EN BANC
[P.E.T. Case No. 001.
MIRIAM DEFENSOR-SANTIAGO, protestant, vs. FIDEL VALDEZ RAMOS, protestee.
SYLLABUS
1. POLITICAL LAW;
PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORAL TRIBUNAL; ELECTION PROTEST; IN ASSUMING THE OFFICE OF SENATOR,
THE PROTESTANT HAS EFFECTIVELY ABAN-DONED OR WITHDRAWN HER ELECTION PROTEST,
THEREBY MAKING IT MOOT. - The term of office of the Senators elected in the
2. ID.; ID.; ID.;
THE PROTESTANT ABANDONED HER ELECTION PROTEST WHEN SHE WAIVED THE REVISION OF
THE REMAINING BALLOTS AND FAILED TO INFORM THE TRIBUNAL WHETHER SHE STILL
INTENDS TO PRESENT ADDITIONAL EVIDENCE AFTER THE COMPLETION OF THE REVISION OF
THE BALLOTS FROM THE PILOT AREAS. - This Tribunal cannot close its eyes to
the fact that the Protestant has decided to waive the revision of the remaining
unrevised ballots from 4,017 precincts out of the 17,527 precincts of the
designated three pilot areas. This is
an unabashed reversal from her original stand in her Motion and Manifestation
dated
3. ID.; ID.; ID.; IT IS IRRELEVANT AT THIS STAGE OF THE PROCEEDINGS THAT THE PROTESTANT’S REVISORS DISCOVERED ALLEGED IRREGULARITIES IN 13,510 OUT OF THE 17,525 CONSTESTED PRECINCTS IN THE PILOT AREAS. - It is entirely irrelevant at this stage of the proceedings that the Protestant’s revisors discovered in the course of the revisions alleged irregularities in 13,510 out of the 17,525 contested precincts in the pilot areas and have objected to thousands of ballots cast in favor of the Protestee. Revision is merely the first stage, and not the alpha and omega, of an election contest. In no uncertain terms then, this Tribunal declared in its resolution of 18 March 1993 that: Protestant knows only too well, being a lawyer and a former judge herself, that the revision phase of her protest is but the first stage in the resolution of her electoral protest and that the function of the revisors is very limited. In her 12 February 1993 Comment on Protestee’s 5 February 1993 Urgent Motion for the issuance of a resolution which, inter alia, would clarify that revisors may observe the objections and/or claims made by the revisors of the other party as well as the ballots subject thereof, and record such observations in a form to be provided for that purpose. Protestant unequivocally stated: “8. Further, the principle and plan of the RPET [Rules of the Presidential Electoral Tribulal is to subdivide the entire election contests into various stages. Thus, the first stage is the Revision Proper. Second is the technical examination if so desired by either party. Third, is the reception of evidence. And fourth, is the filing of parties’ memoranda.” and described the function of the revisors as “solely to examine and segregate the ballots according to which ballots they would like to contest or object (contested ballots) and those which they admit or have no objections (uncontested ballots).” Indeed, revisors do not have any judicial discretion; their duties are merely clerical in nature ( Hontiveros vs. Altavas, 24 Phil. 632 [1913]). In fact, their opinion or decision on the more crucial or critical matter of what ballots are to be contested or not does not even bind the Tribunal (Yalung vs. Atienza, 52 Phil. 781 [1929]; Olano vs. Tibayan, 53 Phil. 168 [1929]). Thus, no undue importance may be given to the revision phase of an election contest. It can never serve as a logical or an acceptable basis for the conclusion that massive fraud or irregularities were committed during an election or that a Protestatnt had won in said election. If that were so, a Protestant may contest all ballot boxes and, in the course of the revision thereof, object - for any imagined ground whatsoever, even if the same be totally unfounded and ridiculous - to all ballots credited to the Protestee; and then, at the end of the day, said Protestant may even announce to the whole world that contrary to what is reflected in the election returns, Protestee had actually lost the elections.
4. ID.; ONLY ONE
REASON WHY THE PROTEST HAD BEEN RENDERED MOOT AND ACADEMIC - IT HAS BEEN
ABANDONED OR WITHDRAWN. - Mr. Justice Puno’s perception that the majority
would dismiss this “election protest as moot and academic on two (2) grounds:
first, that the findings of irregularities made by the revisors of the
protestant in the course of the revision of ballots in 13,510 contested
precincts are entirely irrelevant; and second, she abandoned her protests when
she filed her certificate of candidacy in the 8 May 1995 senatorial elections,”
is inaccurate. The dispositive portion
of this resolution leaves no room for any doubt or miscomprehension that the
dismissal is based on the ground that the protest “has been rendered moot and academic by its abandonement or withdrawal
by the Protestant as a consequence of her election and assumption of office as
Senator and her discharge of the duties and functions thereof” There is,
therefore, ONLY ONE reason or ground why the protest has been rendered moot and
academic, i.e., it has been abandoned or withdrawn. This was the very issue upon which the parties were required, in
the resolution of
5. ID.; ID.; ID.;
IT WAS NEVER THE VIEW OF THE MAJORITY THAT THE PROTESTANT’S FILING OF THE
CERTIFICATE OF CANDIDACY FOR A SEAT IN THE SENATE IN THE 8 MAY 1995 ELECTION
WAS THE SOLE OPERATIVE ACT WHY THE PRESENT PROTEST HAS BECOME MOOT AND
ACADEMIC. - Then too, it was never the view of the majority that the
Protestant’s filing of the certificate of candidacy for a seat in the Senate in
the
6. ID.; ID.; ID.; IN SUM, WHAT APPEARS TO BE THE CORRECT VIEW IN THE DISSENT IS, IN THE FINAL, ANALYSIS, MISPLACED; REASON. - What initially appears to be the correct view in the dissent is, in the final analysis, misplaced. This must also be the verdict upon the following pronouncements of Mr. Justice Puno: A more fundamental reason prevents me from joining the majority. With due respect, I submit that the majority ruling on abandonment is inconsistent with the doctrine that an election contest is concerned less with the private interest of the candidates but more with public interest. Under a republican regime of government, the overarching object of an election contest is to seek and enforce the judgment of the people on who should govern them. It is not a happenstance that the first declaration of policy of our Constitution underlines in bright that “sovereignty resides in the people and all government authority emanates from them.” The first duty of a citizen as a particle of sovereignty just as the first duty of any reigning government is to uphold the sovereignity