Republic of the
Supreme Court
EN BANC
ARTURO M. DE CASTRO, Petitioner, - versus - JUDICIAL AND BAR COUNCIL
(JBC) and PRESIDENT GLORIA MACAPAGAL – ARROYO, Respondents. x - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - x JAIME N. SORIANO, Petitioner, - versus - JUDICIAL AND BAR COUNCIL
(JBC), Respondent. x - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - x PHILIPPINE CONSTITUTION
ASSOCIATION (PHILCONSA), Petitioner, - versus - JUDICIAL AND BAR COUNCIL
(JBC),
Respondent. x - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - x IN RE APPLICABILITY OF SECTION
15, ARTICLE VII OF THE CONSTITUTION TO APPOINTMENTS TO THE JUDICIARY, ESTELITO P. MENDOZA, Petitioner, x - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - - - x JOHN G. PERALTA, Petitioner, - versus - JUDICIAL AND BAR COUNCIL
(JBC). Respondent. x - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - -x PETER IRVING CORVERA; CHRISTIAN ROBERT S. LIM; ALFONSO V. TAN, JR.; NATIONAL MARLOU B. UBANO; INTEGRATED BAR OF THE PHILIPPINES-DAVAO DEL SUR
CHAPTER, represented by its Immediate Past President, ATTY. ISRAELITO P.
TORREON, and the latter in his own personal capacity as a MEMBER of the
PHILIPPINE BAR; MITCHELL JOHN L. BOISER; BAGONG ALYANSANG BAYAN (BAYAN) CHAIRMAN DR. CAROLINA
P. ARAULLO; BAYAN SECRETARY GENERAL RENATO M. REYES, JR.; CONFEDERATION FOR
UNITY, RECOGNITION AND ADVANCE-MENT OF GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES (COURAGE)
CHAIRMAN FERDINAND GAITE; KALIPUNAN NG DAMAYANG MAHIHIRAP (KADAMAY) SECRETARY
GENERAL GLORIA ARELLANO; ALYANSA NG NAGKAKAISANG KABATAAN NG SAMBAYANAN PARA
SA KAUNLARAN (ANAKBAYAN) CHAIRMAN KEN LEONARD RAMOS; TAYO ANG PAG-ASA
CONVENOR ALVIN PETERS; LEAGUE OF FILIPINO STUDENTS (LFS) CHAIRMAN JAMES MARK
TERRY LACUANAN RIDON; NATIONAL UNION OF STUDENTS OF THE PHILIPPINES (NUSP)
CHAIRMAN EINSTEIN RECEDES; COLLEGE EDITORS GUILD OF THE PHILIPPINES (CEGP)
CHAIRMAN VIJAE ALQUISOLA; and STUDENT CHRISTIAN MOVEMENT OF THE PHILIPPINES
(SCMP) CHAIRMAN MA. CRISTINA ANGELA GUEVARRA; WALDEN F. BELLO and LORETTA ANN P. ROSALES; WOMEN TRIAL LAWYERS ORGANIZATION OF THE PHILIPPINES,
represented by YOLANDA QUISUMBING- JAVELLANA; BELLEZA ALOJADO DEMAISIP; TERESITA
GANDIONCO-OLEDAN; MA. VERENA KASILAG-VILLANUEVA; MARILYN STA. ROMANA; LEONILA
DE JESUS; and GUINEVERE DE LEON; AQUILINO Q. PIMENTEL, JR.; Intervenors. x - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - -x ATTY.
