Republic
of the Philippines
SUPREME COURT
Manila
SUPREME COURT
Manila
EN
BANC
G.R. No. 127325
March 19, 1997
MIRIAM DEFENSOR
SANTIAGO, ALEXANDER PADILLA, and MARIA ISABEL ONGPIN, petitioners,
vs.
COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS, JESUS DELFIN, ALBERTO PEDROSA & CARMEN PEDROSA, in their capacities as founding members of the People's Initiative for Reforms, Modernization and Action (PIRMA), respondents.
vs.
COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS, JESUS DELFIN, ALBERTO PEDROSA & CARMEN PEDROSA, in their capacities as founding members of the People's Initiative for Reforms, Modernization and Action (PIRMA), respondents.
SENATOR RAUL S.
ROCO, DEMOKRASYA-IPAGTANGGOL ANG KONSTITUSYON (DIK), MOVEMENT OF ATTORNEYS FOR
BROTHERHOOD INTEGRITY AND NATIONALISM, INC. (MABINI), INTEGRATED BAR OF THE
PHILIPPINES (IBP), and LABAN NG DEMOKRATIKONG PILIPINO (LABAN), petitioners-intervenors.
DAVIDE, JR., J.:
The heart of this
controversy brought to us by way of a petition for prohibition under Rule 65 of
the Rules of Court is the right of the people to directly propose amendments to
the Constitution through the system of initiative under
Section 2 of Article XVII of the 1987 Constitution. Undoubtedly, this demands
special attention, as this system of initiative was unknown to the people of
this country, except perhaps to a few scholars, before the drafting of the 1987
Constitution. The 1986 Constitutional Commission itself, through the original
proponent 1 and the main sponsor 2 of
the proposed Article on Amendments or Revision of the Constitution,
characterized this system as "innovative".3 Indeed
it is, for both under the 1935 and 1973 Constitutions, only two methods of
proposing amendments to, or revision of, the Constitution were
recognized, viz., (1) by Congress upon a vote of three-fourths of
all its members and (2) by a constitutional convention. 4 For
this and the other reasons hereafter discussed, we resolved to give due course
to this petition.
On 6 December 1996,
private respondent Atty. Jesus S. Delfin filed with public respondent
Commission on Elections (hereafter, COMELEC) a "Petition to Amend the
Constitution, to Lift Term Limits of Elective Officials, by People's
Initiative" (hereafter, Delfin Petition) 5 wherein
Delfin asked the COMELEC for an order
1. Fixing the time and dates for signature
gathering all over the country;
2. Causing the necessary publications of
said Order and the attached "Petition for Initiative on the 1987
Constitution, in newspapers of general and local circulation;
3. Instructing Municipal Election
Registrars in all Regions of the Philippines, to assist Petitioners and
volunteers, in establishing signing stations at the time and on the dates
designated for the purpose.
Delfin alleged in
his petition that he is a founding member of the Movement for People's
Initiative, 6 a group of citizens desirous to avail
of the system intended to institutionalize people power; that he and the
members of the Movement and other volunteers intend to exercise the power to
directly propose amendments to the Constitution granted under Section 2,
Article XVII of the Constitution; that the exercise of that power shall be
conducted in proceedings under the control and supervision of the COMELEC;
that, as required in COMELEC Resolution No. 2300, signature stations shall be
established all over the country, with the assistance of municipal election
registrars, who shall verify the signatures affixed by individual signatories;
that before the Movement and other volunteers can gather signatures, it is
necessary that the time and dates to be designated for the purpose be first
fixed in an order to be issued by the COMELEC; and that to adequately inform
the people of the electoral process involved, it is likewise necessary that the
said order, as well as the Petition on which the signatures shall be affixed,
be published in newspapers of general and local circulation, under the control
and supervision of the COMELEC.
The Delfin Petition
further alleged that the provisions sought to be amended are Sections 4 and 7
of Article VI, 7Section 4 of Article VII, 8 and
Section 8 of Article X 9 of the Constitution.
Attached to the petition is a copy of a "Petition for Initiative on the
1987 Constitution" 10 embodying the proposed
amendments which consist in the deletion from the aforecited sections of the
provisions concerning term limits, and with the following proposition:
DO YOU APPROVE OF LIFTING THE TERM LIMITS
OF ALL ELECTIVE GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS, AMENDING FOR THE PURPOSE SECTIONS 4 AND 7
OF ARTICLE VI, SECTION 4 OF ARTICLE VII, AND SECTION 8 OF ARTICLE X OF THE 1987
PHILIPPINE CONSTITUTION?
According to
Delfin, the said Petition for Initiative will first be submitted to the people,
and after it is signed by at least twelve per cent of the total number of
registered voters in the country it will be formally filed with the COMELEC.
Upon the filing of
the Delfin Petition, which was forthwith given the number UND 96-037
(INITIATIVE), the COMELEC, through its Chairman, issued an Order 11 (a)
directing Delfin "to cause the publication of the petition, together with
the attached Petition for Initiative on the 1987 Constitution (including the
proposal, proposed constitutional amendment, and the signature form), and the
notice of hearing in three (3) daily newspapers of general circulation at his
own expense" not later than 9 December 1996; and (b) setting the case for
hearing on 12 December 1996 at 10:00 a.m.
At the hearing of
the Delfin Petition on 12 December 1996, the following appeared: Delfin and
Atty. Pete Q. Quadra; representatives of the People's Initiative for Reforms,
Modernization and Action (PIRMA); intervenor-oppositor Senator Raul S. Roco,
together with his two other lawyers, and representatives of, or counsel for,
the Integrated Bar of the Philippines (IBP), Demokrasya-Ipagtanggol ang
Konstitusyon (DIK), Public Interest Law Center, and Laban ng Demokratikong
Pilipino (LABAN). 12 Senator Roco, on that same
day, filed a Motion to Dismiss the Delfin Petition on the ground that it is not
the initiatory petition properly cognizable by the COMELEC.
After hearing their
arguments, the COMELEC directed Delfin and the oppositors to file their
"memoranda and/or oppositions/memoranda" within five days. 13
On 18 December
1996, the petitioners herein — Senator Miriam Defensor Santiago, Alexander
Padilla, and Maria Isabel Ongpin — filed this special civil action for
prohibition raising the following arguments:
(1) The constitutional provision on
people's initiative to amend the Constitution can only be
implemented by law to be passed by Congress. No such law has been passed; in
fact, Senate Bill No. 1290 entitled An Act Prescribing and Regulating
Constitution Amendments by People's Initiative, which petitioner Senator
Santiago filed on 24 November 1995, is still pending before the Senate
Committee on Constitutional Amendments.
(2) It is true that R.A. No. 6735 provides
for three systems of initiative, namely, initiative on the Constitution, on
statutes, and on local legislation. However, it failed to provide any subtitle
on initiative on the Constitution, unlike in the other modes of initiative,
which are specifically provided for in Subtitle II and Subtitle III. This
deliberate omission indicates that the matter of people's initiative to amend
the Constitution was left to some future law. Former Senator Arturo Tolentino
stressed this deficiency in the law in his privilege speech delivered before
the Senate in 1994: "There is not a single word in that law which can be
considered as implementing [the provision on constitutional initiative]. Such
implementing provisions have been obviously left to a separate law.
(3) Republic Act No. 6735 provides for the
effectivity of the law after publication in print media. This indicates that
the Act covers only laws and not constitutional amendments because the latter
take effect only upon ratification and not after publication.
(4) COMELEC Resolution No. 2300, adopted on
16 January 1991 to govern "the conduct of initiative on the Constitution
and initiative and referendum on national and local laws, is ultra
vires insofar as initiative on amendments to the
Constitution is concerned, since the COMELEC has no power to provide rules and
regulations for the exercise of the right of initiative to amend the
Constitution. Only Congress is authorized by the Constitution to pass the
implementing law.
(5) The people's initiative is limited
to amendments to the Constitution, not to revision thereof.
Extending or lifting of term limits constitutes a revision and
is, therefore, outside the power of the people's initiative.
(6) Finally, Congress has not yet
appropriated funds for people's initiative; neither the COMELEC nor any other
government department, agency, or office has realigned funds for the purpose.
To justify their
recourse to us via the special civil action for prohibition, the petitioners
allege that in the event the COMELEC grants the Delfin Petition, the people's
initiative spearheaded by PIRMA would entail expenses to the national treasury
for general re-registration of voters amounting to at least P180 million, not
to mention the millions of additional pesos in expenses which would be incurred
in the conduct of the initiative itself. Hence, the transcendental importance
to the public and the nation of the issues raised demands that this petition
for prohibition be settled promptly and definitely, brushing aside
technicalities of procedure and calling for the admission of a taxpayer's and
legislator's suit. 14 Besides, there is no other
plain, speedy, and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law.
On 19 December
1996, this Court (a) required the respondents to comment on the petition within
a non-extendible period of ten days from notice; and (b) issued a temporary
restraining order, effective immediately and continuing until further orders,
enjoining public respondent COMELEC from proceeding with the Delfin Petition,
and private respondents Alberto and Carmen Pedrosa from conducting a signature
drive for people's initiative to amend the Constitution.
On 2 January 1997,
private respondents, through Atty Quadra, filed their Comment 15 on
the petition. They argue therein that:
1. IT IS NOT TRUE THAT "IT WOULD
ENTAIL EXPENSES TO THE NATIONAL TREASURY FOR GENERAL REGISTRATION OF VOTERS
AMOUNTING TO AT LEAST PESOS: ONE HUNDRED EIGHTY MILLION (P180,000,000.00)"
IF THE "COMELEC GRANTS THE PETITION FILED BY RESPONDENT DELFIN BEFORE THE
COMELEC.
2. NOT A SINGLE CENTAVO WOULD BE SPENT BY
THE NATIONAL GOVERNMENT IF THE COMELEC GRANTS THE PETITION OF RESPONDENT
DELFIN. ALL EXPENSES IN THE SIGNATURE GATHERING ARE ALL FOR THE ACCOUNT OF
RESPONDENT DELFIN AND HIS VOLUNTEERS PER THEIR PROGRAM OF ACTIVITIES AND
EXPENDITURES SUBMITTED TO THE COMELEC. THE ESTIMATED COST OF THE DAILY PER DIEM
OF THE SUPERVISING SCHOOL TEACHERS IN THE SIGNATURE GATHERING TO BE DEPOSITED
and TO BE PAID BY DELFIN AND HIS VOLUNTEERS IS P2,571,200.00;
3. THE PENDING PETITION BEFORE THE COMELEC
IS ONLY ON THE SIGNATURE GATHERING WHICH BY LAW COMELEC IS DUTY BOUND "TO
SUPERVISE CLOSELY" PURSUANT TO ITS "INITIATORY JURISDICTION"
UPHELD BY THE HONORABLE COURT IN ITS RECENT SEPTEMBER 26, 1996 DECISION IN THE
CASE OF SUBIC BAY METROPOLITAN AUTHORITY VS. COMELEC, ET AL.
G.R. NO. 125416;
4. REP. ACT NO. 6735 APPROVED ON AUGUST 4,
1989 IS THE ENABLING LAW IMPLEMENTING THE POWER OF PEOPLE INITIATIVE TO PROPOSE
AMENDMENTS TO THE CONSTITUTION. SENATOR DEFENSOR-SANTIAGO'S SENATE BILL NO.
1290 IS A DUPLICATION OF WHAT ARE ALREADY PROVIDED FOR IN REP. ACT NO. 6735;
5. COMELEC RESOLUTION NO. 2300 PROMULGATED
ON JANUARY 16, 1991 PURSUANT TO REP. ACT 6735 WAS UPHELD BY THE HONORABLE COURT
IN THE RECENT SEPTEMBER 26, 1996 DECISION IN THE CASE OF SUBIC BAY
METROPOLITAN AUTHORITY VS. COMELEC, ET AL. G.R. NO. 125416
WHERE THE HONORABLE COURT SAID: "THE COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS CAN DO NO
LESS BY SEASONABLY AND JUDICIOUSLY PROMULGATING GUIDELINES AND RULES FOR BOTH
NATIONAL AND LOCAL USE, IN IMPLEMENTING OF THESE LAWS."
6. EVEN SENATOR DEFENSOR-SANTIAGO'S SENATE
BILL NO. 1290 CONTAINS A PROVISION DELEGATING TO THE COMELEC THE POWER TO
"PROMULGATE SUCH RULES AND REGULATIONS AS MAY BE NECESSARY TO CARRY OUT
THE PURPOSES OF THIS ACT." (SEC. 12, S.B. NO. 1290, ENCLOSED AS ANNEX E,
PETITION);
7. THE LIFTING OF THE LIMITATION ON THE
TERM OF OFFICE OF ELECTIVE OFFICIALS PROVIDED UNDER THE 1987 CONSTITUTION IS
NOT A "REVISION" OF THE CONSTITUTION. IT IS ONLY AN AMENDMENT.
"AMENDMENT ENVISAGES AN ALTERATION OF ONE OR A FEW SPECIFIC PROVISIONS OF
THE CONSTITUTION. REVISION CONTEMPLATES A RE-EXAMINATION OF THE ENTIRE DOCUMENT
TO DETERMINE HOW AND TO WHAT EXTENT IT SHOULD BE ALTERED." (PP. 412-413,
2ND. ED. 1992, 1097 PHIL. CONSTITUTION, BY JOAQUIN G. BERNAS, S.J.).
Also on 2 January
1997, private respondent Delfin filed in his own behalf a Comment 16 which
starts off with an assertion that the instant petition is a "knee-jerk
reaction to a draft 'Petition for Initiative on the 1987 Constitution'. . .
which is not formally filed yet." What he filed on 6 December 1996 was an
"Initiatory Pleading" or "Initiatory Petition," which was
legally necessary to start the signature campaign to amend the Constitution or
to put the movement to gather signatures under COMELEC power and function. On
the substantive allegations of the petitioners, Delfin maintains as follows:
(1) Contrary to the claim of the
petitioners, there is a law, R.A. No. 6735, which governs the conduct of initiative to
amend the Constitution. The absence therein of a subtitle for such initiative
is not fatal, since subtitles are not requirements for the validity or
sufficiency of laws.
(2) Section 9(b) of R.A. No. 6735
specifically provides that the proposition in an initiative to
amend the Constitution approved by the majority of the votes cast in the
plebiscite shall become effective as of the day of the plebiscite.
(3) The claim that COMELEC Resolution No.
2300 is ultra vires is contradicted by (a) Section 2, Article
IX-C of the Constitution, which grants the COMELEC the power to enforce and
administer all laws and regulations relative to the conduct of an election,
plebiscite, initiative, referendum, and recall; and (b) Section 20
of R.A. 6735, which empowers the COMELEC to promulgate such rules and
regulations as may be necessary to carry out the purposes of the Act.
(4) The proposed initiative does not
involve a revision of, but mere amendment to,
the Constitution because it seeks to alter only a few specific provisions of
the Constitution, or more specifically, only those which lay term limits. It
does not seek to reexamine or overhaul the entire document.
As to the public
expenditures for registration of voters, Delfin considers petitioners' estimate
of P180 million as unreliable, for only the COMELEC can give the exact figure.
Besides, if there will be a plebiscite it will be simultaneous with the 1997
Barangay Elections. In any event, fund requirements for initiative will
be a priority government expense because it will be for the exercise of the
sovereign power of the people.
In the
Comment 17 for the public respondent COMELEC, filed
also on 2 January 1997, the Office of the Solicitor General contends that:
(1) R.A. No. 6735 deals with, inter
alia, people's initiative to amend the Constitution. Its
Section 2 on Statement of Policy explicitly affirms, recognizes, and guarantees
that power; and its Section 3, which enumerates the three systems of initiative,
includes initiative on the Constitution and defines the same as the power to
propose amendments to the Constitution. Likewise, its Section 5 repeatedly
mentions initiative on the Constitution.
(2) A separate subtitle on initiative on
the Constitution is not necessary in R.A. No. 6735 because, being national in
scope, that system of initiative is deemed included in the
subtitle on National Initiative and Referendum; and Senator Tolentino simply
overlooked pertinent provisions of the law when he claimed that nothing therein
was provided for initiative on the Constitution.
(3) Senate Bill No. 1290 is neither a
competent nor a material proof that R.A. No. 6735 does not deal with initiative on
the Constitution.
(4) Extension of term limits of elected
officials constitutes a mere amendment to the Constitution, not a revision
thereof.
(5) COMELEC Resolution No. 2300 was validly
issued under Section 20 of R.A. No. 6735 and under the Omnibus Election Code.
The rule-making power of the COMELEC to implement the provisions of R.A. No.
6735 was in fact upheld by this Court in Subic Bay Metropolitan
Authority vs. COMELEC.
On 14 January 1997,
this Court (a) confirmed nunc pro tunc the temporary
restraining order; (b) noted the aforementioned Comments and the Motion to Lift
Temporary Restraining Order filed by private respondents through Atty. Quadra,
as well as the latter's Manifestation stating that he is the counsel for
private respondents Alberto and Carmen Pedrosa only and the Comment he filed
was for the Pedrosas; and (c) granted the Motion for Intervention filed on 6
January 1997 by Senator Raul Roco and allowed him to file his Petition in
Intervention not later than 20 January 1997; and (d) set the case for hearing
on 23 January 1997 at 9:30 a.m.
On 17 January 1997,
the Demokrasya-Ipagtanggol ang Konstitusyon (DIK) and the
Movement of Attorneys for Brotherhood Integrity and Nationalism, Inc. (MABINI),
filed a Motion for Intervention. Attached to the motion was their Petition in
Intervention, which was later replaced by an Amended Petition in Intervention
wherein they contend that:
(1) The Delfin proposal does not involve a
mere amendment to, but a revision of, the
Constitution because, in the words of Fr. Joaquin Bernas, S.J., 18 it
would involve a change from a political philosophy that rejects unlimited
tenure to one that accepts unlimited tenure; and although the change might
appear to be an isolated one, it can affect other provisions, such as, on
synchronization of elections and on the State policy of guaranteeing equal
access to opportunities for public service and prohibiting political
dynasties. 19 A revision cannot be
done by initiative which, by express provision of Section 2 of
Article XVII of the Constitution, is limited to amendments.
(2) The prohibition against reelection of
the President and the limits provided for all other national and local elective
officials are based on the philosophy of governance, "to open up the
political arena to as many as there are Filipinos qualified to handle the
demands of leadership, to break the concentration of political and economic
powers in the hands of a few, and to promote effective proper empowerment for
participation in policy and decision-making for the common good"; hence,
to remove the term limits is to negate and nullify the noble vision of the 1987
Constitution.
