EN BANC
[G.R. No. 133676. April 14, 1999]
TUPAY T. LOONG, petitioner,
vs. COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS and ABDUSAKUR TAN, respondents, YUSOP
JIKIRI, intervenor.
D E C I S I O N
PUNO, J.:
In a bid to
improve our elections, Congress enacted R.A. No. 8436 on December 22, 1997
prescribing the adoption of an automated election system. The new system was used in the May 11,
1998 regular elections held in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM)
which includes the Province of Sulu.
Atty. Jose Tolentino, Jr. headed
the COMELEC Task Force to have administrative oversight of the elections in
Sulu.
The voting in
Sulu was relatively peaceful and orderly.[1] The problem started during the
automated counting of votes for the local officials of Sulu at the Sulu State
College. At about 6 a.m. of May 12,
1998, some election inspectors and watchers informed Atty. Tolentino,
Jr. of discrepancies between the election returns and the votes cast for the mayoralty
candidates in the municipality of Pata. Some ballots picked at random by
Atty. Tolentino, Jr. confirmed that votes in favor of a mayoralty candidate
were not reflected in the printed election returns. He suspended the automated counting of ballots in Pata and
immediately communicated the problem to the technical experts of COMELEC and
the suppliers of the automated machine.
After consultations, the experts told him that the problem was
caused by the misalignment of the ovals opposite the names of candidates
in the local ballots. They found
nothing wrong with the automated machines. The error was in the printing of the local ballots, as a
consequence of which, the automated machines failed to read them correctly.[2]
At 12:30 p.m.
of the same day, Atty.
Tolentino, Jr. called for an emergency meeting of the local candidates and the
military-police officials overseeing the Sulu elections. Those who attended were the various
candidates for governor, namely, petitioner Tupay Loong, private respondent Abdusakur
Tan, intervenor Yusop Jikiri and Kimar Tulawie. Also in attendance were Brig. Gen. Edgardo Espinosa, AFP, Marine
forces, Southern Philippines, Brig. Gen. Percival Subala, AFP, 3rd Marine
Brigade, Supt. Charlemagne Alejandrino, Provincial Director, Sulu, PNP Command
and congressional candidate Bensandi Tulawie.[3]
The meeting
discussed how the ballots in Pata should be counted in light of the misaligned
ovals. There was lack of
agreement. Those who recommended a
shift to manual count were Brig. Generals Espinosa and Subala, PNP Director
Alejandrino, gubernatorial candidates Tan and Tulawie and congressional
candidate Bensandi Tulawie. Those who
insisted on an automated count were gubernatorial candidates Loong and
Jikiri. In view of their differences in
opinion, Atty. Tolentino, Jr. requested the parties to submit their written
position papers.[4]
Reports that
the automated counting of ballots in other municipalities in Sulu was not working well were
received by the COMELEC Task Force. Local ballots in five (5) municipalities were rejected by
the automated machines. These
municipalities were Talipao, Siasi, Tudanan, Tapul and Jolo. The ballots were rejected because
they had the wrong sequence code.[5]
Private
respondent Tan and Atty. Tolentino, Jr. sent separate communications to the
COMELEC en banc in Manila.
Still, on May 12, 1998, Tan requested for the suspension of the
automated counting of ballots throughout the Sulu province.[6] On the same day, COMELEC issued
Minute Resolution No. 98-1747 ordering a manual count but only in the
municipality of Pata. The resolution
reads:[7]
"x x x x x x x
x x
"In the matter of the Petition
dated May 12, 1998 of Abdusakur Tan, Governor, Sulu, to suspend or stop
counting of ballots through automation (sic) machines for the following
grounds, quoted to wit
'1.. The Election Returns for the
Municipality of Pata, Province of Sulu-District II do not reflect or reveal the
mandate of the voters:
'DISCUSSIONS
'That the watchers called the
attention of our political leaders and candidates regarding their discovery
that the election returns generated after the last ballots for a precinct is
scanned revealed that some candidates obtained zero votes, among others the
Provincial Board Members, Mayor, Vice-Mayor, and the councilors for the
LAKAS-NUCD-UMDP;
'That the top ballot, however,
reveals that the ballots
contained votes for Anton Burahan, candidate for Municipal Mayor while
the Election Return shows zero vote;
'That further review of the
Election Return reveals that John
Masillam, candidate for Mayor under the LAKAS-NUCD-UMDP-MNLF obtains
(sic) 100% votes of the total number of voters who actually
voted;
'The foregoing discrepancies were
likewise noted and confirmed by the chairmen, poll clerks and members of the
Board of Election Inspectors (BEI) such as Rena Jawan, Matanka Hajirul, Dulba
Kadil, Teddy Mirajuli, Rainer Talcon, Mike Jupakal, Armina Akmad, Romulo Roldan
and Lerma Marawali to mention some;
'The Pata incident can be confirmed
by no less than Atty. Jose Tolentino, Head, Task Force Sulu, whose attention
was called regarding the discrepancies;
'The foregoing is a clear evidence
that the automated machine (scanner) cannot be relied upon as to truly reflect
the contents of the ballots. If such
happened in the Municipality of Pata, it is very possible that the same is
happening in the counting of votes in the other municipalities of this
province. If this will not be suspended
or stopped, the use of automated machines will serve as a vehicle to frustrate
the will of the sovereign people of Sulu;
'Wherefore, the foregoing premises
considered and in the interest of an honest and orderly election, it is
respectfully prayed of this Honorable Commission that an Order be issued
immediately suspending or stopping the use of the automated machine (scanner)
in the counting of votes for all the eighteen (18) municipalities in the
Province of Sulu and in lieu thereof, to avoid delay, counting be done through
the usual way known and tested by us.'
"While the commission does
not agree with the conclusions
stated in the petition, and the failure of the machine to read the votes
may have been occasioned by other factors, a matter that requires
immediate investigation, but in the public interest, the Commission,
'RESOLVED to grant the Petition
dated May 12, 1998 and to Order
that the counting of votes shall be done manually in the Municipality
of PATA, the only place in Sulu where the automated machine failed to
read the ballots, subject to notice to all parties concerned."'
Before midnight of May 12,1998, Atty. Tolentino, Jr. was able to send to
the COMELEC en banc his report and recommendation, urging the use
of the manual count in the entire Province of Sulu, viz:[8]
"The undersigned stopped the
counting in the municipality of Pata since he discovered that votes for a
candidate for mayor was credited in favor of the other candidate. Verification with the Sulu Technical Staff,
including Pat Squires of ES & S, reveals that the cause of the error is the
way the ballot was printed. Aside from
misalignment of the ovals and use of codes assigned to another municipality
(which caused the rejection of all local ballots in one precinct in Talipao),
error messages appeared on the screen although the actual condition of the
ballots would have shown a different message.
Because of these, the undersigned directed that counting for all ballots
in Sulu be stopped to enable the Commission to determine the problem and
rectify the same. It is submitted that
stopping the counting is more in consonance with the Commission's mandate than
proceeding with an automated but inaccurate count.