AMADOR Z. TOLENTINO, JR., (IBP Governor–Southern
(IBP Governor–Eastern
Visayas), Petitioners, - versus - JUDICIAL
AND BAR COUNCIL (JBC), Respondent. x
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - x PHILIPPINE
BAR ASSOCIATION, INC., Petitioner, - versus - JUDICIAL
AND BAR COUNCIL and HER EXCELLENCY GLORIA MACAPAGAL-ARROYO, Respondents. |
G. R. No. 191002 G.R. No. 191032 G.R. No. 191057 A.M. No. 10-2-5-SC G.R. No. 191149 G.R. No. 191342 G.R.
No. 191420 Present: PUNO, C.J., CARPIO, CARPIO MORALES, VELASCO, JR., NACHURA, LEONARDO-DE CASTRO, BRION, PERALTA, BERSAMIN, ABAD, VILLARAMA, JR., PEREZ, and MENDOZA, JJ. Promulgated: April 20, 2010 |
x-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------x
R E S O L U T I O N
BERSAMIN, J.:
On
March 17, 2010, the Court promulgated its decision, holding:
WHEREFORE, the Court:
1. Dismisses the petitions for certiorari and mandamus in G.R. No. 191002 and G.R. No. 191149, and the petition
for mandamus in G.R. No. 191057 for being premature;
2. Dismisses the petitions for prohibition in
G.R. No. 191032 and G.R. No. 191342 for lack of merit; and
3.
Grants
the petition in A.M. No. 10-2-5-SC and,
accordingly, directs the Judicial and Bar Council:
(a) To resume its proceedings
for the nomination of candidates to fill the vacancy to be created by the
compulsory retirement of Chief Justice Reynato S. Puno by May 17, 2010;
(b) To prepare the short list
of nominees for the position of Chief Justice;
(c) To submit to the incumbent
President the short list of nominees for the position of Chief Justice on or
before May 17, 2010; and
(d) To continue its proceedings
for the nomination of candidates
to fill other vacancies in the Judiciary and submit to the President the short
list of nominees corresponding thereto in accordance with this decision.
SO ORDERED.
Motions for
Reconsideration
Petitioners
Jaime N. Soriano (G.R. No. 191032), Amador Z. Tolentino and Roland B. Inting
(G.R. No. 191342), and Philippine Bar Association (G.R. No. 191420), as well as
intervenors Integrated Bar of the Philippines-Davao del Sur (IBP-Davao del Sur,
et al.); Christian Robert S. Lim;
Peter Irving Corvera; Bagong Alyansang Bayan and others (BAYAN, et al.);
Alfonso V. Tan, Jr.; the Women Trial Lawyers Organization of the Philippines
(WTLOP); Marlou B. Ubano; Mitchell John L. Boiser; and Walden F. Bello and
Loretta Ann P. Rosales (Bello, et al.),
filed their respective motions for reconsideration. Also filing a motion for
reconsideration was Senator Aquilino Q. Pimentel, Jr., whose belated
intervention was allowed.
We summarize the arguments and submissions
of the various motions for reconsideration, in the aforegiven order:
Soriano
1.
The Court has not
squarely ruled upon or addressed the issue of whether or not the power to
designate the Chief Justice belonged to the Supreme Court en banc.
2.
The
3.
All Justices of
the Court should participate in the next deliberations. The mere fact that the
Chief Justice sits as ex officio head
of the JBC should not prevail over the more compelling state interest for him
to participate as a Member of the Court.
Tolentino and Inting
1.
A plain reading of Section 15, Article VII does not lead to an
interpretation that exempts judicial appointments from the express ban on
midnight appointments.
2.
In excluding the
Judiciary from the ban, the Court has made distinctions and has created
exemptions when none exists.
3.
The ban on midnight
appointments is placed in Article VII, not in Article VIII, because it limits
an executive, not a judicial, power.
4. Resort to the deliberations
of the Constitutional Commission is superfluous, and is powerless to vary the
terms of the clear prohibition.
5. The Court has given too much credit to the position
taken by Justice Regalado. Thereby, the Court has raised the Constitution to
the level of a venerated text whose intent can only be divined by its framers
as to be outside the realm of understanding by the sovereign people that
ratified it.
