Republic
of the Philippines
SUPREME COURT
Manila
SUPREME COURT
Manila
EN
BANC
G.R. No. 78059 August 31,
1987
ALFREDO M. DE LEON, ANGEL S.
SALAMAT, MARIO C. STA. ANA, JOSE C. TOLENTINO, ROGELIO J. DE LA ROSA and JOSE
M. RESURRECCION, petitioners,
vs.
HON. BENJAMIN B. ESGUERRA, in his capacity as OIC Governor of the Province of Rizal, HON. ROMEO C. DE LEON, in his capacity as OIC Mayor of the Municipality of Taytay, Rizal, FLORENTINO G. MAGNO, REMIGIO M. TIGAS, RICARDO Z. LACANIENTA, TEODORO V. MEDINA, ROSENDO S. PAZ, and TERESITA L. TOLENTINO, respondents.
vs.
HON. BENJAMIN B. ESGUERRA, in his capacity as OIC Governor of the Province of Rizal, HON. ROMEO C. DE LEON, in his capacity as OIC Mayor of the Municipality of Taytay, Rizal, FLORENTINO G. MAGNO, REMIGIO M. TIGAS, RICARDO Z. LACANIENTA, TEODORO V. MEDINA, ROSENDO S. PAZ, and TERESITA L. TOLENTINO, respondents.
MELENCIO-HERRERA, J.:
An original action for
Prohibition instituted by petitioners seeking to enjoin respondents from
replacing them from their respective positions as Barangay Captain and Barangay
Councilmen of Barangay Dolores, Municipality of Taytay, Province of Rizal.
As required by the Court,
respondents submitted their Comment on the Petition, and petitioner's their
Reply to respondents' Comment.
In the Barangay elections
held on May 17, 1982, petitioner Alfredo M. De Leon was elected Barangay
Captain and the other petitioners Angel S. Salamat, Mario C. Sta. Ana, Jose C.
Tolentino, Rogelio J. de la Rosa and Jose M. Resurreccion, as Barangay
Councilmen of Barangay Dolores, Taytay, Rizal under Batas Pambansa Blg. 222,
otherwise known as the Barangay Election Act of 1982.
On February 9, 1987,
petitioner Alfredo M, de Leon received a Memorandum antedated December 1, 1986
but signed by respondent OIC Governor Benjamin Esguerra on February 8, 1987
designating respondent Florentino G. Magno as Barangay Captain of Barangay
Dolores, Taytay, Rizal. The designation made by the OIC Governor was "by
authority of the Minister of Local Government."
Also on February 8, 1987,
respondent OIC Governor signed a Memorandum, antedated December 1, 1986
designating respondents Remigio M. Tigas, Ricardo Z. Lacanienta Teodoro V.
Medina, Roberto S. Paz and Teresita L. Tolentino as members of the Barangay
Council of the same Barangay and Municipality.
That the Memoranda had been
antedated is evidenced by the Affidavit of respondent OIC Governor, the
pertinent portions of which read:
xxx xxx xxx
That I am the OIC Governor of Rizal having been appointed as
such on March 20, 1986;
That as being OIC Governor of the Province of Rizal and in
the performance of my duties thereof, I among others, have signed as I did sign
the unnumbered memorandum ordering the replacement of all the barangay
officials of all the barangay(s) in the Municipality of Taytay, Rizal;
That the above cited memorandum dated December 1, 1986 was
signed by me personally on February 8,1987;
That said memorandum was further deciminated (sic) to all
concerned the following day, February 9. 1987.
FURTHER AFFIANT SAYETH NONE.
Pasig, Metro Manila, March 23, 1987.
Before us now, petitioners
pray that the subject Memoranda of February 8, 1987 be declared null and void
and that respondents be prohibited from taking over their positions of Barangay
Captain and Barangay Councilmen, respectively. Petitioners maintain that
pursuant to Section 3 of the Barangay Election Act of 1982 (BP Blg. 222), their
terms of office "shall be six (6) years which shall commence on June 7,
1982 and shall continue until their successors shall have elected and shall
have qualified," or up to June 7, 1988. It is also their position that
with the ratification of the 1987 Constitution, respondent OIC Governor no
longer has the authority to replace them and to designate their successors.
On the other hand,
respondents rely on Section 2, Article III of the Provisional Constitution,
promulgated on March 25, 1986, which provided:
SECTION 2. All elective and appointive officials and
employees under the 1973 Constitution shall continue in office until otherwise
provided by proclamation or executive order or upon the designation or
appointment and qualification of their successors, if such appointment is made
within a period of one year from February 25,1986.
By reason of the foregoing
provision, respondents contend that the terms of office of elective and
appointive officials were abolished and that petitioners continued in office by
virtue of the aforequoted provision and not because their term of six years had
not yet expired; and that the provision in the Barangay Election Act fixing the
term of office of Barangay officials to six (6) years must be deemed to have
been repealed for being inconsistent with the aforequoted provision of the
Provisional Constitution.
Examining the said
provision, there should be no question that petitioners, as elective officials
under the 1973 Constitution, may continue in office but should vacate their
positions upon the occurrence of any of the events mentioned. 1
Since the promulgation of
the Provisional Constitution, there has been no proclamation or executive order
terminating the term of elective Barangay officials. Thus, the issue for
resolution is whether or not the designation of respondents to replace
petitioners was validly made during the one-year period which ended on February
25, 1987.
Considering the candid
Affidavit of respondent OIC Governor, we hold that February 8, 1977, should be
considered as the effective date of replacement and not December 1,1986 to
which it was ante dated, in keeping with the dictates of justice.
But while February 8, 1987
is ostensibly still within the one-year deadline, the aforequoted provision in
the Provisional Constitution must be deemed to have been overtaken by Section
27, Article XVIII of the 1987 Constitution reading.
SECTION 27. This Constitution shall
take effect immediately upon its ratification by a majority of the votes cast
in a plebiscite held for the purpose and shall supersede all previous
Constitutions.
The 1987 Constitution was
ratified in a plebiscite on February 2, 1987. By that date, therefore, the
Provisional Constitution must be deemed to have been superseded. Having become
inoperative, respondent OIC Governor could no longer rely on Section 2, Article
III, thereof to designate respondents to the elective positions occupied by
petitioners.
Petitioners must now be held
to have acquired security of tenure specially considering that the Barangay
Election Act of 1982 declares it "a policy of the State to guarantee and
promote the autonomy of the barangays to ensure their fullest development as
self-reliant communities. 2 Similarly, the 1987
Constitution ensures the autonomy of local governments and of political
subdivisions of which the barangays form a part, 3 and
limits the President's power to "general supervision" over local
governments. 4 Relevantly, Section 8, Article X of
the same 1987 Constitution further provides in part:
Sec. 8. The term of office of elective local officials,
except barangay officials, which shall be determined by law, shall be three
years ...
Until the term of office of
barangay officials has been determined by law, therefore, the term of office of
six (6) years provided for in the Barangay Election Act of 1982 5 should
still govern.
Contrary to the stand of
respondents, we find nothing inconsistent between the term of six (6) years for
elective Barangay officials and the 1987 Constitution, and the same should,
therefore, be considered as still operative, pursuant to Section 3, Article
XVIII of the 1987 Constitution, reading:
Sec. 3. All existing laws, decrees, executive orders,
proclamations letters of instructions, and other executive issuances not
inconsistent, with this Constitution shall remain operative until amended,
repealed or revoked.
