carry out the necessary and appropriate
actions and measures to suppress and prevent acts of terrorism and lawless violence."

David, et al. assailed PP 1017 on the grounds that (1) it encroaches on the emergency
powers of Congress; (2) it is a subterfuge to avoid the constitutional requirements for the
imposition of martial law; and (3) it violates the constitutional guarantees of freedom of
the press, of speech and of assembly. They alleged direct injury resulting from illegal
arrest and unlawful search committed by police operatives pursuant to PP 1017.

During the hearing, the Solicitor General argued that the issuance of PP 1017 and GO 5
have factual basis, and contended that the intent of the Constitution is to give full
discretionary powers to the President in determining the necessity of calling out the
armed forces. The petitioners did not contend the facts stated b the Solicitor General.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the PP 1017 and G.O. No. 5 is constitutional.

RULING:

The operative portion of PP 1017 may be divided into three important provisions, thus:

First provision: by virtue of the power vested upon me by Section 18, Artilce VII do
hereby command the Armed Forces of the Philippines, to maintain law and order
throughout the Philippines, prevent or suppress all forms of lawless violence as well any
act of insurrection or rebellion
Second provision: and to enforce obedience to all the laws and to all decrees, orders
and regulations promulgated by me personally or upon my direction;
Third provision: as provided in Section 17, Article XII of the Constitution do hereby
declare a State of National Emergency.

PP 1017 is partially constitutional insofar as provided by the first provision of the decree.
First Provision: Calling Out Power.
The only criterion for the exercise of the calling-out power is that whenever it becomes
necessary, the President may call the armed forces to prevent or suppress lawless
violence, invasion or rebellion. (Integrated Bar of the Philippines v. Zamora)
President Arroyos declaration of a state of rebellion was merely an act declaring a
status or condition of public moment or interest, a declaration allowed under Section 4,
Chap 2, Bk II of the Revised Administration Code. Such declaration, in the words of
Sanlakas, is harmless, without legal significance, and deemed not written. In these
cases, PP 1017 is more than that. In declaring a state of national emergency, President
Arroyo did not only rely on Section 18, Article VII of the Constitution, a provision calling
on the AFP to prevent or suppress lawless violence, invasion or rebellion. She also
relied on Section 17, Article XII, a provision on the States extraordinary power to take
over privately-owned public utility and business affected with public interest. Indeed, PP
1017 calls for the exercise of an awesome power. Obviously, such Proclamation cannot
be deemed harmless.
To clarify, PP 1017 is not a declaration of Martial Law. It is merely an exercise of
President Arroyos calling-out power for the armed forces to assist her in preventing or
suppressing lawless violence.

Second Provision: The "Take Care" Power.


The second provision pertains to the power of the President to ensure that the laws be
faithfully executed. This is based on Section 17, Article VII which reads:
SEC. 17. The President shall have control of all the executive departments, bureaus,
and offices. He shall ensure that the laws be faithfully executed.
This Court rules that the assailed PP 1017 is unconstitutional insofar as it grants
President Arroyo the authority to promulgate decrees. Legislative power is peculiarly
within the province of the Legislature. Section 1, Article VI categorically states that [t]he
legislative power shall be vested in the Congress of the Philippines which shall consist of
a Senate and a House of Representatives. To be sure, neither Martial Law nor a state

of rebellion nor a state of emergency can justify President Arroyos exercise of legislative
power by issuing decrees.

Third Provision: The Power to Take Over


Distinction must be drawn between the Presidents authority to declare a state of
national emergency and to exercise emergency powers. To the first, Section 18, Article
VII grants the President such power, hence, no legitimate constitutional objection can be
raised. But to the second, manifold constitutional issues arise.
Generally, Congress is the repository of emergency powers. This is evident in the tenor
of Section 23 (2), Article VI authorizing it to delegate such powers to the President.
Certainly, a body cannot delegate a power not reposed upon it. However, knowing that
during grave emergencies, it may not be possible or practicable for Congress to meet
and exercise its powers, the Framers of our Constitution deemed it wise to allow
Congress to grant emergency powers to the President, subject to certain conditions,
thus:
(1) There must be a war or other emergency.
(2) The delegation must be for a limited period only.
(3) The delegation must be subject to such restrictions as the Congress may prescribe.
(4) The emergency powers must be exercised to carry out a national policy declared by
Congress.
Section 17, Article XII must be understood as an aspect of the emergency powers
clause. The taking over of private business affected with public interest is just another
facet of the emergency powers generally reposed upon Congress. Thus, when Section
17 states that the the State may, during the emergency and under reasonable terms
prescribed by it, temporarily take over or direct the operation of any privately owned
public utility or business affected with public interest, it refers to Congress, not the
President. Now, whether or not the President may exercise such power is dependent on
whether Congress may delegate it to him pursuant to a law prescribing the reasonable
terms thereof.
Following our interpretation of Section 17, Article XII, invoked by President Arroyo in
issuing PP 1017, this Court rules that such Proclamation does not authorize her during
the emergency to temporarily take over or direct the operation of any privately owned
public utility or business affected with public interest without authority from Congress.
Let it be emphasized that while the President alone can declare a state of national
emergency, however, without legislation, he has no power to take over privately-owned
public utility or business affected with public interest. Nor can he determine when such
exceptional circumstances have ceased. Likewise, without legislation, the President has
no power to point out the types of businesses affected with public interest that should be
taken over. In short, the President has no absolute authority to exercise all the powers
of the State under Section 17, Article VII in the absence of an emergency powers act
passed by Congress.

As of G.O. No. 5, it is constitutional since it provides a standard by which the AFP and
the PNP should implement PP 1017, i.e. whatever is necessary and appropriate actions
and measures to suppress and prevent acts of lawless violence. Considering that acts
of terrorism have not yet been defined and made punishable by the Legislature, such
portion of G.O. No. 5 is declared unconstitutional.
DECISION
ZALDY

I.

THE FACTS

On November 23, 2009, heavily armed men believed led by the ruling Ampatuan family
of Maguindanao gunned down and buried under shoveled dirt 57 innocent civilians. In
response to this carnage, President Arroyo issued on November 24, 2009 PP 1946
declaring a state of emergency in Maguindanao, Sultan Kudarat, and Cotabato City.

On December 4, 2009, President Arroyo issued PP 1959 declaring martial law and
suspending the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus in Maguindanao except for
identified areas of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front. On December 6, 2009, President
Arroyo submitted her report to Congress. On December 9, 2009, Congress convened in
joint session to review the validity of the Presidents action. But two days later, or on
December 12, 2009, before Congress could act, the President issued PP 1963, lifting
martial law and restoring the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus.

II.

THE ISSUES

Did the issuance of PP 1963, lifting martial law and restoring the [privilege of the] writ in
Maguindanao, render the issues moot and academic?

III. THE RULING

[The Court DISMISSED the consolidated petitions on the ground that they have become
MOOT and ACADEMIC.]

YES, the issuance of PP 1963, lifting martial law and restoring the [privilege of the] writ
in Maguindanao, rendered the issues moot and academic

Prudence and respect for the co-equal departments of the government dictate that the
Court should be cautious in entertaining actions that assail the constitutionality of the
acts of the Executive or the Legislative department. The issue of constitutionality, said
the Court in Biraogo v. Philippine Truth Commission of 2010, must be the very issue of
the case, that the resolution of such issue is unavoidable.

The issue of the constitutionality of Proclamation 1959 is not unavoidable for two
reasons:

One. President Arroyo withdrew her proclamation of martial law and suspension of the
privilege of the writ of habeas corpus before the joint houses of Congress could fulfill
their automatic duty to review and validate or invalidate the same. xxx.

xxx

xxx

xxx

[U]nder the 1987 Constitution the President and the Congress act in tandem in
exercising the power to proclaim martial law or suspend the privilege of the writ of
habeas corpus. They exercise the power, not only sequentially, but in a sense jointly
since, after the President has initiated the proclamation or the suspension, only the
Congress can maintain the same based on its own evaluation of the situation on the
ground, a power that the President does not have.

Consequently, although the Constitution reserves to the Supreme Court the power to
review the sufficiency of the factual basis of the proclamation or suspension in a proper
suit, it is implicit that the Court must allow Congress to exercise its own review powers,
which is automatic rather than initiated. Only when Congress defaults in its express duty
to defend the Constitution through such review should the Supreme Court step in as its
final rampart. The constitutional validity of the Presidents proclamation of martial law or
suspension of the writ of habeas corpus is first a political question in the hands of
Congress before it becomes a justiciable one in the hands of the Court.

xxx

xxx

xxx

Here, President Arroyo withdrew Proclamation 1959 before the joint houses of
Congress, which had in fact convened, could act on the same. Consequently, the

petitions in these cases have become moot and the Court has nothing to review. The
lifting of martial law and restoration of the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus in
Maguindanao was a supervening event that obliterated any justiciable controversy.

Two. Since President Arroyo withdrew her proclamation of martial law and suspension
of the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus in just eight days, they have not been
meaningfully implemented. The military did not take over the operation and control of
local government units in Maguindanao. The President did not issue any law or decree
affecting Maguindanao that should ordinarily be enacted by Congress. No indiscriminate
mass arrest had been reported. Those who were arrested during the period were either
released or promptly charged in court. Indeed, no petition for habeas corpus had been
filed with the Court respecting arrests made in those eight days. The point is that the
President intended by her action to address an uprising in a relatively small and sparsely
populated province. In her judgment, the rebellion was localized and swiftly
disintegrated in the face of a determined and amply armed government presence.

xxx

xxx

xxx

xxx. In a real sense, the proclamation and the suspension never took off. The Congress
itself adjourned without touching the matter, it having become moot and academic.