of the people at all cost. Thus, in Moraleja vs. Relova, we emphatically held that “x x x once the court has acquired jurisdiction over an election contests, the public interest involved demands that the true winner be known without regard to the wishes or acts of the parties so much so that there can be no default, compromise nor stipulation of facts in this kind of cases.” Wisely, this Tribunal has consistently demurred from dismissing election contests even on the ground of death of the protestee or the protestant. The majority appears to stray away from this lodestar of our Constitution. It will dismiss the case at bar even while the protestee and the protestant are yet alive, even while the term of the 1992 president-elect has yet to expire, and even while the protestee and the protestant together plead that the Tribunal should determine the true will of the people by deciding their dispute on the merits] and not on technicalities that trifle with the truth. I submit that it is the better stance for the Tribunal to decide this election contest on the merits] and vindicate the political judgment of the people which far surpasses in significance all other considerations. Our duty to tell the people who have the right to govern them cannot depend on the uncertain oscillations of politics of the litigants as often times they are directed by the wind of convenience, and not by the weal of the public. For one, the minority has, in no uncertain terms, demonstrated the dissimilarities in the factual settings of the instant protest vis-a-vis the earlier cases that enunciated the doctrine relied on by Mr. Justice Puno. Then, too, it must be reitereated, to avoid further miscomprehension, that the Moraleja ruling even conceded that the matter of abandonment “could be different” if the petitioner therein had accepted “a permanent appointment to a regular office” during the pendency of his protest. In short Moraleja in fact intimates abandonment of an election protest if, in the meantime, the Protestant accepts a permanent appointment to a regular office. If that can be so, then would it be, and for weightier reasons, against a protestant who voluntarily sought election to an office whose term of the contested office, and after winning the said election, took her oath and assumed office and thereafter continuously serves it. In Moraleja, the Supreme Court was meticulous in excluding abandonment from the enumeration of specific “acts or wishes” of the parties which must be disregarded because of the public interest component of an election protest. As reflected in the above quotation from Mr. Justice Puno’s dissent, only default, compromise, or stipulation of facts are included.
7. ID.; ID.; ID.; THE DISSENT FORGETS THAT THE RULES OF THE TRIBUNAL ALLOW SUMMARY DISMISSAL OF ELECTION PROTEST EVEN FOR LESS IMPORTANT GROUNDS. - With all due respect, the above pronouncement of Mr. Justice Puno forgets that. as distinctly pointed out in the early part of this Resolution, the Rules of the Tribunal allow summary dismissal of election protests even for less important grounds, to repeat, such as the petition filed with the Tribunal or the annexes attached thereto are not clearly legible, or the filing fees and cash deposits were not filed within the periods fixed in the Rules, and the additional provision for dismissal under Rule 61. All these provisions of the Rules would then be put to naught or, at the very least, modified or amended in a way not authorized by the Rules, if the theory of Mr. Justice Puno be accepted. Such theory would unreasonably bind the Tribunal to the technical minutiae of trial on the merits to bring to their ultimate end all protests or contests filed before it - including those filed by candidates who even forgot to vote for themselves and obtained no votes in the final count, but, unable to accept defeat, filed a protest claiming massive fraud and irregularities, vote-buying, and terrorism. Consequently, all the time and energy of the Justices of the Supreme Court would be spent appreciating millions of revised ballots to the prejudice of their regular judicial functions in the Court, as the electoral protest of every Juan, Pedro, and Jose who lost in the presidential elections would have to be heard on the merits. Public policy abhors such a scenario and no public good stands to be thereby served.
PADILLA, J., concurring and dissenting:
PROTESTANT’S CANDIDACY FOR SENATOR IN THE MAY 1995
ELECTIONS, HER ELECTION TO SAID OFFICE AND HER ACTUAL ASSUMPTION AND DISCHARGE
OF THE OFFICE COMBINED TO CONSTITUTE A SUPERVENING FACT THAT RENDERED MOOT AND
ACADEMIC HER PRESENT PROTEST. - Protestant’s candidacy for Senator in the 8
May 1995 elections, her election to said office and her actual assumption and
discharge of the office, combined to constitute, in my view, a supervening fact that rendered moot and
academic her present protest because, if she were to pursue her present protest
(without such supervening fact) and, she were to win the protest, her term of
office as President of the Philippine would in
any case expire on 30 June 1998. When
she, however, chose to run for Senator in the
PUNO, J., dissenting:
1. ONLY AFTER THE
PROTESTANT HAS BEEN AFFORDED THE
2. ID.; THE TRIBUNAL CANNOT EVADE THE DUTY TO EXAMINE THE PROTESTED BALLOTS, FOR THE BALLOTS ARE THE BEST EVIDENCE TO ENABLE THE COURT TO DETERMINE THE VOTES OBTAINED BY THE PROTESTANT AND THE PROTESTEE. – It can be assumed arguendo that the protestant has lost her right to present additional evidence by her failure to invoke it within a reasonable time. Even then, I submit that the non-presentation of further evidence is not necessarily fatal. Certain types of fraud and irregularities can be proved without the testimonies of handwriting experts or the testimonies of voters, watchers, inspectors and others who witnessed the same. There are fraud and irregularities which are patent on the face of the ballots and other election documents and paraphernalia. Ballots that are marked, ballots that are spurious, ballots written by the same hand, a ballot written by different hands, tampered tally sheets, false list of voters, falsified election returns, and other election documents can be appreciated without need of evidence aliunde. For this reason. the Tribunal cannot evade the duty to examine the protested ballots for the ballots are the best evidence to enable the court to determine the votes obtained by the protestant and the protestee. Needless to state, until the Tribunal examines and appreciates the protested ballots it cannot dismiss the protest.