(3) The Delfin proposal runs counter to the
purpose of initiative, particularly in a conflict-of-interest situation. Initiative is
intended as a fallback position that may be availed of by the people only if
they are dissatisfied with the performance of their elective officials, but not
as a premium for good performance. 20
(4) R.A. No. 6735 is deficient and
inadequate in itself to be called the enabling law that implements the
people's initiative on amendments to the Constitution. It
fails to state (a) the proper parties who may file the petition, (b) the
appropriate agency before whom the petition is to be filed, (c) the contents of
the petition, (d) the publication of the same, (e) the ways and means of
gathering the signatures of the voters nationwide and 3% per legislative
district, (f) the proper parties who may oppose or question the veracity of the
signatures, (g) the role of the COMELEC in the verification of the signatures
and the sufficiency of the petition, (h) the appeal from any decision of the
COMELEC, (I) the holding of a plebiscite, and (g) the appropriation of funds
for such people's initiative. Accordingly, there being no enabling law, the
COMELEC has no jurisdiction to hear Delfin's petition.
(5) The deficiency of R.A. No. 6735 cannot
be rectified or remedied by COMELEC Resolution No. 2300, since the COMELEC is
without authority to legislate the procedure for a people's initiative under
Section 2 of Article XVII of the Constitution. That function exclusively
pertains to Congress. Section 20 of R.A. No. 6735 does not constitute a legal
basis for the Resolution, as the former does not set a sufficient standard for
a valid delegation of power.
On 20 January 1997,
Senator Raul Roco filed his Petition in
Intervention. 21 He avers that R.A. No. 6735 is the enabling law that implements the people's right to initiate constitutional amendments. This law is a consolidation of Senate Bill No. 17 and House Bill No. 21505; he co-authored the House Bill and even delivered a sponsorship speech thereon. He likewise submits that the COMELEC was empowered under Section 20 of that law to promulgate COMELEC Resolution No. 2300. Nevertheless, he contends that the respondent Commission is without jurisdiction to take cognizance of the Delfin Petition and to order its publication because the said petition is not the initiatory pleading contemplated under the Constitution, Republic Act No. 6735, and COMELEC Resolution No. 2300. What vests jurisdiction upon the COMELEC in an initiative on the Constitution is the filing of a petition for initiative which is signedby the required number of registered voters. He also submits that the proponents of a constitutional amendment cannot avail of the authority and resources of the COMELEC to assist them is securing the required number of signatures, as the COMELEC's role in an initiative on the Constitution is limited to the determination of the sufficiency of the initiative petition and the call and supervision of a plebiscite, if warranted.
Intervention. 21 He avers that R.A. No. 6735 is the enabling law that implements the people's right to initiate constitutional amendments. This law is a consolidation of Senate Bill No. 17 and House Bill No. 21505; he co-authored the House Bill and even delivered a sponsorship speech thereon. He likewise submits that the COMELEC was empowered under Section 20 of that law to promulgate COMELEC Resolution No. 2300. Nevertheless, he contends that the respondent Commission is without jurisdiction to take cognizance of the Delfin Petition and to order its publication because the said petition is not the initiatory pleading contemplated under the Constitution, Republic Act No. 6735, and COMELEC Resolution No. 2300. What vests jurisdiction upon the COMELEC in an initiative on the Constitution is the filing of a petition for initiative which is signedby the required number of registered voters. He also submits that the proponents of a constitutional amendment cannot avail of the authority and resources of the COMELEC to assist them is securing the required number of signatures, as the COMELEC's role in an initiative on the Constitution is limited to the determination of the sufficiency of the initiative petition and the call and supervision of a plebiscite, if warranted.
On 20 January 1997,
LABAN filed a Motion for Leave to Intervene.
The following day,
the IBP filed a Motion for Intervention to which it attached a Petition in
Intervention raising the following arguments:
(1) Congress has failed to enact an
enabling law mandated under Section 2, Article XVII of the 1987 Constitution.
(2) COMELEC Resolution No. 2300 cannot
substitute for the required implementing law on the initiative to amend the
Constitution.
(3) The Petition for Initiative suffers
from a fatal defect in that it does not have the required number of signatures.
(4) The petition seeks, in effect a
revision of the Constitution, which can be proposed only by Congress or a
constitutional convention. 22
On 21 January 1997,
we promulgated a Resolution (a) granting the Motions for Intervention filed by
the DIK and MABINI and by the IBP, as well as the Motion for Leave to Intervene
filed by LABAN; (b) admitting the Amended Petition in Intervention of DIK and
MABINI, and the Petitions in Intervention of Senator Roco and of the IBP; (c)
requiring the respondents to file within a nonextendible period of five days
their Consolidated Comments on the aforesaid Petitions in Intervention; and (d)
requiring LABAN to file its Petition in Intervention within a nonextendible
period of three days from notice, and the respondents to comment thereon within
a nonextendible period of five days from receipt of the said Petition in
Intervention.
At the hearing of
the case on 23 January 1997, the parties argued on the following pivotal
issues, which the Court formulated in light of the allegations and arguments
raised in the pleadings so far filed:
1. Whether R.A. No. 6735, entitled An Act
Providing for a System of Initiative and Referendum and Appropriating Funds
Therefor, was intended to include or cover initiative on
amendments to the Constitution; and if so, whether the Act, as worded,
adequately covers such initiative.
2. Whether that portion of COMELEC
Resolution No. 2300 (In re: Rules and Regulations Governing the Conduct of
Initiative on the Constitution, and Initiative and Referendum on National and
Local Laws) regarding the conduct of initiative on amendments to the Constitution
is valid, considering the absence in the law of specific provisions
on the conduct of such initiative.
3. Whether the lifting of term limits of
elective national and local officials, as proposed in the draft "Petition
for Initiative on the 1987 Constitution," would constitute a revision of,
or an amendment to, the Constitution.
4. Whether the COMELEC can take cognizance
of, or has jurisdiction over, a petition solely intended to obtain an order (a)
fixing the time and dates for signature gathering; (b) instructing municipal
election officers to assist Delfin's movement and volunteers in establishing
signature stations; and (c) directing or causing the publication of, inter
alia, the unsigned proposed Petition for Initiative on the 1987 Constitution.
5. Whether it is proper for the Supreme
Court to take cognizance of the petition when there is a pending case before
the COMELEC.
After hearing them
on the issues, we required the parties to submit simultaneously their
respective memoranda within twenty days and requested intervenor Senator Roco
to submit copies of the deliberations on House Bill No. 21505.
On 27 January 1997,
LABAN filed its Petition in Intervention wherein it adopts the allegations and
arguments in the main Petition. It further submits that the COMELEC should have
dismissed the Delfin Petition for failure to state a sufficient cause of action
and that the Commission's failure or refusal to do so constituted grave abuse
of discretion amounting to lack of jurisdiction.
On 28 January 1997,
Senator Roco submitted copies of portions of both the Journal and the Record of
the House of Representatives relating to the deliberations of House Bill No.
21505, as well as the transcripts of stenographic notes on the proceedings of
the Bicameral Conference Committee, Committee on Suffrage and Electoral
Reforms, of 6 June 1989 on House Bill No. 21505 and Senate Bill No. 17.
Private respondents
Alberto and Carmen Pedrosa filed their Consolidated Comments on the Petitions
in Intervention of Senator Roco, DIK and MABINI, and IBP. 23 The
parties thereafter filed, in due time, their separate memoranda. 24
As we stated in the
beginning, we resolved to give due course to this special civil action.
For a more logical
discussion of the formulated issues, we shall first take up the fifth issue
which appears to pose a prejudicial procedural question.
I
THE INSTANT
PETITION IS VIABLE DESPITE THE PENDENCY IN THE COMELEC OF THE DELFIN PETITION.
Except for the
petitioners and intervenor Roco, the parties paid no serious attention to the
fifth issue, i.e., whether it is proper for this Court to
take cognizance of this special civil action when there is a pending case
before the COMELEC. The petitioners provide an affirmative answer. Thus:
28. The Comelec has no jurisdiction to take
cognizance of the petition filed by private respondent Delfin. This being so,
it becomes imperative to stop the Comelec from proceeding any further, and
under the Rules of Court, Rule 65, Section 2, a petition for prohibition is the
proper remedy.
29. The writ of prohibition is an
extraordinary judicial writ issuing out of a court of superior jurisdiction and
directed to an inferior court, for the purpose of preventing the inferior
tribunal from usurping a jurisdiction with which it is not legally vested.
(People v. Vera, supra., p. 84). In this case the writ is an urgent
necessity, in view of the highly divisive and adverse environmental
consequences on the body politic of the questioned Comelec order. The
consequent climate of legal confusion and political instability begs for
judicial statesmanship.
30. In the final analysis, when the system
of constitutional law is threatened by the political ambitions of man, only the
Supreme Court
can save a nation in peril and uphold the paramount majesty of the Constitution. 25
can save a nation in peril and uphold the paramount majesty of the Constitution. 25
It must be recalled
that intervenor Roco filed with the COMELEC a motion to dismiss the Delfin
Petition on the ground that the COMELEC has no jurisdiction or authority to
entertain the petition. 26 The COMELEC made no
ruling thereon evidently because after having heard the arguments of Delfin and
the oppositors at the hearing on 12 December 1996, it required them to submit
within five days their memoranda or oppositions/memoranda. 27 Earlier,
or specifically on 6 December 1996, it practically gave due course to the
Delfin Petition by ordering Delfin to cause the publication of the petition,
together with the attached Petition for Initiative, the signature form, and the
notice of hearing; and by setting the case for hearing. The COMELEC's failure
to act on Roco's motion to dismiss and its insistence to hold on to the
petition rendered ripe and viable the instant petition under Section 2 of Rule
65 of the Rules of Court, which provides:
Sec. 2. Petition for prohibition. —
Where the proceedings of any tribunal, corporation, board, or person, whether
exercising functions judicial or ministerial, are without or in excess of its
or his jurisdiction, or with grave abuse of discretion, and there is no appeal
or any other plain, speedy and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law, a
person aggrieved thereby may file a verified petition in the proper court
alleging the facts with certainty and praying that judgment be rendered
commanding the defendant to desist from further proceedings in the action or
matter specified therein.
It must also be
noted that intervenor Roco claims that the COMELEC has no jurisdiction over the
Delfin Petition because the said petition is not supported by the required
minimum number of signatures of registered voters. LABAN also asserts that the
COMELEC gravely abused its discretion in refusing to dismiss the Delfin
Petition, which does not contain the required number of signatures. In light of
these claims, the instant case may likewise be treated as a special civil action
for certiorari under Section I of Rule 65 of the Rules of
Court.
In any event, as
correctly pointed out by intervenor Roco in his Memorandum, this Court may
brush aside technicalities of procedure in
cases of transcendental importance. As we stated in Kilosbayan, Inc. v. Guingona, Jr. 28
cases of transcendental importance. As we stated in Kilosbayan, Inc. v. Guingona, Jr. 28
A party's standing before this Court is a
procedural technicality which it may, in the exercise of its discretion, set
aside in view of the importance of issues raised. In the landmark Emergency
Powers Cases, this Court brushed aside this technicality because the
transcendental importance to the public of these cases demands that they be
settled promptly and definitely, brushing aside, if we must, technicalities of
procedure.
II
R.A. NO. 6735
INTENDED TO INCLUDE THE SYSTEM OF INITIATIVE ON AMENDMENTS TO THE CONSTITUTION,
BUT IS, UNFORTUNATELY, INADEQUATE TO COVER THAT SYSTEM.
Section 2 of
Article XVII of the Constitution provides:
Sec. 2. Amendments to this Constitution may
likewise be directly proposed by the people through initiative upon a petition
of at least twelve per centum of the total number of
registered voters, of which every legislative district must be represented by
at least three per centum of the registered voters therein. No
amendment under this section shall be authorized within five years following
the ratification of this Constitution nor oftener than once every five years
thereafter.
The Congress shall
provide for the implementation of the exercise of this right.
This provision is
not self-executory. In his book, 29 Joaquin Bernas,
a member of the 1986 Constitutional Commission, stated:
Without implementing legislation Section 2
cannot operate. Thus, although this mode of amending the Constitution is a mode
of amendment which bypasses congressional action, in the last analysis it still
is dependent on congressional action.
Bluntly stated, the right of the people to
directly propose amendments to the Constitution through the system of
initiative would remain entombed in the cold niche of the Constitution until
Congress provides for its implementation. Stated otherwise, while the Constitution
has recognized or granted that right, the people cannot exercise it if
Congress, for whatever reason, does not provide for its implementation.
This system of
initiative was originally included in Section 1 of the draft Article on
Amendment or Revision proposed by the Committee on Amendments and Transitory
Provisions of the 1986 Constitutional Commission in its Committee Report No. 7
(Proposed Resolution No. 332). 30 That section
reads as follows:
Sec. 1. Any
amendment to, or revision of, this Constitution may be proposed:
(a) by the National Assembly upon a vote of
three-fourths of all its members; or
(b) by a constitutional convention; or
(c) directly by the people themselves thru
initiative as provided for in Article___ Section ___of the Constitution. 31
After several interpellations, but before
the period of amendments, the Committee submitted a new formulation of the
concept of initiative which it denominated as Section 2; thus:
MR. SUAREZ. Thank you, Madam President. May
we respectfully call attention of the Members of the Commission that pursuant
to the mandate given to us last night, we submitted this afternoon a complete
Committee Report No. 7 which embodies the proposed provision governing the
matter of initiative. This is now covered by Section 2 of the complete
committee report. With the permission of the Members, may I quote Section 2:
The people may, after five years from the
date of the last plebiscite held, directly propose amendments to this
Constitution thru initiative upon petition of at least ten percent of the
registered voters.
This completes the blanks appearing in the
original Committee Report No. 7. 32
The interpellations
on Section 2 showed that the details for carrying out Section 2 are
left to the legislature. Thus:
FR. BERNAS. Madam President, just two
simple, clarificatory questions.
First, on Section 1 on the matter of
initiative upon petition of at least 10 percent, there are no details
in the provision on how to carry this out. Do we understand,
therefore, that we are leaving this matter to the legislature?
MR. SUAREZ. That is right, Madam
President.
FR. BERNAS. And do we also understand,
therefore, that for as long as the legislature does not pass the
necessary implementing law on this, this will not operate?
MR. SUAREZ. That matter was also taken up
during the committee hearing, especially with respect to the budget
appropriations which would have to be legislated so that the plebiscite could
be called. We deemed it best that this matter be left to the legislature. The
Gentleman is right. In any event, as envisioned, no amendment through the power
of initiative can be called until after five years from the date of the
ratification of this Constitution. Therefore, the first amendment that could be
proposed through the exercise of this initiative power would be after five
years. It is reasonably expected that within that five-year period, the
National Assembly can come up with the appropriate rules governing the exercise
of this power.
FR. BERNAS. Since the matter is left
to the legislature — the details on how this is to be carried out — is
it possible that, in effect, what will be presented to the people for
ratification is the work of the legislature rather than of the people? Does
this provision exclude that possibility?
MR. SUAREZ. No, it does not exclude that
possibility because even the legislature itself as a body could propose that
amendment, maybe individually or collectively, if it fails to muster the
three-fourths vote in order to constitute itself as a constituent assembly and
submit that proposal to the people for ratification through the process of an
initiative.
xxx xxx xxx
MS. AQUINO. Do I understand from the
sponsor that the intention in the proposal is to vest constituent power in the
people to amend the Constitution?
MR. SUAREZ. That is absolutely correct,
Madam President.
MS. AQUINO. I fully concur with the
underlying precept of the proposal in terms of institutionalizing popular
participation in the drafting of the Constitution or in the amendment thereof,
but I would have a lot of difficulties in terms of accepting the draft of
Section 2, as written. Would the sponsor agree with me that in the hierarchy of
legal mandate, constituent power has primacy over all other legal mandates?
MR. SUAREZ. The Commissioner is right,
Madam President.
MS. AQUINO. And would the sponsor agree
with me that in the hierarchy of legal values, the Constitution is source of
all legal mandates and that therefore we require a great deal of circumspection
in the drafting and in the amendments of the Constitution?
MR. SUAREZ. That proposition is
nondebatable.
MS. AQUINO. Such that in order to
underscore the primacy of constituent power we have a separate article in the
constitution that would specifically cover the process and the modes of
amending the Constitution?
MR. SUAREZ. That is right, Madam President.
MS. AQUINO. Therefore, is the sponsor
inclined, as the provisions are drafted now, to again concede to the
legislature the process or the requirement of determining the mechanics of
amending the Constitution by people's initiative?
MR. SUAREZ. The matter of implementing
this could very well be placed in the hands of the National Assembly, not
unless we can incorporate into this provision the mechanics that would
adequately cover all the conceivable situations. 33
It was made clear
during the interpellations that the aforementioned Section 2 is limited to
proposals to AMEND — not to REVISE — the Constitution; thus:
MR. SUAREZ. . . . This proposal was
suggested on the theory that this matter of initiative, which came about
because of the extraordinary developments this year, has to be separated from
the traditional modes of amending the Constitution as embodied in Section 1.
The committee members felt that this system of initiative should not
extend to the revision of the entire Constitution, so we removed it from
the operation of Section 1 of the proposed Article on Amendment or Revision. 34
xxx xxx xxx
MS. AQUINO. In which case, I am seriously
bothered by providing this process of initiative as a separate section in the
Article on Amendment. Would the sponsor be amenable to accepting an amendment
in terms of realigning Section 2 as another subparagraph (c) of Section 1,
instead of setting it up as another separate section as if it were a
self-executing provision?
MR. SUAREZ. We would be amenable except
that, as we clarified a while ago, this process of initiative is
limited to the matter of amendment and should not expand into a revision which
contemplates a total overhaul of the Constitution. That was the sense that was
conveyed by the Committee.
MS. AQUINO. In other words, the Committee
was attempting to distinguish the coverage of modes (a) and (b) in Section 1 to
include the process of revision; whereas the process of initiation to
amend, which is given to the public, would only apply to amendments?
MR. SUAREZ. That is right. Those were the
terms envisioned in the Committee. 35
Amendments to the
proposed Section 2 were thereafter introduced by then Commissioner Hilario G.
Davide, Jr., which the Committee accepted. Thus:
MR. DAVIDE. Thank you Madam President. I
propose to substitute the entire Section 2 with the following:
MR. DAVIDE. Madam President, I have
modified the proposed amendment after taking into account the modifications
submitted by the sponsor himself and the honorable Commissioners Guingona,
Monsod, Rama, Ople, de los Reyes and Romulo. The modified amendment in
substitution of the proposed Section 2 will now read as follows: "SECTION
2. — AMENDMENTS TO THIS CONSTITUTION MAY LIKEWISE BE DIRECTLY PROPOSED BY THE
PEOPLE THROUGH INITIATIVE UPON A PETITION OF AT LEAST TWELVE PERCENT OF THE
TOTAL NUMBER Of REGISTERED VOTERS, OF WHICH EVERY LEGISLATIVE DISTRICT MUST BE
REPRESENTED BY AT LEAST THREE PERCENT OF THE REGISTERED VOTERS THEREOF. NO
AMENDMENT UNDER THIS SECTION SHALL BE AUTHORIZED WITHIN FIVE YEARS FOLLOWING
THE RATIFICATION OF THIS CONSTITUTION NOR OFTENER THAN ONCE EVERY FIVE YEARS
THEREAFTER.
THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY SHALL BY LAW PROVIDE
FOR THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE EXERCISE OF THIS RIGHT.