WHEREFORE, (1) The Memoranda
issued by respondent OIC Governor on February 8, 1987 designating respondents
as the Barangay Captain and Barangay Councilmen, respectively, of Barangay
Dolores, Taytay, Rizal, are both declared to be of no legal force and effect;
and (2) the Writ of Prohibition is granted enjoining respondents perpetually
from proceeding with the ouster/take-over of petitioners' positions subject of
this Petition. Without costs.
SO ORDERED.
Yap, Fernan, Narvasa,
Gutierrez, Jr., Paras, Feliciano, Gancayco, Padilla, Bidin and Cortes, JJ.,
concur.
Separate Opinions
TEEHANKEE, CJ., concurring:
The main issue resolved in
the judgment at bar is whether the 1987 Constitution took effect on February
2, 1987, the date that the plebiscite for its ratification was held or
whether it took effect on February 11, 1987, the date its
ratification was proclaimed per Proclamation No. 58 of the President of the
Philippines, Corazon C. Aquino.
The Court's decision, with
the lone dissent of Mr. Justice Sarmiento, holds that by virtue of the
provision of Article XVIII, Section 27 of the 1987 Constitution that it
"shall take effect immediately upon its ratification by a majority of the
votes cast in a plebiscite held for the purpose," the 1987 Constitution
took effect on February 2, 1987, the date of its ratification in the plebiscite
held on that same date.
The thrust of the dissent is
that the Constitution should be deemed to "take effect on the date its
ratification shall have been ascertained and not at the time the people cast
their votes to approve or reject it." This view was actually proposed at the
Constitutional Commission deliberations, but was withdrawn by its proponent in
the face of the "overwhelming" contrary view that the Constitution
"will be effective on the very day of the plebiscite."
The record of the
proceedings and debates of the Constitutional Commission fully supports the
Court's judgment. It shows that the clear, unequivocal and express intent of
the Constitutional Conunission in unanimously approving (by thirty-five votes
in favor and none against) the aforequoted Section 27 of Transitory Article
XVIII of the 1987 Constitution was that "the act of ratification is the
act of voting by the people. So that is the date of the ratification" and
that "the canvass thereafter [of the votes] is merely the mathematical
confirmation of what was done during the date of the plebiscite and the
proclamation of the President is merely the official confirmatory declaration
of an act which was actually done by the Filipino people in adopting the
Constitution when they cast their votes on the date of the plebiscite."
The record of the
deliberations and the voting is reproduced hereinbelow: 1
MR. MAAMBONG. Madam President, may we now put to a
vote the original formulation of the committee as indicated in Section 12,
unless there are other commissioners who would like to present amendments.
MR. DAVIDE. Madam President.
THE PRESIDENT. Commissioner Davide is recognized.
MR. DAVIDE. May I propose the following amendments.
On line 2, delete the words "its ratification" and
in lieu thereof insert the following-. "THE PROCLAMATION BY THE PRESIDENT
THAT IT HAS BEEN RATIFIED." And on the last line, after
"constitutions," add the following: "AND THEIR AMENDMENTS."
MR. MAAMBONG. Just a moment, Madam President. If Commissioner
Davide is going to propose an additional sentence, the committee would suggest
that we take up first his amendment to the first sentence as originally
formulated. We are now ready to comment on that proposed amendment.
The proposed amendment would be to delete the words "its
ratification and in lieu thereof insert the words "THE PROCLAMATION BY THE
PRESIDENT THAT IT HAS BEEN RATIFIED." And the second amendment would be:
After the word "constitutions," add the words" AND THEIR
AMENDMENTS,"
The committee accepts the first proposed amendment. However,
we regret that we cannot accept the second proposed amendment after the word
"constitutions" because the committee feels that when we talk of all
previous Constitutions, necessarily it includes "AND THEIR
AMENDMENTS."
MR. DAVIDE. With that explanation, l will not insist on the
second. But, Madam President, may I request that I be allowed to read the
second amendment so the Commission would be able to appreciate the change in
the first.
MR. MAAMBONG. Yes, Madam President, we can now do that.
MR. DAVIDE. The second sentence will read: "THE
PROCLAMATION SHALL BE MADE WITHIN FIVE DAYS FOLLOWING THE COMPLETION OF THE
CANVASS BY THE COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS OF THE RESULTS OF SUCH PLEBISCITE."
MR. MAAMBONG. Madam President, after conferring with our chairman,
the committee feels that the second proposed amendment in the form of a new
sentence would not be exactly necessary and the committee feels that it would
be too much for us to impose a time frame on the President to make the
proclamation. As we would recall, Madam President, in the approved Article on
the Executive, there is a provision which says that the President shall make
certain that all laws shall be faithfully complied. When we approve this first
sentence, and it says that there will be a proclamation by the President that
the Constitution has been ratified, the President will naturally comply with
the law in accordance with the provisions in the Article on the Executive which
we have cited. It would be too much to impose on the President a time frame
within which she will make that declaration. It would be assumed that the
President would immediately do that after the results shall have been canvassed
by the COMELEC.
Therefore, the committee regrets that it cannot accept the
second sentence which the Gentleman is proposing, Madam President.
MR. DAVIDE. I am prepared to withdraw the same on the
assumption that there will be an immediate proclamation of the results by the
President.
MR. MAAMBONG. With that understanding, Madam President.
MR. DAVIDE. I will not insist on the second sentence.
FR. BERNAS. Madam President.
THE PRESIDENT. Commissioner Bernas is recognized.
FR. BERNAS. I would ask the committee to reconsider its
acceptance of the amendment which makes the effectivity of the new Constitution
dependent upon the proclamation of the President. The effectivity of
the Constitution should commence on the date of the ratification, not on the
date of the proclamation of the President. What is confusing, I think,
is what happened in 1976 when the amendments of 1976 were
ratified. In that particular case, the reason the amendments of 1976
were effective upon the proclamation of the President was that the
draft presented to the people said that the amendment will be effective upon
the proclamation made by the President. I have a suspicion that was put in
there precisely to give the President some kind of leeway on whether to
announce the ratification or not. Therefore, we should not make this
dependent on the action of the President since this will be a manifestation of
the act of the people to be done under the supervision of the COMELECand it
should be the COMELEC who should make the announcement that, in fact, the votes
show that the Constitution was ratified and there should be no need to wait for
any proclamation on the part of the President.
MR. MAAMBONG. Would the Gentleman answer a few clarificatory
questions?
FR. BERNAS. Willingly, Madam President.
MR. MAAMBONG. The Gentleman will agree that a date has to be
fixed as to exactly when the Constitution is supposed to be ratified.
FR. BERNAS. I would say that the ratification of the
Constitution is on the date the votes were supposed to have been cast.
MR. MAAMBONG. Let us go to the mechanics of the whole thing,
Madam President. We present the Constitution to a plebiscite, the people
exercise their right to vote, then the votes are canvassed by the Commission on
Elections. If we delete the suggested amendment which says: "THE
PROCLAMATION BY THE PRESIDENT THAT IT HAS BEEN RATIFIED," what would be,
in clear terms, the date when the Constitution is supposed to be ratified or
not ratified, as the case may be?
FR. BERNAS. The date would be the casting of the ballots. if
the President were to say that the plebiscite would be held, for instance, on
January 19, 1987, then the date for the effectivity of the new Constitution
would be January 19, 1987.