3. ID.; MR. JUSTICE PUNO DOES NOT SUBSCRIBE TO THE RULING OF THE MAJORITY THAT THE PROTESTANT ABANDONED HER PROTEST WHEN SHE RAN FOR SENATOR AND DISCHARGED HER DUTIES. - I do not also subscribe to the ruling of the majority that the protestant abandoned her protest when she ran for Senator and discharged her duties. Abandonment in law means, “voluntary relinquishment of all right, title, claim x x x with the intention of not reclaiming it.” In ascertaining abandonment, whether in election, property, or criminal litigations, “x x x intention is the first and paramount object of inquiry for there can be no abandonment without the intent to abandon.” Intention is subjective and can be inferred from the acts and conduct of a person. It is a question of fact. In the case at bar, the Tribunal cannot resolve this question of fact for lack of competent evidence. The protestee has not adduced evidence to prove acts and omissions of the protestant which can be the basis for a finding that she intentionally abandoned her protest. Indeed, the protestee does not want the protest to be dismissed on a technicality but prays that it be decided on the merits. The lack of competent evidence on record notwithstanding, the majority ruled, to wit: “x x x She knew that the term of office of the Senators who would then be elected would be six (6) years, to commence at noon on the thirtieth day of June next following their election and to end at noon of 30 June 2001. Knowing her high sense of integrity and candor, it is most unlikely that during her campaign she promised to serve the electorate as Senator, subject to the outcome of this protest. In short, she filed her certificate of candidacy for the Senate without any qualification, condition, or reservation.”
4. ID.; THE
MAJORITY RULING ON ABANDONMENT IS INCONSISTENT WITH THE DOCTRINE THAT AN
ELECTION CONTEST IS CONCERNED LESS WITH THE PRIVATE INTEREST OF THE CANDIDATES
BUT MORE OF PUBLIC INTEREST. – A more
fundamental reason prevents
me from joining the majority. With due
respect, I submit that the majority ruling on abandonment is inconsistent with
the doctrine that an election contest
is concerned less with the private interest of the candidates but more with
public interest. Under a republican regime of government,
the overarching object of an election contest is to seek and enforce the
judgment of the people on who should govern them. It is not a happenstance that
the first declaration of policy of our Constitution underlines in bright that
“sovereignty resides in the people and all government authority emanates from
them.” The first duty of a citizen as a particle of sovereignty in a democracy
is to exercise his sovereignty just as the first duty of any reigning government
is to uphold the sovereignty of the people at all cost. Thus, in Moraleja vs. Relova, we
emphatically held that “x x x once the court has acquired jurisdiction over an
election contest, the public interest
involved demands that the true winner be known without regard to the wishes or
acts of the parties so much
so that there can be no default, compromise nor stipulation of facts in this
kind of cases.” Wisely, this Tribunal has consistently demurred from dismissing
election contests even on the ground of death of the protestee or the
protestant. The majority appears to
stray away from this lodestar of our Constitution. It will dismiss the case at bar even while the protestee and the
protestant are yet alive, even while the term of the 1992 presidential-elect
has yet to expire, and even while the protestee
and the protestant together plead
that the Tribunal should determine the true will of the people by deciding
their dispute on the merit and not on technicalities that trifle with the
truth. I submit that it is the better
stance for the Tribunal to decide this election contest on the merit and
vindicate the political judgment of the people which far surpasses in
significance all other considerations. Our duty to tell the people who have the
right to govern them cannot depend on the uncertain oscillations of politics of
the litigants as often times they are directed by the wind of convenience, and
not by the weal of the public. Even the
protestee has pleaded that the protest be tried on its merit as it involves a
matter of paramount and grave public interest.
Considering these distinct facts, the Tribunal should not dismiss the
protest on the ground of mootness.
KAPUNAN, J., dissenting:
1. MR. JUSTICE
KAPUNAN DISAGREES THAT AS A CONSEQUENCE OF THE PROTESTANT’S ELECTION AND
ASSUMPTION OF
2. ID.; MR. J. KAPUNAN DOES NOT SUBSCRIBE TO THE MAJORITY’S THEORY THAT BY FILING THE CERTIFICATE OF CANDIDACY FOR THE SENATE, CAMPAIGNING FOR SAID OFFICE AND SUBMITTING HERSELF TO BE VOTED UPON IN THE ELECTIONS, THE PROTESTANT “HAD ENTERED INTO A POLITICAL CONTRACT WITH THE ELECTORATE THAT IF ELECTED SHE WOULD ASSUME THE OFFICE OF SENATOR, DISCHARGE ITS FUNCTIONS, AND SERVE HER CONSTITUENCY AS SUCH FOR THE TERM FOR WHICH SHE WAS ENTITLED. - First, there is no evidence that she made such promise. On the contrary, I believe, she had made herself clear during the 1995 Senatorial campaign that she was not abandoning her protest, meaning that in the event she would be declared the winner in the 1992 Presidential elections, she may opt to assume the Presidency, thus shortening her term of office as Senator. When the voters made their choice for the Senate, they were fully aware that the protestant may not serve the full term of her office if she wins her protest. Despite this, the voters elected her as Senator. Second, if by filing her certificate of candidacy as Senator and campaigning for said office, she entered into a contract with the electorate that she will serve the full term of her office as Senator, in the same token, by filing her certificate of candidacy for the Presidency and campaigning for that office, she must necessarily have entered into a contract with the electorate that she will serve the full term of the Presidency if elected. Third, there has been several cases where members of Congress gave up their positions before their terms of office expired to accept appointments in the cabinet or other high-profile positions. To mention a few, the present Secretary of Justice Teofisto Guingona gave up his Senate seat a few years ago to become Executive Secretary. Congressman Salvador Escudero has just been named the new Secretary of Agriculture. Yet, there has not been any murmur that said officials have violated any political contract with the electorate that elected them to Congress.
3. ID.; MR. J. KAPUNAN WOULD NOT THEREFORE CONCLUDE THAT THE PROTESTANT ABANDONED HER ELECTION PROTEST WHEN SHE WAIVED THE REVISION OF THE REMAINING BALLOTS, AND FAILED TO INFORM THE TRIBUNAL WHETHER SHE STILL INTENDS TO PRESENT ADDITIONAL EVIDENCE AFTER THE COMPLETION OF THE REVISION OF THE BALLOTS FROM THE PILOT AREAS. - Her waiver could have been due to reasons other than that the majority speculatively imputes to her. It could have been based on her belief that the contested ballots in the 13,500 precincts, if and when properly appreciated, would sufficiently substantiate the allegations in her petition. Or she could have been impelled by the desire to expedite the electoral proceedings and minimize her expenses. With regard to the protestant’s failure to inform the Tribunal whether she still intends to present additional evidence after the completion of the revision of the ballots from the pilot areas (as embodied in the resolution dated 21 October 1993), her “omission,” likewise does not amount to a waiver or abandonment of her election protest. Resolution of election cases, it must be stressed, is a Continuous process albeit divided into various stages. These stages - revision, technical examination, presentation of evidence and submission of memoranda - are but parts of one whole procedure. Except for the technical examination of the ballots, wherein the parties are expressly given discretion whether or not to move for one after completion of each stage, the proceedings necessarily move to the next step. The procedure will run its natural course pursuant to the rules of the Presidential Electoral Tribunal (PET). Since the phases or stages in the electoral protest are laid down in the rules, the parties are supposed to act in accordance with the sequential order of the proceedings without being required to manifest formally at each stage if they are willing to proceed to the next one. Hence, waiver of one stage or the remaining stages cannot he impliedly imputed to a party unless there is a manifest intentional and unequivocal statement or action to this effect. The least the Tribunal should have done was to direct the protestant to show cause why her protest should not be dismissed for failure to file the required information, which liberal process the Tribunal customarily accords the parties to find out the reasons for the omission.