"In view of the error
discovered in Pata and the undersigned's order to suspend the counting, the
following documents were submitted to him.
"1. Unsigned letter dated May 12, 1998 submitted by Congressman Tulawie
for manual counting and canvassing;
"2. Petition of Governor Sakur Tan for manual counting;
"3. Position paper of Tupay Loong, Benjamin Loong and Asani Tamang for
automated count;
"4. MNLF Position for automated count; and
"5. Recommendation of General E.V. Espinosa, General PM Subala, and PD
CS Alejandrino for manual count;
"Additional marines have been
deployed at the SSC. The undersigned is
not sure if it is merely intended to tame a disorderly crowd, inside and
outside SSC, or a show of force.
"It is submitted that since
an error was discovered in a machine
which is supposed to have an error rate of 1: 1,000,000, not a few people would
believe that this error in Pata would extend to the other municipalities. Whether or not this is true, it would be more
prudent to stay away from a lifeless thing that has sown tension and
anxiety among and between the voters of Sulu.
Respectfully submitted:
12 May 1998
(Sgd.) JOSE M. TOLENTINO, JR."
The next day,
May 13, 1998, COMELEC issued Resolution No. 98-1750 approving Atty. Tolentino,
Jr.'s recommendation and the manner of its implementation as suggested by
Executive Director Resurreccion Z. Borra.
The Resolution reads:[9]
"In the matter of the
Memorandum dated 13 May 1998 of Executive Director Resurreccion Z. Borra,
pertinent portion of which is quoted as follows:
"In connection with Min. Res.
No. 98-1747 promulgated May 12, 1998 which resolved to order that the counting
of votes shall be done manually in the municipality of Pata, the only place in
Sulu where the automated counting machine failed to read the ballots, subject
to notice to all parties concerned, please find the following:
"1. Handwritten Memo of Director Jose M. Tolentino, Jr., Task
Force Head, Sulu, addressed to the Executive Director on the subject counting
and canvassing in the municipality of Pata due to the errors of the counting of
votes by the machine brought about by the error in the printing of the ballot,
causing misalignment of ovals and use of codes assigned to another
municipality.
He
recommended to revert to the manual counting of votes in the whole of
Sulu. He attached the stand of
Congressman Tulawie, Governor Sakur Tan and recommendation of Brigadier General
Edgardo Espinosa, General Percival Subla, P/Supt. Charlemagne Alejandrino for
manual counting. The position paper of
former Governor Tupay Loong, Mr. Benjamin Loong and Mr. Asani S. Tammang, who
are candidates for Governor and Congressman of 1st and 2nd Districts
respectively, who wanted the continuation of the automated counting.
"While the forces of AFP
are ready to provide arm (sic) security to our Comelec officials, BEIs and
other deputies, the political tensions and imminent violence and bloodshed may not be prevented, as per report
received, the MNLF forces are readying their forces to surround the
venue for automated counting and canvassing in Sulu in order that the
automation process will continue.
"Director Borra recommends,
that while he supports Minute Resolution No. 98-1747, implementation thereof
shall be done as follows:
"1. That all the counting machines from Jolo, Sulu be transported
back by C130 to Manila and be located at the available space at PICC for
purposes of both automated and manual operations. This approach will keep the COMELEC officials away from violence
and bloodshed between the two camps who are determined to slug each other as
above mentioned in Jolo, Sulu. Only
authorized political party and candidate watchers will be allowed in PICC with
proper security, both inside and outside the perimeters of the venue at PICC.
"2. With this process, there will be an objective analysis and
supervision of the automated and manual operations by both the MIS and
Technical Expert of the ES & S away from the thundering mortars and the
sounds of sophisticated heavy weapons from both sides of the warring factions.
"3. Lastly, it will be directly under the close supervision and
control of Commission on Elections En Banc.
"RESOLVED:
"1. To transport all counting machines from Jolo, Sulu by C130
to Manila for purposes of both automated and manual operations, with notice to
all parties concerned;
"2. To authorize the official travel of the board of canvassers
concerned for the conduct of the automated and manual operations of the
counting of votes at PICC under the close supervision and control of the
Commission En Banc. For this purpose,
to make available a designated space at the PICC;
"3. To authorize the presence of only the duly authorized
representative of the political parties concerned and the candidates watchers
both outside and inside the perimeters of the venue at PICC."
Atty. Tolentino, Jr. furnished the parties with
copies of Minute Resolution No. 98-1750 and called for another meeting the next
day, May 14, 1998, to discuss the implementation of the resolution.[10] The meeting was attended by the parties, by Lt. Gen.
Joselin Nazareno, then the Chief of the AFP Southern Command, the NAMFREL,
media, and the public. Especially
discussed was the manner of transporting the ballots and the counting machines
to the PICC in Manila. They agreed to
allow each political party to have at least one (1) escort/ watcher for every
municipality to acompany the flight.
Two C130s were used for the purpose.[11]
On May 15,
1998, the COMELEC en
banc issued
Minute Resolution No. 98-1796 laying down the rules for the manual count, viz:[12]
"In the matter of the
Memorandum dated 15 May 1998 of Executive Director Resurreccion Z. Borra,
quoted to wit:
'In the implementation of COMELEC
Min. Resolution No. 98-1750 promulgated 13 May 1998 in the manual counting of
votes of Pata, Sulu, and in view of the arrival of the counting machines,
ballot boxes, documents and other election paraphernalia for the whole province
of Sulu now stored in PICC, as well as the arrival of the Municipal Board of
Canvassers of said Municipality in Sulu, and after conference with some members
of the Senior Staff and Technical Committee of this Commission, the following
are hereby respectfully recommended:
'1. Manual
counting of the local ballots of the automated election system in Pata, Sulu;
'2. Automated
counting of the national ballots considering that there are no questions raised
on the National Elective Officials as pre-printed in the mark-sensed ballots;
'3. The
creation of the following Special Boards of Inspectors under the supervision of
Atty. Jose M. Tolentino, Jr., Task
Force Head, Sulu, namely:
a) Atty. Mamasapunod M. Aguam
Ms. Gloria Fernandez
Ms. Esperanza Nicolas
b) Director
Ester L. Villaflor-Roxas
Ms. Celia Romero
Ms. Rebecca Macaraya
c) Atty.
Zenaida S. Soriano
Ms. Jocelyn Guiang
Ma. Jacelyn Tan
d) Atty.
Erlinda C. Echavia
Ms. Theresa A. Torralba
Ms. Ma. Carmen Llamas
e) Director
Estrella P. de Mesa
Ms. Teresita Velasco
Ms. Nelly Jaena
'4. Additional
Special Board of Inspectors may be created when necesary.
'5. The
Provincial Board of Canvassers which by standing Resolution is headed by the
Task Force Sulu Head shall consolidate the manual and automated results as
submitted by the Municipal Boards of Canvassers of the whole province with two
members composed of Directors Estrella P. de Mesa and Ester L. Villaflor-Roxas;
'6. The
political parties and the candidates in Sulu as well as the Party-List
Candidates are authorized to appoint their own watchers upon approval of the
Commission',
'RESOLVED to approve the foregoing
recommendations in the implementation of Min. Resolution No. 98-1750
promulgated on 13 May 1998 providing for the manual counting of votes in the
municipality of Pata, Sulu.