6. Valenzuela should not be reversed.
7. The petitioners, as
taxpayers and lawyers, have the clear legal standing to question the illegal
composition of the JBC.
Philippine Bar Association
1.
The Court’s
strained interpretation of the Constitution violates the basic principle that
the Court should not formulate a rule of constitutional law broader than what
is required by the precise facts of the case.
2.
Considering that
Section 15, Article VII is clear and straightforward, the only duty of the
Court is to apply it. The provision expressly and clearly provides a general
limitation on the appointing power of the President in prohibiting the
appointment of any person to any position in the Government without any qualification
and distinction.
3.
The Court gravely
erred in unilaterally ignoring the constitutional safeguard against midnight
appointments.
4.
The Constitution
has installed two constitutional safeguards:- the prohibition against midnight appointments,
and the creation of the JBC. It is not within the authority of the Court to
prefer one over the other, for the Court’s duty is to apply the safeguards as
they are, not as the Court likes them to be.
5.
The Court has
erred in failing to apply the basic principles of statutory construction in
interpreting the Constitution.
6.
The Court has
erred in relying heavily on the title, chapter or section headings, despite
precedents on statutory construction holding that such headings carried very
little weight.
7.
The Constitution
has provided a general rule on midnight appointments, and the only exception is
that on temporary appointments to executive positions.
8.
The Court has
erred in directing the JBC to resume the proceedings for the nomination of the
candidates to fill the vacancy to be created by the compulsory retirement of
Chief Justice Puno with a view to submitting the list of nominees for Chief
Justice to President Arroyo on or before May 17, 2010. The Constitution grants
the Court only the power of supervision over the JBC; hence, the Court cannot
tell the JBC what to do, how to do it, or when to do it, especially in the
absence of a real and justiciable case assailing any specific action or
inaction of the JBC.
9.
The Court has
engaged in rendering an advisory opinion and has indulged in speculations.
10.
The constitutional ban on appointments being
already in effect, the Court’s directing the JBC to comply with the decision
constitutes a culpable violation of the Constitution and the commission of an election
offense.
11.
The Court cannot
reverse on the basis of a secondary authority a doctrine unanimously formulated
by the Court en banc.
12.
The practice has
been for the most senior Justice to act as Chief Justice whenever the incumbent
is indisposed. Thus, the appointment of the successor Chief Justice is not
urgently necessary.
13.
The principal
purpose for the ban on midnight appointments is to arrest any attempt to
prolong the outgoing President’s powers by means of proxies. The attempt of the
incumbent President to appoint the next Chief Justice is undeniably intended to
perpetuate her power beyond her term of office.
IBP-Davao del Sur, et al.
1.
Its language
being unambiguous, Section 15, Article VII of the Constitution applies to
appointments to the Judiciary. Hence, no cogent reason exists to warrant the
reversal of the Valenzuela
pronouncement.
2.
Section 16,
Article VII of the Constitution provides for presidential appointments to the
Constitutional Commissions and the JBC with the consent of the Commission on
Appointments. Its phrase “other officers whose appointments are vested in him
in this Constitution” is enough proof that the limitation on the appointing
power of the President extends to appointments to the Judiciary. Thus, Section
14, Section 15, and Section 16 of Article VII apply to all presidential
appointments in the Executive and Judicial Branches of the Government.
3.
There is no
evidence that the framers of the Constitution abhorred the idea of an Acting Chief Justice in all cases.
Lim
1.
There is no
justiciable controversy that warrants the Court’s exercise of judicial review.
2.
The election ban
under Section 15, Article VII applies to appointments to fill a vacancy in the
Court and to other appointments to the Judiciary.
3.
The creation of
the JBC does not justify the removal of the safeguard under Section 15 of
Article VII against midnight appointments in the Judiciary.
Corvera
1.
The Court’s
exclusion of appointments to the Judiciary from the Constitutional ban on
midnight appointments is based on an interpretation beyond the plain and
unequivocal language of the Constitution.
