Tolentino
v. COMELEC
G.R. No. 148334 January 21, 2004
Barredo, J.
Facts:
Following
the appointment of Senator Teofisto Guingona as Vice-President of the
Philippines, the Senate on February 8, 2001 passed Resolution No. 84, calling
on COMELEC to fill the vacancy through a special election to be held
simultaneously with the regular elections on May 14, 2001. Twelve senators,
with 6-year term each, were due to be elected in that election. The resolution
further provides that the Senatorial candidate garnering the 13th highest
number of votes shall serve only for the unexpired term of former Senator
Teofisto Guingona, Jr. which ends on June 30, 2004. On June 5, 2001, after
canvassing the election results, the COMELEC proclaimed 13 candidates as the
elected Senators, with the first 12 Senators to serve the unexpired term of 6
years and the 13th Senator to serve the full term of 3 years of Senator
Teofisto Guingona, Jr. Gregorio Honasan ranked 13th.
Petitioners
Arturo Tolentino and Arturo Mojica, as voters and taxpayers, filed the instant
petition for prohibition, praying for the nullification of Resolution No. 01-005.
They contend that COMELEC issued Resolution 01-005 without jurisdiction
because: (1) it failed to notify the electorate of the position to be filled in
the special election as required under Section 2 of RA 6645; (2) it failed to
require senatorial candidates to indicate in their certificates of candidacy
whether they seek election under the special or regular elections as allegedly
required under Section 73 of BP 881; and, consequently, (3) it failed to
specify in the Voters Information Sheet the candidates seeking election under
the special or regular senatorial elections as purportedly required under
Section 4, paragraph 4 of RA 6646. Tolentino and Mojica add that because of
these omissions, COMELEC canvassed all the votes cast for the senatorial candidates
in the 14 May 2001 elections without distinction such that there were no two
separate Senate elections held simultaneously but just a single election for
thirteen seats, irrespective of term. Tolentino and Mojica sought the issuance
of a temporary restraining order during the pendency of their petition. Without
issuing any restraining order, the Supreme Court required COMELEC to Comment on
the petition. Honasan questioned Tolentino’s and Mojica’s standing to bring the
instant petition as taxpayers and voters because they do not claim that COMELEC
illegally disbursed public funds; nor claim that they sustained personal injury
because of the issuance of Resolutions 01-005 and 01-006.
Issue:
whether
or not the Special Election held on May 14, 2001 should be nullified:
(1)
for failure to give notice by the
body empowered to and
(2)
for not following the procedure of
filling up the vacancy pursuant to R.A. 6645
Held:
(1)
Where the law does not fix the time and place for holding a special election
but empowers some authority to fix the time and place after the happening of a
condition precedent, the statutory provision on the giving of notice is
considered mandatory, and failure to do so will render the election a nullity.
The test in
determining the validity of a special election in relation to the failure to
give notice of the special election is whether want of notice has resulted in
misleading a sufficient number of voters as would change the result of special
election. If the lack of official notice misled a substantial number of voters
who wrongly believed that there was no special election to fill vacancy, a
choice by small percentage of voters would be void.
(2) There is no
basis in the petitioners’ claim that the manner by which the COMELEC conducted the
special Senatorial election on May 14, 2001 is a nullity because the COMELEC
failed to document separately the candidates and to canvass separately the
votes cast for the special election. No such requirement exists in our election
laws. What is mandatory under Section 2 of R.A. 6645 is that the COMELEC fix
the date of election, if necessary, and state among others, the office/s to be
voted for.
No comments:
Post a Comment