EN BANC
[G.R. No. 139028. April 12, 2000]
HADJI RASUL
BATADOR BASHER, petitioner, vs. COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS and ABULKAIR
AMPATUA, respondents.
D E C I S I O N
PANGANIBAN, J.:
An election must be held at the place, date
and time prescribed by law. Likewise, its suspension or postponement must
comply with legal requirements. Otherwise, it is irregular and void. Â h Y
The
Case
Petitioner[1] assails before us the June 8, 1999 Resolution of the
Commission on Elections (Comelec)[2] in SPA Case No. 97-276 which dismissed a Petition to
Declare a Failure of Election and to Call Special Election in Precinct No. 12,
Barangay Maidan, Tugaya, Lanao del Sur. The assailed Resolution disposed as
follows:
Jksm
"In view of
the foregoing considerations, We he[re]by hold that the special elections in
Barangay Maidan, Tugaya, Lanao del Sur on August 30, 1997 did not fail. The
result thereof must therefore be accorded respect.
"WHEREFORE,
premises considered, the Commission En Banc RESOLVES to DISMISS
the petition for lack of merit."[3]
The
Facts
Petitioner Hadji Rasul Batador Basher and
Private Respondent Abulkair Ampatua were both candidates for the position of
Punong Barangay in Barangay Maidan, Tugaya, Lanao del Sur during the May 12,
1997 barangay election. The election was declared a failure and a special one
was set for June 12, 1997. Again, the election failed and was reset to August
30, 1997.
Chief
According to the Comelec, the voting started
only around 9:00 p.m. on August 30, 1997 because of the prevailing tension in the
said locality. Election Officer Diana Datu–Imam reported that she was allegedly
advised by some religious leaders not to proceed with the election because
"it might trigger bloodshed." She also claimed that the town mayor,
"being too hysterical, yelled and threatened me to declare [a] failure of
election in Maidan." Subsequently, the armed followers of the mayor
pointed their guns at her and her military escorts, who responded in like
manner towards the former. The parties were then pacified at the PNP headquarters.
With the arrival of additional troops, the election officer proceeded to Maidan
to conduct the election starting at 9:00 p.m. until the early morning of the
following day. The holding of the election at that particular time was
allegedly announced "over the mosque."[4]
The tally sheet for the said
"election" showed the following results: private respondent – 250
votes; petitioner – 15 votes; and Baulo Abdul Razul, a third candidate – 10
votes.[5] Private respondent was proclaimed winner.
Petitioner then filed a Petition before the
Comelec praying that the election be declared a failure. Alleging that no
election was conducted in the place and at the time prescribed by law,
petitioner narrated that there was a dispute that day (August 30, 1997) among
the candidates regarding the venue of the election in the lone voting precinct
of the barangay. In order to avoid bloodshed, they ultimately agreed that no
election would be conducted. Accordingly, the election officer turned over for
safekeeping the ballot box containing election paraphernalia to the acting
station commander (OIC) of the Philippine National Police (PNP). The following
day, petitioner and the third candidate were surprised to learn that the
election officer had directed the Board of Election Tellers to conduct the
election and to fill up the election returns and certificates of canvass on the
night of August 30, 1997 at the residence of the former mayor. Petitioner also
stated that no announcement to hold the election at the former mayor’s house
that night was ever made.[6]
As earlier stated, the Comelec dismissed the
Petition. Hence, this recourse to this Court.[7]
Ruling
of the Comelec
The Comelec ruled against a failure of
election because the two conditions laid down in Mitmug v. Comelec[8] were not established. It held that the
"election was conducted on the scheduled date. The precinct functioned.
Actual voting took place, and it resulted not in a failure to elect."[9]
In justifying the balloting at the dead of
night, the poll body cited Section 22, Article IV of Comelec Resolution 2971,
which provided in part that "[i]f at three o’clock, there are still voters
within thirty meters in front of the polling place who have not cast their
votes, the voting shall continue to allow said voters to cast their votes
without interruption. x x x" The Comelec then went on to state that
"experience had shown that even when there is a long delay in the
commencement of the voting, voters continue to stay within the area of the
polling place."[10]
Issue
Petitioner submits the following questions
for the consideration of the Court:
"1. Whether
or not the election held at around 10:00 o’clock in the evening of August 30,
1997 after the Acting Election Officer had verbally declared or announced a
failure of election in Precinct No. 12, Barangay Maidan, Tugaya, Lanao del Sur
is contrary to law, rule and jurisprudence;
"2. Whether
or not the election held at the residence of an Ex-mayor far from the
designated Polling Place of Precinct No. 12, Barangay Maidan, Tugaya, Lanao del
Sur is legal or valid;
"3. Whether
or not the proclamation of the private respondent as the duly elected Punong
Barangay of Barangay Maidan and the seven (7) Barangay Kagawads is illegal,
null and void ab initio."[11]
In the main, the crucial question that needs
to be addressed is whether the "election" held on the date, at the
time and in the place other than those officially designated by the law and by
the Comelec was valid. Esm
The
Court’s Ruling
The Petition is meritorious.
