EN BANC
[G.R. No. 134696.
July 31, 2000]
TOMAS T. BANAGA, JR., petitioner,
vs. COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS and FLORENCIO M. BERNABE, JR., respondents.
D E C I S I O N
QUISUMBING, J.:
This special
civil action for certiorari seeks to annul the en banc resolution
of public respondent Commission on Elections promulgated on June 29, 1998, in a
COMELEC special action case, SPA No. 98-383.
The factual
antecedents of this case are as follows:
Petitioner and
private respondent were the candidates for vice-mayor of the City of Parañaque
in the May 11, 1998 election. On May
19, 1998, the city board of canvassers proclaimed private respondent, Florencio
M. Bernabe, Jr., the winner for having garnered a total of Seventy One Thousand
Nine Hundred Seventy Seven (71,977) votes of the total votes cast for the
vice-mayoralty position. On the other
hand, petitioner, Tomas T. Banaga, Jr., received the second highest number of
votes for the said position, with Sixty Eight Thousand Nine Hundred Seventy
(68,970) of the total votes cast. Thus,
the difference between the votes received by the private respondent and the
petitioner is three thousand seven (3,007) votes.
Dissatisfied,
petitioner filed with the COMELEC on May 29, 1998, an action denominated as “Petition
to Declare Failure of Elections and/or For Annulment of Elections”,[1] alleging that:
“3. xxx the local elections
for the office of Vice-Mayor in the City of Parañaque, Metro Manila, held on 11
May 1998, amounts to a denigration of the expression of the true will of the
people, as it was tainted with widespread election anomalies which constitutes
election fraud. The local elections for
the position of Vice-Mayor in the City of Parañaque, Metro Manila, was replete
with election offenses, specifically vote buying and flying voters being
allowed to vote. Moreover, during the
canvassing of votes before the Board of Canvasser, numerous Election Returns
were discovered to contain glaring discrepancies and are replete with blatant
omissions, not to mention the fact that numerous election returns appeared to
be tampered with. All told, it is
readily apparent that the portion of the Election Returns pertaining to the
position of Vice-Mayor in the City of Parañaque, appear to be altered,
falsified or fabricated.
4.
The will of the legitimate voters of the City of Parañaque were
denigrated during the 11 May 1998 election as a consequence of the fact that an
indeterminable number of flying voters were allowed to vote.
xxx
5.
The 11 May 1998 elections for local officials in the City of Parañaque
has likewise been marred by massive vote buying. To cite but one example, in Precinct Nos. 111-112 at the Tambo
Elementary School in the City of Parañaque, a certain Dennis Sambilay Agayan
(“Agayan”) was arrested for voting in substitution of registered voter Ramon
Vizcarra. Agayan admitted before SPO1
Alberto V. Parena that he was paid One Hundred Fifty Pesos (P150.00) to vote at
precincts No. 111-112 and use the name Ramon Vizcarra. As proof of the foregoing, attached hereto
as Annex “E” is the Information dated 11 May 1998 filed against Agayan.
The magnitude of the vote buying in
the 11 May 1998 local elections in the City of Parañaque, is such that the
voters involved number in the thousands.
Evidence in this regard shall be presented in the proper time.
6.
Also, there have been several instances where purported voters were
depositing more than one (1) ballot inside the ballot box. As evidence thereof, attached hereto as Annex
“F” is the Affidavit of a certain Rosemarie Pascua of Barangay Baclaran, City
of Parañaque.
7.
The foregoing incidents alone actually suffices to establish that a
failure of elections should be declared on the ground that the will of the
electorate of the City of Parañaque has been denigrated. The elections for the office of the
Vice-Mayor in the City of Parañaque, on 11 May 1998 cannot be considered as
reflective of the true will of the electorate.
However, the anomalies do not stop there.
8.
