EN BANC
[G.R. No. 134169. February 2, 2000]
SADIKUL
SAHALI, petitioner, vs. COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS (COMELEC) and HADJA
JUBAIDA H. MATBA, respondents.
D E C I S I O N
YNARES-SANTIAGO, J.:
Petitioner Sadikul Sahali and respondent Hadja
Jubaida H. Matba were two of the contending gubernatorial candidates in
Tawi-Tawi in the elections of May 11, 1998. On May 13, 1998, the Provincial
Board of Canvassers proclaimed petitioner as the duly elected governor of
Tawi-Tawi.
The counting of votes, canvassing of returns
and consolidation of results of the elections were conducted using the
Automated Election System, authorized under Republic Act No. 8436.
Before petitioner could assume office on
June 30, 1998, the COMELEC promulgated Minute Resolution No. 98-1959 dated June
29, 1998, the pertinent part of which reads:
RESOLVED,
consistent with the resolutions of the Commission in Sulu and Maguindanao
cases, to direct the immediate manual recounting of ballots in the province of
Tawi-Tawi; and in the meantime, to suspend the effects of the proclamation as a
logical consequence of the manual counting and that all pleadings filed
relative to SPA No. 98-349 be made to survive even beyond the June 30, 1998
deadline.[1]
It appears that the COMELEC passed the above
Minute Resolution in connection with a petition filed by respondent Matba and
Ismael B. Abubakar, Jr. On May 22, 1998 and docketed as SPA No. 98-349, praying
for the immediate manual counting of ballots in the Province of Tawi-Tawi, on
the allegation that the automated counting machines utilized in said province
suffered massive and total systems breakdown resulting in the following
problems:
Sc-slx
1........Inability of the machines to read the ballots
properly;
2........Inability of the ballots to reject spurious
and excess ballots;
3........Material discrepancies of figures appearing
in various election documents, such as the election returns, municipal
certificates of canvass, statement of votes per precinct and municipality, and
the provincial certificate of canvass. Needless to say, these material
discrepancies resulted in the proclamation of losing candidates. A case in
point is the election contest in the Municipality of South Ubian;
4........Cases of several candidates not obtaining any
vote in the precinct where they are registered and where they voted;
5........Absence of any entry in the statements of
votes in some forty (40) precincts of Tawi-Tawi involving the position of
president down to municipal councilors.[2]
On July 3, 1998, petitioner brought this
special civil action for certiorari seeking the annulment of COMELEC Minute
Resolution No. 98-1959. Petitioner likewise prayed for the issuance of a
temporary restraining order and writ of preliminary injunction to restrain the
COMELEC from implementing or executing the assailed Resolution.
Petitioner contends that he was not notified
of the filing of SPA No. 98-349. Consequently, he was not afforded an
opportunity to answer the petition, and was thereby denied his constitutional
right to due process. He alleges that he was also not officially notified of
the promulgation by the COMELEC of Minute Resolution No. 98-1959; that he only
learned of it from newspaper reports after which his counsel went to the
COMELEC office in Manila to verify. Petitioner maintains that his right to
assume the office of governor of Tawi-Tawi constitutes property right within
the meaning of the due process clause of the Constitution. The Minute
Resolution, he argues, is also void ab initio inasmuch as no pre-proclamation
controversy was filed during the canvassing, and there can be no suspension of
the effects of a proclamation or a recounting of ballots where there is no
pre-proclamation controversy. Petitioner further states that the COMELEC erred
when it granted respondent’s prayer that the petition in SPA No. 98-349 be
extended beyond June 30, 1998 on the strength of Section 16 of the Synchronized
Elections Law of 1991,[3] saying that the said provision is inapplicable in
the case at bar since no pre-proclamation case was filed. Consequently,
petitioner submits that the COMELEC acted without or in excess of its
jurisdiction, or with grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of
jurisdiction.