Main
Issue: Validity of the Special Election
Citing Mitmug v. Comelec,[12] the Comelec points out that a failure of election
requires the concurrence of two conditions, namely (1) no voting took place in
the precinct or precincts on the date fixed by law, or even if there was
voting, the election resulted in a failure to elect; and (2) the votes not cast
would have affected the result of the election. It ruled that these
requirements were not met. Esmsc
We do not agree. The peculiar set of facts
in the present case show not merely a failure of election but the absence of a
valid electoral exercise. Otherwise stated, the disputed "election"
was illegal, irregular and void. Esmmis
Election Situs Was Illegal
First, the place where the voting was conducted was illegal. Section 42 of the
Omnibus Election Code provides that "[t]he chairman of the board of
election tellers shall designate the public school or any other public building
within the barangay to be used as polling place in case the barangay has
one election precinct x x x." Petitioner, citing an Affidavit[13] supposedly executed by the members of the Board of
Election Tellers (BET) for Barangay Maidan, alleges that the election of
officials for said barangay was held at the residence of former Mayor Alang
Sagusara Pukunun, which is located at Barangay Pandarianao, instead of the
officially designated polling precinct at Cagayan Elementary School. If this
allegation were true, such "election" cannot be valid, as it was not
held within the barangay of the officials who were being elected. On the
other hand, it is admitted that there was a public school or building in
Barangay Maidan -- the Cagayan Elementary School, which was the earlier validly
designated voting center.
While the BET members later repudiated their
Affidavit, they could only claim that the election was held "in Barangay
Maidan."[14] They, however, failed to specify the exact venue. In
fact, to this date, even the respondents have failed to disclose where exactly
the voting was conducted. This glaring omission definitely raises serious
questions on whether the election was indeed held in a place allowed by law. Esmso
Voting Time Was Likewise Irregular
Second, as to the time for voting, the law provides that "[t]he casting
of votes shall start at seven o'clock in the morning and shall end at three
o'clock in the afternoon, except when there are voters present within thirty
meters in front of the polling place who have not yet cast their votes, in
which case the voting shall continue but only to allow said voters to cast
their votes without interruption."[15] Section 22, Article IV of Comelec Resolution No.
2971 also specifies that the voting hours shall start promptly at 7:00 a.m. and
end at 3:00 p.m. of the same day. Msesm
However, the "election" for
Barangay Maidan officials was supposed to have been held after 9:00 p.m. of
August 30, 1997 until the wee hours of the following day. Certainly, such
schedule was not in accordance with law or the Comelec Rules. The Comelec erred
in relying on the second sentence of Section 22, Article IV of Comelec
Resolution 2971, which states that "[i]f at three o'clock [in the
afternoon], there are still voters within thirty meters in front of the polling
place who have not cast their votes, the voting shall continue to allow said
voters to cast their votes without interruption." This sentence
presupposes that the election commenced during the official time and is
simply continued beyond 3:00 p.m. in order to accommodate voters who are
within thirty meters of the polling place, already waiting for their turn to
cast their votes. This is clearly the meaning and intent of the word continue
-- "to go on in a specified course of action or condition."[16] The action or condition already subsists and is
allowed to go on. Otherwise, the law should have stated instead that "the
voting may also start even beyond 3:00 p.m. if there are voters within thirty
meters in front of the polling place." Exsm
The strained interpretation espoused by the
Comelec encourages the conduct of clandestine "elections," for it
virtually authorizes the holding of elections beyond normal hours, even at
midnight when circumstances could be more threatening and conducive to unlawful
activities. On a doctrinal basis, such nocturnal electoral practice discourages
the people's exercise of their fundamental right of suffrage, by exposing them
to the dangers concomitant to the dead of night, especially in far-flung
barangays constantly threatened with rebel and military gunfires. Kyle
Election Date Was Invalid
Third, the Comelec scheduled the special election on August 30, 1997. Any
suspension or postponement of an election is governed by Section 2 of RA 6679,[17] which states that "[w]hen for any serious cause
such as rebellion, insurrection, violence, terrorism, loss or destruction of
election paraphernalia, and any analogous causes of such nature that the
holding of a free, orderly and honest election should become impossible in any
barangay, the Commission on Election motu
proprio or upon sworn petition of
ten (10) registered voters of a barangay, after summary proceedings of the
existence of such grounds, shall suspend or postpone the election therein to a
date reasonably close to the date of the election that is not held or is
suspended or postponed, or which resulted in a failure to elect, but not later
than thirty (30) days after the cessation of the cause for such suspension or
postponement of the election or failure to elect, and in all cases not later
than ninety (90) days from the date of the original election." Kycalr
Election Officer Diana Datu-Imam of Tugaya,
Lanao del Sur practically postponed the election in Barangay Maidan from the
official original schedule of 7:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. of August 30, 1997 to
10:00 p.m. of August 30, 1997 until the early morning of August 31, 1997. She
attempted to justify her postponement of the election by citing threats of
violence and bloodshed in the said barangay. Allegedly because of the tension
created by armed escorts of the municipal mayor and the military, Datu-Imam
declared a failure of election in order "to ease their aggression."