4. ID.; THE
PROTEST CANNOT BE LAWFULLY DISMISSED UNDER SECTION 61 OF THE P.E.T. RULES;
REASON. - The protest cannot, therefore, be lawfully dismissed under
Section 61 of the PET rules. Bear in
mind that not only revision of the ballots but also reception of evidence is
required before the Tribunal can dismiss an election protest on the grounds
that “the protestant will most probably fail to make out his case.” In the
instant protest, the revision of the ballots has hardly been completed and
presentation of evidence, undoubtedly the most crucial aspect of the
proceedings, has yet to commence. To
utilize Section 61 of the PET rules to justify dismissal of the instant case at
this early stage of the proceedings is to jump the gun on both the protestant
and the protestee. Having granted the protestant’s motion of
VITUG, J., separate opinion:
MR. JUSTICE VITUG IS UNABLE TO SHARE THE CONCLUSION OF THE MAJORITY THAT THE PROTESTANT IS DEEMED TO HAVE ABANDONED HIS PROTEST WHEN SHE RAN IN THE MAY 1995 ELECTIONS FOR, AND WAS PROCLAIMED AND TOOK OFFICE AS, SENATOR OF THE REPUBLIC. - The submission that the protestant is deemed to have abandoned her protest because she ran in the May 1995 elections for the position of, and was proclaimed and so eventually took office as, Senator of the Republic is a conclusion, I fear, I am unable to share. Abandonment is personal, and it must be manifested in unequivocal terms by the person charged with it. If, as it so appears, the protestant has not to date “informed the tribunal whether (or not) after the completion of the revision of the ballots from her pilot areas she would present evidence in connection therewith,” then the tribunal must act on this basis and decide on whatever it may have on hand with equal opportunity to the protestee to make his own submission of evidence if still desired. Considering that there appears to be no constitutional proscriptions involved, I vote to allow the Tribunal to proceed with a final determination on the merits of the protest rather than a dismissal on the mere ground of abandonment.
APPEARANCES OF COUNSEL
Leonardo C. Aguilar for protestant.
Former Justice Lino Patajo, Avelino J. Cruz, Jr., Renato L. Cayetano, Emerito M. Salva, and Simeon V. Marcelo for protestee.
R E S O L U T I O N
In her motion of 16 August 1995, reiterated in her Comment of 29 August 1995, Protestant Miriam Defensor-Santiago prayed that the revision of ballots in the remaining precincts of the pilot areas be dispensed with and the revision process in the pilot areas be deemed completed.
We deferred action on that motion and required the Protestant and
the Protestee to submit their respective memoranda on the issue of whether this
case had been rendered moot by the election of the Protestant as a Senator in
the May 1995 election and her assumption of office as such on
The Protestant answers this issue in the negative. Relying on Sibulo vda. de De Mesa vs. Mencias,[1] Lomugdang vs. Javier,[2] and De Castro vs. Ginete,[3] she asserts that an election contest involves not only an adjudication and settlement of the private interests of the rival candidates, but more importantly, the paramount need to dispel, once and for all, the uncertainty that beclouds the true choice of the electorate. Hence, it is imbued with, public interest and should be pursued to its final conclusion to determine the bona fide winner. She further asserts that an election case may be rendered moot only if the term of the contested office has expired,[4] thus her election as Senator and assumption of office as such cannot, ‘under the rule laid down in Moraleja vs. Relova,[5] be construed as an abandonment of the instant protest. Finally, she alleges that this Court has departed from the orthodox view that a case should be dismissed if it has been mooted.[6]
For his part, the Protestee submits that there is strong legal
basis for this Tribunal to rule that the Protestant is deemed to have abandoned
the instant protest, in light of the ruling in Dimaporo vs. Mitra[7] which construed Section 67, Article IX
of B.P. Blg. 881 (Omnibus Election Code).[8]
He submits, however, that public interest requires that this protest be
resolved on the merits considering that: (a) it involves a matter of paramount
and grave public interest; and (b) it was filed merely to keep Protestant
Santiago in the limelight in preparation for her Senatorial campaign. He
likewise claims that a resolution on the merits would confirm his victory in
the
We cannot subscribe to the view of the Protestee that by filing her certificate of candidacy for Senator Protestant Santiago ipso facto forfeited her claim to the office of President pursuant to Section 67 of B.P. Blg. 881. Plainly, the said section applies exclusively to an incumbent elective official who files a certificate of candidacy for any office “other than the one he is holding in a permanent capacity.” Even more plain is that the Protestant was not the incumbent President at the time she filed her certificate of candidacy for Senator nor at any time before that. Thus, the holding in Dimaporo does not apply to the Protestant.
Neither do we find any convincing logic to the Protestee’s
proposition that this case should nevertheless be resolved on the merits
because its filing was done in bad faith, i.e., merely to keep the Protestant
in the limelight in preparation for her Senatorial campaign. If that were so, then public interest would
be served if this case were put to an abrupt end after the Protestant won a
seat in the Senate. Finally, neither do
we find any cogent nor compelling reason to proceed with this case, in the
event that we find it to be moot, simply to establish guiding and controlling
principles or doctrines with respect to election protests involving the office
of the President or the Vice- President.
I.
The key then to the resolution of the aforestated issue is the consideration of public interest and public policy and their encompassing effects on election cases which have been unequivocally expressed in the cases cited by the Protestant.