Petitioner subsequently filed a "Very
Urgent Motion Reiterating the Prayer for the Issuance of a Temporary
Restraining Order."[4] Thus, on July 14, 1998, this Court issued a
Resolution directing the parties "to maintain the status quo ante
prevailing at the time of the filing of the petition."[5]
In the meantime, the Office of the Solicitor
General filed on October 9, 1998 a "Manifestation in Lieu of
Comment,"[6] wherein it opined that the COMELEC should have
conducted a summary hearing before issuing Minute Resolution No. 98-1959 and
should not have taken the allegations concerning systems failure in the
automated counting system as gospel truth. Hence, the Solicitor General argues
that the questioned resolution was issued in violation of petitioner’s
constitutional right to due process, citing the case of Bince, Jr. v.
Commission on Elections,[7] where this Court held that the right to public
office is a right protected by the due process clause, and the COMELEC is
without power to partially or totally annul a proclamation or suspend the
effects of a proclamation without notice and hearing.[8]
On October 15, 1998, the Philippine National
Bank (PNB) filed in this case a "Motion with Leave to Allow the
Undersigned to Seek Clarification,"[9] asking the Court whom --- between Mr. Sulay H.
Halipa, who had been designated by ARMM Governor Nur P. Misuari as
Officer-in-Charge of the Office of the Governor of Tawi-Tawi, and petitioner
Sadikul Sahali --- it should recognize as authorized to transact business with
the bank on behalf of the Province of Tawi-Tawi. ScÓ jj
Acting on the above motion, this Court
issued a Resolution on October 20, 1998.[10] It found that the COMELEC issued on July 14, 1998 a
resolution holding in abeyance the implementation of the assailed Minute
Resolution of June 29, 1998. On this basis, the Court ruled that, under its status
quo ante order in this case, official business with the governor of
Tawi-Tawi should be dealt through petitioner Sadikul Sahali, inasmuch as he was
the one proclaimed as such by the COMELEC prior to the filing of this petition.
In its Resolution, this Court also noted the Manifestation filed by the Office
of the Solicitor General and required the COMELEC to comment on the petition.
On December 7, 1998, public respondent
COMELEC submitted its Comment.[11] It countered that its findings in the assailed
Minute Resolution No. 98-1959 was supported by the following documents, to wit:
1........Narrative Report of Idlana Mangona, Acting
Provincial Election Supervisor of Tawi-Tawi, recommending that the petition for
manual recounting and revision of the official ballots be considered, due to
discrepancies found in the Election Reporting System (ERS) computer;[12] Sc
2........Letter of Brigadier General Edgardo V.
Espinosa, Commanding General, Headquarters Marine Forces, Southern Philippines,
to then COMELEC Chairman Bernardo P. Pardo, recommending the manual counting
and re-counting of votes to minimize post-election related incidents and to
satisfy complaints against the use of automated counting machines which
resulted in some technical and unexplained defects and errors;[13]
3........Joint letter of respondent Hadja Jubalda
Matba and Ismael Abubakar, Jr. to the COMELEC alleging massive systems
breakdown of the automated counting machines in Tawi-Tawi.[14]
The COMELEC further stressed that the
instant petition was premature because it was filed before the assailed Minute
Resolution No. 98-1959 became final. The petition was subsequently rendered
moot and academic when the COMELEC issued Minute Resolution No. 98-2145 on July
14, 1998, which held in abeyance the implementation of Minute Resolution No.
98-1959.[15] These events were explained further by the COMELEC
when it promulgated Minute Resolution No. 98-2828 on October 15, 1998,[16] which pertinently reads:
x x x. This means
that the Commission in issuing Min. Res. 98-2145 corrected itself, thus Minute
Resolution 98-1959 and Min. Res. 98-2106 were never implemented and therefore
at the time the status quo ante order was issued by the Supreme Court,
the prevailing situation was that Sadikul Sahali was the duly proclaimed
winning candidate for Governor in Tawi-Tawi as well as other proclaimed local
candidates as of May 13, 1998.
RESOLVED, to
clarify that Sadikul Sahali and other proclaimed local candidates are duly
elected officials of Tawi-Tawi at the time referred to in the status quo ante
order by the Supreme Court.
Petitioner thereafter filed his Reply,[17] reiterating the substantial arguments in his
Petition and amplifying those contained in the Manifestation of the Solicitor
General.