MR. MAAMBONG. In other words, it would not depend on the
actual issuance of the results by the Commission on Elections which will be
doing the canvass? That is immaterial Madam President
FR. BERNAS. It would not, Madam President, because
"ratification" is the act of saying "yes" is done when one
casts his ballot.
MR. MAAMBONG. So it is the date of the plebiscite itself,
Madam President?
FR. BERNAS. Yes, Madam President.
MR. MAAMBONG. With that statement of Commissioner Bernas, we
would like to know from the proponent, Commissioner Davide, if he is insisting
on his amendment.
MR. DAVIDE. Madam President, I am insisting on the amendment
because I cannot subscribe to the view of Commissioner Bernas, that the date of
the ratification is reckoned from the date of the casting of the ballots. That
cannot be the date of reckoning because it is a plebiscite all over the
country. We do not split the moment of casting by each of the voters. Actually
and technically speaking, it would be all right if it would be upon the
announcement of the results of the canvass conducted by the COMELEC or the
results of the plebiscite held all over the country. But it is necessary that
there be a body which will make the formal announcement of the results of the
plebiscite. So it is either the President or the COMELEC itself upon the
completion of the canvass of the results of the plebiscite, and I opted for the
President.
xxx xxx xxx
MR. NOLLEDO. Madam President.
THE PRESIDENT. Commissioner Nolledo is recognized.
MR. NOLLEDO. Thank you, Madam President. I beg to disagree
with Commissioner Davide. I support the stand of Commissioner Bernas because it
is really the date of the casting of the "yes" votes that is the date
of the ratification of the Constitution The announcement merely confirms the
ratification even if the results are released two or three days after.
I think it is a fundamental principle in political law, even in civil law,
because an announcement is a mere confirmation The act of ratification
is the act of voting by the people. So that is the date of the
ratification. If there should be any need for presidential proclamation, that
proclamation will merely confirm the act of ratification.
Thank you, Madam President.
THE PRESIDENT. Does Commissioner Regalado want to contribute?
MR. REGALADO. Madam President, I was precisely going to state
the same support for Commissioner Bernas, because the canvass thereafter is
merely the mathematical confirmation of what was done during
the date of the plebiscite and the proclamation of the
President is merely the official confirmatory declaration of an act
which was actually done by the Filipino people in adopting the Constitution
when they cast their votes on the date of the plebiscite.
MR. LERUM. Madam President, may I be recognized.
THE PRESIDENT. Commissioner Lerum is recognized.
MR. LERUM. I am in favor of the Davide amendment because we
have to fix a date for the effectivity of the Constitution. Suppose the
announcement is delayed by, say, 10 days or a month, what happens to the
obligations and rights that accrue upon the approval of the Constitution? So I
think we must have a definite date. I am, therefore, in favor of the Davide
amendment.
MR. MAAMBONG. Madam President.
THE PRESIDENT. Commissioner Maambong is recognized.
MR. MAAMBONG. With the theory of the Commissioner, would
there be a necessity for the Commission on Elections to declare the results of
the canvass?
FR. BERNAS. There would be because it is the
Commission on Elections which makes the official announcement of the results.
MR. MAAMBONG. My next question which is the final one is: After
the Commision on Elections has declared the results of the canvass, will there
be a necessity for the President to make a proclamation of the results of the
canvass as submitted by the Commission on Elections?
FR. BERNAS. I would say there would be no necessity, Madam
President.
MR. MAAMBONG. In other words, the President may or may not
make the proclamation whether the Constitution has been ratified or not.
FR. BERNAS. I would say that the proclamation made by the
President would be immaterial because under the law, the administration of all
election laws is under an independent Commission on Elections. It is the
Commission on Elections which announces the results.
MR. MAAMBONG. But nevertheless, the President may make the
proclamation.
FR. BERNAS. Yes, the President may. And if what he says
contradicts what the Commission on Elections says, it would have no effect. I
would only add that when we say that the date of effectivity is on the day of
the casting of the votes, what we mean is that the Constitution takes effect on
every single minute and every single second of that day, because the Civil Code
says a day has 24 hours.So that even if the votes are cast in the morning,
the Constitution is really effective from the previous midnight.
So that when we adopted the new rule on citizenship, the
children of Filipino mothers or anybody born on the date of effectivity of the
1973 Constitution, which is January 17, 1973, are natural-born citizens, no
matter what time of day or night.
MR. MAAMBONG. Could we, therefore, safely say that whatever
date is the publication of the results of the canvass by the COMELEC
retroacts to the date of the plebiscite?
FR. BERNAS. Yes, Madam President.
MR. MAAMBONG. I thank the Commissioner.
MR. GUINGONA. Madam President.
THE PRESIDENT. Commissioner Guingona is recognized.
MR. GUINGONA. Mention was made about the need for having a
definite date. I think it is precisely the proposal of Commissioner Bernas
which speaks of the date (of ratification that would have a definite date,
because there would be no definite date if we depend upon the
canvassing by the COMELEC.
Thank you,
THE PRESIDENT. Commissioner Concepcion is recognized.
MR. CONCEPCION. Thank you, Madam President.
Whoever makes the announcement as to the result of the
plebiscite, be it the COMELEC or the President, would announce that a majority
of the votes cast on a given date was in favor of the Constitution. And that is
the date when the Constitution takes effect, apart from the fact that the
provision on the drafting or amendment of the Constitution provides that a
constitution becomes effective upon ratification by a majority of the votes
cast, although I would not say from the very beginning of the date of election
because as of that time it is impossible to determine whether there is a
majority. At the end of the day of election or plebiscite, the
determination is made as of that time-the majority of the votes cast in a
plebiscite held on such and such a date. So that is the time when the new
Constitution will be considered ratified and, therefore, effective.
THE PRESIDENT. May we now hear Vice-President Padilla.
MR. PADILLA. Madam President, I am against the proposed
amendment of Commissioner Davide and I support the view of Commissioner Bernas
and the others because the ratification of the Constitution is on the date the
people, by a majority vote, have cast their votes in favor of the Constitution.
Even in civil law, if there is a contract, say, between an agent and a third
person and that contract is confirmed or ratified by the principal, the
validity does not begin on the date of ratification but it retroacts from the
date the contract was executed.
Therefore, the date of the Constitution as ratified
should retroact to the date that the people have cast their affirmative votes
in favor of the Constitution.
MR. MAAMBONG. Madam President.
THE PRESIDENT. Commissioner Maambong is recognized
MR. MAAMBONG. We will now ask once more Commissioner Davide
if he is insisting on his amendment
MR. DAVIDE. In view of the explanation and
overwhelming tyranny of the opinion that it will be effective
on the very day of the plebiscite, I am withdrawing my
amendment on the assumption that any of the following bodies the Office of the
President or the COMELEC will make the formal announcement of the results.
MR. RAMA. Madam President, we are now ready to vote on the
original provision as stated by the committee.
MR. MAAMBONG. The committee will read again the formulation
indicated in the original committee report as Section 12.
This Constitution shall take effect immediately upon its
ratification by a majority of the votes cast in a plebiscite called for the
purpose and shall supersede all previous Constitutions.
We ask for a vote, Madam President.
V O T I N G
THE PRESIDENT. As many as are in favor, please raise their
hand. (Several Members raised their hands.)
As many as are against, please raise their hand. (No
Member raised his hand.)