In Sibulo vda. de De Mesa vs. Mencias,[9] this Court stated:
It is axiomatic that an election contest involving as it does not only the adjudication settlement of the private interests of the rival candidates but also the paramount need of dispellling once and for all the uncertainty that beclouds the real choice of the electorate with respect to who shall discharge the prerogatives of the offices within their gift, is a proceeding imbued with public interest which raises it onto a plane over and above ordinary civil actions. For this reason, broad perspectives of public policy impose upon courts the imperative duty to ascertain by all means within their command who is the real candidate elected in as expeditious a manner as possible, without being fettered by technicalities and procedural barriers to the end that the will of the people may not be frustrated (Ibasco vs. Ilao, et al., G.R. L-17512, December 29, 1960; Reforma vs. De Luna, G.R. L-13242, July 31, 1958). So inextricably intertwined are the interests of the contestants and those of the public that there can be no gainsaying the logic of the proposition that even the voluntary cessation in office of the protestee not only does not ipso facto divest him of the character of an adversary in the contest inasmuch as he retains a party interest to keep his political opponent out of the office and maintain therein his successor, but also does not in any manner impair or detract from the jurisdiction of the court to pursue the proceeding to its final conclusion (De Los Angeles vs. Rodriguez, 46 Phil. 595, 597; Salcedo vs. Hernandez, 62 Phil. 584, 587; Galves vs. Maramba, G.R. L-13206).
Upon the same principle, the death of the protestee De Mesa did not abate the proceedings in the election protest filed against him, and it may be stated as a rule that an election contest survives and must be prosecuted to final judgment despite the death of the protestee. (In Silverio vs. Castro, 19 SCRA 520 [1967], where the trial court proceeded with the trial of an election protest and decided it even if the protestee had already died and his Vice-Mayor had assumed office by succession, this Court, instead of dismissing the appeal brought on behalf of the deceased protestee, required the Vice-Mayor to intervene on the side of the appellant).
In Lomugdang vs. Javier,[10] this Court declared:
Determination of what candidate has been in fact elected is a
matter clothed with public interest, wherefore, public policy demands that an
election contest, duly commenced, be not abated by the death of the contestant.
We have squarely so ruled in Sibulo vda.
de Mesa vs. Judge Mencias, G.R. No. L-24583,
In the same Sibulo case, already cited, this Court likewise ruled that by virtue of Section 7, Republic Act 2264, the vice-mayor elect has the status of a real party in interest in the continuation of the proceedings and is entitled to intervene therein. For if the protest succeeds and the protestee is unseated, the vice mayor succeeds to the office of mayor that becomes vacant if the duly elected cannot assume the post.
In Moraleja vs. Relova,[11] this Court ruled:
As to the contention that by accepting such appointment as
Technical Assistant, protestant has abandoned his protest, all that need be
said is that once the court has acquired jurisdiction over an election contest,
the public interest involved demands that the true winner be known without
regard to the wishes or acts of the parties, so much so that there can be no
default, compromise nor stipulation of facts in this kind of cases. (Francisco, How To Try Election Cases, p.
163, citing Civilio v. Tomacruz, 62
Phil. 689). In the same manner that the
acceptance by the protestee of an appointment to another position is not a
ground for dismissal of the protest (Philippine Law on Elections by Martin,
1970 ed., pp. 258-259, citing Calvo v. Maramba,
G.R. No. L-13206, January 7, 1918) like the resignation of the protestee from
the contested office (Angeles v. Rodriguez,
46 Phil. 595), simply because it is
of public interest that the real winner be known, neither can the acceptance of
a more or less temporary employment, such as that of a technical assistant of
the Vice-Governor, which is a primarily confidential position, be considered as
inconsistent with protestant’s determination to protect and pursue the public
interest involved in the matter of who is the real choice of the electorate. In
such instances, the plight of protestant may be viewed in the same light as
that of an employee who has been illegally dismissed and who, to find means to
support himself and family while he prosecutes his case for reinstatement,
accepts a temporary employment elsewhere. Such employee is not deemed to have
abandoned the position he seeks to recover. (Tan v. Gimenez, et al. G.R. No. L-12525,
In De Castro vs. Ginete,[12] this Court stated:
The purpose of an election protest is to ascertain whether the candidate proclaimed elected by the board of canvassers is really the lawful choice of the electorate. What is sought in an election protest is the correction of the canvass of the votes, which is the basis of the proclamation of the winning candidate. An election contest involves a public office in which the public has an interest. Certainly, the act of a losing candidate of recognizing the one who is proclaimed the winner should not bar the losing candidate from questioning the validity of the election of the winner in the manner provided by law.
The factual milieu in these cases is not on all fours with the instant protest.
In Sibulo vda. de De Mesa, as in the later case of Silverio vs. Castro,[13] the protestee had been proclaimed the winning mayoralty candidate and had assumed office, and then died during the pendency of the election protest. While in Lomugdang, it was the protestant who died during the pendency of the protest.
In Moraleja, the
election protest survived the protestant’s acceptance of temporary employment
during the pendency of his election protest. Likewise, in De
Finally, in De Castro, the only issue presented was whether the protest should be dismissed on the ground of estoppel. In this proceeding, the protestant congratulated the protestee after the latter was proclaimed the winner by the board of canvassers and even exhorted those present during the inauguration and installation into office of the protestee to support the latter’s administration.