IBP vs Zamora (G.R. No. 171396, August 15, 2000)

FACTS:
Invoking his powers as Commander-in-Chief under Sec 18, Art. VII of the Constitution,
President Estrada, in verbal directive, directed the AFP Chief of Staff and PNP Chief to
coordinate with each other for the proper deployment and campaign for a temporary
period only. The IBP questioned the validity of the deployment and utilization of the
Marines to assist the PNP in law enforcement.

ISSUES:

1. The President's factual determination of the necessity of calling the armed forces is
subject to judicial review.
2. The calling of AFP to assist the PNP in joint visibility patrols violate the constitutional
provisions on civilian supremacy over the military.

RULING:

1. The power of judicial review is set forth in Section 1, Article VIII of the Constitution, to
wit:
Section 1. The judicial power shall be vested in one Supreme Court and in such lower
courts as may be established by law.
Judicial power includes the duty of the courts of justice to settle actual controversies
involving rights which are legally demandable and enforceable, and to determine
whether or not there has been grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of
jurisdiction on the part of any branch or instrumentality of the Government.
When questions of constitutional significance are raised, the Court can exercise its
power of judicial review only if the following requisites are complied with, namely: (1) the
existence of an actual and appropriate case; (2) a personal and substantial interest of
the party raising the constitutional question; (3) the exercise of judicial review is pleaded
at the earliest opportunity; and (4) the constitutional question is the lis mota of the case.

2. The deployment of the Marines does not constitute a breach of the civilian supremacy
clause. The calling of the Marines in this case constitutes permissible use of military
assets for civilian law enforcement. The participation of the Marines in the conduct of
joint visibility patrols is appropriately circumscribed. It is their responsibility to direct and
manage the deployment of the Marines. It is, likewise, their duty to provide the
necessary equipment to the Marines and render logistical support to these soldiers. In
view of the foregoing, it cannot be properly argued that military authority is supreme over
civilian authority. Moreover, the deployment of the Marines to assist the PNP does not
unmake the civilian character of the police force. Neither does it amount to an insidious
incursion of the military in the task of law enforcement in violation of Section 5(4), Article
XVI of the Constitution.

SANLAKAS VS. REYES


[G.R. No. 159085. February 3, 2004]
Facts: In the wee hours of 27 July 203 some 300 junior officers and enlisted men of AFP,
heavily armed stormed the Oakwood Premiere in Makati demanding for the resignation
of the President, Secretary of Defence and Chief of the PNP. By virtue of Proclamation
427 dated 27 July 2003, state of rebellion was declared and General Order No 4 of the
same date, the Armed Forces of the Philippines and the Philippine National Police were
directed to suppress and quell the rebellion pursuant to Section 18 Article VII of the
Constitution. The soldiers returned to barracks on the same night and the declaration of
state of rebellion was lifted on 1 August 2003 by virtue of Proclamation No 435. In the
interim, several petitions were filed before the Court challenging the validity of
Proclamation No. 427 and General Order No. 4. Sanlakas contend that Section 18,
Article VII of the Constitution does not require the declaration of a state of rebellion to
call out the armed forces. Because of the cessation of the Oakwood occupation, there

exists no sufficient factual basis for the proclamation by the President of a state of
rebellion for an indefinite period. Solicitor General argues that the petitions have been
rendered moot by the lifting of the declaration.
Issue: Whether or not declaring state of rebellion is needed to declare General order No
4?
Decision: Petitions dismissed. The state of rebellion has ceased to exist and has
rendered the case moot.
Nevertheless, courts will decide a question, otherwise moot, if it is capable of repetition
yet evading review. The case at bar is one such case. The mere declaration of a state of
rebellion cannot diminish or violate constitutionally protected rights. Indeed, if a state of
martial law does not suspend the operation of the Constitution or automatically suspend
the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus, then it is with more reason that a simple
declaration of a state of rebellion could not bring about these conditions. The presidential
issuances themselves call for the suppression of the rebellion with due regard to
constitutional rights.

Olaguer vs Military Commission

FACTS: Petitioners, as civilians, have been charged the crime of subversion.


Consequently, the Chief-of-Staff of the AFP created a military tribunal, named Military
Commission No. 34, to try criminal case against petitioners. Petitioners were then
convicted and have been imposed a penalty of death penalty. Thereafter, petitioners filed
a petition to enjoin the military tribunal from taking further action on their case for the
tribunal should be considered null and void. Respondents invoked that the creation of
Military Commission is constitutional as ruled upon in a previous case Aquino v.
Military Commission No. 2.- as decided upon by the Supreme Court. However,
petitioners contend that such ruling must be overturned because the ruling is now
inapplicable since Martial Law has already been lifted.

ISSUE: Whether or not the ruling in Aquino v. Military Commission be abandoned and/or
modified in so far as the case at bar is concerned?

HELD: Yes. First, the Court considered that since the martial law has been lifted during
the case is still pending, military tibunals, which were created for the purpose of martial
law, shall be held void already since the law itself is lifted. Second, the Court relied on
the dissenting views of some justices in AQUINO V. MILCOMM, stating that Civilians
like the petitioner placed on tiral for civil offenses under general law are entited o trial by
judicial process, not by executive or military processxxx..Judicial power exist only in
courts.1Moreover, the Court emphasized thatReverence for precedent, simply as
precedent, cannot prevail when constitutionalism and the public interest demand
otherwise. Thus, a doctrine which should be abandoned or modified should be
abandoned or modified accordingly. after all, more important than anything else is that

this Court should be right.

Ruffy vs Chief of Staff

FACTS: During the Japanese insurrection in the Philippines, military men were assigned
at designated camps or military bases all over the country. Japanese forces went to
Mindoro thus forcing petitioner and his band move up the mountains and organize a
guerilla outfit and call it the "Bolo area". A certain Capt. Beloncio relieved Ruffy and
fellow petitioners of their position and duties in the "Bolo area" by the new authority
vested upon him because of the recent change of command. Capt. Beloncio was thus
allegedly slain by Ruffy and his fellow petitioners.

ISSUE: Whether or not the petitioners were subject to military law at the time the offense
was committed, which was at the time of war and the Japanese occupancy.

HELD: The Court held that the petitioners were still subject to military law since
members of the Armed Forces were still covered by the National Defense Act, Articles of
War and other laws even during an occupation. The act of unbecoming of an officer and
a gentleman is considered as a defiance of 95th Article of War held petitioners liable to
military jurisdiction and trial. Moreover, they were operating officers, which makes them
even more eligible for the military court's jurisdiction.
Quillona vs General Court Martial
The petitioner, a policeman, was charged before respondent General Court Martial with
the crime of murder on two (2) counts, under Article 248 of the Revised Penal Code.
On 14 December 1990, petitioner, through counsel, wrote a letter President Corazon C.
Aquino, expressing his desire to be tried by a civilian court and sought a waiver of a
military jurisdiction, for the reason, among others, that the "enactment of the Philippine
National Police Law creates his honest belief that he should now be under the actual
and real jurisdiction of a civilian court.
Petitioner has filed this petition for certiorari and prohibition with preliminary injunction
and/or restraining order, alleging that respondent court acted with grave abuse of
discretion in denying his motion for inhibition and that there is no appeal, nor any other
plain, speedy and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law except thru the present
petition.
Acting on the petition as well as the comment of the Solicitor General, the Court resolved
to (1) treat the respondents' comment as answer to the petition; (2) give due course to
the petition; and (3) consider this case calendared for deliberation. Hence, this decision.
The petition is meritorious.
Issue: Whether or not the petition should be granted.

Held: yes, petition should be granted.Clearly, under the circumstances obtaining in the
present case, respondent court martial acted with grave abuse of discretion amounting
to or excess of jurisdiction in proceeding with the arraignment of the petitioner on 28
December 1990.
Gudani vs. Senga
G.R. No. 170165, August 15, 2006
(Political Law, Constitutional Law, E.O. 464)
FACTS
Petitioners Gen. Gudani and Lieutenant Colonel Balutan are high-ranking officers of
Philippine Marines assigned to the Philippine Military Academy (PMA) in Baguio City.
Senator Biazon invited several senior officers of the military to appear at a public hearing
before a Senate Committee to clarify allegations of massive cheating and the surfacing
of copies of an audio excerpt purportedly of a phone conversation between the President
and then Commission on Elections Commissioner Garcillano. At the time of the 2004
elections, Gen. Gudani had been designated as commander, and Col. Balutan a
member, of Joint Task Force Ranao by the AFP Southern Command. Armed Forces of
the Philippines (AFP) Chief of Staff Lt . Gen. Senga were among the several AFP
officers also received a letter invitation from Sen. Biazon to attend the hearing. But only
Gen. Gudani, and Col. Balutan attended the invitation from Sen. Biazon.
Thereafter, the Office of the Chief of Staff of the AFP issued a Memorandum addressed
to Gen. Baloing. It was signed by Lt. Col. Hernando DCA Iriberri in behalf of Gen. Senga.
Noting that Gen. Gudani and Col. Balutan had been invited to attend the Senate
Committee hearing, the Memorandum directed the two officers to attend the hearing.
Conformably, Gen. Gudani and Col. Balutan filed their respective requests for travel
authority addressed to the PMA Superintendent.
However, Gen. Senga did not attend to the requested hearing as per instruction from the
President that NO AFP PERSONNEL SHALL APPEAR BEFORE ANY
CONGRESSIONAL OR SENATE HEARING WITHOUT HER APPROVAL. `