In addition to the foregoing, during the canvassing of votes before the
Board of Canvassers, it was discovered that numerous election returns contain
glaring discrepancies and are replete with blatant omissions, not to mention
the fact that several election returns appeared to be tampered with or appear
to be fabricated. The Honorable
Commission should seriously consider these anomalies specially on account of
the fact that the lead of the respondent over the petitioner is a mere Three
Thousand Seven (3,007) votes.
xxx
9.
Moreover, several Election Returns are found to have glaring
discrepancies which may materially alter the results of the election for the
office of Vice-Mayor in the City of Parañaque.
xxx
10. Finally, what seriously casts doubt on the legitimacy of the
elections for the office of the Vice-Mayor in the City of Parañaque is the fact
that the results thereof are statistically improbable. A case in point is precinct number 483 where
petitioner shockingly is supposed to have received zero (0) votes. Petitioner is the incumbent Vice-Mayor of
the City of Parañaque. It is, thus,
impossible that he will receive zero (0) votes in any given precinct.”[2]
Petitioner asked
the COMELEC for the following reliefs:
“1. After trial, judgment be rendered as follows:
1.1 Declaring a failure of
elections, or declaring the annulment of the elections, for the office of the
Vice-Mayor in the City of Parañaque, Metro Manila;
1.2. Annulling the proclamation of
the respondent as the elected Vice-Mayor of the City of Parañaque, Metro
Manila, during the 11 May 1998 elections; and
1.3. Declaring that special
elections should be held for the office of Vice-Mayor in the City of Parañaque,
Metro Manila.
2.
Alternatively, in the remote event that the Honorable Commission does
not render judgment as aforesaid, an order be issued to the Treasurer of the
City of Parañaque to bring and present before this Honorable Commission on or
before the day of the hearing of the Election Protest, the ballot boxes, copies
of the registry lists, election returns, the minutes of election in all precincts,
and the other documents used in the local elections for the Office of the
Vice-Mayor held on 11 May 1998 in the said City, for the Honorable Commission
to re-examine and revise the same; and
3.
After due trial judgment be rendered as follows:
3.1. The election of respondent
FLORENCIO M. BERNABE, JR., for the office of Vice-Mayor in the City of
Parañaque, Metro Manila be annulled;
3.2. The petitioner, TOMAS T.
BANAGA, JR., be adjudged as the duly elected Vice-Mayor in the City of
Parañaque, during the 11 May 1998 local elections; and
3.3. The expenses, costs and damages incurred in these proceedings be
assessed against the respondent.
Other just and equitable reliefs
are likewise prayed for.”[3]
On June 29,
1998, the COMELEC dismissed petitioner’s suit.
It held that the grounds relied upon by petitioner do not fall under any
of the instances enumerated in Section 6 of the Omnibus Election Code. The election tribunal concluded that based
on the allegations of the petition, it is clear that an election took place and
that it did not result in a failure to elect.[4]
Considering that
a motion for reconsideration of a COMELEC en banc ruling is prohibited,
except in a case involving an election offense,[5] and aggrieved by the COMELEC’s
dismissal of his suit, petitioner timely filed the instant petition for certiorari
with this Court.
Before us,
petitioner now claims that the COMELEC committed grave abuse of discretion
amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction when it dismissed his petition motu
propio without any basis whatsoever and without giving him the benefit of a
hearing. He contends that:
I
THE PETITION DATED 28 MAY 1998 IS ESSENTIALLY AN
ELECTION PROTEST. HENCE, THE COMELEC COULD NOT LEGALLY DISMISS THE ENTIRE
PETITION MERELY ON THE GROUND THAT THERE WAS ALLEGEDLY NO FAILURE OF ELECTION
IN THE CITY OF PARANAQUE DURING THE 11 MAY 1998 ELECTIONS.
II
THE AUTHORITY RELIED UPON BY THE COMELEC AS BASIS FOR
THE DISMISSAL OF THE PETITION DATED 28 MAY 1998, THAT OF EDWIN SAR[D]EA, ET.