However, as election officer, she has no authority to declare a failure of
election. Indeed, only the Comelec itself has legal authority to exercise such
awesome power. An election officer alone, or even with the agreement of the
candidates, cannot validly postpone or suspend the elections. Calrky
Election Postponement Was Invalid
Fourth, Datu-Imam did not follow the procedure laid down by law for election
postponement or suspension or the declaration of a failure of election. She
narrated the circumstances surrounding her declaration as follows:[18]
"When I
returned to [as]certain the situation in Maidan, the Mayor, being too
hysterical, yelled and threatened me to declare [a] failure of elections in
Maidan. When I insisted to personally confirm the probable cause of bloodshed
(at Maidan), his armed followers/escorts pointed their guns to me and my
escorts. Likewise my military escorts pointed their guns to the mayor and his
men 'Man to Man'. The Datus and religious leaders pacified us at the PNP
Headquarters.
"After a
couple of hours, the military officers and I agreed to adapt another strategy
just to pursue with the elections in Maidan [by] hook or by crook. Considering
that they forcibly took away from us the ballot box containing paraphernalia of
Maidan, I didn't have any recourse but give them. I turned-over the ballot box
to the Acting Chief of Police, Malik Bantuas with proper receipt, taking away
from the box the CEF 2 & 2-A, declaring verbally a failure of elections in
Maidan just to ease their aggression and so that we could pull-out of the place
freely."
It clearly appears from the very report of
Datu-Imam to the Comelec that she did not conduct any proceeding, summary or
otherwise, to find out whether any of the legal grounds for the suspension or
postponement or the declaration of failure of the election actually existed in
the barangay concerned. Mesm
Notice Was Irregular
Finally and very significantly, the electorate was not given
ample notice of the exact schedule and venue of the election. The election
officer herself relates:[19]
"When the
tension was slightly alleviated, I directed the military personnel to pull-out
of the Municipio and withdrew to a nearby Barangay (for safety) where some of
the militaries (sic) were deployed. After planning and coordinating with the
Batallion (sic) Commander, we waited for the additional troups (sic) that
arrived at around 8:30 in the evening. At the stroke of 9:00 o'clock, we
started for Maidan via the national Highway thru the Municipality of Balindong
and others thru a short-cut way (sic) eastward of Tugaya. Utilizing the
election paraphernalia earlier shipped by the Commission as I have requested
(sic) and a ballot box from the PES, we went on with the election (after
announcing it over the mosque) peacefully and orderly despite the tiredness
(sic) and exhaustion felt by the people the whole day waiting/expecting for the
election as I have assured them earlier (sic). x x x"
As can be gleaned easily from the above
report, the electorate of Barangay Maidan was not given due notice that the
election would push through after 9:00 p.m. that same day. Apparently, the
election officer's decision to hold the election on the night of August 30,
1997 was precipitate. Only after additional military troops had arrived at
their site in a nearby barangay about 8:30 p.m. did the election officers
proceed to Barangay Maidan. Arriving at Maidan, they allegedly proceeded to
conduct the election "after announcing it over the mosque."
