DARYL GRACE
J. ABAYON, G.R. No. 189466
Petitioner,
Present:
Puno, C.J.,
Carpio,
Carpio
Morales,
Velasco, Jr.,
Nachura,
-
versus - Leonardo-De Castro,
Brion,
Peralta,
Bersamin,
Del Castillo,
Abad,
Villarama, Jr.,
Perez, and
Mendoza, JJ.
THE HONORABLE HOUSE OF
REPRESENTATIVES ELECTORAL
TRIBUNAL, PERFECTO C. LUCABAN,
JR., RONYL S. DE LA CRUZ
and AGUSTIN C. DOROGA,
Respondents.
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CONGRESSMAN JOVITO
S. G.R. No.
189506
PALPARAN,
JR.,
Petitioner,
- versus -
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
ELECTORAL TRIBUNAL (HRET),
DR. REYNALDO LESACA, JR.,
CRISTINA PALABAY, RENATO M.
REYES, JR., ERLINDA CADAPAN,
ANTONIO FLORES and Promulgated:
JOSELITO USTAREZ,
Respondents. February 11, 2010
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x
ABAD, J.:
These
two cases are about the authority of
the House of Representatives Electoral Tribunal (HRET) to pass upon the
eligibilities of the nominees of the party-list groups that won seats in the lower
house of Congress.
The Facts and the
Case
In G.R. 189466, petitioner
Daryl Grace J. Abayon is the first nominee of the Aangat Tayo party-list organization that won a seat in the House of
Representatives during the 2007 elections.
Respondents Perfecto C.
Lucaban, Jr., Ronyl S. Dela Cruz, and Agustin C. Doroga, all registered voters,
filed a petition for quo warranto with respondent HRET against Aangat Tayo and its nominee, petitioner
Abayon, in HRET Case 07-041. They
claimed that Aangat Tayo was not eligible
for a party-list seat in the House of Representatives, since it did not
represent the marginalized and underrepresented sectors.
Respondent Lucaban and the
others with him further pointed out that petitioner Abayon herself was not
qualified to sit in the House as a party-list nominee since she did not belong
to the marginalized and underrepresented sectors, she being the wife of an
incumbent congressional district representative. She moreover lost her bid as party-list
representative of the party-list organization called An Waray in the immediately preceding elections of May 10, 2004.
Petitioner Abayon
countered that the Commission on Elections (COMELEC) had already confirmed the
status of Aangat Tayo as a national
multi-sectoral party-list organization representing the workers, women, youth,
urban poor, and elderly and that she belonged to the women sector. Abayon also claimed that although she was the
second nominee of An Waray party-list
organization during the 2004 elections, she could not be regarded as having lost
a bid for an elective office.
Finally, petitioner Abayon pointed
out that respondent HRET had no jurisdiction over the petition for quo warranto since respondent Lucaban
and the others with him collaterally attacked the registration of Aangat Tayo as a party-list organization,
a matter that fell within the jurisdiction of the COMELEC. It was Aangat
Tayo that was taking a seat in the House of Representatives, and not Abayon
who was just its nominee. All questions
involving her eligibility as first nominee, said Abayon, were internal concerns
of Aangat Tayo.
On July 16,
2009 respondent HRET issued an order, dismissing the petition as against Aangat Tayo but upholding its
jurisdiction over the qualifications of petitioner Abayon.[1]
The latter moved for reconsideration but
the HRET denied the same on September 17, 2009,[2]
prompting Abayon to file the present petition for special civil action of certiorari.
In G.R. 189506, petitioner Jovito S. Palparan, Jr. is the first nominee
of the Bantay party-list group that
won a seat in the 2007 elections for the members of the House of
Representatives. Respondents Reynaldo
Lesaca, Jr., Cristina Palabay, Renato M. Reyes, Jr., Erlinda Cadapan, Antonio
Flores, and Joselito Ustarez are members of some other party-list groups.
Shortly after
the elections, respondent Lesaca and the others with him filed with respondent HRET
a petition for quo warranto against Bantay and its nominee, petitioner Palparan, in HRET Case 07-040. Lesaca and the others alleged that Palparan
was ineligible to sit in the House of Representatives as party-list nominee
because he did not belong to the marginalized and underrepresented sectors that
Bantay represented, namely, the victims
of communist rebels, Civilian Armed Forces Geographical Units (CAFGUs), former
rebels, and security guards. Lesaca and
the others said that Palparan committed gross human rights violations against
marginalized and underrepresented sectors and organizations.