'RESOLVED, moreover, considering
the recommendation of Comm. Manolo B. Gorospe, Commissioner-In-Charge, ARMM, to
conduct a parallel manual counting on all 18 municipalities of Sulu as a final
guidance of the reliability of the counting machine which will serve as basis
for the proclamation of the winning candidates and for future reference on the
use of the automated counting machine."'
On May 18, 1998,
petitioner filed his objection to Minute Resolution No. 98-1796, viz:[13]
"1. The minute resolution
under agenda No. 98-1796 violates the provisions of Republic Act No. 8436
providing for an automated counting of the ballots in the Autonomous Region in
Muslim Mindanao. The automated counting
is mandatory and could not be substituted by a manual counting. Where the machines are allegedly defective,
the only remedy provided for by law is to replace the machine. Manual counting is prohibited by law;
"2. There are strong
indications that in the municipality of Pata the ballots of the said
municipality were rejected by the counting machine because the ballots were
tampered and/or the texture of the ballots fed to the counting machine are not
the official ballots of the Comelec;
"3. The automated counting
machines of the Comelec have been designed in such a way that only genuine
official ballots could be read and counted by the machine;
"4. The counting machines in
the other municipalities are in order.
In fact, the automated counting has already started. The automated counting in the municipalities
of Lugus and Panglima Tahil has been completed. There is no legal basis for the 'parallel manual counting' ordained
in the disputed minute resolution."
Nonetheless, COMELEC started the manual count on the same date, May
18,1998.
On May 25, 1998,
petitioner filed with this Court a petition for certiorari and prohibition
under Rule 65 of the Rules of Court. He
contended that: (a) COMELEC issued Minute Resolution Nos. 98-1747, 98-1750, and
98-1798 without prior notice and hearing to him; (b) the order for manual
counting violated R.A. No. 8436; (c) manual counting gave "opportunity to
the following election cheatings," namely:
"(a) The counting by human
hands of the tampered, fake and counterfeit ballots which the counting machines
have been programmed to reject (Section 7, 8 & 9 of Rep. Act 8436).
"(b) The opportunity to
substitute the ballots all stored at the PICC.
In fact, no less than the head of the COMELEC Task Force of Sulu, Atty.
Jose M. Tolentino, Jr. who recommended to the COMELEC the anomalous manual
counting, had approached the watchers of petitioners to allow the retrieval of
the ballots, saying "tayo, tayo lang mga watchers, pag-usapan
natin," dearly indicating overtures of possible bribery of the
watchers of petitioner (ANNEX E).
"(c) With the creation by the
COMELEC of only 22 Boards of Election Inspectors to manually count the 1,194
precincts, the manipulators are given sufficient time to change and tamper the
ballots to be manually counted.
"(d) There is the opportunity
of delaying the proclamation of the winning candidates through the usually
dilatory moves in a pre-proclamation controversy because the returns and
certificates of canvass are already human (sic) made. In the automated counting there is no room for any dilatory
pre-proclamation controversy because the returns and the MBC and PBC
certificates of canvass are machine made and immediate proclamation is ordained
thereafter."
Petitioner then
prayed:
"WHEREFORE, it is most
especially prayed of the Honorable Court that:
"1. upon filing of this
petition, a temporary restraining order be issued enjoining the COMELEC from
conducting a manual counting of the ballots of the 1,194 precincts of the 18
municipalities of the Province of Sulu but instead proceed with the automated
counting of the ballots, preparation of the election returns and MBC, PBC
certificates of canvass and proclaim the winning candidates on the basis of the
automated counting and consolidation of results;
"2. this petition be given due
course and the respondents be required to answer;
"3. after due hearing, the
questioned COMELEC En Banc Minute Resolutions of May 12, 13, 15, and 17, 1998
be all declared null and void ab initio for having been issued without
jurisdiction and/or with grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack of
jurisdiction and for being in violation of due process of law;
" 4. the winning candidates of
the Province of Sulu be proclaimed on the basis of the results of the automated
counting, automated election returns, automated MBC and PBC certificates of
canvass;
"x x x."
On June 8,
1998, private respondent Tan was proclaimed governor- elect of Sulu on the basis of the
manual count.[14] Private respondent garnered 43,573
votes. Petitioner was third with 35,452
votes or a difference of 8,121 votes.
On June 23,
1998, this Court required the respondents to file their Comment to the petition
and directed the parties "to maintain the status quo prevailing at the
time of the filing of the petition."[15] The vice-governor elect was allowed
to temporarily discharge the powers and functions of governor.
On August 20,
1998, Yusop Jikiri, the LAKAS-NUCD-UMDP-MNLF candidate for governor filed a
motion for intervention and a Memorandum in Intervention.[16] The result of the manual count
showed he received 38,993 votes and placed second. Similarly, he alleged denial of due process, lack of factual
basis of the COMELEC resolutions and illegality of manual count in light of R.A.
No. 8436. TheCourt noted his intervention.[17] As similar petition for
intervention filed by Abdulwahid Sahidulla, a candidate for vice-governor, on
October 7, 1998 was denied as it was filed too late.
In due time, the
parties filed their respective Comments.
On September 25, 1998, the Court heard the parties in oral arguments[18] which was followed by the
submission of their written memoranda.
The issues
for resolution are the following:
1. Whether
or not a petition for certiorari and prohibition under Rule 65 of the
Rules of Court is the appropriate remedy to invalidate the disputed COMELEC
resolutions.
2. Assuming
the appropriateness of the remedy, whether or not COMELEC committed grave abuse
of discretion amounting to lack of jurisdiction in ordering a manual count.
2.a. Is there a legal basis for the manual count?
2-b. Are its factual bases reasonable?
2.c.
Were the petitioner and the intervenor denied due process by the COMELEC when
it ordered a manual count?
3. Assuming
the manual count is illegal and that its result is unreliable, whether or not
it is proper to call for a special election for the position of governor of
Sulu.
We shall resolve
the issues in seriatim.
First. We hold that certiorari is the
proper remedy of the petitioner.
Section 7, Article IX(A) of the 1987 Constitution states that if
"unless provided by this Constitution or by law, any decision, order or
ruling of each Commission may be brought to the Supreme Court on certiorari by
the aggrieved party within thirty days from receipt of a copy thereof." We have interpreted this provision to mean
final orders, rulings and decisions of the COMELEC rendered in the exercise of
its adjudicatory or quasi-judicial powers.[19] Contrariwise, administrative orders
of the COMELEC are not, as a general rule, fit subjects of a petition for certiorari.
The main issue in the case at bar is whether the COMELEC gravely abused
its discretion when it ordered a manual count of the 1998 Sulu local
elections. A resolution of the issue
will involve an interpretation of R.A. No. 8436 on automated election in
relation to the broad power of the COMELEC under Section 2(1), Article IX(C) of
the Constitution "to enforce and administer all laws and regulations
relative to the conduct of an election x x x." The issue is not only legal
but one of first impression and undoubtedly suffused with significance to the
entire nation. It is adjudicatory of
the right of the petitioner, the private respondent and the intervenor to the
position of governor of Sulu. These are
enough considerations to call for an exercise of the certiorari jurisdiction of
this Court.