2.
The intent of the
ban on midnight appointments is to cover appointments in both the Executive and
Judicial Departments. The application of the principle of verba legis (ordinary meaning) would have obviated dwelling on the
organization and arrangement of the provisions of the Constitution. If there is
any ambiguity in Section 15, Article VII, the intent behind the provision,
which is to prevent political partisanship in all branches of the Government,
should have controlled.
3.
A plain reading
is preferred to a contorted and strained interpretation based on
compartmentalization and physical arrangement, especially considering that the
Constitution must be interpreted as a whole.
4.
Resort to the
deliberations or to the personal interpretation of the framers of the
Constitution should yield to the plain and unequivocal language of the
Constitution.
5.
There is no
sufficient reason for reversing Valenzuela,
a ruling that is reasonable and in accord with the Constitution.
BAYAN, et al.
1.
The Court erred
in granting the petition in A.M. No. 10-2-5-SC, because the petition did not
present a justiciable controversy. The issues it raised were not yet ripe for adjudication,
considering that the office of the Chief Justice was not yet vacant and that
the JBC itself has yet to decide whether or not to submit a list of nominees to
the President.
2.
The collective
wisdom of
3.
In ruling that
Section 15, Article VII is in conflict with Section 4(1), Article VIII, the
Court has violated the principle of ut
magis valeat quam pereat (which mandates that the Constitution should be
interpreted as a whole, such that any conflicting provisions are to be
harmonized as to fully give effect to all). There is no conflict between the
provisions; they complement each other.
4.
The form and
structure of the Constitution’s titles, chapters, sections, and draftsmanship
carry little weight in statutory construction. The clear and plain language of
Section 15, Article VII precludes interpretation.
Tan, Jr.
1.
The factual
antecedents do not present an actual case or controversy. The clash of legal
rights and interests in the present case are merely anticipated. Even if it is
anticipated with certainty, no actual vacancy in the position of the Chief
Justice has yet occurred.
2.
The ruling that
Section 15, Article VII does not apply to a vacancy in the Court and the
Judiciary runs in conflict with long standing principles and doctrines of
statutory construction. The provision admits only one exception, temporary appointments in the Executive
Department. Thus, the Court should not distinguish, because the law itself
makes no distinction.
3.
Valenzuela
was erroneously reversed. The framers of the Constitution clearly intended the
ban on midnight appointments to cover the members of the Judiciary. Hence,
giving more weight to the opinion of Justice Regalado to reverse the en banc
decision in Valenzuela was
unwarranted.
4.
Section 15,
Article VII is not incompatible with Section 4(1), Article VIII. The 90-day
mandate to fill any vacancy lasts until August 15, 2010, or a month and a half
after the end of the ban. The next President has roughly the same time of 45
days as the incumbent President (i.e.,
44 days) within which to scrutinize and study the qualifications of the next
Chief Justice. Thus, the JBC has more than enough opportunity to examine the
nominees without haste and political uncertainty.
5.
When the
constitutional ban is in place, the 90-day period under Section 4(1), Article
VIII is suspended.
6.
There is no basis
to direct the JBC to submit the list of nominees on or before May 17, 2010. The
directive to the JBC sanctions a culpable violation of the Constitution and
constitutes an election offense.
7.
There is no
pressing necessity for the appointment of a Chief Justice, because the Court
sits en banc, even when it acts as
the sole judge of all contests relative to the election, returns and
qualifications of the President and Vice-President. Fourteen other Members of
the Court can validly comprise the Presidential Electoral Tribunal.
WTLOP
1.
The Court
exceeded its jurisdiction in ordering the JBC to submit the list of nominees
for Chief Justice to the President on or before May 17, 2010, and to continue
its proceedings for the nomination of the candidates, because it granted a
relief not prayed for; imposed on the JBC a deadline not provided by law or the
Constitution; exercised control instead of mere supervision over the JBC; and
lacked sufficient votes to reverse Valenzuela.