MR. SUAREZ. Madam President, considering
that the proposed amendment is reflective of the sense contained in Section 2
of our completed Committee Report No. 7, we accept the proposed amendment. 36
The interpellations
which ensued on the proposed modified amendment to Section 2 clearly
showed that it was a legislative act which must implement the exercise
of the right. Thus:
MR. ROMULO. Under Commissioner Davide's
amendment, is it possible for the legislature to set forth certain procedures
to carry out the initiative. . .?
MR. DAVIDE. It can.
xxx xxx xxx
MR. ROMULO. But the Commissioner's
amendment does not prevent the legislature from asking another body to set the
proposition in proper form.
MR. DAVIDE. The Commissioner is correct. In
other words, the implementation of this particular right would be subject to
legislation, provided the legislature cannot determine anymore the percentage
of the requirement.
MR. ROMULO. But the procedures,
including the determination of the proper form for submission to the people,
may be subject to legislation.
MR. DAVIDE. As long as it will not
destroy the substantive right to initiate. In other words, none of the
procedures to be proposed by the legislative body must diminish or impair the
right conceded here.
MR. ROMULO. In that provision of the
Constitution can the procedures which I have discussed be legislated?
MR. DAVIDE. Yes. 37
Commissioner Davide
also reaffirmed that his modified amendment strictly confines initiative to
AMENDMENTS to — NOT REVISION of — the Constitution. Thus:
MR. DAVIDE. With pleasure, Madam President.
MR. MAAMBONG. My first question:
Commissioner Davide's proposed amendment on line 1 refers to
"amendment." Does it not cover the word "revision" as
defined by Commissioner Padilla when he made the distinction between the words
"amendments" and "revision"?
MR. DAVIDE. No, it does not, because
"amendments" and "revision" should be covered by Section 1.
So insofar as initiative is concerned, it can only relate to
"amendments" not "revision." 38
Commissioner Davide
further emphasized that the process of proposing amendments through initiative must
be more rigorous and difficult than the initiative on legislation. Thus:
MR. DAVIDE. A distinction has to be made
that under this proposal, what is involved is an amendment to the Constitution.
To amend a Constitution would ordinarily require a proposal by the National
Assembly by a vote of three-fourths; and to call a constitutional convention
would require a higher number. Moreover, just to submit the issue of calling a
constitutional convention, a majority of the National Assembly is required, the
import being that the process of amendment must be made more rigorous and
difficult than probably initiating an ordinary legislation or putting an end to
a law proposed by the National Assembly by way of a referendum. I cannot agree
to reducing the requirement approved by the Committee on the Legislative
because it would require another voting by the Committee, and the voting as
precisely based on a requirement of 10 percent. Perhaps, I might present such a
proposal, by way of an amendment, when the Commission shall take up the Article
on the Legislative or on the National Assembly on plenary sessions. 39
The Davide modified
amendments to Section 2 were subjected to amendments, and the final version,
which the Commission approved by a vote of 31 in favor and 3 against, reads as
follows:
MR. DAVIDE. Thank you Madam President.
Section 2, as amended, reads as follows: "AMENDMENT TO THIS CONSTITUTION
MAY LIKEWISE BE DIRECTLY PROPOSED BY THE PEOPLE THROUGH INITIATIVE UPON A
PETITION OF AT LEAST TWELVE PERCENT OF THE TOTAL NUMBER OF REGISTERED VOTERS,
OF WHICH EVERY LEGISLATIVE DISTRICT MUST BE REPRESENTED BY AT LEAST THREE
PERCENT OF THE REGISTERED VOTERS THEREOF. NO AMENDMENT UNDER THIS SECTION SHALL
BE AUTHORIZED WITHIN FIVE YEARS FOLLOWING THE RATIFICATION OF THIS CONSTITUTION
NOR OFTENER THAN ONCE EVERY FIVE YEARS THEREAFTER.
THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY SHALL BY LAW PROVIDE
FOR THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE EXERCISE OF THIS RIGHT. 40
FOR THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE EXERCISE OF THIS RIGHT. 40
The entire proposed Article on Amendments
or Revisions was approved on second reading on 9 July 1986. 41 Thereafter,
upon his motion for reconsideration, Commissioner Gascon was allowed to
introduce an amendment to Section 2 which, nevertheless, was withdrawn. In view
thereof, the Article was again approved on Second and Third Readings on 1
August 1986. 42
However, the
Committee on Style recommended that the approved Section 2 be amended by
changing "percent" to "per centum" and
"thereof" to "therein" and deleting the phrase "by
law" in the second paragraph so that said paragraph reads: The
Congress 43 shall provide for the
implementation of the exercise of this right. 44 This
amendment was approved and is the text of the present second paragraph of
Section 2.
The conclusion then
is inevitable that, indeed, the system of initiative on the Constitution under
Section 2 of Article XVII of the Constitution is not self-executory.
Has Congress
"provided" for the implementation of the exercise of this right?
Those who answer the question in the affirmative, like the private respondents
and intervenor Senator Roco, point to us R.A. No. 6735.
There is, of
course, no other better way for Congress to implement the exercise of the right
than through the passage of a statute or legislative act. This is the essence
or rationale of the last minute amendment by the Constitutional Commission to
substitute the last paragraph of Section 2 of Article XVII then reading:
The Congress 45 shall
by law provide for the implementation of the exercise of this right.
with
The Congress shall provide for the
implementation of the exercise of this right.
This substitute amendment was an
investiture on Congress of a power to provide for the rules implementing the
exercise of the right. The "rules" means "the details on how
[the right] is to be carried out." 46
We agree that R.A.
No. 6735 was, as its history reveals, intended to cover initiative to
propose amendments to the Constitution. The Act is a consolidation of House
Bill No. 21505 and Senate Bill No. 17. The former was prepared by the Committee
on Suffrage and Electoral Reforms of the House of Representatives on the basis
of two House Bills referred to it, viz., (a) House Bill No.
497, 47 which dealt with the initiative and
referendum mentioned
in Sections 1 and 32 of Article VI of the Constitution; and (b) House Bill No. 988, 48 which dealt with the subject matter of House Bill No. 497, as well as with initiative and referendum under Section 3 of Article X (Local Government) and initiative provided for in Section 2 of Article XVII of the Constitution. Senate Bill No. 17 49 solely dealt with initiative and referendum concerning ordinances or resolutions of local government units. The Bicameral Conference Committee consolidated Senate Bill No. 17 and House Bill No. 21505 into a draft bill, which was subsequently approved on 8 June 1989 by the Senate 50 and by the House of Representatives. 51 This approved bill is now R.A. No. 6735.
in Sections 1 and 32 of Article VI of the Constitution; and (b) House Bill No. 988, 48 which dealt with the subject matter of House Bill No. 497, as well as with initiative and referendum under Section 3 of Article X (Local Government) and initiative provided for in Section 2 of Article XVII of the Constitution. Senate Bill No. 17 49 solely dealt with initiative and referendum concerning ordinances or resolutions of local government units. The Bicameral Conference Committee consolidated Senate Bill No. 17 and House Bill No. 21505 into a draft bill, which was subsequently approved on 8 June 1989 by the Senate 50 and by the House of Representatives. 51 This approved bill is now R.A. No. 6735.
But is R.A. No.
6735 a full compliance with the power and duty of Congress to "provide for
the implementation of the exercise of the right?"
A careful scrutiny
of the Act yields a negative answer.
First. Contrary to
the assertion of public respondent COMELEC, Section 2 of the Act does not
suggest an initiative on amendments to the Constitution. The said section
reads:
Sec. 2. Statement and Policy. — The power
of the people under a system of initiative and referendum to directly propose,
enact, approve or reject, in whole or in part, the Constitution, laws,
ordinances, or resolutions passed by any legislative body upon compliance with
the requirements of this Act is hereby affirmed, recognized and guaranteed.
(Emphasis supplied).
The inclusion of the word
"Constitution" therein was a delayed afterthought. That word is
neither germane nor relevant to said section, which exclusively relates to
initiative and referendum on national laws and local laws, ordinances, and
resolutions. That section is silent as to amendments on the
Constitution. As pointed out earlier, initiative on the Constitution is
confined only to proposals to AMEND. The people are not accorded the power to
"directly propose, enact, approve, or reject, in whole or in part,
the Constitution" through the system of initiative. They can
only do so with respect to "laws, ordinances, or resolutions."
The foregoing
conclusion is further buttressed by the fact that this section was lifted from
Section 1 of Senate Bill No. 17, which solely referred to a statement of policy
on local initiative and referendum and appropriately used the phrases
"propose and enact," "approve or reject" and "in whole
or in part." 52
Second. It is true
that Section 3 (Definition of Terms) of the Act defines initiative on
amendments to the Constitution and mentions it as one of the three systems
of initiative, and that Section 5 (Requirements) restates the
constitutional requirements as to the percentage of the registered voters who
must submit the proposal. But unlike in the case of the other systems of initiative,
the Act does not provide for the contents of a petition for initiative on
the Constitution. Section 5, paragraph (c) requires, among other things,
statement of the proposed law sought to be enacted, approved or
rejected, amended or repealed, as the case may be. It does not include, as
among the contents of the petition, the provisions of the Constitution sought
to be amended, in the case of initiative on the Constitution. Said paragraph
(c) reads in full as follows:
(c) The petition shall state the following:
c.1 contents or text of the proposed
law sought to be enacted, approved or rejected, amended or repealed,
as the case may be;
c.2 the proposition;
c.3 the reason or reasons therefor;
c.4 that it is not one of the exceptions
provided therein;
c.5 signatures of the petitioners or
registered voters; and
c.6 an abstract or summary proposition is
not more than one hundred (100) words which shall be legibly written or printed
at the top of every page of the petition. (Emphasis supplied).
The use of the clause "proposed laws
sought to be enacted, approved or rejected, amended or repealed" only
strengthens the conclusion that Section 2, quoted earlier, excludes initiative
on amendments to the Constitution.
Third. While the
Act provides subtitles for National Initiative and Referendum (Subtitle II) and
for Local Initiative and Referendum (Subtitle III), no subtitle is provided
for initiative on the Constitution. This conspicuous silence
as to the latter simply means that the main thrust of the Act is initiative and
referendum on national and local laws. If Congress intended R.A. No. 6735 to
fully provide for the implementation of the initiative on
amendments to the Constitution, it could have provided for a subtitle therefor,
considering that in the order of things, the primacy of interest, or hierarchy
of values, the right of the people to directly propose amendments to the
Constitution is far more important than the initiative on national and local
laws.
We cannot accept
the argument that the initiative on amendments to the
Constitution is subsumed under the subtitle on National Initiative and
Referendum because it is national in scope. Our reading of Subtitle II (National
Initiative and Referendum) and Subtitle III (Local Initiative and Referendum)
leaves no room for doubt that the classification is not based on the scope of
the initiative involved, but on its nature and character.
It is "national initiative," if what is proposed to be adopted or
enacted is a national law, or a law which only Congress can pass.
It is "local initiative" if what is proposed to be adopted or enacted
is a law, ordinance, or resolution which only the legislative
bodies of the governments of the autonomous regions, provinces, cities,
municipalities, and barangays can pass. This classification of initiative
into national and local is actually based on
Section 3 of the Act, which we quote for emphasis and clearer understanding:
Sec. 3. Definition of terms —
xxx xxx xxx
There are three (3)
systems of initiative, namely:
a.1 Initiative on the Constitution which
refers to a petition proposing amendments to the Constitution;
a.2 Initiative on Statutes which refers to
a petition proposing to enact a national legislation; and
a.3 Initiative on local legislation which
refers to a petition proposing to enact a regional, provincial, city,
municipal, or barangay law, resolution or ordinance. (Emphasis supplied).
Hence, to complete
the classification under subtitles there should have been a subtitle on
initiative on amendments to the Constitution. 53
A further
examination of the Act even reveals that the subtitling is not accurate.
Provisions not germane to the subtitle on National Initiative and Referendum
are placed therein, like (1) paragraphs (b) and (c) of Section 9, which reads:
(b) The proposition in an initiative on the
Constitution approved by the majority of the votes cast in the plebiscite shall
become effective as to the day of the plebiscite.
(c) A national or local initiative proposition
approved by majority of the votes cast in an election called for the purpose
shall become effective fifteen (15) days after certification and proclamation
of the Commission. (Emphasis supplied).
(2) that portion of
Section 11 (Indirect Initiative) referring to indirect initiative with the
legislative bodies of local governments; thus:
Sec. 11. Indirect Initiative. — Any
duly accredited people's organization, as defined by law, may file a petition
for indirect initiative with the House of Representatives, and other
legislative bodies. . . .
and (3) Section 12 on Appeal,
since it applies to decisions of the COMELEC on the findings of sufficiency or
insufficiency of the petition for initiative or referendum, which could be
petitions for both national and local initiative and
referendum.
Upon the other
hand, Section 18 on "Authority of Courts" under subtitle III on Local
Initiative and Referendum is misplaced, 54 since
the provision therein applies to both national and local initiative and
referendum. It reads:
Sec. 18. Authority of Courts. —
Nothing in this Act shall prevent or preclude the proper courts from declaring
null and void any proposition approved pursuant to this Act for violation of
the Constitution or want of capacity of the local legislative body to enact the
said measure.
Curiously, too,
while R.A. No. 6735 exerted utmost diligence and care in providing for the
details in the implementation of initiative and referendum on national and
local legislation thereby giving them special attention, it failed, rather
intentionally, to do so on the system of initiative on amendments to the
Constitution. Anent the initiative on national legislation, the Act provides
for the following:
(a) The required
percentage of registered voters to sign the petition and the contents of the
petition;
(b) The conduct and
date of the initiative;
(c) The submission
to the electorate of the proposition and the required number of votes for its
approval;
(d) The
certification by the COMELEC of the approval of the proposition;
(e) The publication
of the approved proposition in the Official Gazette or in a newspaper of
general circulation in the Philippines; and
(f) The effects of
the approval or rejection of the proposition. 55
As regards local
initiative, the Act provides for the following:
(a) The preliminary
requirement as to the number of signatures of registered voters for the
petition;
(b) The submission
of the petition to the local legislative body concerned;
(c) The effect of
the legislative body's failure to favorably act thereon, and the invocation of
the power of initiative as a consequence thereof;
(d) The formulation
of the proposition;
(e) The period
within which to gather the signatures;
(f) The persons
before whom the petition shall be signed;
(g) The issuance of
a certification by the COMELEC through its official in the local government
unit concerned as to whether the required number of signatures have been
obtained;
(h) The setting of
a date by the COMELEC for the submission of the proposition to the registered
voters for their approval, which must be within the period specified therein;
(i) The issuance of
a certification of the result;
(j) The date of
effectivity of the approved proposition;
(k) The limitations
on local initiative; and
(l) The limitations
upon local legislative bodies. 56
Upon the other
hand, as to initiative on amendments to the Constitution, R.A.
No. 6735, in all of its twenty-three sections, merely (a) mentions, the word
"Constitution" in Section 2; (b) defines "initiative on the
Constitution" and includes it in the enumeration of the three systems of
initiative in Section 3; (c) speaks of "plebiscite" as the process by
which the proposition in an initiative on the Constitution may be approved or
rejected by the people; (d) reiterates the constitutional requirements as to
the number of voters who should sign the petition; and (e) provides for the
date of effectivity of the approved proposition.
There was,
therefore, an obvious downgrading of the more important or the paramount system
of initiative. RA. No. 6735 thus delivered a humiliating blow to the system of
initiative on amendments to the Constitution by merely paying it a reluctant
lip service. 57
The foregoing
brings us to the conclusion that R.A. No. 6735 is incomplete, inadequate, or
wanting in essential terms and conditions insofar as initiative on amendments
to the Constitution is concerned. Its lacunae on this substantive matter are
fatal and cannot be cured by "empowering" the COMELEC "to
promulgate such rules and regulations as may be necessary to carry out the
purposes of [the] Act. 58
The rule is that
what has been delegated, cannot be delegated or as expressed in a Latin maxim: potestas
delegata non delegari potest. 59 The recognized
exceptions to the rule are as follows:
(1) Delegation of
tariff powers to the President under Section 28(2) of Article VI of the
Constitution;
(2) Delegation of
emergency powers to the President under Section 23(2) of Article VI of the Constitution;
(3) Delegation to
the people at large;
(4) Delegation to
local governments; and
(5) Delegation to
administrative bodies. 60
Empowering the
COMELEC, an administrative body exercising quasi-judicial functions, to
promulgate rules and regulations is a form of delegation of legislative
authority under no. 5 above. However, in every case of permissible delegation,
there must be a showing that the delegation itself is valid. It is valid only
if the law (a) is complete in itself, setting forth therein the policy to be
executed, carried out, or implemented by the delegate; and (b) fixes a standard
— the limits of which are sufficiently determinate and determinable — to which
the delegate must conform in the performance of his functions. 61 A
sufficient standard is one which defines legislative policy, marks its limits,
maps out its boundaries and specifies the public agency to apply it. It
indicates the circumstances under which the legislative command is to be
effected. 62
Insofar as
initiative to propose amendments to the Constitution is concerned, R.A. No.
6735 miserably failed to satisfy both requirements in subordinate legislation.
The delegation of the power to the COMELEC is then invalid.
III
COMELEC RESOLUTION NO. 2300, INSOFAR AS IT
PRESCRIBES RULES AND REGULATIONS ON THE CONDUCT OF INITIATIVE ON AMENDMENTS TO
THE CONSTITUTION, IS VOID.
It logically
follows that the COMELEC cannot validly promulgate rules and regulations to
implement the exercise of the right of the people to directly propose
amendments to the Constitution through the system of initiative. It does not
have that power under R.A. No. 6735. Reliance on the COMELEC's power under
Section 2(1) of Article IX-C of the Constitution is misplaced, for the laws and
regulations referred to therein are those promulgated by the COMELEC under (a)
Section 3 of Article IX-C of the Constitution, or (b) a law where subordinate
legislation is authorized and which satisfies the "completeness" and
the "sufficient standard" tests.
IV
COMELEC ACTED WITHOUT JURISDICTION OR WITH
GRAVE ABUSE OF DISCRETION IN ENTERTAINING THE DELFIN PETITION.
Even if it be
conceded ex gratia that R.A. No. 6735 is a full compliance
with the power of Congress to implement the right to initiate constitutional
amendments, or that it has validly vested upon the COMELEC the power of
subordinate legislation and that COMELEC Resolution No. 2300 is valid, the
COMELEC acted without jurisdiction or with grave abuse of discretion in
entertaining the Delfin Petition.
Under Section 2 of
Article XVII of the Constitution and Section 5(b) of R.A. No. 6735, a petition
for initiative on the Constitution must be signed by at least 12% of the total
number of registered voters of which every legislative district is represented
by at least 3% of the registered voters therein. The Delfin Petition does not
contain signatures of the required number of voters. Delfin himself admits that
he has not yet gathered signatures and that the purpose of his petition is
primarily to obtain assistance in his drive to gather signatures. Without the
required signatures, the petition cannot be deemed validly initiated.