Second. The big issue, one of first impression, is whether the
COMELEC committed grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack of jurisdiction
when it ordered a manual count in light of R.A. No. 8436. The post election realities on ground will
show that the order for a manual count cannot be characterized as arbitrary,
capricious or whimsical.
a. It
is well established that the automated machines failed to read correctly the
ballots in the municipality of Pata. A
mayoralty candidate, Mr. Anton Burahan, obtained zero votes despite the
representations of the Chairman of the Board of Election Inspectors and others
that they voted for him. Another
candidate garnered 100% of the votes.
b. It
is likewise conceded that the automated machines rejected and would not count
the local ballots in the municipalities of Talipao, Siasi, Indanan, Tapal and
Jolo.
c. These
flaws in the automated counting of local ballots in the municipalities of Pata,
Talipao, Siasi, Indanan, Tapal and Jolo were carefully analyzed by the
technical experts of COMELEC and the supplier of the automated machines. All of them found nothing wrong with the
automated machines. They traced the
problem to the printing of local ballots by the National Printing Office. In the case of the municipality of Pata, it
was discovered that the ovals of the local ballots were misaligned and could
not be read correctly by the automated machines. In the case of the municipalities of Talipao, Siasi, Indanan,
Tapal and Jolo, it turned out that the local ballots contained the wrong
sequence code. Each municipality was
assigned a sequence code as a security measure. Ballots with the wrong sequence code were programmed to be
rejected by the automated machines.
It is plain that
to continue with the automated count in these five (5) municipalities would
result in a grossly erroneous count. It
cannot also be gainsaid that the count in these five (5) municipalities will
affect the local elections in Sulu.
There was no need for more sampling of local ballots in these
municipalities as they suffered from the same defects. All local ballots in Pata with misaligned
ovals will be erroneously read by the automated machines. Similarly, all local ballots in Talipao, Siasi,
Indanan, Tapal and Jolo with wrong sequence codes are certain to be rejected by
the automated machines. There is no
showing in the records that the local ballots in these five (5) municipalities
are dissimilar which could justify the call for their greater sampling.
Third. These failures of automated counting created post election tension
in Sulu, a province with a history of violent elections. COMELEC had to act decisively in view of the
fast deteriorating peace and order situation caused by the delay in the
counting of votes. The evidence of this
fragile peace and order cannot be downgraded.
In his handwritten report to the COMELEC dated May 12, 1998, Atty.
Tolentino, Jr. stated:
"x x x
"Additional marines have been
deployed at the SSC. The undersigned is
not sure if it is merely intended to tame a disorderly crowd inside and outside
SSC, or a show of force.
"It is submitted that since an
error was discovered in a machine which is supposed to have an error rate of
1:1,000,000, not a few people would believe that this error in Pata would
extend to the other municipalities.
Whether or not this is true, it would be more prudent to stay
away from a lifeless thing that has sown tension and anxiety among and
between the voters of Sulu."
Executive Director Resurreccion Z. Borra, Task Force Head, ARMM in his
May 13,1998 Memorandum to the COMELEC likewise stated:
"x x x
"While the forces of AFP
are ready to provide arm (sic)
security to our COMELEC officials, BEI's and other deputies, the
political tensions and imminent violence and bloodshed may not be
prevented, as per report received, the MNLF forces are readying their
forces to surround the venue for automated counting and canvassing
in Sulu in order that automation process will continue."
Last but not the least, the military and the police authorities
unanimously recommended manual counting to preserve peace and order. Brig. Gen. Edgardo V. Espinosa, Commanding
General, Marine Forces Southern Philippines, Brig. Gen. Percival M. Subala, Commanding General, 3rd
Marine Brigade, and Supt. Charlemagne S. Alejandrino, Provincial Director, Sulu
PNP Command explained that it "x x x will not only serve the interest of
majority of the political parties involved in the electoral process but also
serve the interest of the military and police forces in maintaining peace and
order throughout the province of Sulu."
An automated
count of the local votes in Sulu would have resulted in a wrong count, a
travesty of the sovereignty of the electorate.
Its aftermath could have been a bloodbath. COMELEC avoided this imminent probability by ordering a manual
count of the votes. It would be the
height of irony if the Court condemns COMELEC for aborting violence in the Sulu
elections.
Fourth. We also find that petitioner Loong and intervenor Jikiri
were not denied due process. The
Tolentino memorandum clearly shows that they were given every
opportunity to oppose the manual count of the local ballots in Sulu. They were orally heard. They later submitted written position
papers. Their representatives escorted
the transfer of the ballots and the automated machines from Sulu to
Manila. Their watchers observed the
manual count from beginning to end. We
quote the Tolentino memorandum, viz:
"x x x
"On or about 6:00 a.m. of May
12, 1998, while automated counting of all the ballots for the province of Sulu
was being conducted at the counting center located at the Sulu State College,
the COMELEC Sulu Task Force Head (TF Head) proceeded to the room where the
counting machine assigned to the municipality of Pata was installed to verify
the cause of the commotion therein.
"During the interview
conducted by the TF Head, the members of the Board of Election Inspectors (BEI)
and watchers present in said room stated that the counting machine assigned to
the municipality of Pata did not reflect the true results of the voting
thereat. The members of the BEI
complained that their votes were not reflected in the printout of the election
returns since per election returns of their precincts, the candidate they voted
for obtained "zero". After
verifying the printout of some election returns as against the official
ballots, the TF Head discovered that votes cast in favor of a mayoralty candidate
were credited in favor of his opponents.
"In his attempt to remedy the
situation, the TF Head suspended the counting of all ballots for said
municipality to enable COMELEC field technicians to determine the cause of the
technical error, rectify the same, and thereafter proceed with automated counting. In the meantime, the counting of the ballots
for the other municipalities proceeded under the automated system.
"Technical experts of the
supplier based in Manila were informed of the problem and after numerous
consultations through long distance calls, the technical experts concluded that
the cause of the error was in the manner the ballots for local positions were
printed by the National Printing Office (NPO), namely, that the ovals opposite
the names of the candidates were not properly aligned. As regards the ballots for national
positions, no error was found.
"Since the problem was not
machine-related, it was obvious that the use of counting machines from other
municipalities to count the ballots of the municipality of Pata would still
result in the same erroneous count.
Thus, it was found necessary to determine the extent of the error in the
ballot printing process before proceeding with the automated counting.
"To avoid a situation where
proceeding with automation will result in an erroneous count, the TF Head, on
or about 11:45 a.m. ordered the suspension of the counting of all ballots in
the province to enable him to call a meeting with the heads of the political
parties which fielded candidates in the province, inform them of the technical
error, and find solutions to the problem.