2.
In interpreting
Section 15, Article VII, the Court has ignored the basic principle of statutory
construction to the effect that the
literal meaning of the law must be applied when it is clear and unambiguous;
and that we should not distinguish where the law does not distinguish.
3.
There is no
urgency to appoint the next Chief Justice, considering that the Judiciary Act of
1948 already provides that the power and duties of the office devolve on the
most senior Associate Justice in case of a vacancy in the office of the Chief
Justice.
Ubano
1.
The language of
Section 15, Article VII, being clear and unequivocal, needs no interpretation
2.
The Constitution
must be construed in its entirety, not by resort to the organization and
arrangement of its provisions.
3.
The opinion of
Justice Regalado is irrelevant, because Section 15, Article VII and the
pertinent records of the Constitutional Commission are clear and unambiguous.
4.
The Court has
erred in ordering the JBC to submit the list of nominees to the President by
May 17, 2010 at the latest, because
no specific law requires the JBC to submit the list of nominees even before the
vacancy has occurred.
Boiser
1.
Under Section 15,
Article VII, the only exemption from the ban on midnight appointments is the
temporary appointment to an executive position. The limitation is in keeping
with the clear intent of the framers of the Constitution to place a restriction
on the power of the outgoing Chief Executive to make appointments.
2.
To exempt the
appointment of the next Chief Justice from the ban on midnight appointments
makes the appointee beholden to the outgoing Chief Executive, and compromises
the independence of the Chief Justice by having the outgoing President be
continually influential.
3.
The Court’s
reversal of Valenzuela without
stating the sufficient reason violates the principle of stare decisis.
1.
Section 15,
Article VII does not distinguish as to the type of appointments an outgoing
President is prohibited from making within the prescribed period. Plain textual
reading and the records of the Constitutional Commission support the view that
the ban on midnight appointments extends to judicial appointments.
2.
Supervision
of the JBC by the Court involves oversight. The subordinate subject to
oversight must first act not in accord with prescribed rules before the act can
be redone to conform to the prescribed rules.
3.
The Court erred
in granting the petition in A.M. No. 10-2-5-SC, because the petition did not
present a justiciable controversy.
Pimentel
1.
Any constitutional
interpretative changes must be reasonable, rational, and conformable to the
general intent of the Constitution as a limitation to the powers of Government
and as a bastion for the protection of the rights of the people. Thus, in
harmonizing seemingly conflicting provisions of the Constitution, the
interpretation should always be one that protects the citizenry from an ever
expanding grant of authority to its representatives.
2.
The decision
expands the constitutional powers of the President in a manner totally
repugnant to republican constitutional democracy, and is tantamount to a
judicial amendment of the Constitution without proper authority.
Comments
The Office of the Solicitor General
(OSG) and the JBC separately represent in their respective comments, thus:
OSG
1.
The JBC may be
compelled to submit to the President a short list of its nominees for the
position of Chief Justice.
2.
The incumbent
President has the power to appoint the next Chief Justice.
3.
Section 15,
Article VII does not apply to the Judiciary.
4.
The principles of
constitutional construction favor the exemption of the Judiciary from the ban
on midnight appointments.
5.
The Court has
the duty to consider and resolve all issues raised by the parties as well as
other related matters.
JBC
1.
The consolidated
petitions should have been dismissed for
prematurity, because the JBC has not yet decided at the time the petitions were
filed whether the incumbent President has the power to appoint the new Chief
Justice, and because the JBC, having yet to interview the candidates, has not
submitted a short list to the President.
2.
The statement in
the decision that there is a doubt on whether a JBC short list is necessary for
the President to appoint a Chief Justice should be struck down as bereft of
constitutional and legal basis. The statement undermines the independence of
the JBC.
3.
The JBC will
abide by the final decision of the Court, but in accord with its constitutional
mandate and its implementing rules and regulations.