While Gen. Gudani and Col. Balutan had concluded their testimony, the office of Gen.
Senga issued a statement which noted that the two had appeared before the Senate
Committee in spite of the fact that a guidance has been given that a Presidential
approval should be sought prior to such an appearance; that such directive was in
keeping with the time[-]honored principle of the Chain of Command; and that the two
officers disobeyed a legal order, in violation of A[rticles of] W[ar] 65 (Willfully Disobeying
Superior Officer), hence they will be subjected to General Court Martial proceedings x x
x Both Gen. Gudani and Col. Balutan were likewise relieved of their assignments then.
On the very day of the hearing, the President issued Executive Order (E.O.) 464. The
Office of the Solicitor General notes that the E.O. enjoined officials of the executive
department including the military establishment from appearing in any legislative inquiry
without her approval.
Now, petitioners seek the annulment of a directive from the President enjoining them and

other military officers from testifying before Congress without the Presidents consent.
Petitioners also pray for injunctive relief against a pending preliminary investigation
against them, in preparation for possible court-martial proceedings, initiated within the
military justice system in connection with petitioners violation of the aforementioned
directive.
The Court has to resolve whether petitioners may be subjected to military discipline on
account of their defiance of a direct order of the AFP Chief of Staff.
ISSUE
Whether or not E.O. 464 which provides among others that NO AFP PERSONNEL
SHALL APPEAR BEFORE ANY CONGRESSIONAL OR SENATE HEARING WITHOUT
HER APPROVAL is unconstitutional?
RULING
The Petition is dismissed.
Is EO 464 constitutional or not, or may the President prevent a member of the armed
forces from testifying before a legislative inquiry?
Insofar as E.O. 464 compelled officials of the executive branch to seek prior presidential
approval before appearing before Congress, the notion of executive control also comes
into consideration. The impression is wrong. The ability of the President to require a
military official to secure prior consent before appearing in Congress pertains to wholly
different and independent specie of presidential authoritythe commander-in-chief
powers of the President. By tradition and jurisprudence, the commander-in-chief powers
of the President are not encumbered by the same degree of restriction as that which
may attach to executive privilege or executive control.

We hold that the President has constitutional authority to do so, by virtue of her power as
commander-in-chief, and that as a consequence a military officer who defies such
injunction is liable under military justice. At the same time, we also hold that any
chamber of Congress which seeks to appear before it a military officer against the
consent of the President has adequate remedies under law to compel such attendance.
Any military official whom Congress summons to testify before it may be compelled to do
so by the President. If the President is not so inclined, the President may be
commanded by judicial order to compel the attendance of the military officer. Final
judicial orders have the force of the law of the land which the President has the duty to
faithfully execute.
Again, let it be emphasized that the ability of the President to prevent military officers
from testifying before Congress does not turn on executive privilege, but on the Chief
Executives power as commander-in-chief to control the actions and speech of members
of the armed forces. The Presidents prerogatives as commander-in-chief are not
hampered by the same limitations as in executive privilege. The commander-in-chief
provision in the Constitution is denominated as Section 18, Article VII, which begins with
the simple declaration that [t]he President shall be the Commander-in-Chief of all armed
forces of the Philippines x x x Outside explicit constitutional limitations, such as those
found in Section 5, Article XVI, the commander-in-chief clause vests on the President, as

commander-in-chief, absolute authority over the persons and actions of the members of
the armed forces. Such authority includes the ability of the President to restrict the travel,
movement and speech of military officers, activities which may otherwise be sanctioned
under civilian law.
Reference to Kapunan, Jr. v. De Villa is useful in this regard. Lt. Col. Kapunan was
ordered confined under house arrest by then Chief of Staff (later President) Gen. Fidel
Ramos. Kapunan was also ordered, as a condition for his house arrest, that he may not
issue any press statements or give any press conference during his period of detention.
The Court unanimously upheld such restrictions, noting:
to a certain degree, individual rights may be curtailed, because the effectiveness of
the military in fulfilling its duties under the law depends to a large extent on the
maintenance of discipline within its ranks. Hence, lawful orders must be followed without
question and rules must be faithfully complied with, irrespective of a soldier's personal
views on the matter. It is from this viewpoint that the restrictions imposed on petitioner
Kapunan, an officer in the AFP, have to be considered.

As a general rule, it is integral to military discipline that the soldiers speech be with the
consent and approval of the military commander. The necessity of upholding the ability
to restrain speech becomes even more imperative if the soldier desires to speak freely
on political matters. For there is no constitutional provision or military indoctrination will
eliminate a soldiers ability to form a personal political opinion, yet it is vital that such
opinions be kept out of the public eye. For one, political belief is a potential source of
discord among people, and a military torn by political strife is incapable of fulfilling its
constitutional function as protectors of the people and of the State. For another, it is
ruinous to military discipline to foment an atmosphere that promotes an active dislike of
or dissent against the President, the commander-in-chief of the armed forces. Soldiers
are constitutionally obliged to obey a President they may dislike or distrust. Even
petitioners are well aware that it was necessary for them to obtain permission from their
superiors before they could travel to Manila to attend the Senate Hearing.

Congress holds significant control over the armed forces in matters such as budget
appropriations and the approval of higher-rank promotions, yet it is on the President that
the Constitution vests the title as commander-in-chief and all the prerogatives and
functions appertaining to the position. Again, the exigencies of military discipline and the
chain of command mandate that the Presidents ability to control the individual members
of the armed forces be accorded the utmost respect. Where a military officer is torn
between obeying the President and obeying the Senate, the Court will without hesitation
affirm that the officer has to choose the President. After all, the Constitution prescribes
that it is the President, and not the Senate, who is the commander-in-chief of the armed
forces.
Judicial relief as remedy:
The refusal of the President to allow members of the military to appear before Congress
is not absolute. Inasmuch as it is ill-advised for Congress to interfere with the Presidents
power as commander-in-chief, it is similarly detrimental for the President to unduly

interfere with Congresss right to conduct legislative inquiries. The impasse did not come
to pass in this petition, since petitioners testified anyway despite the presidential
prohibition. The remedy lies with the courts.

Senate affirmed both the Arnault and Bengzon rulings. It elucidated on the constitutional
scope and limitations on the constitutional power of congressional inquiry. Thus, the
power of inquiry, with process to enforce it, is grounded on the necessity of information
in the legislative process. If the information possessed by executive officials on the
operation of their offices is necessary for wise legislation on that subject, by parity of
reasoning, Congress has the right to that information and the power to compel the
disclosure thereof.

It may thus be subjected to judicial review pursuant to the Courts certiorari powers
under Section 1, Article VIII of the Constitution. To avoid conflict, Congress must indicate
in its invitations to the public officials concerned, or to any person for that matter, the
possible needed statute which prompted the need for the inquiry. Section 21, Article VI
likewise establishes critical safeguards that proscribe the legislative power of inquiry.
The provision requires that the inquiry be done in accordance with the Senate or
Houses duly published rules of procedure, necessarily implying the constitutional
infirmity of an inquiry conducted without duly published rules of procedure. Section 21
also mandates that the rights of persons appearing in or affected by such inquiries be
respected, an imposition that obligates Congress to adhere to the guarantees in the Bill
of Rights.

In Senate, the Court ruled that the President could not impose a blanket prohibition
barring executive officials from testifying before Congress without the Presidents
consent notwithstanding the invocation of executive privilege to justify such prohibition.
Should neither branch yield to the other branchs assertion, the constitutional recourse is
to the courts, as the final arbiter if the dispute. It is only the courts that can compel, with
conclusiveness, attendance or non-attendance in legislative inquiries.

Courts are empowered, under the constitutional principle of judicial review, to arbitrate
disputes between the legislative and executive branches of government on the proper
constitutional parameters of power. By this and, if the courts so rule, the duty falls on the
shoulders of the President, as commander-in-chief, to authorize the appearance of the
military officers before Congress. Even if the President has earlier disagreed with the
notion of officers appearing before the legislature to testify, the Chief Executive is
nonetheless obliged to comply with the final orders of the courts.

Lastly, General Gudani argues that he can no longer fall within the jurisdiction of the
court-martial, considering his retirement last 4 October 2005. He cites Article 2, Title I of
Commonwealth Act No. 408, which defines persons subject to military law as, among
others, all officers and soldiers in the active service of the [AFP], and points out that he

is no longer in the active service. However, an officer whose name was dropped from the
roll of officers cannot be considered to be outside the jurisdiction of military authorities
when military justice proceedings were initiated against him before the termination of his
service. Once jurisdiction has been acquired over the officer, it continues until his case is
terminated.