"On or about 12:30 p.m., the
TF Head presided over a conference at Camp General Bautista (3rd Marine
Brigade) to discuss the process by which the will of the electorate could be
determined. Present during the meeting
were:
1. Brig.
Gen. Edgardo Espinoza
Marine Forces, Southern Philippines
2. Brig. Gen.
Percival Subala
3rd Marine Brigade
3. Provincial
Dir. Charlemagne Alejandrino
Sulu PNP Command
4. Gubernatorial
Candidate Tupay Loong
LAKAS-NUCD
Loong Wing
5. Gubernatorial
Candidate Abdusakur Tan
LAKAS-NUCD Tan Wing
6. Gubernatorial
Candidate Yusop Jikiri
LAKAS-NUCD-MNLF Wing
7. Gubernatorial
Candidate Kimar Tulawie
LAMMP
8. Congressional
Candidate Bensaudi Tulawie
LAMMP
"During said meeting, all of
the above parties verbally advanced their respective positions. Those in favor of a manual count were:
1. Brig.
Gen. Edgardo Espinoza
2. Brig.
Gen. Percival Subala
3. Provincial
Dir. Charlemagne Alenjandrino
4. Gubernatorial
Candidate Abdusakur Tan
5. Gubernatorial
Candidate Kimar Tulawie
6. Congressional
Candidate Bensaudi Tulawie and those in favor of an automated count were:
1. Gubernatorial Candidate Tupay Loong
2. Gubernatorial Candidate Yusop Jikiri
"Said parties were then
requested by the TF Head to submit
their respective position papers so that the same may be forwarded to
the Commission en banc, together with the recommendations
of the TF Head.
'The TF Head returned to the
counting center at the Sulu State College and called his technical staff to determine
the extent of the technical error and to enable him to submit the appropriate
recommendation to the Commission en banc.
"Upon consultation with the
technical staff, it was discovered that in the Municipality of Talipao, some of
the local ballots were rejected by the machine. Verification showed that while the ballots were genuine, ballot
paper bearing a wrong "sequence code" was used by the NPO during the
printing process.
"Briefly, the following is the
manner by which a sequence code" determined genuineness of a ballot. A municipality is assigned a specific
machine (except for Jolo, which was assigned two (2) machines, and sharing of
one (1) machine by two (2) municipalities, namely, H.P. Tahil and Maimbung,
Pandami and K. Caluang, Pata and Tongkil and Panamao and Lugus). A machine is then assigned a specific
"sequence code" as one of the security features to detect whether the
ballots passing through it are genuine.
Since a counting machine is programmed to read the specific
"sequence code" assigned to it, ballots which bear a "sequence
code" assigned to another machine/municipality, even if said ballots were
genuine, will be rejected by the machine.
"Other municipalities, such as
Siasi, Indanan, Tapul and Jolo also had the same problem of rejected
ballots. However, since the machine
operators were not aware that one of the reasons for rejection of ballots is
the use of wrong "sequence code", they failed to determine whether
the cause for rejection of ballots for said municipalities was the same as that
for the municipality of Talipao.
"In the case of 'misaligned
ovals', the counting machine will not reject the ballot because all the
security features, such as "sequence code", are present in the
ballot, however, since the oval is misaligned or not placed in its proper
position, the machine will credit the shaded oval for the position where the
machine is programmed to "read" the oval. Thus, instead of rejecting the ballot, the machine will credit
the votes of a candidate in favor of his opponent, or in the adjacent space
where the oval should be properly placed.
"It could not be determined if
the other municipalities also had the same technical error in their official
ballots since the "misaligned ovals" were discovered only after
members of the Board of Election Inspectors of the Municipality of Pata
complained that their votes were not reflected in the printout of the election
returns.
"As the extent or coverage of
the technical errors could not be determined, the TF Head, upon consultation
with his technical staff, was of the belief that it would be more prudent to
count the ballots manually than to proceed with an automated system which will
result in an erroneous count.
"The TF Head thus ordered the
indefinite suspension of counting of ballots until such time as the Commission
shall have resolved the petition/position papers to be submitted by the
parties. The TF Head and his staff
returned to Camp General Bautista to await the submission of the position
papers of the parties concerned.
"Upon receipt of the
position papers of the parties, the
TF Head faxed the same in the evening of May 12, 1998, together with his
handwritten recommendation to proceed with a manual count." Attached are copies of the
recommendations of the TF Head (Annex "1"), and the position papers
of the Philippine Marines and Philippine National Police (Annex "2"),
LAKAS-NUCD Tan Wing Annex (Annex "3"), Lakas-NUCD Loong Wing (Annex
"4"), LAKAS-NUCD-MNLF Wing (Annex "5") and LAMMP (Annex
"6"). Said recommendations
and position papers were the bases for the promulgation of COMELEC Minute
Resolution No. 98-1750 dated May 13, 1998 (Annex "7"), directing
among other things, that the ballots and counting machines be transported by
C130 to Manila for both automated and manual operations.
"Minute Resolution No.
98-1750 was received by the TF
Head through fax on or about 5:30 in the evening of May 13, 1998. Copies were then served through personal
delivery to the heads of the political parties, with notice to them that
another conference will be conducted at the 3rd Marine Brigade on May
14, 1998 at 9:00 o'clock in the morning, this time, with Lt. General
Joselin Nazareno, then AFP Commander, Southern Command. Attached is a copy of said notice (Annex
"8") bearing the signatures of candidates Tan (Annex
"8-A") and Loong (Annex "8-B"), and the
representatives of candidates Tulawie (Annex "8-C") and Jikiri
(Annex "8-D").
"On May 14, 1998, the TF Head
presided over said conference in the presence of the heads of the political
parties of Sulu, together with their counsel, including Lt. Gen. Nazareno,
Brig. Gen. Subala, representatives of the NAMFREL, media and the public.
"After hearing the sides of
all parties concerned, including
that of NAMFREL, the procedure by which the ballots and counting
machines were to be transported to Manila was finalized, with each
political party authorized to send at least one (1) escort/watcher for
every municipality to accompany the ballot boxes and counting
machines from the counting center at the Sulu State College to the Sulu
Airport up to the PICC, where the COMELEC was then conducting its
Senatorial Canvass. There being
four parties, a total of seventy-two (72) escorts/watchers accompanied
the ballots and counting machines.
"Two C130s left Sulu on May
15, 1998 to transport all the
ballot boxes and counting machines, accompanied by all the authorized
escorts. Said ballots boxes reached
the PICC on the same day, with all the escorts/watchers allowed to
station themselves at the ballot box storage area. On May 17, 1998, another C130 left Sulu to
ferry the members of the board of canvassers."
Fifth. The evidence is clear that the integrity of the local
ballots was safeguarded when they were transferred from Sulu to Manila and when
they were manually counted.
As shown by the
Tolentino memorandum, representatives of the political parties escorted the
transfer of ballots from Sulu to PICC.