The COMELEC acquires
jurisdiction over a petition for initiative only after its filing. The petition
then is the initiatory pleading. Nothing before its filing is
cognizable by the COMELEC, sitting en banc. The only participation
of the COMELEC or its personnel before the filing of such petition are (1) to
prescribe the form of the petition; 63 (2) to issue
through its Election Records and Statistics Office a certificate on the total
number of registered voters in each legislative district; 64 (3)
to assist, through its election registrars, in the establishment of signature
stations; 65 and (4) to verify, through its
election registrars, the signatures on the basis of the registry list of
voters, voters' affidavits, and voters' identification cards used in the
immediately preceding election. 66
Since the Delfin
Petition is not the initiatory petition under R.A. No. 6735 and COMELEC
Resolution No. 2300, it cannot be entertained or given cognizance of by the
COMELEC. The respondent Commission must have known that the petition does not
fall under any of the actions or proceedings under the COMELEC Rules of
Procedure or under Resolution No. 2300, for which reason it did not assign to
the petition a docket number. Hence, the said petition was merely entered as
UND, meaning, undocketed. That petition was nothing more than a
mere scrap of paper, which should not have been dignified by the Order of 6
December 1996, the hearing on 12 December 1996, and the order directing Delfin
and the oppositors to file their memoranda or oppositions. In so dignifying it,
the COMELEC acted without jurisdiction or with grave abuse of discretion and
merely wasted its time, energy, and resources.
The foregoing
considered, further discussion on the issue of whether the proposal to lift the
term limits of elective national and local officials is an amendment to,
and not a revision of, the Constitution is rendered
unnecessary, if not academic.
CONCLUSION
This petition must
then be granted, and the COMELEC should be permanently enjoined from
entertaining or taking cognizance of any petition for initiative on amendments
to the Constitution until a sufficient law shall have been validly enacted to
provide for the implementation of the system.
We feel, however,
that the system of initiative to propose amendments to the Constitution should
no longer be kept in the cold; it should be given flesh and blood, energy and
strength. Congress should not tarry any longer in complying with the
constitutional mandate to provide for the implementation of the right of the
people under that system.
WHEREFORE, judgment
is hereby rendered
a) GRANTING the
instant petition;
b) DECLARING R.A.
No. 6735 inadequate to cover the system of initiative on amendments to the
Constitution, and to have failed to provide sufficient standard for subordinate
legislation;
c) DECLARING void
those parts of Resolution No. 2300 of the Commission on Elections prescribing
rules and regulations on the conduct of initiative or amendments to the
Constitution; and
d) ORDERING the
Commission on Elections to forthwith DISMISS the DELFIN petition (UND-96-037).
The Temporary
Restraining Order issued on 18 December 1996 is made permanent as against the
Commission on Elections, but is LIFTED as against private respondents.
Resolution on the
matter of contempt is hereby reserved.
SO ORDERED.
Narvasa, C.J.,
Regalado, Romero, Bellosillo, Kapunan, Hermosisima, Jr. and Torres, Jr., JJ.,
concur.
Padilla, J., took
no part.
Separate Opinions
PUNO, J., concurring and dissenting:
I join the
ground-breaking ponencia of our esteemed colleague, Mr. Justice Davide insofar
as it orders the COMELEC to dismiss the Delfin petition. I regret, however, I
cannot share the view that R.A. No. 5735 and COMELEC Resolution No. 2300 are
legally defective and cannot implement the people's initiative to amend the
Constitution. I likewise submit that the petition with respect to the Pedrosas
has no leg to stand on and should be dismissed. With due respect:
I
First, I submit
that R.A. No. 6735 sufficiently implements the right of the people to initiate
amendments to the Constitution thru initiative. Our effort to discover the
meaning of R.A. No. 6735 should start with the search of the intent of our
lawmakers. A knowledge of this intent is critical for the intent of the
legislature is the law and the controlling factor in its interpretation. 1 Stated
otherwise, intent is the essence of the law, the spirit which gives life to its
enactment. 2
Significantly, the
majority decision concedes that ". . . R.A. No. 6735 was intended to cover
initiative to propose amendments to the Constitution." It ought to be so
for this intent is crystal clear from the history of the law which was a
consolidation of House Bill No. 21505 3 and Senate
Bill No. 17. 4 Senate Bill No. 17 was entitled
"An Act Providing for a System of Initiative and Referendum and the
Exception Therefrom, Whereby People in Local Government Units Can Directly
Propose and Enact Resolutions and Ordinances or Approve or Reject any Ordinance
or Resolution Passed by the Local Legislative Body." Beyond doubt, Senate
Bill No. 17 did not include people's initiative to propose amendments to the
Constitution. In checkered contrast, House Bill No. 21505 5 expressly
included people's initiative to amend the Constitution. Congressman (now
Senator) Raul Roco emphasized in his sponsorship remarks: 6
xxx xxx xxx
SPONSORSHIP REMARKS OF MR. ROCO
At the outset, Mr. Roco provided the
following backgrounder on the constitutional basis of the proposed measure.
1. As cited in Vera vs. Avelino (1946),
the presidential system which was introduced by the 1935 Constitution saw the
application of the principle of separation of powers.
2. While under the parliamentary system of
the 1973 Constitution the principle remained applicable, the 1981 amendments to
the Constitution of 1973 ensured presidential dominance over the Batasang
Pambansa.
Constitutional history then saw the
shifting and sharing of legislative powers between the Legislature and the
Executive departments. Transcending changes in the exercise of legislative
power is the declaration in the Philippine Constitution that the Philippines is
a republican state where sovereignty resides in the people and all sovereignty
emanates from them.
3. Under the 1987 Constitution, the lawmaking
power is still preserved in Congress; however, to institutionalize direct
action of the people as exemplified in the 1986 Revolution, the Constitution
recognizes the power of the people, through the system of initiative and
referendum.
As cited in Section 1, Article VI of the
1987 Constitution, Congress does not have plenary powers since reserve powers
are given to the people expressly. Section 32 of the same Article mandates
Congress to pass at the soonest possible time, a bill on referendum and initiative,
and to share its legislative powers with the people.
Section 2, Article XVII of the 1987
Constitution, on the other hand, vests in the people the power to directly
propose amendments to the Constitution through initiative, upon petition of at
least 12 percent of the total number of registered voters.
Stating that House Bill No. 21505 is the
Committee's response to the duty imposed on Congress to implement the exercise
by the people of the right to initiative and referendum, Mr. Roco recalled the
beginnings of the system of initiative and referendum under Philippine Law. He
cited Section 99 of the Local Government Code which vests in the barangay
assembly the power to initiate legislative processes, decide the holding of
plebiscite and hear reports of the Sangguniang Barangay, all of which are
variations of the power of initiative and referendum. He added that the holding
of barangay plebiscites and referendum are likewise provided in Sections 100
and 101 of the same Code.
Thereupon, for the sake of brevity, Mr.
Roco moved that pertinent quotation on the subject which he will later submit
to the Secretary of the House be incorporated as part of his sponsorship
speech.
He then cited examples of initiative and
referendum similar to those contained in the instant Bill among which are the
constitutions of states in the United States which recognize the right of
registered voters to initiate the enactment of any statute or to project any
existing law or parts thereof in a referendum. These states, he said, are
Alaska, Alabama, Montana, Massachusets, Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, and
practically all other states.
Mr. Roco explained that in certain American
states, the kind of laws to which initiative and referendum apply is also
without limitation, except for emergency measures, which are likewise
incorporated in House Bill No. 21505. He added that the procedure provided by
the Bill from the filing of the petition, the requirements of a certain
percentage of supporters to present a proposition, to the submission to electors
are substantially similar to the provisions in American laws. Although an
infant in Philippine political structure, the system of initiative and
referendum, he said, is a tried and tested system in other jurisdictions, and
the Bill is patterned after American experience.
He further explained that the bill has only
12 sections, and recalled that the Constitutional Commissioners saw the system
of the initiative and referendum as an instrument which can be used should the
legislature show itself to be indifferent to the needs of the people. This is
the reason, he claimed, why now is an opportune time to pass the Bill even as
he noted the felt necessity of the times to pass laws which are necessary to
safeguard individual rights and liberties.
At this juncture Mr. Roco explained the
process of initiative and referendum as advocated in House Bill No. 21505. He
stated that:
1. Initiative means that the people, on
their own political judgment, submit a Bill for the consideration of the
general electorate.
2. The instant Bill provides three kinds of
initiative, namely; the initiative to amend the Constitution once every five
years; the initiative to amend statutes approved by Congress; and the
initiative to amend local ordinances.
3. The instant Bill gives a definite
procedure and allows the Commission on Elections (COMELEC) to define rules and
regulations on the power of initiative.
4. Referendum means that the legislators
seek the consent of the people on measures that they have approved.
5. Under Section 4 of the Bill the people
can initiate a referendum which is a mode of plebiscite by presenting a
petition therefor, but under certain limitations, such as the signing of said
petition by at least 10 percent of the total of registered voters at which
every legislative district is represented by at least three percent of the
registered voters thereof. Within 30 days after receipt of the petition, the
COMELEC shall determine the sufficiency of the petition, publish the same, and
set the date of the referendum within 45 to 90-day period.
6. When the matter under referendum or
initiative is approved by the required number of votes, it shall become
effective 15 days following the completion of its publication in the Official
Gazette.
In concluding his sponsorship remarks, Mr.
Roco stressed that the Members cannot ignore the people's call for initiative
and referendum and urged the Body to approve House Bill No. 21505.
At this juncture, Mr. Roco also requested
that the prepared text of his speech together with the footnotes be reproduced
as part of the Congressional Records.
The same sentiment as to the bill's intent
to implement people's initiative to amend the Constitution was stressed by then
Congressman (now Secretary of Agriculture) Salvador Escudero III in his
sponsorship remarks, viz: 7
xxx xxx xxx
SPONSORSHIP REMARKS
OF MR. ESCUDERO
Mr. Escudero first pointed out that the
people have been clamoring for a truly popular democracy ever since, especially
in the so-called parliament of the streets. A substantial segment of the
population feels, he said, that the form of democracy is there, but not the
reality or substance of it because of the increasingly elitist approach of
their representatives to the country's problem.
Whereupon, Mr. Escudero pointed out that
the Constitution has provided a means whereby the people can exercise the
reserved power of initiative to propose amendments to the Constitution, and
requested that Sections 1 and 32, Article VI; Section 3, Article X; and Section
2, Article XVII of the Constitution be made part of his sponsorship remarks.
Mr. Escudero also stressed that an
implementing law is needed for the aforecited Constitutional provisions. While
the enactment of the Bill will give way to strong competition among
cause-oriented and sectoral groups, he continued, it will hasten the
politization of the citizenry, aid the government in forming an enlightened
public opinion, and produce more responsive legislation. The passage of the
Bill will also give street parliamentarians the opportunity to articulate their
ideas in a democratic forum, he added.
Mr. Escudero stated that he and Mr. Roco
hoped for the early approval of the Bill so that it can be initially used for
the Agrarian Reform Law. He said that the passage of House Bill No. 21505 will
show that the Members can set aside their personal and political consideration
for the greater good of the people.
The disagreeing provisions in Senate Bill
No. 17 and House Bill No. 21505 were threshed out in a Bicameral Conference
Committee. 8 In the meeting of the Committee on
June 6, 1989, 9 the members agreed that the two (2)
bills should be consolidated and that the consolidated version should include
people's initiative to amend the Constitution as contemplated by House Bill No.
21505. The transcript of the meeting states:
xxx xxx xxx
CHAIRMAN GONZALES. But at any rate, as I
have said, because this is new in our political system, the Senate decided on a
more cautious approach and limiting it only to the local government units
because even with that stage where . . . at least this has been quite popular,
ano? It has been attempted on a national basis. Alright. There has not been a
single attempt. Now, so, kami limitado doon. And, second, we consider also that
it is only fair that the local legislative body should be given a chance to
adopt the legislation bill proposed, right? Iyong sinasabing indirect system of
initiative. If after all, the local legislative assembly or body is willing to
adopt it in full or in toto, there ought to be any reason for
initiative, ano for initiative. And, number 3, we feel that there should be
some limitation on the frequency with which it should be applied. Number 4, na
the people, thru initiative, cannot enact any ordinance that is beyond the
scope of authority of the local legislative body, otherwise, my God, mag-aassume
sila ng power that is broader and greater than the grant of legislative power
to the Sanggunians. And Number 5, because of that, then a proposition which has
been the result of a successful initiative can only carry the force and effect
of an ordinance and therefore that should not deprive the court of its
jurisdiction to declare it null and void for want of authority. Ha, di ba? I
mean it is beyond powers of local government units to enact. Iyon ang main
essence namin, so we concentrated on that. And that is why . . . so ang sa inyo
naman includes iyon sa Constitution, amendment to the Constitution eh . . .
national laws. Sa amin, if you insist on that, alright, although we feel na it
will in effect become a dead statute. Alright, and we can agree, we can agree.
So ang mangyayari dito, and magiging basic nito, let us not discuss anymore
kung alin and magiging basic bill, ano, whether it is the Senate Bill or
whether it is the House bill. Logically it should be ours sapagkat una iyong sa
amin eh. It is one of the first bills approved by the Senate kaya ang number
niyan, makikita mo, 17, eh. Huwag na nating pagusapan. Now, if you insist,
really iyong features ng national at saka constitutional, okay. ____ gagawin na
natin na consolidation of both bills.
HON. ROCO. Yes, we shall consolidate.
CHAIRMAN GONZALES. Consolidation of the
Senate and House Bill No. so and so. 10
When the consolidated bill was presented to
the House for approval, then Congressman Roco upon interpellation by
Congressman Rodolfo Albano, again confirmed that it covered people's initiative
to amend the Constitution. The record of the House Representative states: 11
xxx xxx xxx
THE SPEAKER PRO TEMPORE. The Gentleman from
Camarines Sur is recognized.
MR. ROCO. On the Conference Committee
Report on the disagreeing provisions between Senate Bill No. 21505 which refers
to the system providing for the initiative and referendum, fundamentally, Mr.
Speaker, we consolidated the Senate and the House versions, so both versions
are totally intact in the bill. The Senators ironically provided for local
initiative and referendum and the House Representatives correctly provided for
initiative and referendum on the Constitution and on national legislation.
I move that we approve the consolidated
bill.
MR. ALBANO. Mr. Speaker.
THE SPEAKER PRO TEMPORE. What is the
pleasure of the Minority Floor Leader?
MR. ALBANO. Will the distinguished sponsor
answer just a few questions?
THE SPEAKER PRO TEMPORE. The Gentlemen will
please proceed.
MR. ALBANO. I heard the sponsor say that
the only difference in the two bills was that in the Senate version there was a
provision for local initiative and referendum, whereas the House version has
none.
MR. ROCO. In fact, the Senate version
provide purely for local initiative and referendum, whereas in the House
version, we provided purely for national and constitutional legislation.
MR. ALBANO. Is it our understanding
therefore, that the two provisions were incorporated?
MR. ROCO. Yes, Mr. Speaker.
MR. ALBANO. So that we will now have a
complete initiative and referendum both in the constitutional amendment and
national legislation.
MR. ROCO. That is correct.
MR. ALBANO. And provincial as well as
municipal resolutions?
MR. ROCO. Down to barangay, Mr. Speaker.
MR. ALBANO. And this initiative and
referendum is in consonance with the provision of the Constitution whereby it
mandates this Congress to enact the enabling law, so that we shall have a
system which can be done every five years. Is it five years in the provision of
the Constitution?
MR. ROCO. That is correct, Mr. Speaker. For
constitutional amendments in the 1987 Constitution, it is every five years.
MR. ALBANO. For every five years, Mr.
Speaker?
MR. ROCO. Within five years, we cannot have
multiple initiatives and referenda.
MR. ALBANO. Therefore, basically, there was
no substantial difference between the two versions?
MR. ROCO. The gaps in our bill were filled
by the Senate which, as I said earlier, ironically was about local, provincial
and municipal legislation.
MR. ALBANO. And the two bills were
consolidated?
MR. ROCO. Yes, Mr. Speaker.
MR. ALBANO. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
APPROVAL OF C.C.R.
ON S.B. NO. 17 AND H.B. NO. 21505
(The Initiative and Referendum Act)
ON S.B. NO. 17 AND H.B. NO. 21505
(The Initiative and Referendum Act)
THE SPEAKER PRO TEMPORE. There was a motion
to approve this consolidated bill on Senate Bill No. 17 and House Bill No.
21505.
Is there any objection? (Silence.
The Chair hears none; the motion is approved.
Since it is crystalline that the intent of
R.A. No. 6735 is to implement the people's initiative to amend the
Constitution, it is our bounden duty to interpret the law as it was intended by
the legislature. We have ruled that once intent is ascertained, it must be
enforced even if it may not be consistent with the strict letter of the law and
this ruling is as old as the mountain. We have also held that where a law is
susceptible of more than one interpretation, that interpretation which will
most tend to effectuate the manifest intent of the legislature will be
adopted. 12
The text of R.A.
No. 6735 should therefore be reasonably construed to effectuate its intent to
implement the people's initiative to amend the Constitution. To be sure, we
need not torture the text of said law to reach the conclusion that it
implements people's initiative to amend the Constitution. R.A. No. 6735 is
replete with references to this prerogative of the people.
First, the policy
statement declares:
Sec. 2. Statement of Policy. — The
power of the people under a system of initiative and referendum to directly
propose, enact, approve or reject, in whole or in part, the Constitution, laws,
ordinances, or resolutions passed by any legislative body upon compliance with
the requirements of this Act is hereby affirmed, recognized and guaranteed.
(emphasis supplied)
Second, the law defines
"initiative" as "the power of the people to propose amendments
to the constitution or to propose and enact legislations through an election
called for the purpose," and "plebiscite" as "the electoral
process by which an initiative on the Constitution is approved or rejected by
the people.
Third, the law
provides the requirements for a petition for initiative to amend the
Constitution. Section 5(b) states that "(a) petition for an initiative on
the 1987 Constitution must have at least twelve per centum (12%)
of the total number of registered voters as signatories, of which every
legislative district must be represented by at least threeper centum (3%)
of the registered voters therein." It also states that "(i)nitiative
on the Constitution may be exercised only after five (5) years from the
ratification of the 1987 Constitution and only once every five (5) years
thereafter.
Finally, R.A. No.
6735 fixes the effectivity date of the amendment. Section 9(b) states that
"(t)he proposition in an initiative on the Constitution approved by a
majority of the votes cast in the plebiscite shall become effective as to the
day of the plebiscite.
It is unfortunate
that the majority decision resorts to a strained interpretation of R.A. No.