The results show 35 votes in favor and none against; Section
12 is approved. 2
The Court next holds as a
consequence of its declaration at bar that the Constitution took effect on the
date of its ratification in the plebiscite held on February 2, 1987, that: (1)
the Provisional Constitution promulgated on March 25, 1986 must be deemed to
have been superseded by the 1987 Constitution on the same date February 2, 1987
and (2) by and after said date, February 2, 1987, absent any saying clause to
the contrary in the Transitory Article of the Constitution, respondent OIC
Governor could no longer exercise the power to replace petitioners in their
positions as Barangay Captain and Councilmen. Hence, the attempted replacement
of petitioners by respondent OIC Governor's designation on February 8, 1987 of
their successors could no longer produce any legal force and effect. While the
Provisional Constitution provided for a one-year period expiring on March 25,
1987 within which the power of replacement could be exercised, this period was
shortened by the ratification and effectivity on February 2, 1987 of the Constitution.
Had the intention of the framers of the Constitution been otherwise, they would
have so provided for in the Transitory Article, as indeed they provided for
multifarious transitory provisions in twenty six sections of Article XVIII,
e.g. extension of the six-year term of the incumbent President and
Vice-President to noon of June 30, 1992 for purposes of synchronization of
elections, the continued exercise of legislative powers by the incumbent
President until the convening of the first Congress, etc.
A final note of
clarification, as to the statement in the dissent that "the appointments
of some seven Court of Appeals Justices, 71 provincial fiscals and 55 city
fiscals reported extended (by) the President on February 2, 1987 . . . could be
open to serious questions," in view of the provisions of Sections 8 (1)
and 9, Article VIII of the Constitution which require prior endorsement thereof
by the Judicial and Bar Council created under the Constitution. It should be
stated for the record that the reported date of the appointments, February 2,
1987, is incorrect. The official records of the Court show that the
appointments of the seven Court of Appeals Justices were transmitted to this
Court on February 1, 1987 and they were all appointed on or before January 31,
1987. 3(Similarly, the records of the Department of
Justice likewise show that the appointment papers of the last batch of
provincial and city fiscals signed by the President in completion of the
reorganization of the prosecution service were made on January 31, 1987 and
transmitted to the Department on February 1, 1987.) It is also a matter of
record that since February 2, 1987, no appointments to the Judiciary have been
extended by the President, pending the constitution of the Judicial and Bar
Council, indicating that the Chief Executive has likewise considered February
2, 1987 as the effective date of the Constitution, as now expressly declared by
the Court.
CRUZ, J., concurring.
In her quiet and restrained
manner, Justice Herrera is able to prove her point with more telling effect
than the tones of thunder. She has written another persuasive opinion, and I am
delighted to concur. I note that it in effect affirms my dissents in the De la
Serna, Zamora, Duquing and Bayas cases, where I submitted that the local OICs
may no longer be summarily replaced, having acquired security of tenure under
the new Constitution. Our difference is that whereas I would make that right
commence on February 25, 1987, after the deadline set by the Freedom
Constitution, Justice Herrera would opt for February 2, 1987, when the new
Constitution was ratified. I yield to that better view and agree with her ponencia completely.
SARMIENTO, J., Dissenting.
With due respect to the
majority I register this dissent.
While I agree that the
one-year deadline prescribed by Section 2, Article III of the Provisional
Constitution with respect to the tenure of government functionaries, as
follows:
SECTION 2. All elective and appointive officials and
employees under the 1973 Constitution shall continue in office until otherwise
provided by proclamation or executive order or upon the designation or
appointment and qualification of their successors, if such appointment is made
within a period of one year from February 25, 1986.
was cut short by the
ratification of the 1987 Constitution, I entertain serious doubts whether or
not that cut-off period began on February 2, 1987, the date of the plebiscite
held to approve the new Charter. To my mind the 1987 constitution took effect
on February 11, 1987, the date the same was proclaimed ratified pursuant to
Proclamation No. 58 of the President of the Philippines, and not February 2,
1987, plebiscite day.
I rely, first and foremost,
on the language of the 1987 Charter itself, thus:
Sec. 27. This Constitution shag take effect immediately upon
its ratification by a majority of the votes cast in a plebiscite held for the
purpose and shall supersede all previous Constitutions.
It is my reading of this
provision that the Constitution takes effect on the date its ratification shall
have been ascertained, and not at the time the people cast their votes to
approve or reject it. For it cannot be logically said that Constitution was
ratified during such a plebiscite, when the will of the people as of that time,
had not, and could not have been, vet determined.
Other than that, pragmatic
considerations compel me to take the view.
I have no doubt that between
February 2, and February 11, 1987 the government performed acts that would have
been valid under the Provisional Constitution but would otherwise have been
void under the 1987 Charter. I recall, in particular, the appointments of some
seven Court of Appeals Justices, 71 provincial fiscals, and 55 city fiscals the
President reportedly extended on February 2, 1987. 1 Under
Sections 8 (1) and 9, Article VIII, of the l987 Constitution, as follows:
xxx xxx xxx
Sec. 8. (I)A Judicial and Bar Council is hereby created under
the supervision of the Supreme Court composed of the Chief Justice as ex
officio Chairman, the Secretary of Justice, and a representative of
the Congress as ex oficio Members, a representative of the
Integrated Bar, a professor of law, a retired Member of the Supreme Court, and
a representative of the private sector.
xxx xxx xxx
Sec. 9. The Members of the Supreme Court and judges of 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.
xxx xxx xxx
such appointments could be
open to serious questions.
Since 1973, moreover, we
have invariably reckoned the effectivity of the Constitution as well as the
amendments thereto from the date it is proclaimed ratified.
In Magtoto v.
Manguera, 2 we held that the 1973 Constitution
became in force and effect on January 17, 1973, the date Proclamation No. 1102,
"Announcing the Ratification by the Filipino People of the Constitution
Proposed by the 1971 Constitutional Convention," was issued, although Mr.
Justice, now Chief Justice, Teehankee would push its effectivity date further
to April 17, 1973, the date our decision in Javellana v. Executive
Secretary, 3 became final. And this was so
notwithstanding Section 16, Article XVII, of the 1973 Constitution, thus:
SEC. 16. This Constitution shall take effect immediately upon
its ratification by a majority of the votes cast in a plebiscite called for the
purpose and, except as herein provided, shall supersede the Constitution of
nineteen-hundred and thirty- five and all amendments thereto.
On October 27, 1976, then
President Marcos promulgated Proclamation no. 1595, proclaiming the
ratification of the 1976 amendments submitted in the plebiscite of October 16-
17, 1976. The Proclamation states, inter alia, that.
By virtue-of the powers
vested in me by law, I hereby proclaim all the amendments embodied in this
certificate as duly ratified by the Filipino people in the referendum-
plebiscite held Oct. 16-17, 1976 and are therefore effective and in full force
and effect as of this date.
It shall be noted that under
Amendment No. 9 of the said 1976 amendments.
These amendments shall take effect after the incumbent
President shall have proclaimed that they have been ratified by a majority of
the votes cast in the referendum-plebiscite.
On April 1, 1980, the then
Chief Executive issued Proclamation no. 1959, "Proclaiming the
Ratification by the Filipino People of the Amendments of Section 7, Article X
of the Constitution" (lengthening the terms of office of judges and
justices). The Proclamation provides:
[t]he above-quoted amendment has been duly ratified by a
majority of the votes cast in the plebiscite held, together with the election
for local officials, on January 30, 1980, and that said amendment is hereby
declared to take effect immediately.