May the above dicta apply
to the case of Protestant Santiago who assumed the office of Senator after her
election as such in the
Indeed, it would be entirely different where the protestant
pursued the new position through a popular election, as in the case of
Protestant Santiago who filed a certificate of candidacy for Senator in the
In so doing, she entered into a political contract with the electorate that if elected, she would assume the office of Senator, discharge its functions and serve her constituency as such for the term for which she was elected. These are givens which are in full accord with the principle enshrined in the Constitution that public office is a public trust, and public officers and employees must at all times be accountable to the people and serve them with utmost responsibility, integrity, loyalty and efficiency.[17]
Indeed, it has been aptly said:
It is impossible that government shall be carried on, and the functions of civil society exercised, without the aid and intervention of public servants or officers, and every person, therefore, who enters into civil society and avails himself of the benefits and protection of the government, must owe to this society, or, in other words, to the public, at least a social duty to bear his share of the public burdens, by accepting and performing, under reasonable circumstances, the duties of those public offices to which he may be lawfully chosen.[18]
In this jurisdiction, an elected public official may even be held criminally liable should he refuse to discharge an elective office.[19]
The term of office of the Senators elected in the
It must also be stressed that under the Rules of the Presidential Electoral Tribunal, an election protest may be summarily dismissed, regardless of the public policy and public interest implications thereof, on the following grounds:
(1) The petition is insufficient in form and substance;
(2) The petition is filed beyond the periods provided in Rules 14 and 15 hereof;
(3) The filing fee is not paid within the periods provided for in these Rules;
(4) The cash deposit, or the first P100,000.00 thereof, is not paid within 10 days after the filing of the protest; and
(5) The petition or copies thereof and the annexes thereto filed with the Tribunal are not clearly legible.[20]
Other grounds for a motion to dismiss, e.g., those provided in
the Rules of Court which apply in a suppletory character,[21]
may likewise be pleaded as affirmative defenses in the answer. After which, the Tribunal may, in its
discretion, hold a preliminary hearing on such grounds.[22]
In sum, if an election protest may be dismissed on technical grounds, then it
must be, for a decidedly stronger reason, if it has become moot due to its
abandonment by the Protestant.
II.
There is yet another reason why this case should now be dismissed.
This Tribunal cannot close its eyes to the fact that the
Protestant has decided to waive the revision of the remaining unrevised ballots
from 4,017 precincts out of the 17,527 precincts of the designated three pilot
areas. This is an unabashed reversal
from her original stand in her Motion and Manifestation dated
After deliberating on the foregoing pleadings and the arguments of the parties, the Tribunal rules for the Protestant insofar as the revision of the remaining ballot boxes from her pilot areas are concerned, and against the immediate application of Rule 61 of the Rules of the Tribunal to the Protestee in respect of the Counter-Protest.
At this stage of the proceedings in this case it cannot be
reasonably determined whether the revised ballots are “considerable” enough to
establish a trend either in favor of or against the Protestant as would justify
an appropriate action contemplated in Rule 61 of the Rules of the Tribunal, or
whether the unrevised ballots from said areas would not, in the language of the
Protestant, “materially affect the result of the representative sample of the
ballot boxes so far revised.” As to the 1,300 ballot boxes from
Consequently, we resolved therein to:
A. ORDER the revision of the remaining unrevised ballot boxes enumerated in the aforequoted paragraph A of the 5 October 1993 Resolution and for that purpose to DIRECT the Acting Clerk of Court of the Tribunal to collect said ballot boxes and other election documents and paraphernalia from their respective custodians in the event that their revisions in connection with other election protests in which they are involved have been terminated, and if such revisions are not yet completed, to coordinate with the appropriate tribunal or court in which such other election protests are pending and which have already obtained custody of the ballot boxes and started revision with the end in view of either seeking expeditious revisions in such other election protests or obtaining the custody of the ballot boxes and related election documents and paraphernalia for their immediate delivery to the Tribunal; and
B. REQUIRE the Protestant to inform the Tribunal, within ten (10) days from receipt hereof, if after the completion of the revision of the ballots from her pilot areas she would present evidence in connection therewith.
Until the present, however, the Protestant has not informed the Tribunal whether after the completion of the revision of the ballots from her pilot areas, she still intends to present evidence in connection therewith. This failure then, is nothing short of a manifest indication that she no longer intends to do so.
It is entirely irrelevant at this stage of the proceedings that
the Protestant’s revisors discovered in the course of the revisions alleged
irregularities in 13,510 out of the 17,525 contested precincts in the pilot
areas and have objected to thousands of ballots cast in favor of the Protestee.
Revision is merely the first stage, and
not the alpha and omega, of an election contest. In no uncertain terms then,
this Tribunal declared in its resolution of
Protestant knows only too well, being a lawyer and a former judge herself, that the revision phase of her protest is but the first stage in the resolution of her electoral protest and that the function of the revisors is very limited. In her 12 February 1993 Comment on Protestee’s 5 February 1993 Urgent Motion for the issuance of a resolution which, inter alia, would clarify that revisors may observe the objections and/or claims made by the revisors of the other party as welt as the ballots subject thereof, and record such observations in a form to be provided for that purpose, Protestant unequivocally stated:
“8. Further, the principle and plan of the RPET [Rules of the Presidential Electoral Tribunal] is to subdivide the entire election contest into various stages. Thus, the first stage is the Revision Proper. Second is the technical examination if so desired by either party. Third is the reception of evidence. And Fourth, is the filing of parties’ memoranda.”
and described the function of the revisors as “solely to examine and segregate the ballots according to which ballots they would like to contest or object (contested ballots) and those which they admit or have no objections (uncontested ballots).” Indeed, revisors do not have any judicial discretion; their duties are merely clerical in nature (Hontiveros vs. Altavas, 24 Phil. 632 [1913]). In fact, their opinion or decision on the more crucial or critical matter of what ballots are to be contested or not does not even bind the Tribunal (Yalung vs. Atienza, 52 Phil. 781 [1929]; Olano vs. Tibayan, 53 Phil. 168 [1929]). Thus, no undue importance may be given to the revision phase of an election contest. It can never serve as a logical or an acceptable basis for the conclusion that massive fraud or irregularities were committed during an election or that a Protestant had won in said election. If that were so, a Protestant may contest all ballot boxes and, in the course of the revision thereof, object - for any imagined ground whatsoever, even if the same be totally unfounded and ridiculous - to all ballots credited to the Protestee; and then, at the end of the day, said Protestant may even announce to the whole world that contrary to what is reflected in the election returns, Protestee had actually lost the elections.
All told, a dismissal of this election protest is inevitable.
III.
However, three Members of the Tribunal outrightly disagree with the foregoing disquisitions. Hence, a reply to the important points they raise is in order.