6735 to defeat its intent which it itself concedes is to implement people's
initiative to propose amendments to the Constitution. Thus, it laments that the
word "Constitution" is neither germane nor relevant to the policy
thrust of section 2 and that the statute's subtitling is not accurate. These
lapses are to be expected for laws are not always written in impeccable
English. Rightly, the Constitution does not require our legislators to be
word-smiths with the ability to write bills with poetic commas like Jose Garcia
Villa or in lyrical prose like Winston Churchill. But it has always been our
good policy not to refuse to effectuate the intent of a law on the ground that
it is badly written. As the distinguished Vicente Francisco 13 reminds
us: "Many laws contain words which have not been used accurately. But the
use of inapt or inaccurate language or words, will not vitiate the statute if
the legislative intention can be ascertained. The same is equally true with
reference to awkward, slovenly, or ungrammatical expressions, that is, such
expressions and words will be construed as carrying the meaning the legislature
intended that they bear, although such a construction necessitates a departure
from the literal meaning of the words used.
In the same vein,
the argument that R.A. No. 7535 does not include people's initiative to amend
the Constitution simply because it lacks a sub-title on the subject should be
given the weight of helium. Again, the hoary rule in statutory construction is
that headings prefixed to titles, chapters and sections of a statute may be
consulted in aid of interpretation, but inferences drawn therefrom are entitled
to very little weight, and they can never control the plain terms of the
enacting clauses. 14
All said, it is
difficult to agree with the majority decision that refuses to enforce the
manifest intent or spirit of R.A. No. 6735 to implement the people's initiative
to amend the Constitution. It blatantly disregards the rule cast in concrete
that the letter of the law must yield to its spirit for the letter of the law
is its body but its spirit is its soul. 15
II
COMELEC Resolution
No. 2300, 16 promulgated under the stewardship of
Commissioner Haydee Yorac, then its Acting Chairman, spelled out the procedure
on how to exercise the people's initiative to amend the Constitution. This is
in accord with the delegated power granted by section 20 of R.A. No. 6735 to
the COMELEC which expressly states: "The Commission is hereby empowered to
promulgate such rules and regulations as may be necessary to carry out the
purposes of this Act." By no means can this delegation of power be
assailed as infirmed. In the benchmark case of Pelaez v. Auditor
General, 17 this Court, thru former Chief
Justice Roberto Concepcion laid down the test to determine whether there is
undue delegation of legislative power, viz:
xxx xxx xxx
Although Congress may delegate to another
branch of the Government the power to fill details in the execution,
enforcement or administration of a law, it is essential, to forestall a
violation of the principle of separation of powers, that said law: (a) be
complete in itself — it must set forth therein the policy to be executed,
carried out or implemented by the delegate — and (b) to fix standard — the
limits of which are sufficiently determinate or determinable — to which the
delegate must conform in the performance of his functions. Indeed, without a
statutory declaration of policy, which is the essence of every law, and,
without the aforementioned standard, there would be no means to determine, with
reasonable certainty, whether the delegate has acted within or beyond the scope
of his authority. Hence, he could thereby arrogate upon himself the power, not
only to make the law, but, also — and this is worse — to unmake it, by adopting
measures inconsistent with the end sought to be attained by the Act of
Congress, thus nullifying the principle of separation of powers and the system
of checks and balances, and, consequently, undermining the very foundation of
our republican system.
Section 68 of the Revised Administrative
Code does not meet these well-settled requirements for a valid delegation of
the power to fix the details in the enforcement of a law. It does not enunciate
any policy to be carried out or implemented by the President. Neither does it
give a standard sufficiently precise to avoid the evil effects above referred
to.
R.A. No. 6735
sufficiently states the policy and the standards to guide the COMELEC in
promulgating the law's implementing rules and regulations of the law. As
aforestated, section 2 spells out the policy of the law; viz:
"The power of the people under a system of initiative and referendum to
directly propose, enact, approve or reject, in whole or in part, the
Constitution, laws, ordinances, or resolutions passed by any legislative body
upon compliance with the requirements of this Act is hereby affirmed,
recognized and guaranteed." Spread out all over R.A. No. 6735 are the standards
to canalize the delegated power to the COMELEC to promulgate rules and
regulations from overflowing. Thus, the law states the number of signatures
necessary to start a people's initiative, 18 directs
how initiative proceeding is commenced, 19 what the
COMELEC should do upon filing of the petition for initiative, 20 how
a proposition is approved, 21 when a plebiscite may
be held, 22 when the amendment takes effect 23 and
what matters may not be the subject of any initiative. 24 By
any measure, these standards are adequate.
Former Justice
Isagani A. Cruz, similarly elucidated that "a sufficient standard is
intended to map out the boundaries of the delegates' authority by defining the
legislative policy and indicating the circumstances under which it is to be
pursued and effected. The purpose of the sufficient standard is to prevent a
total transference of legislative power from the lawmaking body to the
delegate." 25 In enacting R.A. No. 6735, it
cannot be said that Congress totally transferred its power to enact the law
implementing people's initiative to COMELEC. A close look at COMELEC Resolution
No. 2300 will show that it merely provided the procedure to effectuate the
policy of R.A. No. 6735 giving life to the people's initiative to amend the Constitution.
The debates 26 in the Constitutional Commission
make it clear that the rules of procedure to enforce the people's initiative
can be delegated, thus:
MR. ROMULO. Under Commissioner Davide's
amendment, it is possible for the legislature to set forth certain procedures
to carry out the initiative. . . ?
MR. DAVIDE. It can.
xxx xxx xxx
MR. ROMULO. But the Commissioner's
amendment does not prevent the legislature from asking another body to set the
proposition in proper form.
MR. DAVIDE. The Commissioner is correct. In
other words, the implementation of this particular right would be subject to
legislation, provided the legislature cannot determine anymore the percentage
of the requirement.
MR. DAVIDE. As long as it will not destroy
the substantive right to initiate. In other words, none of the procedures to be
proposed by the legislative body must diminish or impair the right conceded
here.
MR. ROMULO. In that provision of the
Constitution can the procedures which I have discussed be legislated?
MR. DAVIDE. Yes.
In his book, The Intent of the 1986
Constitution Writers, 27 Father Bernas likewise
affirmed: "In response to questions of Commissioner Romulo, Davide
explained the extent of the power of the legislature over the process: it could
for instance, prescribe the 'proper form before (the amendment) is submitted to
the people,' it could authorize another body to check the proper form. It could
also authorize the COMELEC, for instance, to check the authenticity of the
signatures of petitioners. Davide concluded: 'As long as it will not destroy
the substantive right to initiate. In other words, none of the procedures to be
proposed by the legislative body must diminish or impair the right conceded
here.'" Quite clearly, the prohibition against the legislature is to
impair the substantive right of the people to initiate amendments to the
Constitution. It is not, however, prohibited from legislating the procedure to
enforce the people's right of initiative or to delegate it to another body like
the COMELEC with proper standard.
A survey of our
case law will show that this Court has prudentially refrained from invalidating
administrative rules on the ground of lack of adequate legislative standard to
guide their promulgation. As aptly perceived by former Justice Cruz, "even
if the law itself does not expressly pinpoint the standard, the courts will
bend backward to locate the same elsewhere in order to spare the statute, if it
can, from constitutional infirmity." 28 He
cited the ruling in Hirabayashi v. United States, 29 viz:
xxx xxx xxx
It is true that the Act does not in terms
establish a particular standard to which orders of the military commander are
to conform, or require findings to be made as a prerequisite to any order. But
the Executive Order, the Proclamations and the statute are not to be read in
isolation from each other. They were parts of a single program and must be
judged as such. The Act of March 21, 1942, was an adoption by Congress of the
Executive Order and of the Proclamations. The Proclamations themselves followed
a standard authorized by the Executive Order — the necessity of protecting
military resources in the designated areas against espionage and sabotage.
In the case at bar, the policy and the
standards are bright-lined in R.A. No. 6735. A 20-20 look at the law cannot
miss them. They were not written by our legislators in invisible ink. The
policy and standards can also be found in no less than section 2, Article XVII
of the Constitution on Amendments or Revisions. There is thus no reason to hold
that the standards provided for in R.A. No. 6735 are insufficient for in other
cases we have upheld as adequate more general standards such as
"simplicity and dignity," 30 "public
interest," 31"public welfare," 32 "interest
of law and order," 33 "justice and
equity," 34 "adequate and efficient
instruction," 35"public safety," 36 "public
policy", 37 "greater national
interest", 38 "protect the local consumer
by stabilizing and subsidizing domestic pump rates", 39 and
"promote simplicity, economy and efficiency in government." 40 A
due regard and respect to the legislature, a co-equal and coordinate branch of
government, should counsel this Court to refrain from refusing to effectuate
laws unless they are clearly unconstitutional.
III
It is also
respectfully submitted that the petition should he dismissed with respect to
the Pedrosas. The inclusion of the Pedrosas in the petition is utterly
baseless. The records show that the case at bar started when respondent Delfin
alone and by himself filed with the COMELEC a Petition to Amend the
Constitution to Lift Term Limits of Elective Officials by People's Initiative.
The Pedrosas did not join the petition. It was Senator Roco who moved to
intervene and was allowed to do so by the COMELEC. The petition was heard and
before the COMELEC could resolve the Delfin petition, the case at bar was filed
by the petitioners with this Court. Petitioners sued the COMELEC. Jesus Delfin,
Alberto Pedrosa and Carmen Pedrosa in their capacities as founding members of
the People's Initiative for Reform, Modernization and Action (PIRMA). The suit
is an original action for prohibition with prayer for temporary restraining
order and/or writ of preliminary injunction.
The petition on its
face states no cause of action against the Pedrosas. The only allegation
against the Pedrosas is that they are founding members of the PIRMA which
proposes to undertake the signature drive for people's initiative to amend the
Constitution. Strangely, the PIRMA itself as an organization was not impleaded
as a respondent. Petitioners then prayed that we order the Pedrosas ". . .
to desist from conducting a signature drive for a people's initiative to amend
the Constitution." On December 19, 1996, we temporarily enjoined the
Pedrosas ". . . from conducting a signature drive for people's initiative
to amend the Constitution." It is not enough for the majority to lift the
temporary restraining order against the Pedrosas. It should dismiss the
petition and all motions for contempt against them without equivocation.
One need not draw a
picture to impart the proposition that in soliciting signatures to start a
people's initiative to amend the Constitution the Pedrosas are not engaged in
any criminal act. Their solicitation of signatures is a right guaranteed in
black and white by section 2 of Article XVII of the Constitution which provides
that ". . . amendments to this Constitution may likewise be directly
proposed by the people through initiative. . ." This right springs from
the principle proclaimed in section 1, Article II of the Constitution that in a
democratic and republican state "sovereignty resides in the people and all
government authority emanates from them." The Pedrosas are part of the
people and their voice is part of the voice of the people. They may constitute
but a particle of our sovereignty but no power can trivialize them for
sovereignty is indivisible.
But this is not
all. Section 16 of Article XIII of the Constitution provides: "The right
of the people and their organizations to effective and reasonable participation
at all levels of social, political and economic decision-making shall not be
abridged. The State shall by law, facilitate the establishment of adequate
consultation mechanisms." This is another novel provision of the 1987
Constitution strengthening the sinews of the sovereignty of our people. In
soliciting signatures to amend the Constitution, the Pedrosas are participating
in the political decision-making process of our people. The Constitution says
their right cannot be abridged without any ifs and buts. We cannot put a
question mark on their right.
Over and above
these new provisions, the Pedrosas' campaign to amend the Constitution is an
exercise of their freedom of speech and expression and their right to petition
the government for redress of grievances. We have memorialized this universal
right in all our fundamental laws from the Malolos Constitution to the 1987
Constitution. We have iterated and reiterated in our rulings that freedom of
speech is a preferred right, the matrix of other important rights of our
people. Undeniably, freedom of speech enervates the essence of the democratic
creed of think and let think. For this reason, the Constitution encourages
speech even if it protects the speechless.
It is thus evident
that the right of the Pedrosas to solicit signatures to start a people's
initiative to amend the Constitution does not depend on any law, much less on
R.A. 6735 or COMELEC Resolution No. 2300. No law, no Constitution can chain the
people to an undesirable status quo. To be sure, there are no irrepealable laws
just as there are no irrepealable Constitutions. Change is the predicate of
progress and we should not fear change. Mankind has long recognized the truism
that the only constant in life is change and so should the majority.
IV
In a stream of
cases, this Court has rhapsodized people power as expanded in the 1987
Constitution. On October 5, 1993, we observed that people's might is no longer
a myth but an article of faith in our Constitution. 41 On
September 30, 1994, we postulated that people power can be trusted to check
excesses of government and that any effort to trivialize the effectiveness of
people's initiatives ought to be rejected. 42 On
September 26, 1996, we pledged that ". . . this Court as a matter of policy
and doctrine will exert every effort to nurture, protect and promote their
legitimate exercise." 43Just a few days ago, or on
March 11, 1997, by a unanimous decision, 44 we
allowed a recall election in Caloocan City involving the mayor and ordered that
he submits his right to continue in office to the judgment of the tribunal of
the people. Thus far, we have succeeded in transforming people power from an
opaque abstraction to a robust reality. The Constitution calls us to encourage
people empowerment to blossom in full. The Court cannot halt any and all
signature campaigns to amend the Constitution without setting back the
flowering of people empowerment. More important, the Court cannot seal the lips
of people who are pro-change but not those who are anti-change without
concerting the debate on charter change into a sterile talkaton. Democracy is
enlivened by a dialogue and not by a monologue for in a democracy nobody can
claim any infallibility.
Melo and Mendoza,
JJ., concur.
VITUG, J., concurring and dissenting:
The COMELEC should
have dismissed, outrightly, the Delfin Petition.
It does seem to me
that there is no real exigency on the part of the Court to engross, let alone
to commit, itself on all the issues raised and debated upon by the parties.
What is essential at this time would only be to resolve whether or not the
petition filed with the COMELEC, signed by Atty. Jesus S. Delfin in his
capacity as a "founding member of the Movement for People's
Initiative" and seeking through a people initiative certain modifications
on the 1987 Constitution, can properly be regarded and given its due course.
The Constitution, relative to any proposed amendment under this method, is
explicit. Section 2, Article XVII, thereof provides:
Sec. 2. Amendments to this Constitution may
likewise be directly proposed by the people through initiative upon a petition
of at least twelve per centum of the total number of
registered voters, of which every legislative district must be represented by
at least three per centum of the registered voters therein. No
amendment under this section shall be authorized within five years following
the ratification of this Constitution nor oftener than once every five years
thereafter.
The Congress shall provide for the implementation
of the exercise of this right.
The Delfin petition
is thus utterly deficient. Instead of complying with the constitutional
imperatives, the petition would rather have much of its burden passed on, in
effect, to the COMELEC. The petition would require COMELEC to schedule
"signature gathering all over the country," to cause the necessary
publication of the petition "in newspapers of general and local
circulation," and to instruct "Municipal Election Registrars in all
Regions of the Philippines to assist petitioners and volunteers in establishing
signing stations at the time and on the dates designated for the purpose.
I submit, even
then, that the TRO earlier issued by the Court which, consequentially, is made
permanent under theponencia should be held to cover only the Delfin
petition and must not be so understood as having intended or contemplated to
embrace the signature drive of the Pedrosas. The grant of such a right is
clearly implicit in the constitutional mandate on people initiative.
The distinct
greatness of a democratic society is that those who reign are the governed
themselves. The postulate is no longer lightly taken as just a perceived myth
but a veritable reality. The past has taught us that the vitality of government
lies not so much in the strength of those who lead as in the consent of those
who are led. The role of free speech is pivotal but it can only have its true
meaning if it comes with the correlative end of being heard.
Pending a petition
for a people's initiative that is sufficient in form and substance, it behooves
the Court, I most respectfully submit, to yet refrain from resolving the
question of whether or not Republic Act No. 6735 has effectively and
sufficiently implemented the Constitutional provision on right of the people to
directly propose constitutional amendments. Any opinion or view formulated by
the Court at this point would at best be only a non-binding, albeit possibly
persuasive, obiter dictum.
I vote for granting
the instant petition before the Court and for clarifying that the TRO earlier
issued by the Court did not prescribe the exercise by the Pedrosas of their
right to campaign for constitutional amendments.
FRANCISCO, J., dissenting and concurring:
There is no
question that my esteemed colleague Mr. Justice Davide has prepared a scholarly
and well-written ponencia. Nonetheless, I cannot fully subscribe to his view
that R. A. No. 6735 is inadequate to cover the system of initiative on
amendments to the Constitution.
To begin with,
sovereignty under the constitution, resides in the people and all government
authority emanates from them. 1 Unlike our previous
constitutions, the present 1987 Constitution has given more significance to
this declaration of principle for the people are now vested with power not only
to propose, enact or reject any act or law passed by Congress or by the local
legislative body, but to propose amendments to the constitution as well. 2 To
implement these constitutional edicts, Congress in 1989 enacted Republic Act
No. 6735, otherwise known as "The initiative and Referendum Act".
This law, to my mind, amply covers an initiative on the constitution. The
contrary view maintained by petitioners is based principally on the alleged
lack of sub-title in the law on initiative to amend the constitution and on
their allegation that:
Republic Act No. 6735 provides for the
effectivity of the law after publication in print media. [And] [t]his indicates
that Republic Act No. 6735 covers only laws and not constitutional amendments,
because constitutional amendments take effect upon ratification not after
publication. 3
which allegation manifests petitioners'
selective interpretation of the law, for under Section 9 of Republic Act No.
6735 on the Effectivity of Initiative or Referendum Proposition paragraph
(b) thereof is clear in providing that:
The proposition in
an initiative on the constitution approved by a majority of the votes cast in
the plebiscite shall become effective as to the day of the plebiscite.
It is a rule that
every part of the statute must be interpreted with reference the context, i.e.,
that every part of the statute must be construed together with the other parts
and kept subservient to the general intent of the whole enactment. 4 Thus,
the provisions of Republic Act No. 6735 may not be interpreted in isolation.
The legislative intent behind every law is to be extracted from the statute as
a whole. 5
In its definition
of terms, Republic Act No. 6735 defines initiative as "the power of the
people to propose amendments to the constitution or to propose and enact
legislations through an election called for the purpose". 6The
same section, in enumerating the three systems of initiative, included an
"initiative on the constitution which refers to a petition proposing
amendments to the constitution" 7 Paragraph
(e) again of Section 3 defines "plebiscite" as "the electoral
process by which an initiative on the constitution is approved or rejected by
the people" And as to the material requirements for an initiative on
the Constitution, Section 5(b) distinctly enumerates the following:
A petition for an initiative on the 1987
Constitution must have at least twelve per centum (12%) of the
total number of the registered voters as signatories, of which every
legislative district must be represented by at least three per centum (3%)
of the registered voters therein. Initiative on the constitution may be
exercised only after five (5) years from the ratification of the 1987
Constitution and only once every five years thereafter.
These provisions were inserted, on purpose,
by Congress the intent being to provide for the implementation of the right to
propose an amendment to the Constitution by way of initiative. "A legal
provision", the Court has previously said, "must not be construed as
to be a useless surplusage, and accordingly, meaningless, in the sense of
adding nothing to the law or having no effect whatsoever thereon". 8 That
this is the legislative intent is further shown by the deliberations in
Congress, thus:
. . . More significantly, in the course of
the consideration of the Conference Committee Report on the disagreeing
provisions of Senate Bill No. 17 and House Bill No. 21505, it was noted:
MR. ROCO. On the Conference Committee
Report on the disagreeing provisions between Senate Bill No. 17 and the
consolidated House Bill No. 21505 which refers to the system providing for the
initiative and referendum, fundamentally, Mr. Speaker, we consolidated the
Senate and the House versions, so both versions are totally intact in the bill.