On April 29, 1999, respondent Matba filed a
"Manifestation & Motion", wherein he invoked the Resolution of
this Court dated March 15, 1999 dismissing the petition in G.R. No. 134188
entitled "Nur G. Jaafar, Petitioner versus The Commission on Elections,
Radja Jubaida H. Matba, Ismael B. Abubakar, Jr., Habid Gulam Hadjirul, Sauragal
Dayan, Hadja Monera Managula, Hadji Ladjakawasa Tabarasa, Abdurahman Nawali and
Laurel Tahil, Respondents", which petition likewise sought the
annulment of COMELEC Minute Resolution No. 98-1959. Accordingly, respondent
Matba prayed that the instant petition be likewise dismissed for being moot and
academic.
Scmis
This Court agrees with respondents. Indeed,
it can be gleaned from the records that shortly after the promulgation of Minute
Resolution No. 98-1959, Hon. Nur G. Jaafar, Congressman, Lone District of
Tawi-Tawi, wrote a letter to the COMELEC on July 3, 1998 contending that the
Commission was misinformed and misled into promulgating the assailed Minute
Resolution. Congressman Jaafar alleges the following to be the correct facts:
1........That, the May 11, 1998 elections in Tawi-Tawi
were generally clean, honest and peaceful. The votes were casted (sic),
machine counted and canvassed. The winning candidates
were duly proclaimed and have taken their respective oath of office prior
to the promulgation of said questionable Resolution;
2........That, the counting of votes were done through
the automated counting machine which was pre-tested a few days before
the election by Comelec technicians and conducted in the presence of
representatives of all political parties. The same machine were used (sic)
in the counting of votes by municipalities also in the presence of the
Military, Police, Namfrel, Comelec and representative of all parties concerned
which eventually led to the proclamation of the winning candidates for various
positions;
3........That, the recommendation of Mr. Idlana
Mangona to conduct a manual recount because of system failure and/or total
breakdown of the machine should not be used solely as a basis in promulgating
said Resolution because Mr. Mangona was not the Comelec-In-Charge of the
province during the elections, neither is he in the position to technically
attest to the defectiveness of the counting machine. Atty. Alloden
Dalaig of the Comelec Central Offices was the one assigned as Chairman of the
Provincial Board of Canvassers (PBC) and designated Comelec-In-Charge for the
entire Province of Tawi-Tawi.
Also, neither can
Bgen. Espinosa equate the situation in Sulu and Maguindanao to that of
Tawi-Tawi as it was an entirely different situation, besides the General was
not physically present on the ground. On the contrary, the post-election
report of Col. Nelson Allaga C0 8MBLT who was the overall-in-charge of
securing the last elections in the province show otherwise; (Attached letter of
Col. Allaga to Honorable Chairman Pardo); Missc
4........That, the questioned Resolution triggered by
the unsworn letter request of Hadja Jubaida Matba and Ismael Abubakar,
defeated gubernatorial and congressional candidates, respectively, should not
have been given due course considering that the same was not even calendared
much more part of the agenda of the Commission of June 29, 1998; and
5........Lastly and more important of all, the
undersigned and other wining candidates were not given due notice and allowed
to present their side thereby depriving them of their right to be heard by the
Commission, a clear violation of their Constitutional right to due process.[18]
On July 10, 1998, COMELEC Executive Director
Resurreccion Z. Borra issued a Memorandum inquiring and seeking clarification
as to whether the COMELEC En Banc will order the Executive Director to
implement Minute Resolution No. 98-2106, which resolved to direct the immediate
implementation of the assailed Minute Resolution No. 98-1959, considering that
there was still pending a petition for certiorari filed by Congressman Jaafar
before the Supreme Court to annul Minute Resolution No. 98-1959.
It was on the basis of the foregoing that
the COMELEC passed Minute Resolution No. 98-2145 which states:
RESOLVED, to hold in abeyance
Min. Resolution No. 98-1959 dated 29 June 1998 and Min. Resolution No.
98-2106 dated 07 July 1998, for further study/review by the Commission.
Let the Executive Director implement this
resolution.
Later, after this Court issued the status
quo ante order of July 14, 1998, the COMELEC promulgated another
resolution, namely, Minute Resolution No. 98-2828, which provides: Misspped
x x x. This means
that the Commission in issuing Min. Res. 98-2145 corrected itself, thus Minute
Resolution 98-1959 and Min. Res. 98-2106 were never implemented and therefore
at the time the status quo ante order was issued by the Supreme Court,
the prevailing situation was that Sadikul Sahali was the duly proclaimed
winning candidate for Governor in Tawi-Tawi as well as other proclaimed local
candidates as of May 13, 1998.