Ampatuan vs Puno
G.R. No. 190259, June 7, 2011
FACTS:
On 24 November 2009, the day after the Maguindanao Massacre, then Pres. Arroyo
issued Proclamation 1946, placing the Provinces of Maguindanao and Sultan Kudarat
and the City of Cotabato under a state of emergency. She directed the AFP and the
PNP to undertake such measures as may be allowed by the Constitution and by law to
prevent and suppress all incidents of lawless violence in the named places. Three days
later, she also issued AO 273 transferring supervision of the ARMM from the Office of
the President to the DILG. She subsequently issued AO 273-A, which amended the
former AO (the term transfer used in AO 273 was amended to delegate, referring to
the supervision of the ARMM by the DILG).
Claiming that the Presidents issuances encroached on the ARMMs autonomy,
petitioners Datu Zaldy Uy Ampatuan, Ansaruddin Adiong, and Regie Sahali-Generale, all
ARMM officials, filed this petition for prohibition under Rule 65. They alleged that the
Presidents proclamation and orders encroached on the ARMMs autonomy as these
issuances empowered the DILG Secretary to take over ARMMs operations and to seize
the regional governments powers. They also claimed that the President had no factual
basis for declaring a state of emergency, especially in the Province of Sultan Kudarat
and the City of Cotabato, where no critical violent incidents occurred and that the
deployment of troops and the taking over of the ARMM constitutes an invalid exercise of
the Presidents emergency powers. Petitioners asked that Proclamation 1946 as well as
AOs 273 and 273-A be declared unconstitutional.
ISSUES:
1. Whether Proclamation 1946 and AOs 273 and 273-A violate the principle of local
autonomy under the Constitution and The Expanded ARMM Act
2. Whether or not President Arroyo invalidly exercised emergency powers when she
called out the AFP and the PNP to prevent and suppress all incidents of lawless violence
in Maguindanao, Sultan Kudarat, and Cotabato City
3. Whether or not the President had factual bases for her actions
HELD:
1The principle of local autonomy was not violated. DILG Secretary did not take over
control of the powers of the ARMM. After law enforcement agents took the respondent
Governor of ARMM into custody for alleged complicity in the Maguindanao Massacre,
the ARMM ViceGovernor, petitioner Adiong, assumed the vacated post on 10 Dec.

2009 pursuant to the rule on succession found in Sec. 12 Art.VII of RA 9054. In turn,
Acting Governor Adiong named the then Speaker of the ARMM Regional Assembly,
petitioner SahaliGenerale, Acting ARMM Vice-Governor. The DILG Secretary therefore
did not take over the administration or the operations of the ARMM.
2The deployment is not by itself an exercise of emergency powers as understood under
Section 23 (2), Article VI of the Constitution, which provides:
SECTION 23. x x x (2) In times of war or other national emergency, the Congress may,
by law, authorize the President, for a limited period and subject to such restrictions as it
may prescribe, to exercise powers necessary and proper to carry out a declared national
policy. Unless sooner withdrawn by resolution of the Congress, such powers shall cease
upon the next adjournment thereof.
The President did not proclaim a national emergency, only a state of emergency in the
three places mentioned. And she did not act pursuant to any law enacted by Congress
that authorized her to exercise extraordinary powers. The calling out of the armed forces
to prevent or suppress lawless violence in such places is a power that the Constitution
directly vests in the President. She did not need a congressional authority to exercise
the same.
The Presidents call on the armed forces to prevent or suppress lawless violence springs
from the power vested in her under Section 18, Article VII of the Constitution, which
provides:
Section 18. The President shall be the Commander-in-Chief of all armed forces of the
Philippines and whenever it becomes necessary, he may call out such armed forces to
prevent or suppress lawless violence, invasion or rebellion. x x x
3While it is true that the Court may inquire into the factual bases for the Presidents
exercise of the above power, it would generally defer to her judgment on the matter. As
the Court acknowledged in Integrated Bar of the Philippines v. Hon. Zamora, it is clearly
to the President that the Constitution entrusts the determination of the need for calling
out the armed forces to prevent and suppress lawless violence. Unless it is shown that
such determination was attended by grave abuse of discretion, the Court will accord
respect to the Presidents judgment. Thus, the Court said:
If the petitioner fails, by way of proof, to support the assertion that the President acted
without factual basis, then this Court cannot undertake an independent investigation
beyond the pleadings. The factual necessity of calling out the armed forces is not easily
quantifiable and cannot be objectively established since matters considered for
satisfying the same is a combination of several factors which are not always accessible
to the courts. Besides the absence of textual standards that the court may use to judge
necessity, information necessary to arrive at such judgment might also prove
unmanageable for the courts. Certain pertinent information might be difficult to verify, or
wholly unavailable to the courts. In many instances, the evidence upon which the
President might decide that there is a need to call out the armed forces may be of a
nature not constituting technical proof.
On the other hand, the President, as Commander-in-Chief has a vast intelligence
network to gather information, some of which may be classified as highly confidential or
affecting the security of the state. In the exercise of the power to call, on-the-spot

decisions may be imperatively necessary in emergency situations to avert great loss of


human lives and mass destruction of property. Indeed, the decision to call out the
military to prevent or suppress lawless violence must be done swiftly and decisively if it
were to have any effect at all. x x x.
Here, petitioners failed to show that the declaration of a state of emergency in the
Provinces of Maguindanao, Sultan Kudarat and Cotabato City, as well as the Presidents
exercise of the calling out power had no factual basis. They simply alleged that, since
not all areas under the ARMM were placed under a state of emergency, it follows that
the takeover of the entire ARMM by the DILG Secretary had no basis too.
The imminence of violence and anarchy at the time the President issued Proclamation
1946 was too grave to ignore and she had to act to prevent further bloodshed and
hostilities in the places mentioned. Progress reports also indicated that there was
movement in these places of both high-powered firearms and armed men sympathetic to
the two clans. Thus, to pacify the peoples fears and stabilize the situation, the President
had to take preventive action. She called out the armed forces to control the proliferation
of loose firearms and dismantle the armed groups that continuously threatened the
peace and security in the affected places.
Since petitioners are not able to demonstrate that the proclamation of state of
emergency in the subject places and the calling out of the armed forces to prevent or
suppress lawless violence there have clearly no factual bases, the Court must respect
the Presidents actions (Ampatuan vs Puno, G.R. No. 190259, June 7, 2011).

Legazpi vs Minister

Legaspi, incumbent member of the interim Batasang Pambansa, petitioned to declare


Presidential Decree 1840 granting tax amnesty and filing of statement of assets and
liabilities and some other purposes unconstitutional. He argued that said decree was
promulgated despite the fact that under the Constitution The Legislative power shall be
vested in a Batasang Pambansa (Sec. 1, Article VIII) and the President may grant
amnesty only with concurrence of the Batasang Pambansa.

ISSUE: Whether or not the President (PM) can issue such decrees.

HELD: It is to be observed that the original text mentions President (Prime Minister).
This is so because . . . The incumbent President of the Philippines shall be the Prime
Minister and he shall continue to exercise all his powers even after the interim Batasang
Pambansa is organized and ready to discharge its functions, and likewise he shall
continue to exercise his powers and prerogatives under the 1935 Constitution and the
powers vested in the President and the Prime Minister under this Constitution.
Parenthetically, the term Incumbent President employed in the transitory provisions

could only refer to President Ferdinand E. Marcos (Aquino vs. Commission on Elections,
62 SCRA 275). After the April 7 amendments there exists no longer a President
(Prime Minister) but A President and A Prime Minister. They are now two different
offices which cannot be held by a single person not a transitory one but a regular one
provided for and governed by the main provisions of the newly amended Constitution.
Subsequent events accept the reality that we are no longer governed by the transitory
provisions of the Constitution. This form of government is essentially parliamentary with
presidential features.
Aquino v. Enrile
59 SCRA 183

FACTS:
The cases are all petitions for habeas corpus, the petitioners having been arrested and
detained by the military by virtue of Proclamation 1081. The petitioners were arrested
and held pursuant to General Order No.2 of the President "for being participants or for
having given aid and comfort in the conspiracy to seize political and state power in the
country and to take over the Government by force..." General Order No. 2 was issued by
the President in the exercise of the power he assumed by virtue of Proclamation 1081
placing the entire country under martial law.

ISSUES:
1) Is the existence of conditions claimed to justify the exercise of the power to declare
martial law subject to judicial inquiry?; and
2) Is the detention of the petitioners legal in accordance to the declaration of martial law?

HELD:
5 Justices held that the issue is a political question, hence, not subject to judicial inquiry,
while 4 Justices held that the issue is a justiciable one. However, any inquiry by this
Court in the present cases into the constitutional sufficiency of the factual bases for the
proclamation of martial law has become moot and academic. Implicit in the state of
martial law is the suspension of the privilege of writ of habeas corpus with respect to
persons arrested or detained for acts related to the basic objective of the proclamation,
which is to suppress invasion, insurrection or rebellion, or to safeguard public safety
against imminent danger thereof. The preservation of society and national survival takes
precedence. The proclamation of martial law automatically suspends the privilege of the
writ as to the persons referred to in this case.

LANSANG VS. GARCIA [42 SCRA 448; L-33964; 11 Dec 1971]

Facts: In the evening of August 21, 1971, at about 9 p.m., while the Liberal Party of the
Philippines was holding a public meeting at Plaza Miranda, Manila, for the presentation
of its candidates in the general elections scheduled for November 8, 1971, two hand
grenades were thrown at the platform where said candidates and other persons were.
Eight persons were killed and many more injured. Proclamation 889 was issued by the
President suspending privilege of writ of habeas corpus stating that there is a conspiracy
of rebellion and insurrection in order to forcibly seize political power. Petitions for writ of
habeas corpus were filed by persons (13) who have been arrested without a warrant.