The Senators ironically provided for local initiative and referendum and the
House of Representatives correctly provided for initiative and referendum an
the Constitution and on national legislation.
I move that we approve the consolidated
bill.
MR. ALBANO, Mr. Speaker.
THE SPEAKER PRO TEMPORE. What is the pleasure
of the Minority Floor Leader?
MR. ALBANO. Will the distinguished sponsor
answer just a few questions?
THE SPEAKER PRO TEMPORE. What does the
sponsor say?
MR. ROCO. Willingly, Mr. Speaker.
THE SPEAKER PRO TEMPORE. The Gentleman will
please proceed.
MR. ALBANO. I heard the sponsor say that
the only difference in the two bills was that in the Senate version there was a
provision for local initiative and referendum, whereas the House version has
none.
MR. ROCO. In fact, the Senate version
provided purely for local initiative and referendum, whereas in the House
version, we provided purely for national and constitutional legislation.
MR. ALBANO. Is it our understanding,
therefore, that the two provisions were incorporated?
MR. ROCO. Yes, Mr. Speaker.
MR. ALBANO. So that we will now have a
complete initiative and referendum both in the constitutional amendment and
national legislation.
MR. ROCO. That is correct.
MR. ALBANO. And provincial as well as
municipal resolutions?
MR. ROCO. Down to barangay, Mr. Speaker.
MR. ALBANO. And this initiative and
referendum is in consonance with the provision of the Constitution to enact the
enabling law, so that we shall have a system which can be done every five
years. Is it five years in the provision of the Constitution?
MR. ROCO. That is correct, Mr. Speaker. For
constitutional amendments to the 1987 Constitution, it is every five
years." (Id. [Journal and Record of the House of Representatives],
Vol. VIII, 8 June 1989, p. 960; quoted in Garcia v. Comelec, 237 SCRA 279, 292-293
[1994]; emphasis supplied)
. . . The Senate version of the Bill may
not have comprehended initiatives on the Constitution. When consolidated,
though, with the House version of the Bill and as approved and enacted into
law, the proposal included initiative on both the Constitution and ordinary
laws. 9
Clearly then, Republic Act No. 6735 covers
an initiative on the constitution. Any other construction as what petitioners
foist upon the Court constitute a betrayal of the intent and spirit behind the
enactment.
At any rate, I
agree with the ponencia that the Commission on Elections, at present, cannot
take any action (such as those contained in the Commission's orders dated
December 6, 9, and 12, 1996 [Annexes B, C and B-1]) indicative of its having
already assumed jurisdiction over private respondents' petition. This is so
because from the tenor of Section 5 (b) of R.A. No. 6735 it would appear that
proof of procurement of the required percentage of registered voters at the
time the petition for initiative is filed, is a jurisdictional requirement.
Thus:
A petition for an initiative on
the 1987 Constitution must have at least twelve per centum (12%)
of the total number of registered voters as signatories, of which every
legislative district must be represented by at least three per centum (3%)
of the registered voters therein. Initiative on the Constitution may be
exercised only after five (5) years from the ratification of the 1987
Constitution and only once every five (5) years thereafter.
Here private respondents' petition is
unaccompanied by the required signatures. This defect notwithstanding, it is
without prejudice to the refiling of their petition once compliance with the
required percentage is satisfactorily shown by private respondents. In the
absence, therefore, of an appropriate petition before the Commission on
Elections, any determination of whether private respondents' proposal constitutes
an amendment or revision is premature.
ACCORDINGLY, I take
exception to the conclusion reached in the ponencia that R.A.
No. 6735 is an "inadequate" legislation to cover a people's
initiative to propose amendments to the Constitution. I, however, register my
concurrence with the dismissal, in the meantime, of private respondents'
petition for initiative before public respondent Commission on Elections until
the same be supported by proof of strict compliance with Section 5 (b) of R.A.
No. 6735.
Melo and Mendoza,
JJ., concur.
PANGANIBAN, J., concurring and dissenting:
Our distinguished
colleague, Mr. Justice Hilario G. Davide Jr., writing for the majority, holds
that:
(1) The Comelec
acted without jurisdiction or with grave abuse of discretion in entertaining
the "initiatory" Delfin Petition.
(2) While the
Constitution allows amendments to "be directly proposed by the people
through initiative," there is no implementing law for the purpose. RA 6735
is "incomplete, inadequate, or wanting in essential terms and conditions
insofar as initiative on amendments to the Constitution is concerned."
(3) Comelec
Resolution No. 2330, "insofar as it prescribes rules and regulations on
the conduct of initiative on amendments to the Constitution, is void."
I concur with the
first item above. Until and unless
an initiatory petition can show the required number of signatures — in this
case, 12% of all the registered voters in the Philippines with at least 3% in
every legislative district — no public funds may be spent and no government
resources may be used in an initiative to amend the Constitution. Verily, the
Comelec cannot even entertain any petition absent such signatures. However,
I dissent most respectfully from the majority's two other rulings. Let
me explain.
Under the above
restrictive holdings espoused by the Court's majority, the Constitution cannot
be amended at all through a people's initiative. Not by Delfin, not by Pirma, not
by anyone, not even by all the voters of the country acting together. This
decision will effectively but unnecessarily curtail, nullify, abrogate and
render inutile the people's right to change the basic law. At the
very least, the majority holds the right hostage to congressional discretion on
whether to pass a new law to implement it, when there is already one existing
at present. This right to amend through initiative, it bears stressing, is
guaranteed by Section 2, Article XVII of the Constitution, as follows:
Sec. 2. Amendments to this Constitution may
likewise be directly proposed by the people through initiative upon a petition
of at least twelve per centum of the total number of
registered voters, of which every legislative district must be represented by
at least three per centum of the registered voters therein. No
amendment under this section shall be authorized within five years following
the ratification of this Constitution nor oftener than once every five years
thereafter.
With all due
respect, I find the majority's position all too sweeping and all too extremist.
It is equivalent to burning the whole house to exterminate the rats, and to
killing the patient to relieve him of pain. What Citizen Delfin wants the
Comelec to do we should reject. But we should not thereby preempt any future
effort to exercise the right of initiative correctly and judiciously. The
fact that the Delfin Petition proposes a misuse of initiative does not justify
a ban against its proper use. Indeed, there is a right way to do the right
thing at the right time and for the right reason.
Taken Together and
Interpreted Properly, the Constitution, RA 6735 and Comelec Resolution 2300 Are
Sufficient to Implement Constitutional Initiatives
While RA 6735 may
not be a perfect law, it was — as the majority openly concedes — intended by
the legislature to cover and, I respectfully submit, it contains enough
provisions to effectuate an initiative on the Constitution. 1 I
completely agree with the inspired and inspiring opinions of Mr. Justice
Reynato S. Puno and Mr. Justice Ricardo J. Francisco that RA 6735, the Roco law
on initiative, sufficiently implements the right of the people to initiate
amendments to the Constitution. Such views, which I shall no longer repeat nor
elaborate on, are thoroughly consistent with this Court's unanimous en
banc rulings in Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority vs. Commission
on Elections, 2 that "provisions for
initiative . . . are (to be) liberally construed to effectuate their purposes,
to facilitate and not hamper the exercise by the voters of the rights granted
thereby"; and in Garcia vs. Comelec, 3 that
any "effort to trivialize the effectiveness of people's initiatives ought
to be rejected."
No law can
completely and absolutely cover all administrative details. In recognition of
this, RA 6735 wisely empowered 4 the Commission on
Election "to promulgate such rules and regulations as may be necessary to
carry out the purposes of this Act." And pursuant thereto, the Comelec
issued its Resolution 2300 on 16 January 1991. Such Resolution, by its very
words, was promulgated "to govern the conduct of initiative on the
Constitution and initiative and referendum on national and local laws,"
not by the incumbent Commission on Elections but by one then composed of Acting
Chairperson Haydee B. Yorac, Comms. Alfredo E. Abueg Jr., Leopoldo L. Africa,
Andres R. Flores, Dario C. Rama and Magdara B. Dimaampao. All of these
Commissioners who signed Resolution 2300 have retired from the Commission, and
thus we cannot ascribe any vile motive unto them, other than an honest, sincere
and exemplary effort to give life to a cherished right of our people.
The majority argues
that while Resolution 2300 is valid in regard to national laws and local
legislations, it is void in reference to constitutional amendments. There is no
basis for such differentiation. The source of and authority for the Resolution
is the same law, RA 6735.
I respectfully
submit that taken together and interpreted properly and liberally, the
Constitution (particularly Art. XVII, Sec. 2), R4 6735 and Comelec Resolution
2300 provide more than sufficient authority to implement, effectuate and
realize our people's power to amend the Constitution.
Petitioner Delfin
and the Pedrosa
Spouses Should Not Be Muzzled
Spouses Should Not Be Muzzled
I am glad the
majority decided to heed our plea to lift the temporary restraining order
issued by this Court on 18 December 1996 insofar as it prohibited Petitioner
Delfin and the Spouses Pedrosa from exercising their right of initiative. In
fact, I believe that such restraining order as against private respondents
should not have been issued, in the first place. While I agree that the Comelec
should be stopped from using public funds and government resources to help them
gather signatures, I firmly believe that this Court has no power to restrain
them from exercising their right of initiative. The right to propose amendments
to the Constitution is really a species of the right of free speech and free
assembly. And certainly, it would be tyrannical and despotic to stop anyone
from speaking freely and persuading others to conform to his/her beliefs. As
the eminent Voltaire once said, "I may disagree with what you say, but I
will defend to the death your right to say it." After all, freedom is not
really for the thought we agree with, but as Justice Holmes wrote,
"freedom for the thought that we hate." 5
Epilogue
By way of epilogue,
let me stress the guiding tenet of my Separate Opinion. Initiative, like
referendum and recall, is a new and treasured feature of the Filipino
constitutional system. All three are institutionalized legacies of the
world-admired EDSA people power. Like elections and plebiscites, they are
hallowed expressions of popular sovereignty. They are sacred democratic rights
of our people to be used as their final weapons against political excesses,
opportunism, inaction, oppression and misgovernance; as well as their reserved
instruments to exact transparency, accountability and faithfulness from their
chosen leaders. While on the one hand, their misuse and abuse must be
resolutely struck down, on the other, their legitimate exercise should be
carefully nurtured and zealously protected.
WHEREFORE, I vote
to GRANT the petition of Sen. Miriam D. Santiago et al. and to DIRECT
Respondent Commission on Elections to DISMISS the Delfin Petition on the ground
of prematurity, but not on the other grounds relied upon by the majority. I
also vote to LIFT the temporary restraining order issued on 18 December 1996
insofar as it prohibits Jesus Delfin, Alberto Pedrosa and Carmen Pedrosa from
exercising their right to free speech in proposing amendments to the
Constitution.
Melo and Mendoza,
JJ., concur.
Separate Opinions
PUNO, J., concurring and dissenting:
I join the
ground-breaking ponencia of our esteemed colleague, Mr. Justice Davide insofar
as it orders the COMELEC to dismiss the Delfin petition. I regret, however, I
cannot share the view that R.A. No. 5735 and COMELEC Resolution No. 2300 are
legally defective and cannot implement the people's initiative to amend the
Constitution. I likewise submit that the petition with respect to the Pedrosas
has no leg to stand on and should be dismissed. With due respect:
I
First, I submit
that R.A. No. 6735 sufficiently implements the right of the people to initiate
amendments to the Constitution thru initiative. Our effort to discover the
meaning of R.A. No. 6735 should start with the search of the intent of our
lawmakers. A knowledge of this intent is critical for the intent of the
legislature is the law and the controlling factor in its interpretation. 1 Stated
otherwise, intent is the essence of the law, the spirit which gives life to its
enactment. 2
Significantly, the
majority decision concedes that ". . . R.A. No. 6735 was intended to cover
initiative to propose amendments to the Constitution." It ought to be so
for this intent is crystal clear from the history of the law which was a
consolidation of House Bill No. 21505 3 and Senate
Bill No. 17. 4 Senate Bill No. 17 was entitled
"An Act Providing for a System of Initiative and Referendum and the
Exception Therefrom, Whereby People in Local Government Units Can Directly
Propose and Enact Resolutions and Ordinances or Approve or Reject any Ordinance
or Resolution Passed by the Local Legislative Body." Beyond doubt, Senate
Bill No. 17 did not include people's initiative to propose amendments to the
Constitution. In checkered contrast, House Bill No. 21505 5 expressly
included people's initiative to amend the Constitution. Congressman (now
Senator) Raul Roco emphasized in his sponsorship remarks: 6
xxx xxx xxx
SPONSORSHIP REMARKS OF MR. ROCO
At the outset, Mr. Roco provided the
following backgrounder on the constitutional basis of the proposed measure.
1. As cited in Vera vs. Avelino (1946),
the presidential system which was introduced by the 1935 Constitution saw the
application of the principle of separation of powers.
2. While under the parliamentary system of
the 1973 Constitution the principle remained applicable, the 1981 amendments to
the Constitution of 1973 ensured presidential dominance over the Batasang
Pambansa.
Constitutional history then saw the
shifting and sharing of legislative powers between the Legislature and the
Executive departments. Transcending changes in the exercise of legislative
power is the declaration in the Philippine Constitution that the Philippines is
a republican state where sovereignty resides in the people and all sovereignty
emanates from them.
3. Under the 1987 Constitution, the
lawmaking power is still preserved in Congress; however, to institutionalize
direct action of the people as exemplified in the 1986 Revolution, the
Constitution recognizes the power of the people, through the system of
initiative and referendum.
As cited in Section 1, Article VI of the
1987 Constitution, Congress does not have plenary powers since reserve powers
are given to the people expressly. Section 32 of the same Article mandates
Congress to pass at the soonest possible time, a bill on referendum and
initiative, and to share its legislative powers with the people.
Section 2, Article XVII of the 1987
Constitution, on the other hand, vests in the people the power to directly
propose amendments to the Constitution through initiative, upon petition of at
least 12 percent of the total number of registered voters.
Stating that House Bill No. 21505 is the
Committee's response to the duty imposed on Congress to implement the exercise
by the people of the right to initiative and referendum, Mr. Roco recalled the
beginnings of the system of initiative and referendum under Philippine Law. He
cited Section 99 of the Local Government Code which vests in the barangay
assembly the power to initiate legislative processes, decide the holding of
plebiscite and hear reports of the Sangguniang Barangay, all of which are
variations of the power of initiative and referendum. He added that the holding
of barangay plebiscites and referendum are likewise provided in Sections 100
and 101 of the same Code.
Thereupon, for the sake of brevity, Mr.
Roco moved that pertinent quotation on the subject which he will later submit
to the Secretary of the House be incorporated as part of his sponsorship
speech.
He then cited examples of initiative and referendum
similar to those contained in the instant Bill among which are the
constitutions of states in the United States which recognize the right of
registered voters to initiate the enactment of any statute or to project any
existing law or parts thereof in a referendum. These states, he said, are
Alaska, Alabama, Montana, Massachusets, Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, and
practically all other states.
Mr. Roco explained that in certain American
states, the kind of laws to which initiative and referendum apply is also
without limitation, except for emergency measures, which are likewise
incorporated in House Bill No. 21505. He added that the procedure provided by
the Bill from the filing of the petition, the requirements of a certain
percentage of supporters to present a proposition, to the submission to
electors are substantially similar to the provisions in American laws. Although
an infant in Philippine political structure, the system of initiative and
referendum, he said, is a tried and tested system in other jurisdictions, and
the Bill is patterned after American experience.
He further explained that the bill has only
12 sections, and recalled that the Constitutional Commissioners saw the system
of the initiative and referendum as an instrument which can be used should the
legislature show itself to be indifferent to the needs of the people. This is
the reason, he claimed, why now is an opportune time to pass the Bill even as
he noted the felt necessity of the times to pass laws which are necessary to
safeguard individual rights and liberties.
At this juncture Mr. Roco explained the
process of initiative and referendum as advocated in House Bill No. 21505. He
stated that:
1. Initiative means that the people, on
their own political judgment, submit a Bill for the consideration of the
general electorate.
2. The instant Bill provides three kinds of
initiative, namely; the initiative to amend the Constitution once every five
years; the initiative to amend statutes approved by Congress; and the
initiative to amend local ordinances.
3. The instant Bill gives a definite
procedure and allows the Commission on Elections (COMELEC) to define rules and
regulations on the power of initiative.
4. Referendum means that the legislators
seek the consent of the people on measures that they have approved.
5. Under Section 4 of the Bill the people
can initiate a referendum which is a mode of plebiscite by presenting a
petition therefor, but under certain limitations, such as the signing of said
petition by at least 10 percent of the total of registered voters at which
every legislative district is represented by at least three percent of the
registered voters thereof. Within 30 days after receipt of the petition, the
COMELEC shall determine the sufficiency of the petition, publish the same, and
set the date of the referendum within 45 to 90-day period.
6. When the matter under referendum or
initiative is approved by the required number of votes, it shall become
effective 15 days following the completion of its publication in the Official
Gazette.
In concluding his sponsorship remarks, Mr.
Roco stressed that the Members cannot ignore the people's call for initiative
and referendum and urged the Body to approve House Bill No. 21505.
At this juncture, Mr. Roco also requested
that the prepared text of his speech together with the footnotes be reproduced
as part of the Congressional Records.
The same sentiment as to the bill's intent
to implement people's initiative to amend the Constitution was stressed by then
Congressman (now Secretary of Agriculture) Salvador Escudero III in his
sponsorship remarks, viz: 7
xxx xxx xxx
SPONSORSHIP REMARKS
OF MR. ESCUDERO
Mr. Escudero first pointed out that the
people have been clamoring for a truly popular democracy ever since, especially
in the so-called parliament of the streets. A substantial segment of the
population feels, he said, that the form of democracy is there, but not the
reality or substance of it because of the increasingly elitist approach of
their representatives to the country's problem.
Whereupon, Mr. Escudero pointed out that
the Constitution has provided a means whereby the people can exercise the
reserved power of initiative to propose amendments to the Constitution, and
requested that Sections 1 and 32, Article VI; Section 3, Article X; and Section
2, Article XVII of the Constitution be made part of his sponsorship remarks.
Mr. Escudero also stressed that an
implementing law is needed for the aforecited Constitutional provisions. While
the enactment of the Bill will give way to strong competition among
cause-oriented and sectoral groups, he continued, it will hasten the
politization of the citizenry, aid the government in forming an enlightened
public opinion, and produce more responsive legislation. The passage of the
Bill will also give street parliamentarians the opportunity to articulate their
ideas in a democratic forum, he added.
Mr. Escudero stated that he and Mr. Roco
hoped for the early approval of the Bill so that it can be initially used for
the Agrarian Reform Law. He said that the passage of House Bill No. 21505 will
show that the Members can set aside their personal and political consideration
for the greater good of the people.
