Casibang v. Aquino
G.R. No. L-38025
August 20, 1979
Makasiar, J.
Facts:
Respondent
Remigio P. Yu was proclaimed on November 9, 1971 as the elected Mayor of Rosales,
Pangasinan in the 1971 local elections, by a plurality of 501 votes over his only
rival, herein petitioner, who seasonably filed a protest against the election of
the former with the Court of First Instance of Pangasinan, on the grounds of (1)
anomalies and irregularities in the appreciation, counting and consideration of
votes in specified electoral precincts; (2) terrorism; (3) rampant vote buying;
(4) open voting or balloting; and (5) excessive campaign expenditures and other
violations of the 1971 Election Code.
In the meantime
or on September 21, 1972, the incumbent President of the Republic of the Philippines
issued Proclamation No. 1081, placing the entire country under Martial Law; and
two months thereafter, more or less, or specifically on November 29, 1972, the 1971
Constitutional Convention passed and approved a Constitution to supplant the 1935
Constitution; and the same was thereafter overwhelmingly ratified by the sovereign
people of the Republic of the Philippines on January 17, 1973; and on March 31,
1973, the Supreme Court declared that there is no further judicial obstacle to the
new Constitution being considered in force and effect.
Thereafter or on
October 10, 1973, at which time petitioner had already completed presenting his
evidence and in fact had rested his case, respondent Yu moved to dismiss the election
protest of petitioner on the ground that the trial court had lost jurisdiction over
the same in view of the effectivity of the 1973 Constitution by reason of which
— principally) Section 9 of Article XVII [Transitory Provisions] and Section 2 of
Article XI — a political question has intervened in the case. Respondent Yu contended
that “... the provisions in the 1935 Constitution relative to all local governments
have been superseded by the 1973 Constitution. Therefore, all local government should
adhere to our parliamentary form of government. This is clear in the New Constitution
under its Article XI.” He further submitted that local elective officials (including
mayors) have no more four-year term of office. They are only in office at the pleasure
of the appointing power embodied in the New Constitution, and under Section 9 of
Article XVII.
The thrust of the
political question theory of respondent Yu is that the 1973 Constitution, through
Section 9 of Article XVII thereof, protected only those incumbents, like him, at
the time of its ratification and effectivity and are the only ones authorized to
continue in office and their term of office as extended now depends on the pleasure
of, as the same has been entrusted or committed to, the incumbent President of the
Philippines or the Legislative Department; and that Section 2 of Article XI thereof
entrusted to the National Assembly the revamp of the entire local government structure
by the enactment of a local government code, thus presenting a question of policy,
the necessity and expediency of which are outside the range of judicial review.
In short, for the respondent Judge to still continue assuming jurisdiction over
the pending election protest of petitioner is for him to take cognizance of a question
or policy in regard to which full discretionary authority has been delegated to
the Legislative or Executive branch of the government.
Issue:
whether
the issue involves a political question and therefore beyond judicial ambit
Held:
No.
Section 9 of Article XVII of the 1973 Constitution did not render moot and academic
pending election protest cases. The constitutional grant of privilege to continue
in office, made by the new Constitution for the benefit of persons who were incumbent
officials or employees of the Government when the new Constitution took effect,
cannot be fairly construed as indiscriminately encompassing every person who at
the time happened to be performing the duties of an elective office, albeit under
protest or contest” and that “subject to the constraints specifically mentioned
in Section 9, Article XVII of the Transitory Provisions, it neither was, nor could
have been the intention of the framers of our new fundamental law to disregard and
shunt aside the statutory right of a candidate for elective position who, within
the time-frame prescribed in the Election Code of 1971, commenced proceedings beamed
mainly at the proper determination in a judicial forum of a proclaimed candidate-elect’s
right to the contested office.
The right of the
private respondents (protestees) to continue in office indefinitely arose not only
by virtue of Section 9 of Article XVII of the New Constitution but principally from
their having been proclaimed elected to their respective positions as a result of
the November 8, 1971 elections. Therefore, if in fact and in law, they were not
duly elected to their respective positions and consequently, have no right to hold
the same, perform their functions, enjoy their privileges and emoluments, then certainly,
they should not be allowed to enjoy the indefinite term of office given to them
by said constitutional provision.