Indeed, in his May 14, 1992 letter to Atty. Tolentino, Jr., petitioner
Tupay Loong himself submitted the names of his representatives who would
accompany the ballot boxes and other election paraphernalia, viz:[20]
"Dear Atty. Tolentino:
"Submitted herewith are the
names of escort(s) to accompany the ballot boxes and other election
pharaphernalia to be transported to COMELEC, Manila, to wit:
1. Jolo - Joseph Lu
2. Patikul - Fathie
B. Loong
3. Indanan - - Dixon Jadi
4. Siasi - Jamal
Ismael
5. K. Kaluang - Enjimar
Abam
6. Pata - Marvin
Hassan
7. Parang - Siyang
Loong
8. Pangutaran - Hji.
Nasser Loong
9. Marunggas - Taib
Mangkabong
10. Luuk - Jun Arbison
11. Pandami - Orkan
Osman
12. Tongkil - Usman
Sahidulla
13. Tapul - Alphawanis
Tupay
14. Lugus - Patta
Alih
15. Maimbong - Mike
Bangahan
16. P. Estino - Yasir
lbba
17. Panamao - Hamba
Loong
18. Talipao - Ismael
Sali
"Hoping for your kind and
(sic) consideration for approval on this matter.
"Thank you.
Very truly yours,
(Sgd.) Tupay T. Loong
(Sgd.) Asani S. Tammang"
The ballot boxes
were consistently under the watchful eyes of the parties' representatives. They were placed in an open space at the
PICC. The watchers stationed themselves
some five (5) meters away from the ballot boxes. They watched 24 hours a day and slept at the PICC.[21]
The parties'
watchers again accompanied the transfer of the ballot boxes from PICC to the
public schools of Pasay City where the ballots were counted. After the counting they once more escorted
the return of the ballot boxes to PICC.[22]
In fine,
petitioner's charge that the ballots could have been tampered with before the
manual counting is totally unfounded.
Sixth. The evidence also reveals that the result of the manual
count is reliable.
It bears
stressing that the ballots used in the case at bar were specially made to suit
an automated election. The ballots were
uncomplicated. They had fairly large
ovals opposite the names of candidates.
A voter needed only to check the oval opposite the name of his
candidate. When the COMELEC ordered a
manual count of the votes, it issued special rules as the counting involved a
different kind of ballot, albeit, more simple ballots. The Omnibus Election Code rules on
appreciation of ballots cannot apply for they only apply to elections where the
names of candidates are handwritten in the ballots. The rules were spelled out in Minute Resolution 98-1798, viz:[23]
"In the matter of the
Memorandum dated 17 May 1998 of Executive Director Resurreccion Z. Borra, re
procedure of the counting of votes for Sulu for the convening of the Board of
Election Inspectors, the Municipal Board of Canvassers and the Provincial Board
of Canvassers on May 18, 1998 at 9:00 a.m. at the Philippine International
Convention Center (PICC),
'RESOLVED to approve the following
procedure for the counting of votes for Sulu at the PICC:
'I. Common Provisions:
'1. Open the ballot
box, retrieve the Minutes of Voting and the uncounted ballots or the envelope
containing the counted ballots as the case may be;
'2. Segregate the national
ballots from the local ballots;
'3. Count the number of pieces
of both the national and local ballots and compare the same with the number of
votes who actually voted as stated in the Minutes of Voting:
- If there is no Minutes of
Voting, refer to the Voting Records at the back of the VRRs to determine the
number of voters who actually voted.
- If there are more ballots
than the number of voters who actually voted, the poll clerk shall draw out as
many local and national ballots as may be equal to the excess and place them in
the envelope for excess ballots.
'II Counting of Votes
'A. National Ballots:
'1. If the national
ballots have already been counted, return the same inside the envelope for
counted ballots, reseal and place the envelope inside the ballot box;
'2. If the national ballots
have not yet been counted, place them inside an envelope and give the envelope
through a liaison officer to the machine operator concerned for counting and
printing of the election returns;
'3. The machine operator shall
affix his signature and thumbmark thereon, and return the same to the members
of the BEI concerned for their signatures and thumbmarks;
'4. The
said returns shall then be placed in corresponding envelopes for distribution;
'B. Local Ballots:
'1. Group the local ballots in piles of fifty (50);
'2. The Chairman shall read
the votes while the poll clerk and the third member shall simultaneously
accomplish the election returns and the tally board respectively.
'If
the voters shaded more ovals than the number of positions to be voted for, no vote shall be counted in favor
of any candidate.
'3. After all the local
ballots shall have been manually counted, the same shall be given to the
machine operator concerned for counting by the scanning machine. The machine operator shall then save the
results in a diskette and print out the election returns for COMELEC reference.
'4. The
BEI shall accomplish the certification portion of the election returns and
announce the results;
'5. Place
the election returns in their respective envelopes and distribute them
accordingly;
'6. Return
all pertinent election documents and paraphernalia inside the ballot box.
'III. Consolidation of Results
'A. National Ballots
'1. The results of the
counting for the national ballots for each municipality shall be consolidated
by using the ERs of the automated election system;
'2. After the consolidation,
the Machine Operator shall print the certificate of canvass by municipality and
statement of votes by precinct;
'3. To
consolidate the provincial results, the MO shall load all the diskettes used in
the scanner to the ERs;
'4. The
MO shall print the provincial certificate of canvass and the SOV by
municipality;
'5. In case there is system
failure in the counting and/or consolidation of the results, the POBC/MOBC
shall revert to manual consolidation.
'B. Local Ballots
'1. - The consolidation of votes shall be done manually by the
Provincial/Municipal Board of Canvassers;
'2. The
proclamation of winning candidates shall be based on the manual consolidation.
'RESOLVED, moreover, that the pertinent provisions of COMELEC Resolution Nos. 2971
and 3030 shall apply.
'Let the Executive Director
implement this resolution."'
As aforestated,
five (5) Special Boards were initially created under Atty. Tolentino, Jr. to
undertake the manual counting,[24] viz:
"a) Atty. Mamasapunod M. Aguam
Ms.
Gloria Fernandez
Ms. Esperanza Nicolas
b) Director
Ester L. Villaflor-Roxas
Ms.
Celia Romero
Ms. Rebecca Macaraya
c) Atty. Zenaida S. Soriano
Ms.
Jocelyn Guiang
Ma. Jocelyn Tan
d) Atty. Erlinda C. Echavia
Ms.
Teresa A. Torralba
Ms. Ma.
Carmen Llamas
e) Director
Estrella P. de Mesa
Ms.
Teresita Velasco
Ms. Nelly Jaena"
Later, the COMELEC utilized the services of 600 public school teachers
from Pasay City to do the manual counting.
Five (5) elementary schools served as the venues of the counting, viz:[25]
"1. Gotamco Elementary School, Gotamco Street, Pasay City - for the
municipalities of Indanan, Pangutaran, Panglima Tahil, Maimbung;
"2. Zamora Elementary School, Zamora Street, Pasay City - for the
municipalities of Jolo, Talipao, Panglima Estino, and Tapul;
"3. Epifanio Elementary School, Tramo Street, Pasay City - for the
municipalities of Parang, Lugus, Panamao;
"4. Burgos Elementary School, Burgos Street, Pasay City - for the
municipalities of Luuk and Tongkil;
5. Palma
Elementary School - for the municipalities of Siasi and Kalingalang
Caluang."