The disagreeing provisions in Senate Bill
No. 17 and House Bill No. 21505 were threshed out in a Bicameral Conference
Committee. 8 In the meeting of the Committee on
June 6, 1989, 9 the members agreed that the two (2)
bills should be consolidated and that the consolidated version should include
people's initiative to amend the Constitution as contemplated by House Bill No.
21505. The transcript of the meeting states:
xxx xxx xxx
CHAIRMAN GONZALES. But at any rate, as I
have said, because this is new in our political system, the Senate decided on a
more cautious approach and limiting it only to the local government units
because even with that stage where . . . at least this has been quite popular,
ano? It has been attempted on a national basis. Alright. There has not been a
single attempt. Now, so, kami limitado doon. And, second, we consider also that
it is only fair that the local legislative body should be given a chance to
adopt the legislation bill proposed, right? Iyong sinasabing indirect system of
initiative. If after all, the local legislative assembly or body is willing to
adopt it in full or in toto, there ought to be any reason for
initiative, ano for initiative. And, number 3, we feel that there should be
some limitation on the frequency with which it should be applied. Number 4, na
the people, thru initiative, cannot enact any ordinance that is beyond the
scope of authority of the local legislative body, otherwise, my God, mag-aassume
sila ng power that is broader and greater than the grant of legislative power
to the Sanggunians. And Number 5, because of that, then a proposition which has
been the result of a successful initiative can only carry the force and effect
of an ordinance and therefore that should not deprive the court of its
jurisdiction to declare it null and void for want of authority. Ha, di ba? I
mean it is beyond powers of local government units to enact. Iyon ang main
essence namin, so we concentrated on that. And that is why . . . so ang sa inyo
naman includes iyon sa Constitution, amendment to the Constitution eh . . .
national laws. Sa amin, if you insist on that, alright, although we feel na it
will in effect become a dead statute. Alright, and we can agree, we can agree.
So ang mangyayari dito, and magiging basic nito, let us not discuss anymore
kung alin and magiging basic bill, ano, whether it is the Senate Bill or
whether it is the House bill. Logically it should be ours sapagkat una iyong sa
amin eh. It is one of the first bills approved by the Senate kaya ang number
niyan, makikita mo, 17, eh. Huwag na nating pagusapan. Now, if you insist,
really iyong features ng national at saka constitutional, okay. ____ gagawin na
natin na consolidation of both bills.
HON. ROCO. Yes, we shall consolidate.
CHAIRMAN GONZALES. Consolidation of the
Senate and House Bill No. so and so. 10
When the consolidated bill was presented to
the House for approval, then Congressman Roco upon interpellation by
Congressman Rodolfo Albano, again confirmed that it covered people's initiative
to amend the Constitution. The record of the House Representative states: 11
xxx xxx xxx
THE SPEAKER PRO TEMPORE. The Gentleman from
Camarines Sur is recognized.
MR. ROCO. On the Conference Committee
Report on the disagreeing provisions between Senate Bill No. 21505 which refers
to the system providing for the initiative and referendum, fundamentally, Mr.
Speaker, we consolidated the Senate and the House versions, so both versions
are totally intact in the bill. The Senators ironically provided for local
initiative and referendum and the House Representatives correctly provided for
initiative and referendum on the Constitution and on national legislation.
I move that we approve the consolidated
bill.
MR. ALBANO. Mr. Speaker.
THE SPEAKER PRO TEMPORE. What is the
pleasure of the Minority Floor Leader?
MR. ALBANO. Will the distinguished sponsor
answer just a few questions?
THE SPEAKER PRO TEMPORE. The Gentlemen will
please proceed.
MR. ALBANO. I heard the sponsor say that
the only difference in the two bills was that in the Senate version there was a
provision for local initiative and referendum, whereas the House version has
none.
MR. ROCO. In fact, the Senate version
provide purely for local initiative and referendum, whereas in the House
version, we provided purely for national and constitutional legislation.
MR. ALBANO. Is it our understanding
therefore, that the two provisions were incorporated?
MR. ROCO. Yes, Mr. Speaker.
MR. ALBANO. So that we will now have a
complete initiative and referendum both in the constitutional amendment and
national legislation.
MR. ROCO. That is correct.
MR. ALBANO. And provincial as well as
municipal resolutions?
MR. ROCO. Down to barangay, Mr. Speaker.
MR. ALBANO. And this initiative and
referendum is in consonance with the provision of the Constitution whereby it
mandates this Congress to enact the enabling law, so that we shall have a
system which can be done every five years. Is it five years in the provision of
the Constitution?
MR. ROCO. That is correct, Mr. Speaker. For
constitutional amendments in the 1987 Constitution, it is every five years.
MR. ALBANO. For every five years, Mr.
Speaker?
MR. ROCO. Within five years, we cannot have
multiple initiatives and referenda.
MR. ALBANO. Therefore, basically, there was
no substantial difference between the two versions?
MR. ROCO. The gaps in our bill were filled
by the Senate which, as I said earlier, ironically was about local, provincial
and municipal legislation.
MR. ALBANO. And the two bills were
consolidated?
MR. ROCO. Yes, Mr. Speaker.
MR. ALBANO. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
APPROVAL OF C.C.R.
ON S.B. NO. 17 AND H.B. NO. 21505
(The Initiative and Referendum Act)
ON S.B. NO. 17 AND H.B. NO. 21505
(The Initiative and Referendum Act)
THE SPEAKER PRO TEMPORE. There was a motion
to approve this consolidated bill on Senate Bill No. 17 and House Bill No.
21505.
Is there any objection? (Silence.
The Chair hears none; the motion is approved.
Since it is crystalline that the intent of
R.A. No. 6735 is to implement the people's initiative to amend the
Constitution, it is our bounden duty to interpret the law as it was intended by
the legislature. We have ruled that once intent is ascertained, it must be
enforced even if it may not be consistent with the strict letter of the law and
this ruling is as old as the mountain. We have also held that where a law is
susceptible of more than one interpretation, that interpretation which will
most tend to effectuate the manifest intent of the legislature will be
adopted. 12
The text of R.A.
No. 6735 should therefore be reasonably construed to effectuate its intent to
implement the people's initiative to amend the Constitution. To be sure, we
need not torture the text of said law to reach the conclusion that it
implements people's initiative to amend the Constitution. R.A. No. 6735 is
replete with references to this prerogative of the people.
First, the policy
statement declares:
Sec. 2. Statement of Policy. — The
power of the people under a system of initiative and referendum to directly
propose, enact, approve or reject, in whole or in part, the Constitution, laws,
ordinances, or resolutions passed by any legislative body upon compliance with
the requirements of this Act is hereby affirmed, recognized and guaranteed.
(emphasis supplied)
Second, the law defines
"initiative" as "the power of the people to propose amendments
to the constitution or to propose and enact legislations through an election
called for the purpose," and "plebiscite" as "the electoral
process by which an initiative on the Constitution is approved or rejected by
the people.
Third, the law
provides the requirements for a petition for initiative to amend the
Constitution. Section 5(b) states that "(a) petition for an initiative on
the 1987 Constitution must have at least twelve per centum (12%)
of the total number of registered voters as signatories, of which every
legislative district must be represented by at least threeper centum (3%)
of the registered voters therein." It also states that "(i)nitiative
on the Constitution may be exercised only after five (5) years from the
ratification of the 1987 Constitution and only once every five (5) years
thereafter.
Finally, R.A. No.
6735 fixes the effectivity date of the amendment. Section 9(b) states that
"(t)he proposition in an initiative on the Constitution approved by a
majority of the votes cast in the plebiscite shall become effective as to the
day of the plebiscite.
It is unfortunate
that the majority decision resorts to a strained interpretation of R.A. No.
6735 to defeat its intent which it itself concedes is to implement people's
initiative to propose amendments to the Constitution. Thus, it laments that the
word "Constitution" is neither germane nor relevant to the policy
thrust of section 2 and that the statute's subtitling is not accurate. These
lapses are to be expected for laws are not always written in impeccable
English. Rightly, the Constitution does not require our legislators to be
word-smiths with the ability to write bills with poetic commas like Jose Garcia
Villa or in lyrical prose like Winston Churchill. But it has always been our
good policy not to refuse to effectuate the intent of a law on the ground that
it is badly written. As the distinguished Vicente Francisco 13 reminds
us: "Many laws contain words which have not been used accurately. But the
use of inapt or inaccurate language or words, will not vitiate the statute if
the legislative intention can be ascertained. The same is equally true with
reference to awkward, slovenly, or ungrammatical expressions, that is, such
expressions and words will be construed as carrying the meaning the legislature
intended that they bear, although such a construction necessitates a departure
from the literal meaning of the words used.
In the same vein,
the argument that R.A. No. 7535 does not include people's initiative to amend
the Constitution simply because it lacks a sub-title on the subject should be
given the weight of helium. Again, the hoary rule in statutory construction is
that headings prefixed to titles, chapters and sections of a statute may be
consulted in aid of interpretation, but inferences drawn therefrom are entitled
to very little weight, and they can never control the plain terms of the
enacting clauses. 14
All said, it is
difficult to agree with the majority decision that refuses to enforce the
manifest intent or spirit of R.A. No. 6735 to implement the people's initiative
to amend the Constitution. It blatantly disregards the rule cast in concrete
that the letter of the law must yield to its spirit for the letter of the law
is its body but its spirit is its soul. 15
II
COMELEC Resolution
No. 2300, 16 promulgated under the stewardship of
Commissioner Haydee Yorac, then its Acting Chairman, spelled out the procedure
on how to exercise the people's initiative to amend the Constitution. This is
in accord with the delegated power granted by section 20 of R.A. No. 6735 to
the COMELEC which expressly states: "The Commission is hereby empowered to
promulgate such rules and regulations as may be necessary to carry out the
purposes of this Act." By no means can this delegation of power be
assailed as infirmed. In the benchmark case of Pelaez v. Auditor
General, 17 this Court, thru former Chief
Justice Roberto Concepcion laid down the test to determine whether there is
undue delegation of legislative power, viz:
xxx xxx xxx
Although Congress may delegate to another
branch of the Government the power to fill details in the execution,
enforcement or administration of a law, it is essential, to forestall a
violation of the principle of separation of powers, that said law: (a) be
complete in itself — it must set forth therein the policy to be executed,
carried out or implemented by the delegate — and (b) to fix standard — the
limits of which are sufficiently determinate or determinable — to which the
delegate must conform in the performance of his functions. Indeed, without a
statutory declaration of policy, which is the essence of every law, and,
without the aforementioned standard, there would be no means to determine, with
reasonable certainty, whether the delegate has acted within or beyond the scope
of his authority. Hence, he could thereby arrogate upon himself the power, not
only to make the law, but, also — and this is worse — to unmake it, by adopting
measures inconsistent with the end sought to be attained by the Act of Congress,
thus nullifying the principle of separation of powers and the system of checks
and balances, and, consequently, undermining the very foundation of our
republican system.
Section 68 of the Revised Administrative
Code does not meet these well-settled requirements for a valid delegation of
the power to fix the details in the enforcement of a law. It does not enunciate
any policy to be carried out or implemented by the President. Neither does it
give a standard sufficiently precise to avoid the evil effects above referred
to.
R.A. No. 6735
sufficiently states the policy and the standards to guide the COMELEC in
promulgating the law's implementing rules and regulations of the law. As
aforestated, section 2 spells out the policy of the law; viz:
"The power of the people under a system of initiative and referendum to
directly propose, enact, approve or reject, in whole or in part, the
Constitution, laws, ordinances, or resolutions passed by any legislative body
upon compliance with the requirements of this Act is hereby affirmed,
recognized and guaranteed." Spread out all over R.A. No. 6735 are the
standards to canalize the delegated power to the COMELEC to promulgate rules
and regulations from overflowing. Thus, the law states the number of signatures
necessary to start a people's initiative, 18 directs
how initiative proceeding is commenced, 19 what the
COMELEC should do upon filing of the petition for initiative, 20 how
a proposition is approved, 21 when a plebiscite may
be held, 22 when the amendment takes effect 23 and
what matters may not be the subject of any initiative. 24 By
any measure, these standards are adequate.
Former Justice
Isagani A. Cruz, similarly elucidated that "a sufficient standard is
intended to map out the boundaries of the delegates' authority by defining the
legislative policy and indicating the circumstances under which it is to be
pursued and effected. The purpose of the sufficient standard is to prevent a
total transference of legislative power from the lawmaking body to the delegate." 25 In
enacting R.A. No. 6735, it cannot be said that Congress totally transferred its
power to enact the law implementing people's initiative to COMELEC. A close
look at COMELEC Resolution No. 2300 will show that it merely provided the
procedure to effectuate the policy of R.A. No. 6735 giving life to the people's
initiative to amend the Constitution. The debates 26 in
the Constitutional Commission make it clear that the rules of procedure to
enforce the people's initiative can be delegated, thus:
MR. ROMULO. Under Commissioner Davide's
amendment, it is possible for the legislature to set forth certain procedures
to carry out the initiative. . . ?
MR. DAVIDE. It can.
xxx xxx xxx
MR. ROMULO. But the Commissioner's
amendment does not prevent the legislature from asking another body to set the
proposition in proper form.
MR. DAVIDE. The Commissioner is correct. In
other words, the implementation of this particular right would be subject to
legislation, provided the legislature cannot determine anymore the percentage
of the requirement.
MR. DAVIDE. As long as it will not destroy
the substantive right to initiate. In other words, none of the procedures to be
proposed by the legislative body must diminish or impair the right conceded
here.
MR. ROMULO. In that provision of the
Constitution can the procedures which I have discussed be legislated?
MR. DAVIDE. Yes.
In his book, The Intent of the 1986
Constitution Writers, 27 Father Bernas likewise
affirmed: "In response to questions of Commissioner Romulo, Davide
explained the extent of the power of the legislature over the process: it could
for instance, prescribe the 'proper form before (the amendment) is submitted to
the people,' it could authorize another body to check the proper form. It could
also authorize the COMELEC, for instance, to check the authenticity of the
signatures of petitioners. Davide concluded: 'As long as it will not destroy
the substantive right to initiate. In other words, none of the procedures to be
proposed by the legislative body must diminish or impair the right conceded
here.'" Quite clearly, the prohibition against the legislature is to
impair the substantive right of the people to initiate amendments to the
Constitution. It is not, however, prohibited from legislating the procedure to
enforce the people's right of initiative or to delegate it to another body like
the COMELEC with proper standard.
A survey of our
case law will show that this Court has prudentially refrained from invalidating
administrative rules on the ground of lack of adequate legislative standard to
guide their promulgation. As aptly perceived by former Justice Cruz, "even
if the law itself does not expressly pinpoint the standard, the courts will
bend backward to locate the same elsewhere in order to spare the statute, if it
can, from constitutional infirmity." 28 He
cited the ruling in Hirabayashi v. United States, 29 viz:
xxx xxx xxx
It is true that the Act does not in terms
establish a particular standard to which orders of the military commander are
to conform, or require findings to be made as a prerequisite to any order. But
the Executive Order, the Proclamations and the statute are not to be read in
isolation from each other. They were parts of a single program and must be
judged as such. The Act of March 21, 1942, was an adoption by Congress of the
Executive Order and of the Proclamations. The Proclamations themselves followed
a standard authorized by the Executive Order — the necessity of protecting
military resources in the designated areas against espionage and sabotage.
In the case at bar, the policy and the
standards are bright-lined in R.A. No. 6735. A 20-20 look at the law cannot
miss them. They were not written by our legislators in invisible ink. The
policy and standards can also be found in no less than section 2, Article XVII
of the Constitution on Amendments or Revisions. There is thus no reason to hold
that the standards provided for in R.A. No. 6735 are insufficient for in other
cases we have upheld as adequate more general standards such as "simplicity
and dignity," 30 "public
interest," 31"public welfare," 32 "interest
of law and order," 33 "justice and
equity," 34 "adequate and efficient
instruction," 35"public safety," 36 "public
policy", 37 "greater national
interest", 38 "protect the local consumer
by stabilizing and subsidizing domestic pump rates", 39 and
"promote simplicity, economy and efficiency in government." 40 A
due regard and respect to the legislature, a co-equal and coordinate branch of
government, should counsel this Court to refrain from refusing to effectuate
laws unless they are clearly unconstitutional.
III
It is also
respectfully submitted that the petition should he dismissed with respect to
the Pedrosas. The inclusion of the Pedrosas in the petition is utterly
baseless. The records show that the case at bar started when respondent Delfin
alone and by himself filed with the COMELEC a Petition to Amend the
Constitution to Lift Term Limits of Elective Officials by People's Initiative.
The Pedrosas did not join the petition. It was Senator Roco who moved to
intervene and was allowed to do so by the COMELEC. The petition was heard and
before the COMELEC could resolve the Delfin petition, the case at bar was filed
by the petitioners with this Court. Petitioners sued the COMELEC. Jesus Delfin,
Alberto Pedrosa and Carmen Pedrosa in their capacities as founding members of
the People's Initiative for Reform, Modernization and Action (PIRMA). The suit
is an original action for prohibition with prayer for temporary restraining
order and/or writ of preliminary injunction.
The petition on its
face states no cause of action against the Pedrosas. The only allegation
against the Pedrosas is that they are founding members of the PIRMA which
proposes to undertake the signature drive for people's initiative to amend the
Constitution. Strangely, the PIRMA itself as an organization was not impleaded
as a respondent. Petitioners then prayed that we order the Pedrosas ". . .
to desist from conducting a signature drive for a people's initiative to amend
the Constitution." On December 19, 1996, we temporarily enjoined the
Pedrosas ". . . from conducting a signature drive for people's initiative
to amend the Constitution." It is not enough for the majority to lift the
temporary restraining order against the Pedrosas. It should dismiss the
petition and all motions for contempt against them without equivocation.
One need not draw a
picture to impart the proposition that in soliciting signatures to start a
people's initiative to amend the Constitution the Pedrosas are not engaged in
any criminal act. Their solicitation of signatures is a right guaranteed in
black and white by section 2 of Article XVII of the Constitution which provides
that ". . . amendments to this Constitution may likewise be directly
proposed by the people through initiative. . ." This right springs from
the principle proclaimed in section 1, Article II of the Constitution that in a
democratic and republican state "sovereignty resides in the people and all
government authority emanates from them." The Pedrosas are part of the
people and their voice is part of the voice of the people. They may constitute
but a particle of our sovereignty but no power can trivialize them for
sovereignty is indivisible.
But this is not
all. Section 16 of Article XIII of the Constitution provides: "The right
of the people and their organizations to effective and reasonable participation
at all levels of social, political and economic decision-making shall not be
abridged. The State shall by law, facilitate the establishment of adequate
consultation mechanisms." This is another novel provision of the 1987
Constitution strengthening the sinews of the sovereignty of our people. In
soliciting signatures to amend the Constitution, the Pedrosas are participating
in the political decision-making process of our people. The Constitution says
their right cannot be abridged without any ifs and buts. We cannot put a
question mark on their right.