It was stated that one of the safeguards of the proclamation was that it is to be applied to
persons caught in flagrante delicto. Incidentally, Proc. 889-A was issued as an
amendment, inserting the word actually staging. Proc. 889-B was also issued lifting the
suspension of privilege in 27 provinces, 3 sub-provinces and 26 cities. Proc. 889-C was
issued restoring the suspension in 13 provinces and cities(mostly in Mindanao). Proc.
889-D further lifted the suspension in 7 provinces and 4 cities. Only 18 provinces and
sub-provinces and 2 cities whose privilege was suspended. Petitioners maintained that
Proclamation No. 889 did not declare the existence of actual "invasion insurrection or
rebellion or imminent danger thereof, however it became moot and academic since it
was amended. Petitioners further contend that public safety did not require the issuance
of proclamations stating: (a) that there is no rebellion; (b) that, prior to and at the time of
the suspension of the privilege, the Government was functioning normally, as were the
courts; (c) that no untoward incident, confirmatory of an alleged July-August Plan, has
actually taken place after August 21, 1971; (d) that the President's alleged apprehension,
because of said plan, is non-existent and unjustified; and (e) that the Communist forces
in the Philippines are too small and weak to jeopardize public safety to such extent as to
require the suspension of the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus.

A resolution was issued by majority of the Court having tentatively arrived at a


consensus that it may inquire in order to satisfy itself of the existence of the factual
bases for the proclamations. Now the Court resolves after conclusive decision reached
by majority.

Issues:

(1) Whether or Not the authority to decide whether the exigency has arisen requiring
suspension (of the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus) belongs to the President and
his decision is final and conclusive upon the courts and upon all other persons.

(2) Whether or Not public safety require the suspension of the privilege of the writ of
habeas corpus decreed in Proclamation No. 889-A.

Held: The President has authority however it is subject to judicial review. Two conditions
must concur for the valid exercise of the authority to suspend the privilege to the writ (a)
there must be "invasion, insurrection, or rebellion" or "imminent danger thereof," and (b)
"public safety" must require the suspension of the privilege. President has three (3)
courses of action: (a) to call out the armed forces; (b) to suspend the privilege of the writ
of habeas corpus; and (c) to place the Philippines or any part thereof under martial law.
He had, already, called out the armed forces, proved inadequate. Of the two other
alternatives, the suspension of the privilege is the least harsh.

Petitioners contention that CPP-NPA has no ability, is negatived by the killing of 5


mayors, 20 barrio captains and 3 chiefs of police; that there were fourteen (14)
meaningful bombing incidents in the Greater Manila Area in 1970. CPP has managed to
infiltrate or establish and control nine major labor organizations; has exploited the (11)
major student or youth organizations; about thirty (30) mass organizations actively
advancing the CPP.

LANSANG VS. GARCIA [42 SCRA 448; L-33964; 11 Dec 1971]

Facts: In the evening of August 21, 1971, at about 9 p.m., while the Liberal Party of the
Philippines was holding a public meeting at Plaza Miranda, Manila, for the presentation
of its candidates in the general elections scheduled for November 8, 1971, two hand
grenades were thrown at the platform where said candidates and other persons were.
Eight persons were killed and many more injured. Proclamation 889 was issued by the
President suspending privilege of writ of habeas corpus stating that there is a conspiracy
of rebellion and insurrection in order to forcibly seize political power. Petitions for writ of
habeas corpus were filed by persons (13) who have been arrested without a warrant.

It was stated that one of the safeguards of the proclamation was that it is to be applied to
persons caught in flagrante delicto. Incidentally, Proc. 889-A was issued as an
amendment, inserting the word actually staging. Proc. 889-B was also issued lifting the
suspension of privilege in 27 provinces, 3 sub-provinces and 26 cities. Proc. 889-C was
issued restoring the suspension in 13 provinces and cities(mostly in Mindanao). Proc.
889-D further lifted the suspension in 7 provinces and 4 cities. Only 18 provinces and
sub-provinces and 2 cities whose privilege was suspended. Petitioners maintained that
Proclamation No. 889 did not declare the existence of actual "invasion insurrection or
rebellion or imminent danger thereof, however it became moot and academic since it
was amended. Petitioners further contend that public safety did not require the issuance
of proclamations stating: (a) that there is no rebellion; (b) that, prior to and at the time of
the suspension of the privilege, the Government was functioning normally, as were the
courts; (c) that no untoward incident, confirmatory of an alleged July-August Plan, has
actually taken place after August 21, 1971; (d) that the President's alleged apprehension,

because of said plan, is non-existent and unjustified; and (e) that the Communist forces
in the Philippines are too small and weak to jeopardize public safety to such extent as to
require the suspension of the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus.

A resolution was issued by majority of the Court having tentatively arrived at a


consensus that it may inquire in order to satisfy itself of the existence of the factual
bases for the proclamations. Now the Court resolves after conclusive decision reached
by majority.

Issues:

(1) Whether or Not the authority to decide whether the exigency has arisen requiring
suspension (of the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus) belongs to the President and
his decision is final and conclusive upon the courts and upon all other persons.

(2) Whether or Not public safety require the suspension of the privilege of the writ of
habeas corpus decreed in Proclamation No. 889-A.

Held: The President has authority however it is subject to judicial review. Two conditions
must concur for the valid exercise of the authority to suspend the privilege to the writ (a)
there must be "invasion, insurrection, or rebellion" or "imminent danger thereof," and (b)
"public safety" must require the suspension of the privilege. President has three (3)
courses of action: (a) to call out the armed forces; (b) to suspend the privilege of the writ
of habeas corpus; and (c) to place the Philippines or any part thereof under martial law.
He had, already, called out the armed forces, proved inadequate. Of the two other
alternatives, the suspension of the privilege is the least harsh.

Petitioners contention that CPP-NPA has no ability, is negatived by the killing of 5


mayors, 20 barrio captains and 3 chiefs of police; that there were fourteen (14)
meaningful bombing incidents in the Greater Manila Area in 1970. CPP has managed to
infiltrate or establish and control nine major labor organizations; has exploited the (11)
major student or youth organizations; about thirty (30) mass organizations actively
advancing the CPP.

SECTION 19

LLAMAS v. EXEC. SEC. ORBOS, OCAMPO III


October 15, 1991 (G.R. No. 99031)
PARTIES:
Petitioner: RODOLFO D. LLAMAS
Respondent: EXECUTIVE SECRETARY OSCAR ORBOS and MARIANO UN OCAMPO
III

FACTS:
Ocampo III was the governor of Tarlac Province. Llamas together with some other
complainants filed an administrative case against Ocampo III for alleged acts
constituting graft and corruption. Ocampo III was found guilty. He was suspended for
office for 90 days hence his vice governor, Llamas, assumed office. In not less than 30
days however, Ocampo III returned with an AO showing that he was pardoned hence he
can resume office without completing the 90 day suspension imposed upon him.
The petitioner argues that President may grant executive clemency only in criminal
cases. They say that the qualifying phrase after conviction by final judgment applies
solely to criminal cases, and no other law allows the grant of executive clemency or
pardon to anyone who has been convicted in an administrative case, allegedly because
the word conviction refers only to criminal cases.
SSUE: WON the President of the Philippines has the power to grant executive clemency
in administrative cases.

HELD:
Yes. It is not specified in the constitution whether it may be considered under criminal or
administrative cases. , if the law does not distinguish, so we must not distinguish. The
Constitution does not distinguish between which cases executive clemency may be
exercised by the President, with the sole exclusion of impeachment cases. By the same
token, if executive clemency may be exercised only in criminal cases, it would indeed be
unnecessary to provide for the exclusion of impeachment cases from the coverage of
Article VII, Section 19 of the Constitution. Cases of impeachment are automatically
excluded inasmuch as the same do not necessarily involve criminal offenses.
The do not clearly see any valid and convincing reason why the President cannot grant
executive clemency in administrative cases. It is the courts considered view that if the
President can grant reprieves, commutations and pardons, and remit fines and
forfeitures in criminal cases, with much more reason can she grant executive clemency
in administrative cases, which are clearly less serious than criminal offenses.
The court stressed, however, that when we say the President can grant executive
clemency in administrative cases, we refer only to all administrative cases in the

Executive branch, not in the Judicial or Legislative branches of the government.


In criminal cases, the quantum of evidence required to convict an individual is proof
beyond reasonable doubt. On the other hand, in administrative cases, the quantum of
evidence required is mere substantial evidence to support a decision.

PEOPLE VS SALLE, JR.


FACTS:
Francisco Salle, Jr. and Ricky Mengote were found guilty beyond reasonable doubt and
each issentenced to suffer the penalty of reclusion perpetua and to pay an indemnity.
The appellantsseasonably filed their Notice of Appeal. On 24 March 1993, the Court
accepted the appeal. On 6 January1994, however, appellant Francisco Salle, Jr. filed an
Urgent Motion to Withdraw Appeal. They weregranted a conditional pardon that with
their acceptance of the conditional pardon, the appellants will bereleased from
confinement, the appellants impliedly admitted their guilt and accepted their
sentence,and hence, the appeal should be dismissed. They were discharged from the
New Bilibid Prison on 28
December 1993. Atty. Lao further in
formed the Court that appellant Ricky Mengote left for his provincewithout consulting her.
She then prays that the Court grant Salle's motion to withdraw his appeal andconsider it
withdrawn upon his acceptance of the conditional pardon. Mengote has not filed a
motion towithdraw his appeal.
ISSUE:

Whether or not Mengotes conditional pardon


is valid?
RULING:
No. Since pardon is given only to one whose conviction is final, pardon has no effect
until theperson withdraws his appeal and thereby allows his conviction to be final and
Mengote has not filed amotion to withdraw his appeal.