AL. V. COMELEC, ET. AL., AND MITMUG V. COMELEC, ARE NOT APPLICABLE
TO THE CASE AT BAR CONSIDERING THAT ASIDE FROM BEING AN ELECTION PROTEST, THE
SAID PETITION SEEKS THE ANNULMENT OF AN ELECTION PURSUANT TO THE DOCTRINE LAID
DOWN BY THE HONORABLE SUPREME COURT IN LOONG V. COMELEC.[6]
Clearly, the
issue for our resolution is whether or not public respondent acted with grave
abuse of discretion in dismissing petitioner’s petition, in the light of
petitioner’s foregoing contentions.
While petitioner
may have intended to institute an election protest by praying that said action
may also be considered an election protest, in our view, petitioner’s action is
a petition to declare a failure of elections or annul election results. It is not an election protest.
First, his
petition before the COMELEC was instituted pursuant to Section 4 of Republic
Act No. 7166 in relation to Section 6 of the Omnibus Election Code. Section 4
of RA 7166 refers to “postponement, failure of election and special
elections”[7] while Section 6 of the Omnibus
Election Code relates to “failure of election”. It is simply captioned as “Petition to
Declare Failure of Elections and/or For Annulment of Elections”.
Second, an
election protest is an ordinary action while a petition to declare a failure of
elections is a special action under the 1993 COMELEC Rules of Procedure as
amended. An election protest is
governed by Rule 20 on ordinary actions, while a petition to declare failure of
elections is covered by Rule 26 under special actions.
In this case,
petitioner filed his petition as a special action and paid the corresponding
fee therefor. Thus, the petition was
docketed as SPA-98-383. This conforms to petitioner’s categorization of his
petition as one to declare a failure of elections or annul election
results. In contrast, an election
protest is assigned a docket number starting with “EPC”, meaning election
protest case.
Third,
petitioner did not comply with the requirements for filing an election
protest. He failed to pay the required
filing fee and cash deposits for an election protest. Failure to pay filing fees will not vest the election tribunal
jurisdiction over the case. Such
procedural lapse on the part of a petitioner would clearly warrant the outright
dismissal of his action.
Fourth, an en
banc decision of COMELEC in an ordinary action becomes final and executory
after thirty (30) days from its promulgation, while an en banc decision
in a special action becomes final and executory after five (5) days from
promulgation, unless restrained by the Supreme Court.[8] For that reason, a petition cannot
be treated as both an election protest and a petition to declare failure of
elections.
Fifth, the
allegations in the petition decisively determine its nature. Petitioner alleged that the local elections
for the office of vice-mayor in Parañaque City held on May 11, 1998, denigrates
the true will of the people as it was marred with widespread anomalies on
account of vote buying, flying voters and glaring discrepancies in the election
returns. He averred that those incidents
warrant the declaration of a failure of elections.[9]
Given these
circumstances, public respondent cannot be said to have gravely erred in
treating petitioner’s action as a petition to declare failure of elections or
to annul election results.
The COMELEC’s
authority to declare a failure of elections is provided in our election
laws. Section 4 of RA 7166 provides
that the COMELEC sitting en banc by a majority vote of its members may
decide, among others, the declaration of failure of election and the calling of
special election as provided in Section 6 of the Omnibus Election Code. Said Section 6, in turn, provides as
follows:
Section 6. Failure of Elections.
--- If, on account of force majeure, violence, 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 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 on a date reasonably
close to the date 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.”