Over and above
these new provisions, the Pedrosas' campaign to amend the Constitution is an
exercise of their freedom of speech and expression and their right to petition
the government for redress of grievances. We have memorialized this universal
right in all our fundamental laws from the Malolos Constitution to the 1987
Constitution. We have iterated and reiterated in our rulings that freedom of
speech is a preferred right, the matrix of other important rights of our
people. Undeniably, freedom of speech enervates the essence of the democratic
creed of think and let think. For this reason, the Constitution encourages
speech even if it protects the speechless.
It is thus evident
that the right of the Pedrosas to solicit signatures to start a people's initiative
to amend the Constitution does not depend on any law, much less on R.A. 6735 or
COMELEC Resolution No. 2300. No law, no Constitution can chain the people to an
undesirable status quo. To be sure, there are no irrepealable laws just as
there are no irrepealable Constitutions. Change is the predicate of progress
and we should not fear change. Mankind has long recognized the truism that the
only constant in life is change and so should the majority.
IV
In a stream of
cases, this Court has rhapsodized people power as expanded in the 1987
Constitution. On October 5, 1993, we observed that people's might is no longer
a myth but an article of faith in our Constitution. 41 On
September 30, 1994, we postulated that people power can be trusted to check
excesses of government and that any effort to trivialize the effectiveness of
people's initiatives ought to be rejected. 42 On
September 26, 1996, we pledged that ". . . this Court as a matter of
policy and doctrine will exert every effort to nurture, protect and promote
their legitimate exercise." 43Just a few days ago,
or on March 11, 1997, by a unanimous decision, 44 we
allowed a recall election in Caloocan City involving the mayor and ordered that
he submits his right to continue in office to the judgment of the tribunal of
the people. Thus far, we have succeeded in transforming people power from an
opaque abstraction to a robust reality. The Constitution calls us to encourage
people empowerment to blossom in full. The Court cannot halt any and all
signature campaigns to amend the Constitution without setting back the
flowering of people empowerment. More important, the Court cannot seal the lips
of people who are pro-change but not those who are anti-change without
concerting the debate on charter change into a sterile talkaton. Democracy is
enlivened by a dialogue and not by a monologue for in a democracy nobody can
claim any infallibility.
Melo and Mendoza,
JJ., concur.
VITUG, J., concurring and dissenting:
The COMELEC should
have dismissed, outrightly, the Delfin Petition.
It does seem to me
that there is no real exigency on the part of the Court to engross, let alone
to commit, itself on all the issues raised and debated upon by the parties.
What is essential at this time would only be to resolve whether or not the
petition filed with the COMELEC, signed by Atty. Jesus S. Delfin in his
capacity as a "founding member of the Movement for People's
Initiative" and seeking through a people initiative certain modifications
on the 1987 Constitution, can properly be regarded and given its due course.
The Constitution, relative to any proposed amendment under this method, is
explicit. Section 2, Article XVII, thereof provides:
Sec. 2. Amendments to this Constitution may
likewise be directly proposed by the people through initiative upon a petition
of at least twelve per centum of the total number of
registered voters, of which every legislative district must be represented by
at least three per centum of the registered voters therein. No
amendment under this section shall be authorized within five years following
the ratification of this Constitution nor oftener than once every five years
thereafter.
The Congress shall provide for the
implementation of the exercise of this right.
The Delfin petition
is thus utterly deficient. Instead of complying with the constitutional
imperatives, the petition would rather have much of its burden passed on, in
effect, to the COMELEC. The petition would require COMELEC to schedule
"signature gathering all over the country," to cause the necessary
publication of the petition "in newspapers of general and local
circulation," and to instruct "Municipal Election Registrars in all
Regions of the Philippines to assist petitioners and volunteers in establishing
signing stations at the time and on the dates designated for the purpose.
I submit, even
then, that the TRO earlier issued by the Court which, consequentially, is made
permanent under theponencia should be held to cover only the Delfin
petition and must not be so understood as having intended or contemplated to
embrace the signature drive of the Pedrosas. The grant of such a right is
clearly implicit in the constitutional mandate on people initiative.
The distinct
greatness of a democratic society is that those who reign are the governed
themselves. The postulate is no longer lightly taken as just a perceived myth
but a veritable reality. The past has taught us that the vitality of government
lies not so much in the strength of those who lead as in the consent of those
who are led. The role of free speech is pivotal but it can only have its true
meaning if it comes with the correlative end of being heard.
Pending a petition
for a people's initiative that is sufficient in form and substance, it behooves
the Court, I most respectfully submit, to yet refrain from resolving the
question of whether or not Republic Act No. 6735 has effectively and
sufficiently implemented the Constitutional provision on right of the people to
directly propose constitutional amendments. Any opinion or view formulated by
the Court at this point would at best be only a non-binding, albeit possibly
persuasive, obiter dictum.
I vote for granting
the instant petition before the Court and for clarifying that the TRO earlier
issued by the Court did not prescribe the exercise by the Pedrosas of their
right to campaign for constitutional amendments.
FRANCISCO, J., dissenting and concurring:
There is no
question that my esteemed colleague Mr. Justice Davide has prepared a scholarly
and well-written ponencia. Nonetheless, I cannot fully subscribe to his view
that R. A. No. 6735 is inadequate to cover the system of initiative on
amendments to the Constitution.
To begin with,
sovereignty under the constitution, resides in the people and all government
authority emanates from them. 1 Unlike our previous
constitutions, the present 1987 Constitution has given more significance to
this declaration of principle for the people are now vested with power not only
to propose, enact or reject any act or law passed by Congress or by the local
legislative body, but to propose amendments to the constitution as well. 2 To
implement these constitutional edicts, Congress in 1989 enacted Republic Act
No. 6735, otherwise known as "The initiative and Referendum Act".
This law, to my mind, amply covers an initiative on the constitution. The
contrary view maintained by petitioners is based principally on the alleged
lack of sub-title in the law on initiative to amend the constitution and on
their allegation that:
Republic Act No. 6735 provides for the
effectivity of the law after publication in print media. [And] [t]his indicates
that Republic Act No. 6735 covers only laws and not constitutional amendments,
because constitutional amendments take effect upon ratification not after
publication. 3
which allegation manifests petitioners'
selective interpretation of the law, for under Section 9 of Republic Act No.
6735 on the Effectivity of Initiative or Referendum Proposition paragraph
(b) thereof is clear in providing that:
The proposition in
an initiative on the constitution approved by a majority of the votes cast in
the plebiscite shall become effective as to the day of the plebiscite.
It is a rule that
every part of the statute must be interpreted with reference the context, i.e.,
that every part of the statute must be construed together with the other parts
and kept subservient to the general intent of the whole enactment. 4 Thus,
the provisions of Republic Act No. 6735 may not be interpreted in isolation.
The legislative intent behind every law is to be extracted from the statute as
a whole. 5
In its definition
of terms, Republic Act No. 6735 defines initiative as "the power of the
people to propose amendments to the constitution or to propose and enact
legislations through an election called for the purpose". 6The
same section, in enumerating the three systems of initiative, included an
"initiative on the constitution which refers to a petition proposing
amendments to the constitution" 7 Paragraph
(e) again of Section 3 defines "plebiscite" as "the electoral
process by which an initiative on the constitution is approved or rejected by
the people" And as to the material requirements for an initiative on
the Constitution, Section 5(b) distinctly enumerates the following:
A petition for an initiative on the 1987
Constitution must have at least twelve per centum (12%) of the
total number of the registered voters as signatories, of which every
legislative district must be represented by at least three per centum (3%)
of the registered voters therein. Initiative on the constitution may be
exercised only after five (5) years from the ratification of the 1987
Constitution and only once every five years thereafter.
These provisions were inserted, on purpose,
by Congress the intent being to provide for the implementation of the right to
propose an amendment to the Constitution by way of initiative. "A legal
provision", the Court has previously said, "must not be construed as
to be a useless surplusage, and accordingly, meaningless, in the sense of
adding nothing to the law or having no effect whatsoever thereon". 8 That
this is the legislative intent is further shown by the deliberations in
Congress, thus:
. . . More significantly, in the course of
the consideration of the Conference Committee Report on the disagreeing
provisions of Senate Bill No. 17 and House Bill No. 21505, it was noted:
MR. ROCO. On the Conference Committee
Report on the disagreeing provisions between Senate Bill No. 17 and the
consolidated House Bill No. 21505 which refers to the system providing for the
initiative and referendum, fundamentally, Mr. Speaker, we consolidated the
Senate and the House versions, so both versions are totally intact in the bill.
The Senators ironically provided for local initiative and referendum and the
House of Representatives correctly provided for initiative and referendum an
the Constitution and on national legislation.
I move that we approve the consolidated
bill.
MR. ALBANO, Mr. Speaker.
THE SPEAKER PRO TEMPORE. What is the
pleasure of the Minority Floor Leader?
MR. ALBANO. Will the distinguished sponsor
answer just a few questions?
THE SPEAKER PRO TEMPORE. What does the
sponsor say?
MR. ROCO. Willingly, Mr. Speaker.
THE SPEAKER PRO TEMPORE. The Gentleman will
please proceed.
MR. ALBANO. I heard the sponsor say that
the only difference in the two bills was that in the Senate version there was a
provision for local initiative and referendum, whereas the House version has
none.
MR. ROCO. In fact, the Senate version
provided purely for local initiative and referendum, whereas in the House
version, we provided purely for national and constitutional legislation.
MR. ALBANO. Is it our understanding,
therefore, that the two provisions were incorporated?
MR. ROCO. Yes, Mr. Speaker.
MR. ALBANO. So that we will now have a
complete initiative and referendum both in the constitutional amendment and
national legislation.
MR. ROCO. That is correct.
MR. ALBANO. And provincial as well as
municipal resolutions?
MR. ROCO. Down to barangay, Mr. Speaker.
MR. ALBANO. And this initiative and
referendum is in consonance with the provision of the Constitution to enact the
enabling law, so that we shall have a system which can be done every five
years. Is it five years in the provision of the Constitution?
MR. ROCO. That is correct, Mr. Speaker. For
constitutional amendments to the 1987 Constitution, it is every five
years." (Id. [Journal and Record of the House of Representatives],
Vol. VIII, 8 June 1989, p. 960; quoted in Garcia v. Comelec, 237 SCRA 279,
292-293 [1994]; emphasis supplied)
. . . The Senate version of the Bill may
not have comprehended initiatives on the Constitution. When consolidated,
though, with the House version of the Bill and as approved and enacted into
law, the proposal included initiative on both the Constitution and ordinary
laws. 9
Clearly then, Republic Act No. 6735 covers
an initiative on the constitution. Any other construction as what petitioners
foist upon the Court constitute a betrayal of the intent and spirit behind the
enactment.
At any rate, I
agree with the ponencia that the Commission on Elections, at present, cannot
take any action (such as those contained in the Commission's orders dated
December 6, 9, and 12, 1996 [Annexes B, C and B-1]) indicative of its having
already assumed jurisdiction over private respondents' petition. This is so
because from the tenor of Section 5 (b) of R.A. No. 6735 it would appear that
proof of procurement of the required percentage of registered voters at the
time the petition for initiative is filed, is a jurisdictional requirement.
Thus:
A petition for an initiative on
the 1987 Constitution must have at least twelve per centum (12%)
of the total number of registered voters as signatories, of which every
legislative district must be represented by at least three per centum (3%)
of the registered voters therein. Initiative on the Constitution may be
exercised only after five (5) years from the ratification of the 1987
Constitution and only once every five (5) years thereafter.
Here private respondents' petition is
unaccompanied by the required signatures. This defect notwithstanding, it is
without prejudice to the refiling of their petition once compliance with the
required percentage is satisfactorily shown by private respondents. In the
absence, therefore, of an appropriate petition before the Commission on
Elections, any determination of whether private respondents' proposal constitutes
an amendment or revision is premature.
ACCORDINGLY, I take
exception to the conclusion reached in the ponencia that R.A.
No. 6735 is an "inadequate" legislation to cover a people's
initiative to propose amendments to the Constitution. I, however, register my
concurrence with the dismissal, in the meantime, of private respondents'
petition for initiative before public respondent Commission on Elections until
the same be supported by proof of strict compliance with Section 5 (b) of R.A.
No. 6735.
Melo and Mendoza,
JJ., concur.
PANGANIBAN, J., concurring and dissenting:
Our distinguished
colleague, Mr. Justice Hilario G. Davide Jr., writing for the majority, holds
that:
(1) The Comelec
acted without jurisdiction or with grave abuse of discretion in entertaining
the "initiatory" Delfin Petition.
(2) While the
Constitution allows amendments to "be directly proposed by the people
through initiative," there is no implementing law for the purpose. RA 6735
is "incomplete, inadequate, or wanting in essential terms and conditions
insofar as initiative on amendments to the Constitution is concerned."
(3) Comelec
Resolution No. 2330, "insofar as it prescribes rules and regulations on the
conduct of initiative on amendments to the Constitution, is void."
I concur with the
first item above. Until and unless
an initiatory petition can show the required number of signatures — in this
case, 12% of all the registered voters in the Philippines with at least 3% in
every legislative district — no public funds may be spent and no government
resources may be used in an initiative to amend the Constitution. Verily, the
Comelec cannot even entertain any petition absent such signatures. However,
I dissent most respectfully from the majority's two other rulings. Let
me explain.
Under the above
restrictive holdings espoused by the Court's majority, the Constitution cannot
be amended at all through a people's initiative. Not by Delfin, not by Pirma, not
by anyone, not even by all the voters of the country acting together. This
decision will effectively but unnecessarily curtail, nullify, abrogate and
render inutile the people's right to change the basic law. At the
very least, the majority holds the right hostage to congressional discretion on
whether to pass a new law to implement it, when there is already one existing
at present. This right to amend through initiative, it bears stressing, is
guaranteed by Section 2, Article XVII of the Constitution, as follows:
Sec. 2. Amendments to this Constitution may
likewise be directly proposed by the people through initiative upon a petition
of at least twelve per centum of the total number of
registered voters, of which every legislative district must be represented by
at least three per centum of the registered voters therein. No
amendment under this section shall be authorized within five years following
the ratification of this Constitution nor oftener than once every five years
thereafter.
With all due
respect, I find the majority's position all too sweeping and all too extremist.
It is equivalent to burning the whole house to exterminate the rats, and to
killing the patient to relieve him of pain. What Citizen Delfin wants the
Comelec to do we should reject. But we should not thereby preempt any future
effort to exercise the right of initiative correctly and judiciously. The
fact that the Delfin Petition proposes a misuse of initiative does not justify
a ban against its proper use. Indeed, there is a right way to do the right
thing at the right time and for the right reason.
Taken Together and
Interpreted Properly, the Constitution, RA 6735 and Comelec Resolution 2300 Are
Sufficient to Implement Constitutional Initiatives
While RA 6735 may
not be a perfect law, it was — as the majority openly concedes — intended by
the legislature to cover and, I respectfully submit, it contains enough
provisions to effectuate an initiative on the Constitution. 1 I
completely agree with the inspired and inspiring opinions of Mr. Justice
Reynato S. Puno and Mr. Justice Ricardo J. Francisco that RA 6735, the Roco law
on initiative, sufficiently implements the right of the people to initiate
amendments to the Constitution. Such views, which I shall no longer repeat nor
elaborate on, are thoroughly consistent with this Court's unanimous en
banc rulings in Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority vs. Commission
on Elections, 2 that "provisions for
initiative . . . are (to be) liberally construed to effectuate their purposes,
to facilitate and not hamper the exercise by the voters of the rights granted
thereby"; and in Garcia vs. Comelec, 3 that
any "effort to trivialize the effectiveness of people's initiatives ought
to be rejected."
No law can
completely and absolutely cover all administrative details. In recognition of
this, RA 6735 wisely empowered 4 the Commission on
Election "to promulgate such rules and regulations as may be necessary to
carry out the purposes of this Act." And pursuant thereto, the Comelec
issued its Resolution 2300 on 16 January 1991. Such Resolution, by its very
words, was promulgated "to govern the conduct of initiative on the
Constitution and initiative and referendum on national and local laws,"
not by the incumbent Commission on Elections but by one then composed of Acting
Chairperson Haydee B. Yorac, Comms. Alfredo E. Abueg Jr., Leopoldo L. Africa,
Andres R. Flores, Dario C. Rama and Magdara B. Dimaampao. All of these
Commissioners who signed Resolution 2300 have retired from the Commission, and
thus we cannot ascribe any vile motive unto them, other than an honest, sincere
and exemplary effort to give life to a cherished right of our people.
The majority argues
that while Resolution 2300 is valid in regard to national laws and local
legislations, it is void in reference to constitutional amendments. There is no
basis for such differentiation. The source of and authority for the Resolution
is the same law, RA 6735.
I respectfully
submit that taken together and interpreted properly and liberally, the
Constitution (particularly Art. XVII, Sec. 2), R4 6735 and Comelec Resolution
2300 provide more than sufficient authority to implement, effectuate and
realize our people's power to amend the Constitution.
Petitioner Delfin
and the Pedrosa
Spouses Should Not Be Muzzled
Spouses Should Not Be Muzzled
I am glad the
majority decided to heed our plea to lift the temporary restraining order
issued by this Court on 18 December 1996 insofar as it prohibited Petitioner
Delfin and the Spouses Pedrosa from exercising their right of initiative. In
fact, I believe that such restraining order as against private respondents
should not have been issued, in the first place. While I agree that the Comelec
should be stopped from using public funds and government resources to help them
gather signatures, I firmly believe that this Court has no power to restrain
them from exercising their right of initiative. The right to propose amendments
to the Constitution is really a species of the right of free speech and free
assembly. And certainly, it would be tyrannical and despotic to stop anyone
from speaking freely and persuading others to conform to his/her beliefs. As
the eminent Voltaire once said, "I may disagree with what you say, but I
will defend to the death your right to say it." After all, freedom is not
really for the thought we agree with, but as Justice Holmes wrote,
"freedom for the thought that we hate." 5
Epilogue
By way of epilogue,
let me stress the guiding tenet of my Separate Opinion. Initiative, like
referendum and recall, is a new and treasured feature of the Filipino
constitutional system. All three are institutionalized legacies of the
world-admired EDSA people power. Like elections and plebiscites, they are
hallowed expressions of popular sovereignty. They are sacred democratic rights
of our people to be used as their final weapons against political excesses,
opportunism, inaction, oppression and misgovernance; as well as their reserved
instruments to exact transparency, accountability and faithfulness from their
chosen leaders. While on the one hand, their misuse and abuse must be
resolutely struck down, on the other, their legitimate exercise should be
carefully nurtured and zealously protected.
WHEREFORE, I vote
to GRANT the petition of Sen. Miriam D. Santiago et al. and to DIRECT
Respondent Commission on Elections to DISMISS the Delfin Petition on the ground
of prematurity, but not on the other grounds relied upon by the majority. I
also vote to LIFT the temporary restraining order issued on 18 December 1996
insofar as it prohibits Jesus Delfin, Alberto Pedrosa and Carmen Pedrosa from
exercising their right to free speech in proposing amendments to the
Constitution.
Melo and Mendoza,
JJ., concur.