Until a subsequent
law or presidential decree provides otherwise, the right of respondent (protestee)
to continue as mayor rests on the legality of his election which has been protested
by herein petitioner. Should the court decide adversely against him the electoral
protest, respondent (protestee) would cease to be mayor even before a law or presidential
decree terminates his tenure of office pursuant to said Section 9 of Article XVII
of the 1973 Constitution.
There is a difference
between the ‘term’ of office and the ‘right’ to hold an office. A ‘term’ of office is the period during winch
an elected officer or appointee is entitled to hold office, perform its functions
and enjoy its privileges and emoluments. A ‘right’
to hold a public office is the just and legal claim to hold and enjoy the powers
and responsibilities of the office. In other words, the ‘term’ refers to the period,
duration of length of time during which the occupant of an office is .entitled to
stay therein whether such period be definite or indefinite. Hence, although Section
9, Article XVII of the New Constitution made the term of the petitioners indefinite,
it did not foreclose any challenge by the herein petitioners, in an election protest,
of the ‘right’ of the private respondents to continue holding their respective office.
What has been directly affected by said constitutional provision is the ‘term’ to
the office, although the ‘right’ of the incumbent to an office which he is legally
holding is co-extensive with the ‘term’ thereof,” and that “it is erroneous to conclude
that under Section 9, Article XVII of the New Constitution, the term of office of
the private respondents expired, and that they are now holding their respective
offices under a new term. They hold their respective offices still under the term
to which they have been elected, although the same is now indefinite.
The New Constitution
recognized the continuing jurisdiction of courts of first instance to hear, try
and decide election protests: “Section 7 of Article XVII of the New Constitution
provides that ‘all existing laws not inconsistent with this Constitution shall remain
operative until amended, modified or repealed by the National Assembly. ‘And there
has been no amendment, modification or repeal of Section 220 of the Election Code
of 1971 which gave the herein petitioners the right to file an election contest
against those proclaimed elected,” and “according to Section 8, Article XVII of
the New Constitution ‘all courts existing at the time of the ratification of this
Constitution shall continue and exercise their jurisdiction until otherwise provided
by law in accordance with this Constitution, and all cases pending in said courts
shall be heard, tried and determined under the laws then in force.’ Consequently,
the Courts of First Instance presided over by the respondent-Judges should continue
and exercise their jurisdiction to hear, try and decide the election protests filed
by herein petitioners.”
While under the
New Constitution the Commission on Elections is now the sole judge of all contests
relating to the elections, returns, and qualifications of members of the National
Assembly as well as elective provincial and city officials (par. 2 of Sec. 2, Article
XII-C of the 1973 Constitution), such power does not extend to electoral contests
concerning municipal elective positions.
General Order No.
3, issued by the President of the Philippines merely reiterated his powers under
Section 9 of Article XVII of the New Constitution. The President did not intend
thereby to modify the aforesaid constitutional provision.
General Order No.
3, as amended by General Order No. 3-A, does not expressly include electoral contests
of municipal elective positions as among those removed from the jurisdiction of
the courts; for said General Order, after affirming the jurisdiction of the Judiciary
to decide in accordance with the existing laws on criminal and civil cases, simply
removes from the jurisdiction of the Civil Court certain crimes specified therein
as well as the validity, legality or constitutionality of any decree, order or acts
issued by the President or his duly designated representative or by public servants
pursuant to his decrees and orders issued under Proclamation No. 1081.
In the light of
the foregoing pronouncements, the electoral protest case herein involved has remained
a justiciable controversy. No political question has ever been interwoven into this
case. Nor is there any act of the incumbent President or the Legislative Department
to be indirectly reviewed or interfered with if the respondent Judge decides the
election protest. The term “political question”
connotes what it means in ordinary parlance, namely, a question of policy. It refers
to 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
term has been made applicable to controversies clearly non-judicial and therefore
beyond its jurisdiction or to an issue involved in a case appropriately subject
to its cognizance, as to which there has been a prior legislative or executive determination
to which deference must be paid. Political
questions should refer to such as would under the Constitution be decided by
the people in their sovereign capacity or in regard to which full discretionary
authority is vested either in the President or Congress. It is thus beyond the competence
of the judiciary to pass upon.
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