It shall be noted that under
Resolution No. 21, dated December 18, 1979, the proposed amendment shall take
effect on the date the incumbent President/Prime Minister shall proclaim its
ratification.
On April 7, 1981, Proclamation
No. 2077 was issued "Proclaiming the Ratification in the Plebiscite of
April 7, 1981 of the Amendments to the Constitution Embodied in Batas Pambansa
Blg. 122 and Declaring Them Therefore Effective and in Full Force and
Effect." The Proclamation, in declaring the said amendments duly approved,
further declared them "[e]ffective and in full force and in effect as of
the date of this Proclamation," It shall be noted, in this connection,
that under Resolutions Nos. I and 2 of the Batasang Pambansa, Third Regular
Session, Sitting as a Constituent Assembly, which parented these amendments,
the same:
. . .shall become valid as part of the Constitution when
approved by a majority of the votes cast in a plebiscite to be held pursuant to
Section 2, Article XVI of the Constitution.
On the other hand, Batas
Pambansa Blg. 122, "An Act to Submit to the Filipino People, for
Ratification or Rejection, the Amendment to the Constitution of the
Philippines, Proposed by the Batasang Pambansa, Sitting as a Constituent Assembly,
in its Resolutions Numbered Three, Two, and One, and to Appropriate Funds
Therefore," provides, as follows:
SEC. 7. The Commission on Elections, sitting en banc,
shad canvass and proclaim the result of the plebiscite using the certificates
submitted to it, duly authenticated and certified by the Board of Canvassers of
each province or city.
We have, finally,
Proclamation No. 2332, "Proclaiming the Ratification in the Plebiscite of
January 27, 1984, of the Amendments to the Constitution Embodied in Batasang
Pambansa Resolutions Nos. 104, 105, 110, 111, 112 and 113." It states that
the amendments:
....are therefore effective and in full force and effect as
of the date of this Proclamation.
It carries out Resolution
no. 104 itself (as well as Resolutions Nos. 110 and 112 and Section 9, Batas
Blg. 643), which states, that:
The proposed amendments shall take effect on the date the
President of the Philippines shall proclaim that they have been ratified by a
majority of the votes cast in the plebiscite held for the purpose, but not
later than three months from the approval of the amendments.
albeit Resolutions Nos. 105,
111, and 113 provide, that:
These amendments shall be valid as a part of the Constitution
when approved by a majority of the votes cast in an election/plebiscite at
which it is submitted to the people for their ratification pursuant to Section
2 of Article XVI of the Constitution, as amended.
That a Constitution or
amendments thereto take effect upon proclamation of their ratification and not
at the time of the plebiscite is a view that is not peculiar to the Marcos era.
The Resolution of Both
Houses (of Congress) in Joint Session on the March 11, 1947 plebiscite called
pursuant to Republic Act No. 73 and the Resolution of Both Houses (of Congress)
adopted on September 18, 1946, was adopted on April 9,1947. The April 9, 1947
Resolution makes no mention of a retroactive application.
Accordingly, when the
incumbent President (Mrs. Corazon C. Aquino) proclaimed on February 11, 1987,
at Malacanang Palace:
... that the Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines
adopted by the Constitutional Commission of 1986, including the Ordinance
appended thereto, has been duly ratified by the Filipino people and is
therefore effective and in full force and effect. 4
the 1987 Constitution, in
point of fact, came into force and effect, I hold that it took effect at no
other time.
I submit that our ruling
in Ponsica v. Ignalaga 5 in which we
declared, in passing, that the new Charter was ratified on February 2, 1987,
does not in any way weaken this dissent. As I stated, the remark was said in
passing-we did not resolve the case on account of a categorical holding that
the 1987 Constitution came to life on February 2, 1987. In any event, if we
did, I now call for its re-examination.
I am therefore of the
opinion, consistent with the views expressed above, that the challenged
dismissals done on February 8, 1987 were valid, the 1987 Constitution not being
then as yet in force.
Separate Opinions
TEEHANKEE, CJ., concurring:
The main issue resolved in
the judgment at bar is whether the 1987 Constitution took effect on February
2, 1987, the date that the plebiscite for its ratification was held or
whether it took effect on February 11, 1987, the date its
ratification was proclaimed per Proclamation No. 58 of the President of the
Philippines, Corazon C. Aquino.
The Court's decision, with
the lone dissent of Mr. Justice Sarmiento, holds that by virtue of the
provision of Article XVIII, Section 27 of the 1987 Constitution that it
"shall take effect immediately upon its ratification by a majority of the
votes cast in a plebiscite held for the purpose," the 1987 Constitution
took effect on February 2, 1987, the date of its ratification in the plebiscite
held on that same date.
The thrust of the dissent is
that the Constitution should be deemed to "take effect on the date its
ratification shall have been ascertained and not at the time the people cast
their votes to approve or reject it." This view was actually proposed at
the Constitutional Commission deliberations, but was withdrawn by its proponent
in the face of the "overwhelming" contrary view that the Constitution
"will be effective on the very day of the plebiscite."
The record of the
proceedings and debates of the Constitutional Commission fully supports the
Court's judgment. It shows that the clear, unequivocal and express intent of
the Constitutional Conunission in unanimously approving (by thirty-five votes
in favor and none against) the aforequoted Section 27 of Transitory Article
XVIII of the 1987 Constitution was that "the act of ratification is the
act of voting by the people. So that is the date of the ratification" and
that "the canvass thereafter [of the votes] is merely the mathematical
confirmation of what was done during the date of the plebiscite and the
proclamation of the President is merely the official confirmatory declaration
of an act which was actually done by the Filipino people in adopting the
Constitution when they cast their votes on the date of the plebiscite."
The record of the
deliberations and the voting is reproduced hereinbelow: 1
MR. MAAMBONG. Madam President, may we now put to a
vote the original formulation of the committee as indicated in Section 12,
unless there are other commissioners who would like to present amendments.
MR. DAVIDE. Madam President.
THE PRESIDENT. Commissioner Davide is recognized.
MR. DAVIDE. May I propose the following amendments.
On line 2, delete the words "its ratification" and
in lieu thereof insert the following-. "THE PROCLAMATION BY THE PRESIDENT
THAT IT HAS BEEN RATIFIED." And on the last line, after
"constitutions," add the following: "AND THEIR AMENDMENTS."
MR. MAAMBONG. Just a moment, Madam President. If Commissioner
Davide is going to propose an additional sentence, the committee would suggest
that we take up first his amendment to the first sentence as originally
formulated. We are now ready to comment on that proposed amendment.
The proposed amendment would be to delete the words "its
ratification and in lieu thereof insert the words "THE PROCLAMATION BY THE
PRESIDENT THAT IT HAS BEEN RATIFIED." And the second amendment would be:
After the word "constitutions," add the words" AND THEIR
AMENDMENTS,"
The committee accepts the first proposed amendment. However,
we regret that we cannot accept the second proposed amendment after the word
"constitutions" because the committee feels that when we talk of all
previous Constitutions, necessarily it includes "AND THEIR
AMENDMENTS."
MR. DAVIDE. With that explanation, l will not insist on the
second. But, Madam President, may I request that I be allowed to read the
second amendment so the Commission would be able to appreciate the change in
the first.