For his part, petitioner Estelito P.
Mendoza (A.M. No. 10-2-5-SC) submits his comment even if the OSG and the JBC
were the only ones the Court has required to do so. He states that the motions
for reconsideration were directed at the administrative matter he initiated and
which the Court resolved. His comment asserts:
1.
The grounds of
the motions for reconsideration were already resolved by the decision and the
separate opinion.
2.
The
administrative matter he brought invoked the Court’s power of supervision over
the JBC as provided by Section 8(1), Article VIII of the Constitution, as
distinguished from the Court’s adjudicatory power under Section 1, Article
VIII. In the former, the requisites for judicial review are not required, which
was why Valenzuela was docketed as an administrative matter. Considering
that the JBC itself has yet to take a position on when to submit the short list
to the proper appointing authority, it has effectively solicited the exercise
by the Court of its power of supervision over the JBC.
3.
To apply Section
15, Article VII to Section 4(1) and Section 9, Article VIII is to amend the
Constitution.
4.
The portions of the deliberations of the
Constitutional Commission quoted in the dissent of Justice Carpio Morales, as
well as in some of the motions for reconsideration do not refer to either
Section 15, Article VII or Section 4(1), Article VIII, but to Section 13, Article
VII (on nepotism).
Ruling
We
deny the motions for reconsideration for lack of merit, for all the matters
being thereby raised and argued, not being new, have all been resolved by the
decision of March 17, 2010.
Nonetheless, the Court opts to dwell
on some matters only for the purpose of clarification and emphasis.
First: Most of the movants contend that
the principle of stare decisis is
controlling, and accordingly insist that the Court has erred in disobeying or
abandoning Valenzuela.[1]
The
contention has no basis.
Stare
decisis derives its name from the Latin maxim stare decisis et non quieta movere, i.e., to adhere to precedent and not to unsettle things that are
settled. It simply means that a principle underlying the decision in one case
is deemed of imperative authority, controlling the decisions of like cases in
the same court and in lower courts within the same jurisdiction, unless and
until the decision in question is reversed or overruled by a court of competent
authority. The decisions relied upon as precedents are commonly those of
appellate courts, because the decisions of the trial courts may be appealed to
higher courts and for that reason are probably not the best evidence of the
rules of law laid down. [2]
Judicial
decisions assume the same authority as a statute itself and, until
authoritatively abandoned, necessarily become, to the extent that they are
applicable, the criteria that must control the actuations, not only of those
called upon to abide by them, but also of those duty-bound to enforce obedience
to them.[3] In
a hierarchical judicial system like ours, the decisions of the higher courts
bind the lower courts, but the courts of co-ordinate authority do not bind each
other. The one highest court does not bind itself, being invested with the
innate authority to rule according to its best lights.[4]
The Court, as the highest court of
the land, may be guided but is not controlled by precedent.
Thus, the Court, especially with a new membership, is not obliged to follow
blindly a particular decision that it determines, after re-examination, to call
for a rectification.[5] The adherence to precedents is strict
and rigid in a common-law setting like the
For the
intervenors to insist that Valenzuela
ought not to be disobeyed, or abandoned, or reversed, and that its wisdom
should guide, if not control, the Court in this case is, therefore, devoid of
rationality and foundation. They seem to conveniently forget that the
Constitution itself recognizes the innate authority of the Court en banc to modify or reverse a doctrine
or principle of law laid down in any decision rendered en banc or in division.[7]
Second: Some intervenors are grossly misleading the public by their
insistence that the Constitutional Commission extended to the Judiciary the ban
on presidential appointments during the period stated in Section 15, Article
VII.