Petitioner Palparan
countered that the HRET had no jurisdiction over his person since it was
actually the party-list Bantay, not he,
that was elected to and assumed membership in the House of Representatives. Palparan claimed that he was just Bantay’s nominee. Consequently, any question involving his
eligibility as first nominee was an internal concern of Bantay. Such question must
be brought, he said, before that party-list group, not before the HRET.
On July 23, 2009 respondent HRET
issued an order dismissing the petition against Bantay for the reason that the issue of the ineligibility or
qualification of the party-list group fell within the jurisdiction of the COMELEC
pursuant to the Party-List System Act.
HRET, however, defended its jurisdiction over the question of petitioner
Palparan’s qualifications.[3]
Palparan moved for reconsideration but
the HRET denied it by a resolution dated September 10, 2009,[4]
hence, the recourse to this Court through this petition for special civil
action of certiorari and prohibition.
Since the two cases raise a common
issue, the Court has caused their consolidation.
The Issue Presented
The common
issue presented in these two cases is:
Whether
or not respondent HRET has jurisdiction over the question of qualifications of petitioners
Abayon and Palparan as nominees of Aangat Tayo and Bantay party-list organizations, respectively, who took the seats at the House of
Representatives that such organizations
won in the 2007 elections.
The Court’s Ruling
Petitioners
Abayon and Palparan have a common theory: Republic Act (R.A.) 7941, the
Party-List System Act, vests in the COMELEC the authority to determine which parties
or organizations have the qualifications to seek party-list seats in the House
of Representatives during the elections.
Indeed, the HRET dismissed the petitions for quo warranto filed with it insofar as they sought the
disqualifications of Aangat Tayo and Bantay. Since petitioners
Abayon and Palparan were not elected into office but were chosen by their
respective organizations under their internal rules, the HRET has no
jurisdiction to inquire into and adjudicate their qualifications as
nominees.
If at
all, says petitioner Abayon, such authority belongs to the COMELEC which
already upheld her qualification as nominee of Aangat Tayo for the women sector.
For Palparan, Bantay’s personality is so inseparable and intertwined
with his own person as its nominee so that the HRET cannot dismiss the quo
warranto action against Bantay without dismissing the action against him.
But,
although it is the party-list organization that is voted for in the elections,
it is not the organization that sits as and becomes a member of the House of
Representatives. Section 5, Article VI
of the Constitution,[5]
identifies who the “members” of that House are:
Sec.
5. (1).
The House of Representatives shall be composed of not more than two
hundred and fifty members, unless otherwise fixed by law, who shall
be elected from legislative districts apportioned among the provinces,
cities, and the Metropolitan Manila area in accordance with the number of their
respective inhabitants, and on the basis of a uniform and progressive ratio, and
those who, as provided by law, shall be elected through a party‑list
system of registered national, regional, and sectoral parties or organizations.
(Underscoring supplied)
Clearly,
the members of the House of Representatives are of two kinds: “members x x x who
shall be elected from legislative districts” and “those who x x x shall be
elected through a party-list system of registered national, regional, and
sectoral parties or organizations.” This
means that, from the Constitution’s point of view, it is the party-list
representatives who are “elected” into office, not their parties or organizations. These representatives are elected, however, through
that peculiar party-list system that the Constitution authorized and that Congress
by law established where the voters cast their votes for the organizations or
parties to which such party-list representatives belong.
Once elected, both the district
representatives and the party-list representatives are treated in like manner. They have the same deliberative rights, salaries, and emoluments. They can participate in the making of
laws that will directly benefit their legislative districts or sectors. They are also subject to the same term
limitation of three years for a maximum
of three consecutive terms.
It may not be amiss to point
out that the Party-List System Act itself recognizes party-list nominees as “members
of the House of Representatives,” thus:
Sec. 2.