MR. MAAMBONG. Yes, Madam President, we can now do that.
MR. DAVIDE. The second sentence will read: "THE
PROCLAMATION SHALL BE MADE WITHIN FIVE DAYS FOLLOWING THE COMPLETION OF THE
CANVASS BY THE COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS OF THE RESULTS OF SUCH PLEBISCITE."
MR. MAAMBONG. Madam President, after conferring with our
chairman, the committee feels that the second proposed amendment in the form of
a new sentence would not be exactly necessary and the committee feels that it
would be too much for us to impose a time frame on the President to make the
proclamation. As we would recall, Madam President, in the approved Article on
the Executive, there is a provision which says that the President shall make
certain that all laws shall be faithfully complied. When we approve this first
sentence, and it says that there will be a proclamation by the President that
the Constitution has been ratified, the President will naturally comply with
the law in accordance with the provisions in the Article on the Executive which
we have cited. It would be too much to impose on the President a time frame within
which she will make that declaration. It would be assumed that the President
would immediately do that after the results shall have been canvassed by the
COMELEC.
Therefore, the committee regrets that it cannot accept the
second sentence which the Gentleman is proposing, Madam President.
MR. DAVIDE. I am prepared to withdraw the same on the
assumption that there will be an immediate proclamation of the results by the
President.
MR. MAAMBONG. With that understanding, Madam President.
MR. DAVIDE. I will not insist on the second sentence.
FR. BERNAS. Madam President.
THE PRESIDENT. Commissioner Bernas is recognized.
FR. BERNAS. I would ask the committee to reconsider its
acceptance of the amendment which makes the effectivity of the new Constitution
dependent upon the proclamation of the President. The effectivity of
the Constitution should commence on the date of the ratification, not on the
date of the proclamation of the President. What is confusing, I think,
is what happened in 1976 when the amendments of 1976 were
ratified. In that particular case, the reason the amendments of 1976
were effective upon the proclamation of the President was that the
draft presented to the people said that the amendment will be effective upon
the proclamation made by the President. I have a suspicion that was put in
there precisely to give the President some kind of leeway on whether to
announce the ratification or not. Therefore, we should not make this
dependent on the action of the President since this will be a manifestation of
the act of the people to be done under the supervision of the COMELECand it
should be the COMELEC who should make the announcement that, in fact, the votes
show that the Constitution was ratified and there should be no need to wait for
any proclamation on the part of the President.
MR. MAAMBONG. Would the Gentleman answer a few clarificatory
questions?
FR. BERNAS. Willingly, Madam President.
MR. MAAMBONG. The Gentleman will agree that a date has to be
fixed as to exactly when the Constitution is supposed to be ratified.
FR. BERNAS. I would say that the ratification of the
Constitution is on the date the votes were supposed to have been cast.
MR. MAAMBONG. Let us go to the mechanics of the whole thing,
Madam President. We present the Constitution to a plebiscite, the people
exercise their right to vote, then the votes are canvassed by the Commission on
Elections. If we delete the suggested amendment which says: "THE
PROCLAMATION BY THE PRESIDENT THAT IT HAS BEEN RATIFIED," what would be,
in clear terms, the date when the Constitution is supposed to be ratified or
not ratified, as the case may be?
FR. BERNAS. The date would be the casting of the ballots. if
the President were to say that the plebiscite would be held, for instance, on
January 19, 1987, then the date for the effectivity of the new Constitution
would be January 19, 1987.
MR. MAAMBONG. In other words, it would not depend on the
actual issuance of the results by the Commission on Elections which will be
doing the canvass? That is immaterial Madam President
FR. BERNAS. It would not, Madam President, because
"ratification" is the act of saying "yes" is done when one
casts his ballot.
MR. MAAMBONG. So it is the date of the plebiscite itself,
Madam President?
FR. BERNAS. Yes, Madam President.
MR. MAAMBONG. With that statement of Commissioner Bernas, we
would like to know from the proponent, Commissioner Davide, if he is insisting
on his amendment.
MR. DAVIDE. Madam President, I am insisting on the amendment
because I cannot subscribe to the view of Commissioner Bernas, that the date of
the ratification is reckoned from the date of the casting of the ballots. That
cannot be the date of reckoning because it is a plebiscite all over the
country. We do not split the moment of casting by each of the voters. Actually
and technically speaking, it would be all right if it would be upon the
announcement of the results of the canvass conducted by the COMELEC or the
results of the plebiscite held all over the country. But it is necessary that
there be a body which will make the formal announcement of the results of the
plebiscite. So it is either the President or the COMELEC itself upon the
completion of the canvass of the results of the plebiscite, and I opted for the
President.
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MR. NOLLEDO. Madam President.
THE PRESIDENT. Commissioner Nolledo is recognized.
MR. NOLLEDO. Thank you, Madam President. I beg to disagree
with Commissioner Davide. I support the stand of Commissioner Bernas because it
is really the date of the casting of the "yes" votes that is the date
of the ratification of the Constitution The announcement merely confirms the
ratification even if the results are released two or three days after.
I think it is a fundamental principle in political law, even in civil law,
because an announcement is a mere confirmation The act of ratification
is the act of voting by the people. So that is the date of the
ratification. If there should be any need for presidential proclamation, that
proclamation will merely confirm the act of ratification.
Thank you, Madam President.
THE PRESIDENT. Does Commissioner Regalado want to contribute?
MR. REGALADO. Madam President, I was precisely going to state
the same support for Commissioner Bernas, because the canvass thereafter is
merely the mathematical confirmation of what was done during
the date of the plebiscite and the proclamation of the
President is merely the official confirmatory declaration of an act
which was actually done by the Filipino people in adopting the Constitution
when they cast their votes on the date of the plebiscite.
MR. LERUM. Madam President, may I be recognized.
THE PRESIDENT. Commissioner Lerum is recognized.
MR. LERUM. I am in favor of the Davide amendment because we
have to fix a date for the effectivity of the Constitution. Suppose the
announcement is delayed by, say, 10 days or a month, what happens to the
obligations and rights that accrue upon the approval of the Constitution? So I
think we must have a definite date. I am, therefore, in favor of the Davide
amendment.
MR. MAAMBONG. Madam President.
THE PRESIDENT. Commissioner Maambong is recognized.
MR. MAAMBONG. With the theory of the Commissioner, would
there be a necessity for the Commission on Elections to declare the results of
the canvass?
FR. BERNAS. There would be because it is the
Commission on Elections which makes the official announcement of the results.
MR. MAAMBONG. My next question which is the final one is:
After the Commision on Elections has declared the results of the canvass, will
there be a necessity for the President to make a proclamation of the results of
the canvass as submitted by the Commission on Elections?
FR. BERNAS. I would say there would be no necessity, Madam
President.
MR. MAAMBONG. In other words, the President may or may not
make the proclamation whether the Constitution has been ratified or not.
FR. BERNAS. I would say that the proclamation made by the
President would be immaterial because under the law, the administration of all
election laws is under an independent Commission on Elections. It is the
Commission on Elections which announces the results.
MR. MAAMBONG. But nevertheless, the President may make the
proclamation.
FR. BERNAS. Yes, the President may. And if what he says
contradicts what the Commission on Elections says, it would have no effect. I
would only add that when we say that the date of effectivity is on the day of
the casting of the votes, what we mean is that the Constitution takes effect on
every single minute and every single second of that day, because the Civil Code
says a day has 24 hours.