From
beginning to end, the manual counting was done with the watchers of the parties
concerned in attendance. Thereafter,
the certificates of canvass were prepared and signed by the City/Municipal
Board of Canvassers composed of the Chairman, Vice-Chairman, and
Secretary. They were also signed by the
parties' watchers.[26]
The correctness
of the manual count cannot therefore be doubted. There was no need for an expert to count the votes. The naked eye could see the checkmarks
opposite the big ovals. Indeed, nobody
complained that the votes could not be read and counted. The COMELEC representatives had no
difficulty counting the votes. The 600
public school teachers of Pasay City had no difficulty. The watchers of the parties had no
difficulty. Petitioner did not object
to the rules on manual count on the ground that the ballots cannot be manually
counted. Indeed, in his original
Petition, petitioner did not complain that the local ballots could not be
counted by a layman. Neither did the
intervenor complain in his petition for intervention. The allegation that it will take a trained eye to read the
ballots is more imagined than real.
This is not
all. As private respondent Tan alleged,
the manual count could not have been manipulated in his favor because the
results show that most of his political opponents won. Thus, "the official results show that
the two congressional seats in Sulu were won by Congressman Hussin Amin of the
LAKAS-MNLF Wing for the 1st
District and Congressman Asani Tammang of the LAKAS-Loong Wing for the 2nd
District. In the provincial level, of
the eight (8) seats for the Sangguniang Panlalawigan, two (2) were won by the
camp of respondent Tan; three (3) by the camp of petitioner Loong; two (2) by
the MNLF; and one (1) by LAMMP. In the
mayoral race, seven (7) out of eighteen (18) victorious municipal mayors were identified
with respondent Tan; four (4) with petitioner Loong; three (3) with the MNLF;
two (2) with LAMMP and one (1) with REPORMA."[27] There is logic to private
respondent Tan's contention that if the manual count was tampered, his
candidates would not have miserably lost.
Seventh. We further hold that petitioner cannot insist on automated
counting under R.A. No. 8436 after the machines misread or rejected the local
ballots in five (5) municipalities in Sulu.
Section 9 of R.A. No. 8436 provides:
"SEC. 9. Systems Breakdown
in the Counting Center. In the
event of a systems breakdown of all assigned machines in the counting center,
the Commission shall use any available machine or any component thereof from
another city/municipality upon approval of the Commission En Banc or any of its
divisions.
The transfer of such machines or
any component thereof shall be undertaken in the presence of representatives of
political parties and citizens' arm of the Commission who shall be notified by
the election officer of such transfer.
There is a systems breakdown in the
counting center when the machine fails to read the ballots or fails to
store/save results or fails to print the results after it has read the ballots;
or when the computer fails to consolidate election results/reports or fails to
print election results/reports after consolidation."
As the facts show, it was inutile for the COMELEC to use other machines
to count the local votes in Sulu. The
errors in counting were due to the misprinting of ovals and the use of wrong
sequence codes in the local ballots.
The errors were not machine-related.
Needless to state, to grant petitioner's prayer to continue the machine
count of the local ballots will certainly result in an erroneous count and
subvert the will of the electorate.
Eighth. In enacting R.A. No. 8436, Congress obviously failed to
provide a remedy where the error in counting is not machine-related for human
foresight is not all-seeing. We hold,
however, that the vacuum in the law cannot prevent the COMELEC from levitating
above the problem. Section 2(1) of
Article IX(C) of the Constitution gives the COMELEC the broad power "to
enforce and administer all laws and regulations relative to the conduct of an
election, plebiscite, initiative, referendum and recall." Undoubtedly, the text and intent of this
provision is to have COMELEC all the necessary and incidental powers for it to
achieve the objective of holding free, orderly, honest, peaceful, and credible
elections. Congruent to this intent,
this Court has not been niggardly in defining the parameters of powers of
COMELEC in the conduct of our elections.
Thus, we held in Sumulong v. COMELEC:[28]
"Politics is a practical
matter, and political questions must be dealt with realistically - not from the
standpoint of pure theory. The
Commission on Elections, because of its fact-finding facilities, its contacts
with political strategists, and its knowledge derived from actual experience in
dealing with political controversies, is in a peculiarly advantageous position
to decide complex political questions x x x.
There are no ready made formulas for solving public problems. Time and experience are necessary to evolve
patterns that will serve the ends of good government. In the matter of the administration of laws relative to the
conduct of election, x x x we must not by any excessive zeal take away from the
Commission on Elections the initiative which by constitutional and legal
mandates properly belongs to it."
In the case at bar, the COMELEC order for a manual count was not only
reasonable. It was the only way to
count the decisive local votes in the six (6) municipalities of Pata, Talipao,
Siasi, Tudanan, Tapul and Jolo. The
bottom line is that by means of the manual count, the will of the voters of
Sulu was honestly determined. We cannot
kick away the will of the people by giving a literal interpretation to R.A.
8436. R.A. 8436 did not prohibit manual
counting when machine count does not work.
Counting is part and parcel of the conduct of an election which is under
the control and supervision of the COMELEC.
It ought to be self-evident that the Constitution did not envision a
COMELEC that cannot count the result of an election.
Ninth. Our elections are not conducted under laboratory conditions. In running for public offices, candidates do
not follow the rules of Emily Post.
Too often, COMELEC has to make snap judgments to meet unforseen
circumstances that threaten to subvert the will of our voters. In the process, the actions of COMELEC may
not be impeccable, indeed, may even be debatable. We cannot, however, engage in a swivel chair criticism of these
actions often taken under very difficult circumstances. Even more, we cannot order a special
election unless demanded by exceptional circumstances. Thus, the plea for this Court to call a
special election for the governorship of Sulu is completely off-line. The plea can only be grounded on failure of
election. Section 6 of the Omnibus
Election Code tells us when there is a failure of election, viz:
"Sec. 6. Failure of
election. - If on account of force majeure, terrorism, fraud, or
other analogous causes, the election in any polling place has not been held on
the date fixed, or had been suspended before the hour fixed by law for the
closing of the voting, or after the voting and during the preparation and the
transmission of the election returns or in the custody or canvass thereof, such
election results in a failure to elect, and in any of such cases the failure or
suspension of election would affect the result of the election, the Commission
shall on the basis of a verified petition by any interested party and after due
notice and hearing, call for the holding or continuation of the election, not
held, suspended or which resulted in a failure to elect but not later than
thirty days after the cessation of the cause of such postponement or suspension
of the election or failure to elect."
To begin with, the plea for a special election must be addressed to the
COMELEC and not to this Court. Section
6 of the Omnibus Election Code should be read in relation to Section 4 of R.A.
No. 7166 which provides:
"Sec. 4. Postponement,
Failure of Election and Special Elections. - The postponement,
declaration of failure of elections and the calling of special elections as
provided in Sections 5, 6, and 7 of the Omnibus Election Code shall be decided
by the Commission en banc by a majority vote of its members. The causes for the declaration of a failure
of election may occur before or after casting of votes or on the day of the
election."