Mr. Justice Puno’s perception that the majority would dismiss
this “election protest as moot and academic on two (2) grounds: first, that the
findings of irregularities made by the revisors of the protestant in the course
of the revision of ballots in 13,510 contested precincts are entirely
irrelevant; and second, she abandoned her protest when she filed her
certificate of candidacy in the 8 May 1995 senatorial elections,” is
inaccurate. The dispositive portion of
this resolution leaves no room for any doubt or miscomprehension that the
dismissal is based on the ground that the protest “has been rendered moot and academic by its abandonment or withdrawal
by the Protestant as a consequence of her election and assumption of office as
Senator and her discharge of the duties and functions thereof.” There is,
therefore, ONLY ONE reason or ground why the protest has been rendered moot and
academic, i.e., it has been abandoned
or withdrawn. This was the very issue upon which the parties were required, in
the resolution of
The majority neither conveyed, asserted nor even suggested, as
Mr. Justice Puno has apparently understood, that this protest has become moot
and academic because the finding of irregularities by the Protestant’s revisors
in the course of the revision of the ballots in 13,510 contested precincts in
the pilot areas are “entirely irrelevant,” and that the Protestant has
abandoned this protest by filing a certificate of candidacy for the office of
Senator in the 8 May 1995 elections. The majority’s views on “irrelevancy” and
“on the filing of the certificate of candidacy” are not the grounds themselves,
but parts only of the arguments to strengthen the conclusion reached, i.e., abandonment. Otherwise stated, in
order to make the point crystal clear, the majority never held that the
irrelevancy of the finding of irregularities is a ground why this protest has
become moot and academic. It only declared that the Protestant’s: (a) waiver of
revision of the unrevised ballots from the remaining 4,017 contested precincts
in the pilot areas; and (b) failure to comply with the resolution of 21 October
1995 requiring her to inform the Tribunal within ten days from notice if she
would still present evidence after completion of the revision of the ballots
from her pilot areas - rendered such “findings” of irregularities entirely
irrelevant considering the Tribunal’s disquisitions on what revision is in its
In his dissent, Mr. Justice Puno lifted the words “entirely irrelevant” from the fourth paragraph under the heading “II” of this Resolution. It must, however, be stressed that the said paragraph is inexorably linked to the preceding two paragraphs relating to the above-mentioned waiver and non-compliance, which provide the major premises for the fourth paragraph; more concretely, the latter is nothing more than the logical conclusion which the major premises support.
The reasons adduced by Mr. Justice Puno for the Protestant’s turn-around
are mere speculations. In any event, the Protestant’s possible “belief that the
contested ballots in 13,500 precincts when properly appreciated will
sufficiently establish her electoral victory,” cannot stand against her
previous insistence to proceed with the revision of the remaining unrevised
ballots and the aforementioned finding of the Tribunal in its resolution of
Then too, it was never the view of the majority that the
Protestant’s filing of the certificate of candidacy for a seat in the Senate in
the
[o]f whether or not the protest has not been rendered moot and
academic by the election of the Protestant as Senator and her subsequent
assumption of office as such on
As to the concept of abandonment, Mr. Justice Puno and Mr. Justice Kapunan cite Black’s Law Dictionary and the cases of Roebuck vs. Mecosta Country Road Commission,[23] Dober vs. Ukase Inv. Co.,[24] and McCall vs. Cull,[25] cited therein. We have turned to the primary sources of these cases, meticulously perused them, and found none materially significant to this protest.
The first two cases above refer to abandonment of property. Roebuck involved the issue of whether a roadway had been abandoned by the Mecosta Road Commission. The Court therein held that in order for there to be an abandonment of land dedicated to public use, two elements must concur, viz., (a) intention to relinquish the right or property, but without intending to transfer title to any particular person; and (b) the external act which such intention is carried into effect. While Dober, on the issue of whether the plaintiff therein abandoned a certain property, quoted Corpus Juris that the intention to abandon must be determined from the facts and circumstances of the case. There must be a clear, unequivocal and decisive act of the party to constitute abandonment in respect of a right secured - an act done which shows a determination in the individual not to have a benefit which is designed for him.
It is, of course, settled that a public office is not deemed property.[26]
Only McCall involved the issue of abandonment of office. It is stated therein as follows:
Abandonment is a matter of intention and, when thought of in
connection with an office, implies that the occupant has quit the office and
ceased to perform its duties. As long
as he continues to discharge the duties of the office, even though his source
of title is two appointments, one valid and the other invalid, it cannot be
said he has abandoned it. It was said in Steingruber v.
Strictly speaking, McCall is inapplicable to this protest for, as correctly stated in the dissent of Mr. Justice Kapunan, the Protestant could not abandon the office of President which she was not holding at the time she filed the certificate of candidacy for Senator. But the majority of the Tribunal never declared, nor even implied, that she abandoned the office of President because it knew that she had yet nothing to abandon. Precisely, she filed this protest to be declared the winner for that office, to thereafter assume and perform the duties thereof, and exercise the powers appertaining thereto. What the Tribunal explicitly states is that the Protestant abandoned this Protest, thereby rendering this protest moot.
Mr. Justice Puno also insists that abandonment raises a question of fact and that the Tribunal cannot resolve it “for lack of competent evidence”; moreover, he notes that the Protestee “has not adduced evidence which can be the basis for a finding that she intentionally abandoned her protest; on the contrary, the Protestee does not want the protest to be dismissed on a technicality but prays that it be decided on the merits.” Suffice it to say that the Protestant herself has not denied nor questioned the following facts, which by themselves, constitute overwhelming proof of the intention to abandon the protest:
(a) Filling of a
certificate of candidacy for Senator for the
(b) Campaigning for the office of Senator in such election,
(c) Taking her oath of office as Senator upon the commencement of the term therefor;
(d) Assumption of office as Senator; and
(e) Discharge and performance of the duties appertaining to the office of Senator.
These acts speak for themselves - res ipsa loquitur - to negate any proposition that the Protestant has not abandoned this protest.
Thus, what initially appears to be the correct view in the dissent is, in the final analysis, misplaced. This must also be the verdict upon the following pronouncements of Mr. Justice Puno:
A more fundamental reason prevents me from joining the majority. With due respect, I submit that the majority ruling on abandonment is inconsistent with the doctrine that an election contest is concerned less with the private interest of the candidates but more with public interest. Under a republican regime of government, the overarching object of an election contest is to seek and enforce the judgment of the people on who should govern them. It is not a happenstance that the first declaration of policy of our Constitution underlines in bright that “sovereignty resides in the people and all government authority emanates from them.” The first duty of a citizen as a particle of sovereignty in a democracy is to exercise his sovereignty just as the first duty of any reigning government is to uphold the sovereignty of the people at all cost. Thus, in Moraleja vs. Relova, we emphatically held that “x x x once the court has acquired jurisdiction over an election contest, the public interest involved demands that the true winner be known without regard to the wishes or acts of the parties so much so that there can be no default, compromise nor stipulation of facts in this kind of cases.” Wisely, this Tribunal has consistently demurred from dismissing election contests even on the ground of death of the protestee or the protestant.