So that even if the votes are cast in the morning, the
Constitution is really effective from the previous midnight. So
that when we adopted the new rule on citizenship, the children of Filipino
mothers or anybody born on the date of effectivity of the 1973 Constitution,
which is January 17, 1973, are natural-born citizens, no matter what time of
day or night.
MR. MAAMBONG. Could we, therefore, safely say that whatever
date is the publication of the results of the canvass by the COMELEC
retroacts to the date of the plebiscite?
FR. BERNAS. Yes, Madam President.
MR. MAAMBONG. I thank the Commissioner.
MR. GUINGONA. Madam President.
THE PRESIDENT. Commissioner Guingona is recognized.
MR. GUINGONA. Mention was made about the need for having a
definite date. I think it is precisely the proposal of Commissioner Bernas
which speaks of the date (of ratification that would have a definite date,
because there would be no definite date if we depend upon the
canvassing by the COMELEC.
Thank you,
THE PRESIDENT. Commissioner Concepcion is recognized.
MR. CONCEPCION. Thank you, Madam President.
Whoever makes the announcement as to the result of the
plebiscite, be it the COMELEC or the President, would announce that a majority
of the votes cast on a given date was in favor of the Constitution. And that is
the date when the Constitution takes effect, apart from the fact that the
provision on the drafting or amendment of the Constitution provides that a
constitution becomes effective upon ratification by a majority of the votes
cast, although I would not say from the very beginning of the date of election
because as of that time it is impossible to determine whether there is a
majority. At the end of the day of election or plebiscite, the
determination is made as of that time-the majority of the votes cast in a
plebiscite held on such and such a date. So that is the time when the new
Constitution will be considered ratified and, therefore, effective.
THE PRESIDENT. May we now hear Vice-President Padilla.
MR. PADILLA. Madam President, I am against the proposed
amendment of Commissioner Davide and I support the view of Commissioner Bernas
and the others because the ratification of the Constitution is on the date the
people, by a majority vote, have cast their votes in favor of the Constitution.
Even in civil law, if there is a contract, say, between an agent and a third
person and that contract is confirmed or ratified by the principal, the
validity does not begin on the date of ratification but it retroacts from the
date the contract was executed.
Therefore, the date of the Constitution as ratified
should retroact to the date that the people have cast their affirmative votes
in favor of the Constitution.
MR. MAAMBONG. Madam President.
THE PRESIDENT. Commissioner Maambong is recognized
MR. MAAMBONG. We will now ask once more Commissioner Davide
if he is insisting on his amendment
MR. DAVIDE. In view of the explanation and
overwhelming tyranny of the opinion that it will be effective
on the very day of the plebiscite, I am withdrawing my
amendment on the assumption that any of the following bodies the Office of the
President or the COMELEC will make the formal announcement of the results.
MR. RAMA. Madam President, we are now ready to vote on the
original provision as stated by the committee.
MR. MAAMBONG. The committee will read again the formulation
indicated in the original committee report as Section 12.
This Constitution shall take effect immediately upon its
ratification by a majority of the votes cast in a plebiscite called for the
purpose and shall supersede all previous Constitutions.
We ask for a vote, Madam President.
V O
T I N G
THE PRESIDENT. As many as are in favor, please raise their
hand. (Several Members raised their hands.)
As many as are against, please raise their hand. (No
Member raised his hand.)
The results show 35 votes in favor and none against; Section
12 is approved. 2
The Court next holds as a
consequence of its declaration at bar that the Constitution took effect on the
date of its ratification in the plebiscite held on February 2, 1987, that: (1)
the Provisional Constitution promulgated on March 25, 1986 must be deemed to
have been superseded by the 1987 Constitution on the same date February 2, 1987
and (2) by and after said date, February 2, 1987, absent any saying clause to
the contrary in the Transitory Article of the Constitution, respondent OIC
Governor could no longer exercise the power to replace petitioners in their
positions as Barangay Captain and Councilmen. Hence, the attempted replacement
of petitioners by respondent OIC Governor's designation on February 8, 1987 of
their successors could no longer produce any legal force and effect. While the
Provisional Constitution provided for a one-year period expiring on March 25,
1987 within which the power of replacement could be exercised, this period was
shortened by the ratification and effectivity on February 2, 1987 of the
Constitution. Had the intention of the framers of the Constitution been
otherwise, they would have so provided for in the Transitory Article, as indeed
they provided for multifarious transitory provisions in twenty six sections of
Article XVIII, e.g. extension of the six-year term of the incumbent President
and Vice-President to noon of June 30, 1992 for purposes of synchronization of
elections, the continued exercise of legislative powers by the incumbent
President until the convening of the first Congress, etc.
A final note of
clarification, as to the statement in the dissent that "the appointments
of some seven Court of Appeals Justices, 71 provincial fiscals and 55 city
fiscals reported extended (by) the President on February 2, 1987 . . . could be
open to serious questions," in view of the provisions of Sections 8 (1)
and 9, Article VIII of the Constitution which require prior endorsement thereof
by the Judicial and Bar Council created under the Constitution. It should be
stated for the record that the reported date of the appointments, February 2,
1987, is incorrect. The official records of the Court show that the
appointments of the seven Court of Appeals Justices were transmitted to this
Court on February 1, 1987 and they were all appointed on or before January 31,
1987. 3(Similarly, the records of the Department of
Justice likewise show that the appointment papers of the last batch of
provincial and city fiscals signed by the President in completion of the
reorganization of the prosecution service were made on January 31, 1987 and
transmitted to the Department on February 1, 1987.) It is also a matter of
record that since February 2, 1987, no appointments to the Judiciary have been
extended by the President, pending the constitution of the Judicial and Bar
Council, indicating that the Chief Executive has likewise considered February
2, 1987 as the effective date of the Constitution, as now expressly declared by
the Court.
CRUZ, J., concurring.
In her quiet and restrained
manner, Justice Herrera is able to prove her point with more telling effect
than the tones of thunder. She has written another persuasive opinion, and I am
delighted to concur. I note that it in effect affirms my dissents in the De la
Serna, Zamora, Duquing and Bayas cases, where I submitted that the local OICs
may no longer be summarily replaced, having acquired security of tenure under
the new Constitution. Our difference is that whereas I would make that right
commence on February 25, 1987, after the deadline set by the Freedom
Constitution, Justice Herrera would opt for February 2, 1987, when the new
Constitution was ratified. I yield to that better view and agree with her ponencia completely.
SARMIENTO, J., Dissenting.
With due respect to the
majority I register this dissent.
While I agree that the
one-year deadline prescribed by Section 2, Article III of the Provisional
Constitution with respect to the tenure of government functionaries, as
follows:
SECTION 2. All elective and appointive officials and
employees under the 1973 Constitution shall continue in office until otherwise
provided by proclamation or executive order or upon the designation or
appointment and qualification of their successors, if such appointment is made
within a period of one year from February 25, 1986.
was cut short by the
ratification of the 1987 Constitution, I entertain serious doubts whether or
not that cut-off period began on February 2, 1987, the date of the plebiscite
held to approve the new Charter. To my mind the 1987 constitution took effect
on February 11, 1987, the date the same was proclaimed ratified pursuant to
Proclamation No. 58 of the President of the Philippines, and not February 2,
1987, plebiscite day.