WHEREFORE, counsel for accused-appellant Ricky Mengote y Cuntadois hereby given


thirty (30) days from notice hereof within which to secure from the latter the withdrawal of
his appeal and to submit it to this Court. The conditional pardon granted the said
appellant shall bedeemed to take effect only upon the grant of such withdrawal. In case
of non-compliance with thisResolution, the Director of the Bureau of Corrections must

exert every possible effort to take back into hiscustody the said appellant, for which
purpose he may seek the assistance of the Philippine National Police or the National
Bureau of Investigation.
MONSANTO v. FACTORAN
February 9, 1989 (G.R. No. 78239)
PARTIES:
Petitioner: SALVACION A. MONSANTO
Respondent: FULGENCIO S., JR.

FACTS:

In a decision by the Sandiganbayan convicted petitioner Salvacion A. Monsanto


was accused of the crime of estafa thru falsification of public documents and sentenced
them to imprisonment and to indemnify the government in the sum of P4,892.50
representing the balance of the amount defrauded and to pay the costs proportionately.

She was given an absolute pardon by President Marcos which she accepted.

Petitioner requested that she be restored to her former post as assistant city
treasurer since the same was still vacant, she also asked for the backpay for the entire
period of her suspension.

Finance Ministry ruled that petitioner may be reinstated to her position without
the necessity of a new appointment

The Office of the President said that that acquittal, not absolute pardon, of a
former public officer is the only ground for reinstatement to his former position and
entitlement to payment of his salaries, benefits and emoluments due to him during the
period of his suspension pendente lite.

In fact, in such a situation, the former public official must secure a reappointment
before he can reassume his former position. And a pardon shall in no case exempt the
culprit from payment of the civil indemnity imposed upon him by the sentence.

Petitioner argued that general rules on pardon cannot apply to her case by
reason of the fact that she was extended executive clemency while her conviction was
still pending appeal in this Court. There having been no final judgment of conviction, her
employment therefore as assistant city treasurer could not be said to have been
terminated or forfeited.

The court viewed that is not material when the pardon was bestowed, whether
before or after conviction, for the result would still be the same

ISSUE:

(1) Effects of a full and absolute pardon


(2) WON a public officer, who has been granted an absolute pardon by the Chief
Executive, is entitled to reinstatement to her former position without need of a new
appointment.

HELD:
(1)
A pardon reaches both the punishment prescribed for the offense and the guilt of
the offender; and when the pardon is full, it releases the punishment and blots out of
existence the guilt, so that in the eye of the law the offender is as innocent as if he had
never committed the offense. If granted before conviction, it prevents any of the
penalties and disabilities, consequent upon conviction, from attaching; if granted after
conviction, it removes the penalties and disabilities and restores him to all his civil rights;
it makes him, as it were, a new man, and gives him a new credit and capacity. But
unless expressly grounded on the persons innocence (which is rare), it cannot bring
back lost reputation for honesty, integrity and fair dealing.

A pardon looks to the future. It is not retrospective. It makes no amends for the past. It
affords no relief for what has been suffered by the offender. It does not impose upon the
government any obligation to make reparation for what has been suffered.

(2)
No. To insist on automatic reinstatement because of a mistaken notion that the
pardon virtually acquitted one from the offense of estafa would be grossly untenable. A
pardon, albeit full and plenary, cannot preclude the appointing power from refusing
appointment to anyone deemed to be of bad character, a poor moral risk, or who is
unsuitable by reason of the pardoned conviction.
The absolute disqualification or ineligibility from public office forms part of the
punishment prescribed by the Revised Penal Code for estafa thru falsification of public
documents.

The pardon granted to petitioner has resulted in removing her disqualification from
holding public employment but it cannot go beyond that. To regain her former post as
assistant city treasurer, she must re-apply and undergo the usual procedure required for
a new appointment.

ATTY. ALICIA RISOS-VIDAL, ALFREDO S. LIM PETITIONER-INTERVENOR,


VS. COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS AND JOSEPH EJERCITO ESTRADA

LEONARDO-DE CASTRO, J.:

NATURE:
These are petitions including:
1) a Petition for Certiorari filed by Atty. Alicia Risos-Vidal, which essentially prays for the
issuance of the writ of certiorari annulling and setting aside the April 1, 2013 and April
23, 2013 Resolutions of the Commission on Elections (COMELEC), Second Division and
En banc, respectively.

(2) a Petition-in-Intervention[ filed by Alfredo S. Lim praying to be declared the 2013


winning candidate for Mayor of the City of Manila in view of private respondent former
President Joseph Ejercito Estradas) disqualification to run for and hold public office

FACTS:
On September 12, 2007, the Sandiganbayan convicted former President Estrada, a
former President of the Republic of the Philippines, for the crime of plunder and was
sentenced to suffer the penalty of Reclusion Perpetua and the accessory penalties of
civil interdiction during the period of sentence and perpetual absolute disqualification.

On October 25, 2007, however, former President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo extended
executive clemency, by way of pardon, to former President Estrada explicitly states that
He is hereby restored to his civil and political rights.

On November 30, 2009, former President Estrada filed a Certificate of Candidacy[7] for
the position of President but was opposed by three petitions seeking for his
disqualification. None of the cases prospered and MRs were denied by Comelec En
Banc. Estrada only managed to garner the second highest number of votes on the May
10, 2010 synchronized elections.

On October 2, 2012, former President Estrada once more ventured into the political
arena, and filed a Certificate of Candidacy,[10] this time vying for a local elective post,
that of the Mayor of the City of Manila.

Petitioner Risos-Vidal filed a Petition for Disqualification against former President


Estrada before the COMELEC because of Estradas Conviction for Plunder by the
Sandiganbayan Sentencing Him to Suffer the Penalty of Reclusion Perpetua with
Perpetual Absolute Disqualification. Petitioner relied on Section 40 of the Local
Government Code (LGC), in relation to Section 12 of the Omnibus Election Code (OEC)

In a Resolution dated April 1, 2013, the COMELEC, Second Division, dismissed the
petition for disqualification holding that President Estradas right to seek public office has
been effectively restored by the pardon vested upon him by former President Gloria M.
Arroyo.

Estrada won the mayoralty race in May 13, 2013 elections. Petitioner-intervenor Alfredo
Lim garnered the second highest votes intervene and seek to disqualify Estrada for the
same ground as the contention of Risos-Vidal and praying that he be proclaimed as
Mayor of Manila.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the COMELEC committed grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or
excess of jurisdiction in ruling that former President Estrada is qualified to vote and be
voted for in public office as a result of the pardon granted to him by former President
Arroyo.

HELD:
No. The COMELEC did not commit grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or
excess of jurisdiction in issuing the assailed Resolutions. The arguments forwarded by
Risos-Vidal fail to adequately demonstrate any factual or legal bases to prove that the
assailed COMELEC Resolutions were issued in a whimsical, arbitrary or capricious
exercise of power that amounts to an evasion or refusal to perform a positive duty
enjoined by law or were so patent and gross as to constitute grave abuse of
discretion.

Former President Estrada was granted an absolute pardon that fully restored all his civil
and political rights, which naturally includes the right to seek public elective office, the
focal point of this controversy. The wording of the pardon extended to former President
Estrada is complete, unambiguous, and unqualified. It is likewise unfettered by Articles
36 and 41 of the Revised Penal Code. The only reasonable, objective, and constitutional
interpretation of the language of the pardon is that the same in fact conforms to Articles
36 and 41 of the Revised Penal Code.

The proper interpretation of Articles 36 and 41 of the Revised Penal Code.


A close scrutiny of the text of the pardon extended to former President Estrada shows
that both the principal penalty of reclusion perpetua and its accessory penalties are
included in the pardon. The sentence which states that (h)e is hereby restored to his
civil and political rights, expressly remitted the accessory penalties that attached to the
principal penalty of reclusion perpetua. Hence, even if we apply Articles 36 and 41 of the
Revised Penal Code, it is indubitable from the text of the pardon that the accessory

penalties of civil interdiction and perpetual absolute disqualification were expressly


remitted together with the principal penalty of reclusion perpetua.