RESOLVED, to clarify that Sadikul Sahali and other proclaimed
local candidates are duly elected officials of Tawi-Tawi at the time referred
to in the status quo ante order by the Supreme Court.
Clearly, the COMELEC, motu proprio,
reconsidered its earlier Minute Resolution No. 98-1959, as it was within its
power to do, before it became final and executory. As argued by the COMELEC, it
has the inherent power to amend and control its process and order. Within the
thirty-day period from its promulgation,[19] therefore, the questioned Minute Resolution No.
98-1959 was still under the control of the COMELEC and may thus be recalled or
set aside. Necessarily, the subsequent passage by the COMELEC of Minute
Resolution No. 98-2145 on July 14, 1998, wherein it corrected its earlier
Minute Resolution No. 98-1959, rendered the instant petition moot and academic.
Verily, this very same issue has already
been resolved by this Court en banc in Jaafar v. Commission on
Elections, et al.,[20] which held:
We agree with
respondent COMELEC that this petition should be dismissed. The pleadings and
their annexes show that shortly after this petition for certiorari to annul
Minute Resolution No. 98-1959 dated 29 June 1998, was filed the COMELEC motu
proprio issued M.R. No. 98-2145 on July 14, 1998 which held in abeyance the
implementation of the questioned resolution and that of Minute Resolution No.
98-2106 dated July 7, 1998 for further study/review by the Commission. Hence,
Resolution No. 98-1959 never became final and executory and is still subject to
either recall or modification by the Commission.
The Court notes that
COMELEC Resolution No. 98-2828 issued on October 15, 1998 clarified that all
the winning candidates for local government positions have been proclaimed and
that no declaration of failure of elections in the island province of Tawi-Tawi
was made by the Commission. Sadikul Sahali (who was proclaimed governor of
Tawi-Tawi) and all other local candidates who were proclaimed winners as of May
13, 1998 are the duly elected officials of Tawi-Tawi as of July 14, 1998, when
the status quo ante order was issued by the Supreme Court. Accordingly, the
subsequent promulgation of COMELEC Resolution Nos. 98-2145 and 9828 (sic)
show that the questioned Minute Resolution No. 98-1959 of the respondent
tribunal suspending the effects of the proclamation of the petitioner and other
local candidates has been effectively withdrawn, or at least held in abeyance
for further study and review. The subsequent issuance of COMELEC M.R. Nos.
98-2145 and 98-2828 has mooted the instant petition. Spped
The court should
refrain from expressing its opinion in a case in which no practical relief may
be granted in view of a supervening event. It is a rule almost unanimously
observed that courts of justice will take cognizance only of justiciable
controversies wherein actual and not merely hypothetical issues are involved.
Where the issue has become moot and academic there is no justiciable
controversy, an adjudication thereon would be of no practical use or value.[21]
The present petition for certiorari,
therefore, must be dismissed. It is grounded on alleged grave abuse of
discretion and lack of jurisdiction. In the recent case of Perla Garcia, et
al. v. HRET, et al.,[22] this Court had occasion to rule:
Certiorari as a
special civil action can be availed of only if there is concurrence of the
essential requisites, to wit: (a) the tribunal, board or officer exercising
judicial functions has acted without or in excess of jurisdiction or with grave
abuse of discretion amounting to lack or in excess or jurisdiction, and (b)
there is no appeal, nor any plain, speedy and adequate remedy in the ordinary
course of law for the purpose of annulling or modifying the proceeding. There
must be a capricious, arbitrary and whimsical exercise of power for it to
prosper.[23]
To question the
jurisdiction of the lower court or the agency exercising judicial or
quasi-judicial functions, the remedy is a special civil action for certiorari
under Rule 65 of the Rules of Court. The petitioner in such cases must clearly
show that the public respondent acted without jurisdiction or with grave abuse
of discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction. Grave abuse of
discretion defies exact definition, but generally refers to "capricious or
whimsical exercise of judgment as is equivalent to lack of jurisdiction. The
abuse of discretion must be patent and gross as to amount to an evasion of
positive duty or a virtual refusal to perform a duty enjoined by law, or to act
at all in contemplation of law, as where the power is exercised in an arbitrary
and despotic manner by reason of passion and hostility."