Such abbreviated announcement "over the
mosque" at such late hour did NOT constitute sufficient notice to
the electorate. Consequently, not the entire electorate or even a respectable
number could have known of the activity and actually participated therein or
voluntarily and discerningly chosen not to have done so. Slx
Indeed, the Court in Hassan v. Comelec[20] held that the notice given on the afternoon of the
election day resetting the election to the following day and transferring its
venue was "too short." We said that "[t]o require the voters to
come to the polls on such short notice was highly impracticable. x x x It is
essential to the validity of the election that the voters have notice in some
form, either actual or constructive, of the time, place and purpose thereof.[21] The time for holding it must be authoritatively
designated in advance."[22]
In the case at bar, the announcement was
made only minutes before the supposed voting. If one-day notice was held to
be insufficient in Hassan, the much shorter notice in the present case
should all the more be declared wanting. It should in fact be equated with
"no notice." Scslx
In sum, the "election" supposedly
held for officials of Barangay Maidan cannot be clothed with any form of
validity. It was clearly unauthorized and invalid. It had no legal leg to stand
on. Not only did the suspension/postponement not comply with the procedure laid
down by law and the Comelec Rules, neither was there sufficient notice of the
time and date when and the place where it would actually be conducted. It was
thus as if no election was held at all. Hence, its results could not determine
the winning punong barangay. Slxsc
WHEREFORE, the Petition is hereby GRANTED and the assailed
Resolution SET ASIDE. The proclamation of private respondent as punong
barangay is hereby declared VOID. Respondent Comelec is ORDERED
to conduct a special election for punong barangay of Maidan, Tugaya, Lanao del
Sur as soon as possible. No pronouncement as to costs. Slxmis
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr., C.J., Melo, Puno, Kapunan,
Mendoza, Quisumbing, Pardo, Buena, Gonzaga-Reyes, and Ynares-Santiago, JJ., concur. Missdaa
Bellosillo, J., no part, did not take part in deliberation.
Vitug, J., on official business abroad.
Purisima, J., joins the dissent of J. De Leon, Jr.
De Leon, Jr.,
JJ., see dissent.
[1] Petitioner describes the present recourse as a
"Petition for Review on Certiorari." The Court, however, resolved
to consider it as a Petition for Certiorari under Rule 65 of the Rules
of Court because it is grounded on grave abuse of discretion on the part of the
Comelec.
[2] The Resolution was signed by Comelec Chairman Harriet
O. Demetriou, Commissioners Manolo B. Gorospe, Julio F. Desamito, Teresita
Dy-Liacco Flores, Japal M. Guiani, Luzviminda G. Tancangco and Abdul Gani
Marohombsar Al Hadj.
[3] Assailed Resolution, p. 8; rollo, p. 20.
[4] Narrative Report of Election Officer Diana T.
Datu-Imam, cited in the assailed Resolution, pp. 4-5; rollo, pp. 16-17.
[5] Annex "K," Petition; rollo, p. 38.
[6] Petition to Declare a Failure of Election, pp. 2-3; rollo,
pp. 23-24.
[7] The Court deemed the case submitted for decision upon
the filing of Respondent Comelec’s Comment on October 29, 1999. Private
respondent’s Comment was received on July 23, 1999. This case, however, was
assigned to the undersigned ponente for the writing of the Court’s
Decision during the deliberations of the Court on April 11, 2000 when his
erstwhile Dissent was voted as the majority opinion.
[8] 230 SCRA 54, February 10, 1994.
[9] Assailed Resolution, p. 8; rollo, p. 20.
[10] Ibid., p. 6; rollo, p. 18.
[11] Petition, p. 4; rollo, p. 6.
[12] 230 SCRA 54, February 10, 1994. See also §6, Omnibus
Election Code.
[13] Rollo, p. 34.
[14] See Assailed Comelec Resolution, p. 4.
[15] [§190, OEC, as amended.
[16] Webster's New World Dictionary, 2nd College ed.
(1974). (Emphasis supplied.)
[17] Otherwise known as the Barangay Election Law, which
amended parts of the OEC.
[18] Narrative Report dated August 31, 1997 of Election
Officer Diana T. Datu-Imam, p. 2; rollo, pp. 57-58.
[19] Narrative Report, supra.
[20] 264 SCRA 125, November 13, 1996, per Kapunan, J.
[21] Citing Furste v. Gray, 240 Ky 604, 42
SW 2d 889; and State ex rel Stipp v. Colliver, (MO) 243 SW 2d
344.
[22] Hassan, supra, p. 134.