The majority appears to stray away from this lodestar of our Constitution. It will dismiss the case at bar even while the protestee and the protestant are yet alive, even while the term of the 1992 president-elect has yet to expire, and even while the protestee and the protestant together plead that the Tribunal should determine the true will of the people by deciding their dispute on the merit[s] and not on technicalities that trifle with the truth. I submit that it is the better stance for the Tribunal to decide this election contest on the merit[s] and vindicate the political judgment of the people which far surpasses in significance all other considerations. Our duty to tell the people who have the right to govern them cannot depend on the uncertain oscillations of politics of the litigants as often times they are directed by the wind of convenience, and not by the weal of the public.
For one, the majority has, in no uncertain terms. demonstrated the dissimilarities in the factual settings of the instant protest vis-a-vis the earlier cases that enunciated the doctrine relied on by Mr. Justice Puno. Then, too, it must be reiterated, to avoid further miscomprehension, that the Moraleja ruling even conceded that the matter of abandonment “could be different” if the petitioner therein had accepted “a permanent appointment to a regular office” during the pendency of his protest. In short, Moraleja in fact intimates abandonment of an election protest if, in the meantime, the Protestant accepts a permanent appointment to a regular office. If that be so, then would it be, and for weightier reasons, against a protestant who voluntarily sought election to an office whose term would extend beyond the expiry date of the term of the contested office, and after winning the said election, took her oath and assumed office and thereafter continuously serves it.
In Moraleja, the Supreme Court was meticulous in excluding abandonment from the enumeration of specific “acts or wishes” of the parties which must he disregarded because of the public interest component of an election protest. As reflected in the above quotation from Mr. Justice Puno’s dissent, only default, compromise, or stipulation of facts are included.
Finally, with all due respect, the above pronouncement of Mr.
Justice Puno forgets that, as distinctly pointed out in the early part of this
Resolution, the Rules of the Tribunal allow summary dismissal of election
protests even for less important grounds, to repeat, such as the petition filed
with the Tribunal or the annexes attached thereto are not clearly legible, or
the filing fees and cash deposits were not filed within the periods fixed in
the Rules,[27]
and the additional provision for dismissal under Rule 61. All these provisions of the Rules would then
be put to naught or, at the very least, modified or amended in a way not
authorized by the Rules, if the theory of. Mr. Justice Puno be accepted. Such
theory would unreasonably bind the Tribunal to the technical minutiae of trial
on the merits to bring to their ultimate end all protests or contests filed
before it - including those filed by candidates who even forgot to vote for
themselves and obtained no votes in the final count, but, unable to accept
defeat, filed a protest claiming massive fraud and irregularities, vote-buying,
and terrorism. Consequently, all the
time and energy of the Justices of the Supreme Court would be spent
appreciating millions of revised ballots to the prejudice of their regular
judicial functions in the Court, as, the electoral protest of every Juan,
Pedro, and Jose who lost in the presidential elections would have to be heard on the merits. Public policy abhors such a
scenario and no public good stands to be thereby served.
WHEREFORE, the Tribunal hereby resolved to
(1) GRANT the
Protestant’s Motion of
(2) DISMISS the instant election protest, since it has been rendered moot and academic by its abandonment or withdrawal by the Protestant as a consequence of her election and assumption of office as Senator and her discharge of the duties and functions thereof; and
(3) DISMISS, as a consequence, the Protestee’s Counter-Protest.
No pronouncements as to costs.
SO ORDERED.
Narvasa, C.J. (Chairman), Regalado, Davide, Jr., Romero and Hermosisima, Jr., JJ., concur.
Padilla, J, see concurring and dissenting opionion.
Bellosillo, J., adopts concurring and dissenting opinion of J. Padilla.
Melo, J., in the result.
Puno, J., dissents.
Vitug, J., see separate
(dissenting) opinion
Kapunan, J., see dissenting
opinion
Mendoza, J., joins Justice
Kapunan’s dissenting opinion
Francisco, J., joins dissenting
opinion of Justice Puno.
Panganiban, J., no part. As former practicing lawyer, have rendered legal opinion in this matter.
[1] 18 SCRA 533 [1966].
[2] 21 SCRA 402 [1967].
[3] 27 SCRA 623 [1969].
[4] Citing Tuanda vs. Dionaldo, 17 SCRA 646 [1966].
[5] 42 SCRA 10 [1971].
[6] Citing Eastern Broadcasting Corp. (DYRE) vs. Dans, 137 SCRA 628 [1985]; Salonga vs. Patio, 134 SCRA 438 [1985].
[7] 202 SCRA 779 [1991].
[8] The section reads:
Any elective official, whether national or local, running for any office other than the one which he is holding in a permanent capacity, except for President and Vice-President, shall be considered ipso facto resigned from his office upon the filing of his certificate of candidacy.
[9] Supra. note 1 at 538.
[10] Supra, note 2 at 407.
[11] Supra, note 5 at 14-15.
[12] Supra, note 3.
[13] 19 SCRA 520 [1967].
[14] 46 Phil. 595 [1924].
[15] Supra, note 5 at 15.
[16] Section 4. Article VI, 1987 Constitution.
[17] Section 1. Article XI, 1987 Constitution.
[18] FLOYD R MECHEM, Treatise on the Law of Public Officers and Employees, § 240, 155-156.
[19] Article 234, Revised Penal Code, provides:
ART 234. Refusal to discharge elective office.- The penalty of arresto mayor or a fine not exceeding 1,000 pesos, or both, shall be imposed upon any person who, having been elected by popular election to a public office, shall refuse without legal motive to be sworn in or to discharge the duties of said office.
[20] Rule 19. Rules of the Presidential Electoral Tribunal.
[21] Rule
69,
[22]
Rule 23.
[23] 49
[24] 139
Or. 626, 10 P 2d 356, 357.
[25] 51
[26] ISAGANI A. CRUZ, Constitutional Law, 1993 ed., 101, citing Rubi vs. Provincial Board of Mindoro, 38 Phil. 660 [1919].
[27] 19, Rules of the Presidential Electoral Tribunal.