The disqualification of former President Estrada under Section 40 of the LGC in relation
to Section 12 of the OEC was removed by his acceptance of the absolute pardon
granted to him

While it may be apparent that the proscription in Section 40(a) of the LGC is worded in
absolute terms, Section 12 of the OEC provides a legal escape from the prohibition a
plenary pardon or amnesty. In other words, the latter provision allows any person who
has been granted plenary pardon or amnesty after conviction by final judgment of an
offense involving moral turpitude, inter alia, to run for and hold any public office, whether
local or national position.
Proclamation No. 80, s. 1987
Signed on February 28, 1987
MALACAAN PALACE
MANILA

BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE PHILIPPINES

PROCLAMATION NO. 80

GRANTING AMNESTY IN FAVOR OF ALL PERSONS WHO, IN THE FURTHERANCE


OF THEIR POLITICAL BELIEFS, MAY HAVE COMMITTED ACTS PENALIZED BY
EXISTING LAWS

WHEREAS, certain persons or group/s of persons continue to oppose the government;

WHEREAS, these persons may have committed an act or acts in violation of existing

laws in furtherance of their political beliefs;

WHEREAS, it is in the interest of the nation to forgive these individuals and forego their
prosecution in order that all may be reunited and peace and order established in our
land, and so that they can contribute their energy and talents to the achievement of
political and social reforms within the framework of the laws and democracy;

WHEREAS, the unity of the Filipino people is necessary so that the nation can recover
from the ravages of dictatorships; cdt

NOW, THEREFORE, I, CORAZON C. AQUINO, President of the Philippines, by virtue of


the powers vested in me by Section 6, Art. XVIII, of the 1987 Constitution, do hereby
declare and proclaim full and complete amnesty in favor of all persons who have or may
have committed any act penalized under existing laws in furtherance of their political
beliefs and who, not being in the custody of, or charged by, undergoing investigation by,
the authorities of the present administration, as of the date, the 28th of February 1987,
and for six months thereafter, return their own free will to the fold of the law for the
following crimes: treason; conspiracy or proposal to commit the crime of treason;
misprision of treason; espionage; rebellion or insurrection; conspiracy and proposal to
commit rebellion or insurrection; inciting to rebellion or insurrection; sedition; conspiracy
to commit sedition; inciting to sedition; illegal assemblies; illegal associations; direct
assault; indirect assault; resistance and disobedience to a person in authority or agents
of such person or persons; subversion; and illegal possession of firearms and
explosives. This shall not, however, apply to crimes or acts committed from purely
personal motives or outside of the foregoing enumerations.

It is further declared that in order to determine those persons who may come within the
terms of this amnesty, an Amnesty Committee is hereby created in each province or city
composed of the Provincial/City Citizens Attorney, as Chairman, and four members,
namely: the AFP Judge Advocate designated by the Secretary of National Defense, the
Provincial/City Secretary, an IBP representative designated by the Provincial/City IBP
Chapter and the fourth to be chosen by the Chairman and the herein three named
members, which shall examine the facts and circumstances surrounding each case. The
Committee shall decide each case within ten (10) working days from receipt of the
application, and upon finding that it falls within the terms of this Proclamation, it shall so
declare and the amnesty shall immediately be effective as to said person. Should the
Amnesty Committee fail to make its decision within the given ten day period, such
inaction shall be construed as an automatic grant of amnesty in favor of the applicant
concerned. casia

Any person who desires to avail of the amnesty provided herein may, at anytime within
six (6) months from date of issuance of this Proclamation, file an application for amnesty
with the Bayanihan Center organized in each province or city. The Bayanihan Center

immediately forward the application to the Amnesty Committee, which shall then
evaluate and pass upon the application in accordance with the Guidelines that may be
issued by the National Reconciliation and Development Council to implement this
Proclamation and shall make the necessary decision in each particular case.

This Proclamation take effect immediately.

DONE in the City of Manila, this 28th day of February, in the year of Our Lord, Nineteen
Hundred and Eighty-Seven.

SABELLO VS DECS

Section 19. Except in cases of impeachment, or as otherwise provided in this


Constitution, the President may grant reprieves, commutations, and pardons, and remit
fines and forfeitures, after conviction by final judgment.
He shall also have the power to grant amnesty with the concurrence of a majority of all
the Members of the Congress.

Facts: Sabello, an elementary school principal and the assistant principal of the Talisay
Brgy. High School together with their barrio captain were charged of the violation of RA
3019(Anti Graft and Corrupt Practices Act). They were both convicted and sentenced 1yr
& disqualification to hold office. Petitioner is alleged that he gravely erred in depositing
840.00 to the City Treasurer's office in the name of Talisay Barrio H.S to cover up for the
teachers salary. The amount of 840 came from the aid given by the Pres. in the amount
of 2,000 for each barrio. The Barrio Council believing in good faith that the barrio H.S
was a barrio project therefore it is entitled to its share with the funds given by the pres.
Petitioner then appealed to the C.A of MNL. Court of appeals then modified the penaly
by eliminating the subsidiary imprisonment in case of insolvency in the payment of 1/2 of
the amount being involved. Petitioner could no longer appeal to the Supreme court so
then judgment became final. Afterwards, the pres granted the petitioner ABSOLUTE
PARDON restoring him full civil and political rights. Petitioner then applied for the
reinstatement of his employment; he was reinatated but not as a Principal rather a
classroom teacher. He then appealed for the relief of the Supreme Court to grant his
requesr of being reinstated to his former position and for the payment of his backwages.

ISSUE: whether petitioner merits reappointment to the position he held prior to his
conviction that of Elementary Principal I.

HELD: The DECS did not act on the request of the petitioner because they contended
through the Sol.Gen that there is no justiceable controversy to be resolved.

The Court believed otherwise.There is here a justiciable controversy. Petitioner claims


he must be restored to the same position he was in before he was convicted on a mere
technical error and for which he was given an absolute pardon, under the circumstances
of this case, if the petitioner had been unfairly deprived of' what is rightfully his, the
discretion is qualified by the requirements of giving justice to the petitioner. It is no longer
a matter of discretion on the part of the appointing power, but discretion tempered with
fairness and justice.

As to the argument that the Department of Education, Culture and Sports cannot be
sued, the only answer is that its officials can be sued for alleged grave errors in their
official acts. Again, We ignore technicality by considering this a suit against the officials
of this government agency.

In Monsanto vs. Factoran, Jr., 3 this Court held that the absolute disqualification from
office or ineligibility from public office forms part of the punishment prescribed under the
penal code and that pardon frees the individual from all the penalties and legal
disabilities and restores him to all his civil rights. Although such pardon restores his
eligibility to a public office it does not entitle him to automatic reinstatement. He should
apply for reappointment to said office.There are no circumstances that would warrant the
diminution in his rank, justice and equity dictate that he be returned to his former position
of Elementary School Principal I and not to that of a mere classroom teacher.

However, the Court cannot grant his prayer for backwages from September 1, 1971 to
November 23, 1982 since in Monsanto 4 this Court said he is not entitled to automatic
reinstatement. Petitioner was lawfully separated from the government service upon his
conviction for an offense. Thus, although his reinstatement had been duly authorized, it
did not thereby entitle him to backwages. Such right is afforded only to those who have
been illegally dismissed and were thus ordered reinstated or to those otherwise
acquitted of the charge against them.

WHEREFORE, the petition is GRANTED in that the Secretary of the Department of


Education, Culture and Sports and/or his duly authorized representative is hereby
directed to appoint petitioner to the position of Elementary School Principal I or it
equivalent, without pronouncement as to cost. This decision is immediately executory.
PEOPLE VS SALLE, JR

Francisco Salle, Jr. and Ricky Mengote were found guilty beyond reasonable doubt and

each is sentenced to suffer the penalty of reclusion perpetua and to pay an indemnity.
The appellants seasonably filed their Notice of Appeal. On 24 March 1993, the Court
accepted the appeal. On 6 January 1994, however, appellant Francisco Salle, Jr. filed an
Urgent Motion to Withdraw his Appeal. They were granted a conditional pardon that
with their acceptance of the conditional pardon, the appellants will be released from
confinement, the appellants impliedly admitted their guilt and accepted their sentence,
and hence, the appeal should be dismissed.They were discharged from the New Bilibid
Prison on 28 December 1993. Atty. Lao further informed the Court that appellant Ricky
Mengote left for his province without consulting her. She then prays that the Court grant
Salle's motion to withdraw his appeal and consider it withdrawn upon his acceptance of
the conditional pardon. Mengote has not filed a motion to withdraw his appeal.

ISSUE: Whether Mengotes conditional pardon is valid.

HELD: No. Since pardon is given only to one whose conviction is final, pardon has no
effect until the person withdraws his appeal and thereby allows his conviction to be final
and Mengote has not filed a motion to withdraw his appeal. WHEREFORE, counsel
for accused-appellantRicky Mengote y Cuntado is hereby given thirty (30) days from
notice hereof within which to secure from the latter the withdrawal of his appeal and to
submit it to this Court. The conditional pardon granted the said appellant shall be
deemed to take effect only upon the grant of such withdrawal. In case of noncompliance with this Resolution, the Director of the Bureau of Corrections
must exert every possible effort to take back into his custody the said appellant, forwhich
purpose he may seek the assistance of the Philippine National Police or the
NationalBureau of Investigation.