I rely, first and foremost,
on the language of the 1987 Charter itself, thus:
Sec. 27. This Constitution shag take effect immediately upon
its ratification by a majority of the votes cast in a plebiscite held for the
purpose and shall supersede all previous Constitutions.
It is my reading of this
provision that the Constitution takes effect on the date its ratification shall
have been ascertained, and not at the time the people cast their votes to
approve or reject it. For it cannot be logically said that Constitution was
ratified during such a plebiscite, when the will of the people as of that time,
had not, and could not have been, vet determined.
Other than that, pragmatic
considerations compel me to take the view.
I have no doubt that between
February 2, and February 11, 1987 the government performed acts that would have
been valid under the Provisional Constitution but would otherwise have been
void under the 1987 Charter. I recall, in particular, the appointments of some
seven Court of Appeals Justices, 71 provincial fiscals, and 55 city fiscals the
President reportedly extended on February 2, 1987. 1 Under
Sections 8 (1) and 9, Article VIII, of the l987 Constitution, as follows:
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Sec. 8. (I)A Judicial and Bar Council is hereby created under
the supervision of the Supreme Court composed of the Chief Justice as ex
officio Chairman, the Secretary of Justice, and a representative of
the Congress as ex oficio Members, a representative of the
Integrated Bar, a professor of law, a retired Member of the Supreme Court, and
a representative of the private sector.
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2Sec. 9. The Members of the Supreme Court and judges of 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.
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such appointments could be
open to serious questions.
Since 1973, moreover, we
have invariably reckoned the effectivity of the Constitution as well as the
amendments thereto from the date it is proclaimed ratified.
In Magtoto v.
Manguera, 2 we held that the 1973 Constitution
became in force and effect on January 17, 1973, the date Proclamation No. 1102,
"Announcing the Ratification by the Filipino People of the Constitution
Proposed by the 1971 Constitutional Convention," was issued, although Mr.
Justice, now Chief Justice, Teehankee would push its effectivity date further
to April 17, 1973, the date our decision in Javellana v. Executive
Secretary, 3 became final. And this was so
notwithstanding Section 16, Article XVII, of the 1973 Constitution, thus:
SEC. 16. This Constitution shall take effect immediately upon
its ratification by a majority of the votes cast in a plebiscite called for the
purpose and, except as herein provided, shall supersede the Constitution of
nineteen-hundred and thirty- five and all amendments thereto.
On October 27, 1976, then
President Marcos promulgated Proclamation no. 1595, proclaiming the
ratification of the 1976 amendments submitted in the plebiscite of October 16-
17, 1976. The Proclamation states, inter alia, that.
By virtue-of the powers
vested in me by law, I hereby proclaim all the amendments embodied in this
certificate as duly ratified by the Filipino people in the referendum —
plebiscite held Oct. 16-17, 1976 and are therefore effective and in full force
and effect as of this date.
It shall be noted that under
Amendment No. 9 of the said 1976 amendments.
These amendments shall take effect after the incumbent
President shall have proclaimed that they have been ratified by a majority of
the votes cast in the referendum-plebiscite.
On April 1, 1980, the then
Chief Executive issued Proclamation no. 1959, "Proclaiming the
Ratification by the Filipino People of the Amendments of Section 7, Article X
of the Constitution" (lengthening the terms of office of judges and
justices). The Proclamation provides:
[t]he above-quoted amendment has been duly ratified by a
majority of the votes cast in the plebiscite held, together with the election
for local officials, on January 30, 1980, and that said amendment is hereby
declared to take effect immediately.
It shall be noted that under
Resolution No. 21, dated December 18, 1979, the proposed amendment shall take
effect on the date the incumbent President/Prime Minister shall proclaim its
ratification.
On April 7, 1981,
Proclamation No. 2077 was issued "Proclaiming the Ratification in the
Plebiscite of April 7, 1981 of the Amendments to the Constitution Embodied in
Batas Pambansa Blg. 122 and Declaring Them Therefore Effective and in Full
Force and Effect." The Proclamation, in declaring the said amendments duly
approved, further declared them "[e]ffective and in full force and in
effect as of the date of this Proclamation," It shall be noted, in this
connection, that under Resolutions Nos. I and 2 of the Batasang Pambansa, Third
Regular Session, Sitting as a Constituent Assembly, which parented these
amendments, the same:
... shall become valid as part of the Constitution when
approved by a majority of the votes cast in a plebiscite to be held pursuant to
Section 2, Article XVI of the Constitution.
On the other hand, Batas
Pambansa Blg. 122, "An Act to Submit to the Filipino People, for
Ratification or Rejection, the Amendment to the Constitution of the
Philippines, Proposed by the Batasang Pambansa, Sitting as a Constituent
Assembly, in its Resolutions Numbered Three, Two, and One, and to Appropriate
Funds Therefore," provides, as follows:
SEC. 7. The Commission on Elections, sitting en banc,
shad canvass and proclaim the result of the plebiscite using the certificates
submitted to it, duly authenticated and certified by the Board of Canvassers of
each province or city.
We have, finally,
Proclamation No. 2332, "Proclaiming the Ratification in the Plebiscite of
January 27, 1984, of the Amendments to the Constitution Embodied in Batasang
Pambansa Resolutions Nos. 104, 105, 110, 111, 112 and 113." It states that
the amendments:
....are therefore effective and in full force and effect as
of the date of this Proclamation.
It carries out Resolution
no. 104 itself (as well as Resolutions Nos. 110 and 112 and Section 9, Batas
Blg. 643), which states, that:
The proposed amendments shall take effect on the date the
President of the Philippines shall proclaim that they have been ratified by a
majority of the votes cast in the plebiscite held for the purpose, but not
later than three months from the approval of the amendments.
albeit Resolutions Nos. 105,
111, and 113 provide, that:
These amendments shall be
valid as a part of the Constitution when approved by a majority of the votes
cast in an election/plebiscite at which it is submitted to the people for their
ratification pursuant to Section 2 of Article XVI of the Constitution, as
amended.
That a Constitution or
amendments thereto take effect upon proclamation of their ratification and not
at the time of the plebiscite is a view that is not peculiar to the Marcos era.
The Resolution of Both
Houses (of Congress) in Joint Session on the March 11, 1947 plebiscite called
pursuant to Republic Act No. 73 and the Resolution of Both Houses (of Congress)
adopted on September 18, 1946, was adopted on April 9,1947. The April 9, 1947
Resolution makes no mention of a retroactive application. Accordingly,
when the incumbent President (Mrs. Corazon C. Aquino) proclaimed on February
11, 1987, at Malacanang Palace:
... that the Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines
adopted by the Constitutional Commission of 1986, including the Ordinance
appended thereto, has been duly ratified by the Filipino people and is
therefore effective and in full force and effect. 4
the 1987 Constitution, in
point of fact, came into force and effect, I hold that it took effect at no
other time.
I submit that our ruling
in Ponsica v. Ignalaga 5 in which we
declared, in passing, that the new Charter was ratified on February 2, 1987,
does not in any way weaken this dissent. As I stated, the remark was said in
passing-we did not resolve the case on account of a categorical holding that
the 1987 Constitution came to life on February 2, 1987. In any event, if we
did, I now call for its re-examination.
I am therefore of the
opinion, consistent with the views expressed above, that the challenged
dismissals done on February 8, 1987 were valid, the 1987 Constitution not being
then as yet in force.