"It has been
held, however, that no grave abuse of discretion may be attributed to a court
simply because of its alleged misappreciation of facts and evidence. A writ of
certiorari may not be used to correct a lower tribunal's evaluation of the
evidence and factual findings. In other words, it is not a remedy for mere
errors of judgment, which are correctible by an appeal or a petition for review
under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court. Josp-ped
"In fine,
certiorari will issue only to correct errors of jurisdiction, not errors of
procedure or mistakes in the findings or conclusions of the lower court. As
long as a court acts within its jurisdiction, any alleged errors committed in
the exercise of its discretion will amount to nothing more than errors of
judgment which are reviewable by timely appeal and not by special civil action
for certiorari."[24]
In this case, petitioner miserably failed to
show that the promulgation by respondent COMELEC of the assailed Minute
Resolution No. 98-1959 amounted to a capricious and whimsical exercise of
judgment equivalent to lack of jurisdiction, or that its act was exercised in
an arbitrary and despotic manner by reason of passion or personal hostility
towards petitioner. On the contrary, the COMELEC, perhaps realizing the
precipitousness of the issuance of Minute Resolution No. 98-1959, lost no time
in recalling the same and promulgating Minute Resolution No. 98-2145 in its
stead. To be sure, this negates any indication of grave abuse of discretion on
the part of the COMELEC.
WHEREFORE, the petition is DISMISSED.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr., Bellosillo, Melo, Puno,
Vitug, Kapunan, Mendoza, Quisumbing, Purisima, Buena, Gonzaga-Reyes, and De
Leon, Jr., JJ., concur.
Panganiban, J., in the result. The
Comelec has already withdrawn the assailed Resolution; hence, this case is now
moot.
Pardo, J., took no part.2/18/00 8:50 AM
[1] Annex "A"; Rollo, p. 20.
[2] Ibid.; Rollo, p. 19.
[3] Republic Act No. 7166, Section 16, to wit:
Pre-proclamation Cases Involving Provincial,
City and Municipal offices. ---
Pre-proclamation cases involving provincial, city and municipal offices shall
be allowed and shall be governed by Sections 17, 18, 19, 20, 21 and 22 hereof. Sjä cj
All pre-proclamation cases pending before the Commission shall be deemed terminated at the beginning of the term of the office involved and the rulings of the board of canvassers concerned shall be deemed affirmed, without prejudice to the filing of a regular election protest by the aggrieved party. However, proceedings may continue when on the basis of the evidence thus far presented, the Commission determines that the petition appears meritorious and accordingly issues an order for the proceeding to continue or when an appropriate order has been issued by the Supreme Court in a petition for certiorari (italics ours)
[4] Rollo, pp. 24-27.
[5] Rollo, p. 28.
[6] Rollo, pp. 40-44.
[7] 218 SCRA 782 (1993)
[8] Supra., at 793, citing Fariñas v. Commission on Elections (G.R. No. 81763, March 3, 1988), Reyes v. Commission on Elections (G.R. No. 81856, March 3, 1988), and Gallardo v. Commission on Elections (G.R. No. 85974, May 2, 1989)
[9] Rollo, pp. 47-50.
[10] Rollo, p. 68.
[11] Rollo, pp. 79-97.
[12] Annex "1"; Rollo, pp. 98-99.
[13] Annex "2"; Rollo, p. 100.
[14] Annex "3"; Rollo, pp. 101-102.
[15] Annex "4"; Rollo, pp. 103-105.
[16] Annex "5"; Rollo, pp. 106-107.
[17] Rollo, pp. 112-116.
[18] Rollo, pp. 103-104; emphasis copied.
[19] See CONSTITUTION, Article IX-A, Section 7, viz:
x x x. Unless otherwise 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.
[20] G.R. No. 134188, March 15, 1999.
[21] Citations omitted.
[22] G.R. No. 134792, August 12, 1999.
[23] Supra., citing Suntay v. Cojuangco-Suntay, G.R. No. 132524, December 29, 1998.
[24] Supra., citing People of the Philippines v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 128986, June 21, 1999.