SECTION 21

THE COMMISSIONER OF CUSTOMS and THE COLLECTOR OFCUSTOMS,


petitioners,vs.
EASTERN SEA TRADING,
respondent.
G.R. No. L-14279October 31, 1961
Topic: Executive Agreements
NATURE OF THE CASE
This is a petition for review of a decision of the Court of Tax Appeals, whichreversed a
decision of the Commissioner of Customs
FACTS

Several onion and garlic shipments imported by respondent consignee fromHongkong


and Japan were seized and subjected to forfeiture proceedings for alleged violations of
Section 1363 of the Revised Administrative Code. Allegedly, none of the shipments had
the certificate required by Central BankCirculars 44 and 45 (requiring a Central Bank
license and a certificateauthorizing the importation or release of the subject good ) for
their release.The Collector of Customs of Manila rendered judgment declaring
theforfeiture of the goods in favor of the Government. Upon appeal, theCommissi
oner of Customs upheld the Collectors decision. Respondent filed
a petition for review with the Court of Tax Appeals. The CTA reversed the
Commissioner
s decision. Hence, this present petition.
ISSUES
1. Whether the seizure and forfeiture of the goods imported from Japan canbe justified
under EO 328 (which implements an executive agreementextending the effectivity of the
Trades and Financial Agreements of thePhilippines with Japan)
---YES.
2. Whether the executive agreement sought to be implemented by EO 328 islegal and
valid, considering that the Senate has not concurred in the makingof said executive
agreement
---NO.

RULING
Treaties are different from executive agreements. While treaties are formaldocuments
which require ratification by the Senate, executive agreementsbecome binding through
executive action without the need of a vote by theSenate or Congress. Further,
international agreements involving politicalissues or changes of national policy and those
involving internationalarrangements of a permanent character usually take the form of
treaties; onthe other hand, international agreements embodying
adjustments of detail
carrying out well-established national policies and traditions and thoseinvolving
arrangements of a more or less temporary nature usually take theform of executive
agreements.The right of the Executive to enter into binding agreements
without
thenecessity of subsequent Congressional approval has been
confirmed by long usage
. From the earliest days of our history we have entered into executiveagreements

covering such subjects as commercial and consular relations,most-favored-nation rights,


patent rights, trademark and copyright protection,postal and navigation arrangements
and the settlement of claims.
Thevalidity of these has never been seriously questioned by our courts
.Francis Saye, former US High Commissioner to the Philippines, further states that xxx it
would seem to be sufficient, in order to show that the tradeagreements under the act of
1934 are not anomalous in character, that theyare not treaties, and that they have
abundant precedent in our history, torefer to certain classes of agreements entered into
by the Executive withoutthe approval of the Senate. They cover such subjects as the
inspection of vessels, navigation dues, income tax on shipping profits, the admission of
civil aircraft, customs matters, and commercial relations generally,international claims,
postal matters, the registration of trademarks andcopyrights, etcetera. Some of them
were concluded not by specificcongressional authorization but in conformity with policies
declared in acts of Congress with respect to the general subject matter, such as tariff
acts; whilestill others, particularly those with respect of the settlement of claims
againstforeign governments, were concluded independently of any legislationThe Parity
Rights Agreement, which was provided for in the Ordinance Appended to the
Constitution was the subject of an executive agreement,made without the concurrence
of 2/3 of the Senate of the US.Hence, the validity of the executive agreement in question
in this case ispatent.The authority to issue import licenses was not vested exclusively
upon theImport Control Commission or Administration. EO 328 provided for export or
import licenses "from the
Central Bank of the Philippines
or the ImportControl Administration" or Commission. Indeed, the latter was created only
toperform the task of implementing certain objectives of the Monetary Boardand the
Central Bank,
which otherwise had to be undertaken by these two (2)agencies
. Upon the abolition of said Commission, the duty to provide meansand ways for the
accomplishment of said objectives had merely to bedischarged directly by the Monetary
Board and the Central Bank, even if theaforementioned Executive Order had been silent
thereon.The decision of the CTA is reversed.

G.R. No. 159618 February 1, 2011

BAYAN MUNA, as represented by Rep. SATUR OCAMPO, Rep. CRISPIN BELTRAN,


and Rep. LIZA L.MAZA,

Petitioner,vs.

ALBERTO ROMULO, in his capacity as Executive Secretary, and BLAS F. OPLE, in his
capacity asSecretary of Foreign Affairs,

Respondents.
VELASCO, JR.,
J.:

Facts:
Petitioner Bayan Muna is a duly registered party-list group established to represent the
marginalized sectors of society. Respondent Blas F. Ople, now deceased, was the
Secretary of Foreign Affairs during the period material to this case. Respondent Alberto
Romulo was impleaded in his capacity as then Executive Secretary. Rome Statute of the
International Criminal Court having a key determinative bearing on this case is the Rome
Statute establishing the International Criminal Court (ICC) with the power to exercise its
jurisdiction over persons for the most serious crimes of international concern and shall
be complimentary to the national criminal jurisdiction. The serious crimes adverted to
cover those considered grave under international law, such as genocide, crimes against
humanity, war crimes, and crimes of aggression. On December 28, 2000, the RP,
through Charge dAffaires Enrique A. Manalo, signed the Rome Statute which, by its
terms, is subject to ratification, acceptance or approval by the signatory states. As of the
filing of the instant petition, only 92 out of the 139 signatory countries appear to have
completed the ratification, approval and concurrence process. The Philippines is not
among the 92.

Issue :
Whether the agreement is valid, binding, and effective without the concurrence by at
least two-thirds (2/3) of all the members of the senate

Held:
Evidently, there is, as yet, no overwhelming consensus, let alone prevalent practice,
among the different countries in the world that the prosecution of internationally
recognized crimes of genocide, etc. should be handled by a particular international
criminal court.

Absent the widespread/consistent-practice-of-states factor, the second or the


psychological element must be deemed non-existent, for an inquiry on why states
behave the way they do presupposes, in the first place, that they are actually behaving,

as a matter of settled and consistent practice, in a certain manner. This implicitly


requires belief that the practice in question is rendered obligatory by the existence of a
rule of law requiring it. Like the first element, the second element has likewise not been
shown to be present.

Further, the Rome Statute itself rejects the concept of universal jurisdiction over the
crimes enumerated therein as evidenced by it requiring State consent. Even further,
theRome Statute specifically and unequivocally requires that: This Statute is subject to
ratification, acceptance or approval by signatory States. These clearly negate the
argument that such has already attained customary status.

More importantly, an act of the executive branch with a foreign government must be
afforded great respect. The power to enter into executive agreements has long been
recognized to be lodged with the President. As We held in Neri v. Senate Committee on
Accountability of Public Officers and Investigations, [t]he power to enter into an
executive agreement is in essence an executive power. This authority of the President to
enter into executive agreements without the concurrence of the Legislature has
traditionally been recognized in Philippine jurisprudence. The rationale behind this
principle is the inviolable doctrine of separation of powers among the legislative,
executive and judicial branches of the government. Thus, absent any clear contravention
of the law, courts should exercise utmost caution in declaring any executive agreement
invalid.

In light of the above consideration, the position or view that the challenged RP-US NonSurrender Agreement ought to be in the form of a treaty, to be effective, has to be
rejected.

Pimentel v. Executive Secretary


G.R. No. 158088 July 6, 2005

Facts:

1. The petitioners filed a petition for mandamus to compel the Office of the Executive
Secretary and the Department of Foreign Affairs to transmit the signed copy of the Rome
Statute of the International Criminal Court to the Senate of the Philippinesfor its
concurrence pursuant to Sec. 21, Art VII of the 1987 Constitution.

2. The Rome Statute established the Int'l Criminal Court which will have jurisdiction over
the most serious crimes as genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes and crimes of
aggression as defined by the Statute. The Philippines through the Chargie du Affairs in
UN. The provisions of the Statute however require that it be subject to ratification,
acceptance or approval of the signatory state.

3. Petitioners contend that ratification of a treaty, under both domestic and international
law, is a function of the Senate, hence it is the duty of the Executive Department to
transmit the signed copy to the senate to allow it to exercise its discretion.

Issue: Whether or not the Exec. Secretary and the DFA have the ministerial duty to
transmit to the Senate the copy of the Rome Statute signed by a member of the
Philippine mission to the U.N. even without the signature of the President.

The Supreme Court held NO.

1. The President as the head of state is the sole organ and authorized in the external
relations and he is also the country's sole representative with foreign nations, He is the
mouthpiece with respect to the country's foreign affairs.

2. In treaty-making, the President has the sole authority to negotiate with other states
and enter into treaties but this power is limited by the Constitution with the 2/3 required
vote of all the members of the Senate for the treaty to be valid. (Sec. 21, Art VII).

3. The legislative branch part is essential to provide a check on the executive in the field
of foreign relations, to ensure the nation's pursuit of political maturity and growth.

SECTION 23
80 SCRA 538 Political Law Constitutional Law Presidents Immunity From
Suit

In December 1977, a referendum was scheduled to be held. The purpose of which was
to merge the office of the Prime Minister and the Office of the President. At that time,
Marcos was serving as the president and at the same time he was wielding legislative
powers. The referendum was to ask the people whether or not they still want Marcos to

serve as the president (and at the same time Prime Minister) after an interim Batasan
Pambansa will be organized. Ernesto Hidalgo filed a petition for prohibition and
mandamus before the Supreme Court to enjoin COMELEC and the president from
proceeding with the said referendum as he averred that the referendum will effectively
amend the C0nstitution, which he says is unconstitutional and improper.

ISSUE: Whether or not the president can be sued and compelled through a mandamus
by the SC.

HELD: The Supreme Court did not pass upon the issue of the suability of the Presisent
in thsi case considering that the COMELEC, the body tasked to implement the
referendum, was impleaded.

The SC however ruled that the referendum is valid and that the same will merely ask the
people if they want Marcos to stay in power or not and that the referendum will not
amend the Constitution as Hidalgo avers.

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