The
deliberations that the dissent of Justice Carpio Morales quoted from the
records of the Constitutional Commission did not concern either Section 15,
Article VII or Section 4(1), Article VIII, but only Section 13, Article VII, a
provision on nepotism. The records of
the Constitutional Commission show that Commissioner
Hilario G. Davide, Jr. had proposed to include judges and justices related to
the President within the fourth civil degree of consanguinity or affinity among
the persons whom the President might not appoint during his or her tenure. In
the end, however, Commissioner Davide, Jr. withdrew the proposal to include the
Judiciary in Section 13, Article VII “(t)o avoid any further complication,”[8]
such that the final version of the second paragraph of Section 13, Article VII
even completely omits any reference to the Judiciary, to wit:
Section 13. xxx
The
spouse and relatives by consanguinity or affinity within the fourth civil
degree of the President shall not during his tenure be appointed as Members of
the Constitutional Commissions, or the Office of the Ombudsman, or as
Secretaries, Undersecretaries, chairmen or heads of bureaus or offices,
including government-owned or controlled corporations and their subsidiaries.
Last: The movants take the majority to task for
holding that Section 15, Article VII does not apply to appointments in the
Judiciary. They aver that the Court either ignored or refused to apply many
principles of statutory construction.
The
movants gravely err in their posture, and are themselves apparently
contravening their avowed reliance on the principles of statutory construction.
For one, the movants, disregarding
the absence from Section 15, Article VII of the express extension of the ban on
appointments to the Judiciary, insist that the ban applied to the Judiciary
under the principle of verba legis.
That is self-contradiction at its worst.
Another instance is the movants’
unhesitating willingness to read into Section 4(1) and Section 9, both of
Article VIII, the express applicability of the ban under Section 15, Article
VII during the period provided therein, despite the silence of said provisions
thereon. Yet, construction cannot supply the omission, for doing so would
generally constitute an encroachment upon the field of the Constitutional
Commission. Rather, Section 4(1) and Section 9 should be left as they are,
given that their meaning is clear and explicit, and no words can be
interpolated in them.[9]
Interpolation of words is unnecessary, because the law is more than likely to
fail to express the legislative intent with the interpolation. In other words,
the addition of new words may alter the thought intended to be conveyed. And,
even where the meaning of the law is clear and sensible, either with or without
the omitted word or words, interpolation is improper, because the primary
source of the legislative intent is in the language of the law itself.[10]
Thus, the decision of March 17, 2010
has fittingly observed:
Had the framers intended to extend the
prohibition contained in Section 15, Article VII to the appointment of Members
of the Supreme Court, they could have explicitly done so. They could not have
ignored the meticulous ordering of the provisions. They would have easily and surely written the prohibition made
explicit in Section 15, Article VII as being equally applicable to the
appointment of Members of the Supreme Court in Article VIII itself, most likely
in Section 4 (1), Article VIII. That such specification was not done only
reveals that the prohibition against the President or Acting President making
appointments within two months before the next presidential elections and up to
the end of the President’s or Acting President’s term does not refer to the
Members of the Supreme Court.
We cannot permit the meaning of the
Constitution to be stretched to any unintended point in order to suit the
purposes of any quarter.
Final Word
It has been insinuated as part of the
polemics attendant to the controversy we are resolving that because all the
Members of the present Court were appointed by the incumbent President, a
majority of them are now granting to her the authority to appoint the successor
of the retiring Chief Justice.
The insinuation is misguided and
utterly unfair.
The Members of the Court vote on the
sole basis of their conscience and the merits of the issues. Any claim to the contrary
proceeds from malice and condescension. Neither the outgoing President nor the
present Members of the Court had arranged the current situation to happen and
to evolve as it has. None of the Members of the Court could have prevented the
Members composing the Court when she assumed the Presidency about a decade ago
from retiring during her prolonged term and tenure, for their retirements were
mandatory. Yet, she is now left with an imperative duty under the Constitution
to fill up the vacancies created by such inexorable retirements within 90 days
from their occurrence. Her official duty she must comply with. So must we ours
who are tasked by the Constitution to settle the controversy.
