Calalang v. Williams
GR 47800, 2 December 1940
Laurel, J:
Held:
The promotion of social justice is to be achieved not through a mistaken
sympathy towards any given group. Social justice is neither communism, nor
despotism, nor atomism, nor anarchy, but the humanization of laws and the equalization
of social and economic forces by the State so that justice in its rational and
objectively secular conception may at least be approximated. Social justice
means the promotion of the welfare of all the people, the adoption by the
Government of measures calculated to insure economic stability of all the
competent elements of society, through the maintenance of a proper economic and
social equilibrium in the interrelations of the members of the community,
constitutionally, through the adoption of measures legally justifiable, or
extra-constitutionally, through the exercise of powers underlying the existence
of all governments on the time-honored principle of salus populi est suprema lex. Social justice, therefore, must
be founded on the recognition of the necessity of interdependence among divers
and diverse units of a society and of the protection that should be equally and
evenly extended to all groups as a combined force in our social and economic
life, consistent with the fundamental and paramount objective of the state of
promoting the health, comfort, and quiet of all persons, and of bringing about
“the greatest good to the greatest number.”
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