The grounds for failure of election - force majeure, terrorism, fraud or
other analogous causes - clearly involve questions of fact. It is for this reason that they can only be
determined by the COMELEC en banc after due notice and hearing to the
parties. In the case at bar, petitioner
never asked the COMILEC en banc to call for a special election in
Sulu. Even in his original petition
with this Court, petitioner did not pray for a special election. His plea for a special election is a mere
afterthought. Too late in the day and
too unprocedural. Worse, the grounds
for failure of election are inexistent.
The records show that the voters of Sulu were able to cast their votes
freely and fairly. Their votes were
counted correctly, albeit manually. The
people have spoken. Their sovereign
will has to be obeyed.
There is another
reason why a special election cannot be ordered by this Court. To hold a special election only for the
position of Governor will be discriminatory and will violate the right
of private respondent to equal protection of the law. The records show that all elected officials in Sulu have been
proclaimed and are now discharging their powers and duties. Thus, two (2) congressmen, a vice-governor,
eight (8) members of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan and eighteen (18) mayors,
numerous vice-mayors and municipal councilors are now serving in their official
capacities. These officials were
proclaimed on the basis of the same manually counted votes of Sulu. If manual counting is illegal, their
assumption of office cannot also be countenanced. Private respondent's election cannot be singled out as invalid
for alikes cannot be treated unalikes.
A final
word. Our decision merely reinforces our
collective efforts to endow COMELEC with enough power to hold free, honest,
orderly and credible elections. A quick
flashback of its history is necessary lest our efforts be lost in the labyrinth
of time.
The COMELEC was
organized under Commonwealth Act No. 607 enacted on August 22,1940. The power to enforce our election laws was
originally vested in the President and exercised through the Department of
Interior. According to Dean Sinco,[29] the view ultimately emerged that an
independent body could better protect the right of suffrage of our people. Hence, the enforcement of our election laws,
while an executive power, was transferred to the COMELEC.
From a statutory
creation, the COMELEC was transformed to a constitutional body by virtue of the
1940 amendments to the 1935 Constitution which took effect on December 2,
1940. COMELEC was generously granted
the power to "have exclusive charge of the enforcement and administration
of all laws relative to the conduct of elections x x x."[30]
Then came the
1973 Constitution. It further broadened
the powers of COMELEC by making it the sole Judge of all election contests
relating to the election, returns and qualifications of members of the national
legislature and elective provincial and city officials.[31] In fine, the COMELEC was given
judicial power aside from its traditional administrative and executive
functions.
The 1987
Constitution quickened this trend of strengthening the COMELEC. Today, COMLEC enforces and administers all
laws and regulations relative to the conduct of elections, plebiscites,
initiatives, referenda and recalls.
Election contests involving regional, provincial and city elective
officials are under its exclusive original jurisdiction. All contests involving elective municipal
and barangay officials are under its appellate jurisdiction.[32]
Our decisions
have been in cadence with the movement towards empowering the COMELEC in order
that it can more effectively perform its duty of safeguarding the sanctity of
our elections. In Cauton vs.
COMELEC,[33] we laid down this liberal approach, viz:
x x x
'The purpose of the Revised
Election Code is to protect the integrity of elections and to suppress all
evils that may violate its purity and defeat the will of the voters. The purity of the elections is one of the most
fundamental requisites of popular government.
The Commission on Elections, by constitutional mandate, must do
everything in its power to secure a fair and honest canvass of the votes cast
in the elections. In the performance of
its duties, the Commission must be given a considerable latitude in adopting
means and methods that will insure the accomplishment of the great objective
for which it was created -- to promote free, orderly, and honest elections. The
choice of means taken by the Commission on Elections, unless they are
clearly illegal or constitute grave abuse of discretion, should not be
interfered with."
In Pacis vs. COMELEC,[34] we reiterated the guiding principle
that "clean elections control the appropriateness of the
remedy." The dissent, for all its
depth, is out of step with this movement.
It condemns the COMELEC for exercising its discretion to resort to
manual count when this was its only viable alternative. It would set aside the results of the manual
count even when the results are free from fraud and irregularity. Worse, it would set aside the judgment of
the people electing the private respondent as Governor. Upholding the sovereignty of the
people is what democracy is all about.
When the sovereignty of the people expressed thru the ballot is
at stake, it is not enough for this Court to make a statement but it
should do everything to have that sovereignty obeyed by all. Well done is always better than well
said.
IN VIEW
WHEREOF, the
petition of Tupay Loong and the petition in intervention of Yusop Jikiri are
dismissed, there being no showing that public respondent gravely abused its
discretion in issuing Minute Resolution Nos. 98-1748, 98-1750, 98-1796 and
98-1798. Our status quo order of
June 23, 1998 is lifted. No costs.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr.,
C.J., Romero, Bellosillo, Melo, Vitug, Kapunan, Mendoza, Quisumbing, Purisima,
Buena, and Gonzaga-Reyes, JJ., concur.
Pardo, J., No part.
Panganiban, J., see dissenting
opinion.
Ynares
Santiago, J., no part. Did not
participate in the deliberation.
[1] See Report of Charlemagne Salamat Alejandro, Police
Superintendent, GSC, Provincial Director, pp. 1-2; Rollo, pp. 318-319.
[2] See Memorandum of Atty. Tolentino, Jr. to Atty. Jose
Balbuena, Director IV, Legal Department, Comelec, pp. 1-2; Rollo, pp.
284-285.
[3] Ibid., p. 3; Rollo, p. 286.
[4] Ibid., p.
4; Rollo, p. 287.
[5] Ibid., p. 6; Rollo, p. 289.
[6] Rollo, pp. 303-304.
[7] Ibid., pp. 25-26.
[8] Rollo, pp. 299-301.
[9] Rollo, pp. 27-29.
[10] Rollo, pp. 290-291.
[11] Ibid.
[12] Ibid., pp. 30-32
[13] Rollo, pp. 37-45.
[14] Rollo, p.54.
[15] Ibid., p. 46.
[16] Ibid., pp. 157-184.
[17] Ibid., p. 330.
[18] Ibid., p. 392.
[19] Filipino Engineering and Machine Shop v.
Ferrer, 135 SCRA 25 (1985).
[20] Rollo, p. 314.
[21] Supplemental Memorandum of the Solicitor General,
pp. 11-12; Rollo, pp. 433-434.
[22] Tolentino memorandum, op. Cit., p. 14; Rollo,
p. 297.
[23] Rollo, pp. 34-35.
[24] See Rosolution No. 98-1796.
[25] Rollo, p. 328.
[26] Rollo, pp. 62-97.
[27] Memorandum, p. 9; Rollo, p. 264.
[28] 73 Phil. 288, 295-296 (1941).
[29] Philippine Political Law, 1962 ed., pp. 383-386.
[30] Section 2, Art. X of the 1935 Constitution.
[31] Section 2, Art. XII (c) of the 1973 Constitution.
[32] Section 2, Art. IX (C) of the 1987 Constitution.
[33] 19 SCRA 911-922 (1967).
[34] 25 SCRA 377, 388 (1968).