ACCORDINGLY, the motions for
reconsideration are denied with finality.
SO ORDERED.
LUCAS P. BERSAMIN
Associate Justice
WE CONCUR:
REYNATO S. PUNO
Chief Justice
ANTONIO
T. CARPIO RENATO
C. CORONA
Associate Justice Associate Justice
CONCHITA CARPIO MORALES PRESBITERO J. VELASCO, JR.
Associate Justice
Associate Justice
ANTONIO EDUARDO B. NACHURA TERESITA J. LEONARDO-DE CASTRO
Associate Justice Associate Justice
ARTURO D. BRION DIOSDADO M. PERALTA
Associate Justice Associate
Justice
MARIANO C.
Associate Justice
Associate Justice
MARTIN
S. VILLARAMA, JR. JOSE
Associate
Justice
Associate Justice
JOSE CATRAL
Associate Justice
Pursuant to Section 13, Article VIII of the
Constitution, it is hereby certified that the conclusions in the above
Resolution had been reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the
writer of the opinion of the Court.
REYNATO
S. PUNO
Chief Justice
[1] In Re Appointments
Dated March 30, 1998 of Hon. Mateo A. Valenzuela and Hon. Placido B. Vallarta as
Judges of the Regional Trial Court of Branch 62, Bago City and of Branch 24,
Cabanatuan City, respectively, A.M. No. 98-5-01-SC, November 9, 1998,
298 SCRA 408.
[2] Price
& Bitner, Effective Legal Research,
Little, Brown & Co.,
[3] Caltex (Phil.), Inc. v. Palomar, No.
L-19650, September 29, 1966, 18 SCRA 247
[4] E.g., Dias, Jurisprudence, Butterworths,
[5] Limketkai Sons Milling,
Inc. v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 118509, September 5, 1996, 261 SCRA 464.
[6] See Calabresi, A Common
Law for the Age of Statutes, Harvard University Press, p. 4 (1982) and
endnote 12 of the page, which essentially recounts that the strict application
of the doctrine of stare decisis is
true only in a common-law jurisdiction like England (citing Wise, The Doctrine of Stare Decisis, 21 Wayne
Law Review, 1043, 1046-1047 (1975). Calabresi recalls that the English House of
Lords decided in 1898 (London Tramways
Co. v. London County Council, A.C. 375) that they could not alter precedents
laid down by the House of Lords acting as the supreme court in previous cases,
but that such precedents could only be altered by an Act of Parliament, for to
do otherwise would mean that the courts would usurp legislative function; he
mentions that in 1966, Lord Chancellor Gardiner announced in a Practice Statement a kind of general
memorandum from the court that while: “Their Lordships regard the use of
precedent as an indispensable foundation upon which to decide what is the law,”
they “nevertheless recognize that too rigid adherence to precedent may lead to
injustice in a particular case and also unduly restrict the proper development
of the law. They propose, therefore, to modify their present practice and,
while treating former decisions of this House as normally binding, to depart
from a previous decision when it appears right to do so.” (Calabresi cites
Leach, Revisionism in the House of Lords:
The Bastion of Rigid Stare Decisis Falls, 80 Harvard Law Review, 797
(1967).
[7] Section 4 (2), Article VIII, provides:
xxx
(3)
Cases or matters heard by a division shall be decided or resolved with the
concurrence of a majority of the Members who actually took part in the
deliberations on the issues in the case and voted thereon, and in no case,
without the concurrence of at least three of such Members. When the required
number is not obtained, the case shall be decided en banc; Provided, that no doctrine or principle of law laid down by the court
in a decision rendered en banc or in
division may be modified or reversed except by the court sitting en banc.
[8] Record of the 1986 Constitutional Commission, Vol. 2, July 31,
1986, RCC No. 44. pp. 542-543.
[9]
Smith
v. State, 66
[10]
State
ex rel Everding v. Simon, 20