There are three
instances where a failure of election may be declared, namely, (a) the election
in any polling place has not been held on the date fixed on account of force
majeure, violence, terrorism, fraud or other analogous causes; (b) the
election in any polling place has been suspended before the hour fixed by law
for the closing of the voting on account of force majeure, violence,
terrorism, fraud or other analogous causes; or (c) after the voting and during
the preparation and transmission of the election returns or in the custody or
canvass thereof, such election results in a failure to elect on account of force
majeure, violence, terrorism, fraud or other analogous causes. In these instances, there is a resulting
failure to elect. This is obvious in
the first two scenarios, where the election was not held and where the election
was suspended. As to the third
scenario, where the preparation and the transmission of the election returns
give rise to the consequence of failure to elect must as aforesaid, is
interpreted to mean that nobody emerged as a winner.[10]
Before the
COMELEC can act on a verified petition seeking to declare a failure of election
two conditions must concur, 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.[11] Note that the cause of such failure
of election could only be any of the following: force majeure, violence, terrorism, fraud or other
analogous causes.
We have
painstakingly examined the petition filed by petitioner Banaga before the
COMELEC. But we found that petitioner
did not allege at all that elections were either not held or suspended. Neither did he aver that although there was
voting, nobody was elected. On the
contrary, he conceded that an election took place for the office of vice-mayor
of Parañaque City, and that private respondent was, in fact, proclaimed elected
to that post. While petitioner contends
that the election was tainted with widespread anomalies, it must be noted that
to warrant a declaration of failure of election the commission of fraud must be
such that it prevented or suspended the holding of an election, or marred
fatally the preparation and transmission, custody and canvass of the election
returns. These essential facts ought to
have been alleged clearly by the petitioner below, but he did not.
In Mitmug vs.
COMELEC,[12] petitioner instituted with the
COMELEC an action to declare failure of election in forty-nine precincts
where less than a quarter of the electorate were able to cast their votes. He also lodged an election protest with the
Regional Trial Court disputing the result of the election in all precincts in
his municipality. The COMELEC denied motu
propio and without due notice and hearing the petition to declare failure
of election despite petitioner’s argument that he has meritorious grounds in
support thereto, that is, massive disenfranchisement of voters due to
terrorism. On review, we ruled that the
COMELEC did not gravely abuse its discretion in denying the petition. It was not proven that no actual voting took
place. Neither was it shown that even
if there was voting, the results thereon would be tantamount to failure to
elect. Considering that there is no
concurrence of the conditions seeking to declare failure of election, there is
no longer need to receive evidence on alleged election irregularities.
In Sardea vs.
COMELEC,[13] all election materials and
paraphernalia with the municipal board of canvassers were destroyed by the
sympathizers of the losing mayoralty candidate. The board then decided to use the copies of election returns
furnished to the municipal trial court.
Petitioner therein filed a petition to stop the proceedings of the board
of canvassers on the ground that it had no authority to use said election
returns obtained from the municipal trial court. The petition was denied.
Next, he filed a petition assailing the composition of the board of
canvassers. Despite that petition, the
board of canvassers proclaimed the winning candidates. Later on, petitioner filed a petition to
declare a failure of election alleging that the attendant facts would
justify declaration of such failure. On
review, we ruled that petitioner’s first two actions involved pre-proclamation
controversies which can no longer be entertained after the winning candidates
have been proclaimed. Regarding the
petition to declare a failure of election, we held that the destruction and
loss of copies of election returns intended for the municipal board of
canvassers on account of violence is not one of the causes that would warrant
the declaration of failure of election.
The reason is that voting actually took place as scheduled and other
valid election returns still existed.
Moreover, the destruction or loss did not affect the result of the
election. We also declared that there
is failure of elections only when the will of the electorate has been muted and
cannot be ascertained. If the will of the
people is determinable, the same must as far as possible be respected.
These aforecited
cases are instructive in the resolution of the present case because they
involve similar actions and issues. No
error could be attributed to public respondent for its reliance on these
precedents.
In Loong vs.
Comelec,[14] the petition for annulment of
election results or to declare failure of elections in Parang, Sulu, on the
ground of statistical improbability and massive fraud was granted by the
COMELEC.[15] Even before the technical
examination of election documents was conducted, the COMELEC already observed
badges of fraud just by looking at the election results in Parang. Nevertheless, the COMELEC dismissed the
petition for annulment of election results or to declare failure of elections
in the municipalities of Tapul, Panglima Estino, Pata, Siasi and Kalinggalang
Calauag. The COMELEC dismissed the
latter action on ground of untimeliness of the petition, despite a finding that
the same badges of fraud evident from the results of the election based on the
certificates of canvass of votes in Parang, are also evident in the election
results of the five mentioned municipalities.
We ruled that COMELEC committed grave abuse of discretion in dismissing
the petition as there is no law which provides for a reglementary period to
file annulment of elections when there is yet no proclamation. The election resulted in a failure to
elect on account of fraud.
Accordingly, we ordered the COMELEC to reinstate the aforesaid petition. Those circumstances, however, are not
present in this case, so that reliance on Loong by petitioner Banaga is
misplaced.
Petitioner
argues that the COMELEC should not have treated his prayer for annulment of
elections as a prayer for declaration of failure of elections.[16] This argument is plainly gratuitous
as well as immaterial. A prayer to
declare failure of elections and a prayer to annul the election results for
vice mayor in this case are actually of the same nature. Whether an action is for declaration of
failure of elections or for annulment of election results, based on allegations
of fraud, terrorism, violence or analogous cause, the Omnibus Election Code
denominates them similarly.[17] No positive gain will accrue to
petitioner’s cause by making a distinction without a difference.
Finally,
petitioner claims that public respondent gravely abused its discretion when it
dismissed his petition motu propio.
However, the fact that a verified petition has been filed does not mean
that a hearing on the case should first be held before COMELEC can act on
it. The petition to declare a failure
of election and/or to annul election results must show on its face that the
conditions necessary to declare a failure to elect are present. In their absence, the petition must be
denied outright.[18] Public respondent had no recourse
but to dismiss petition. Nor may
petitioner now complain of denial of due process, on this score, for his
failure to properly file an election protest.
The COMELEC can only rule on what was filed before it. It committed no grave abuse of discretion in
dismissing his petition “to declare failure of elections and/or for annulment
of elections” for being groundless, hence without merit.
WHEREFORE, the instant petition is
DISMISSED. The assailed RESOLUTION of
public respondent is AFFIRMED. Costs
against petitioner.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr.,
C.J., Melo, Puno, Vitug, Kapunan, Mendoza, Panganiban, Purisima, Buena,
Gonzaga-Reyes, Ynares-Santiago, and De Leon, Jr., JJ., concur.
Bellosillo,
J., on
official leave.
Pardo, J., no part.
[1] The Petition is dated May 28, 1998.
[2] Rollo, pp. 38-49.
[3] Id. at 49-51.
[4] Id. at 29-30.
[5] Section 1 (d), Rule 13, 1993 COMELEC Rules of
Procedure, as amended.
[6] Rollo, p. 10.
[7] Republic Act 7166, Section 4. Postponement,
Failure of Election and Special Elections.--- The postponement, declaration
of failure of election 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 sitting en banc by a majority vote of its members. The cause for the declaration of a failure
of election may occur before or after the casting of votes or on the day of
election. xxx
[8] COMELEC Rules of Procedure, Rule 18, Section 13 (a),
(b).
[9] Rollo, pp. 39-43.
[10] Typoco vs. COMELEC, GR-136191, November
29, 1999, p. 9.
[11] Mitmug vs. COMELEC, 230 SCRA 54, 60 (1994).
[12] Mitmug vs. COMELEC, 230 SCRA 54 (1994).
[13] Sardea vs. COMELEC, 225 SCRA 374
(1993).
[14] 257 SCRA 1 (1996).
[15] Id. at 31-32.
[16] Rollo, p. 20.
[17] Loong vs. COMELEC, 257 SCRA 1, 16, 23 (1996).
[18] Mitmug vs. COMELEC, 230 SCRA 54, 61 (1994).