Declaration of Policy. - The State shall promote proportional representation in
the election of representatives to the House of Representatives through a
party-list system of registered national, regional and sectoral parties or
organizations or coalitions thereof, which
will enable Filipino citizens belonging to the marginalized and
underrepresented sectors, organizations and parties, and who lack
well-defined political constituencies but who could contribute to the
formulation and enactment of appropriate legislation that will benefit the
nation as a whole, to become members of the House of Representatives. Towards this end, the State shall develop and
guarantee a full, free and open party system in order to attain the broadest
possible representation of party, sectoral or group interests in the House of
Representatives by enhancing their chances to compete for and win seats in the
legislature, and shall provide the simplest scheme possible. (Underscoring supplied)
As
this Court also held in Bantay Republic Act or BA-RA 7941 v. Commission on Elections,[6]
a party-list representative is in every sense “an elected member of the House
of Representatives.” Although the vote
cast in a party-list election is a vote for a party, such vote, in the end,
would be a vote for its nominees, who, in appropriate cases, would eventually
sit in the House of Representatives.
Both
the Constitution and the Party-List System Act set the qualifications and grounds
for disqualification of party-list nominees.
Section 9 of R.A. 7941, echoing the Constitution, states:
Sec. 9. Qualification
of Party-List Nominees. – No person shall be nominated as party-list
representative unless he is a natural-born citizen of the Philippines, a
registered voter, a resident of the Philippines for a period of not less than
one (1) year immediately preceding the day of the election, able to read and
write, bona fide member of the party or organization which he seeks to
represent for at least ninety (90) days preceding the day of the election, and
is at least twenty-five (25) years of age on the day of the election.
In case of a nominee of the youth sector, he must at least
be twenty-five (25) but not more than thirty (30) years of age on the day of
the election. Any youth sectoral
representative who attains the age of thirty (30) during his term shall be
allowed to continue until the expiration of his term.
In
the cases before the Court, those who challenged the qualifications of
petitioners Abayon and Palparan claim that the two do not belong to the
marginalized and underrepresented sectors that they ought to represent. The Party-List System Act provides that a
nominee must be a “bona fide member
of the party or organization which he seeks to represent.”[7]
It is
for the HRET to interpret the meaning of this particular qualification of a
nominee—the need for him or her to be a bona
fide member or a representative of his party-list organization—in the
context of the facts that characterize petitioners Abayon and Palparan’s relation
to Aangat Tayo and Bantay, respectively, and the
marginalized and underrepresented interests that they presumably embody.
Petitioners
Abayon and Palparan of course point out that the authority to determine the
qualifications of a party-list nominee belongs to the party or organization
that nominated him. This is true, initially. The right to examine the fitness of aspiring nominees
and, eventually, to choose five from among them after all belongs to the party
or organization that nominates them.[8] But where an allegation is made that the
party or organization had chosen and allowed a disqualified nominee to become
its party-list representative in the lower House and enjoy the secured tenure
that goes with the position, the resolution of the dispute is taken out of its
hand.
Parenthetically,
although the Party-List System Act does not so state, the COMELEC seems to
believe, when it resolved the challenge to petitioner Abayon, that it has the
power to do so as an incident of its authority to approve the registration of
party-list organizations. But the Court
need not resolve this question since it is not raised here and has not been
argued by the parties.
What
is inevitable is that Section 17, Article VI of the Constitution[9]
provides that the HRET shall be the sole judge of all contests relating to,
among other things, the qualifications of the members of the House of
Representatives. Since, as pointed out
above, party-list nominees are “elected members” of the House of
Representatives no less than the district representatives are, the HRET has
jurisdiction to hear and pass upon their qualifications. By analogy with the cases of district representatives,
once the party or organization of the party-list nominee has been proclaimed
and the nominee has taken his oath and assumed office as member of the House of
Representatives, the COMELEC’s jurisdiction over election contests relating to
his qualifications ends and the HRET’s own jurisdiction begins.[10]
The Court holds that respondent
HRET did not gravely abuse its discretion when it dismissed the petitions for quo warranto against Aangat Tayo party-list and Bantay party-list but upheld its jurisdiction
over the question of the qualifications of petitioners Abayon and Palparan.
WHEREFORE,
the Court DISMISSES
the consolidated petitions and AFFIRMS the Order
dated July 16, 2009 and Resolution 09-183 dated September 17, 2009 in HRET Case
07-041 of the House of Representatives Electoral Tribunal as well as its Order dated July
23, 2009 and Resolution 09-178 dated September 10, 2009 in HRET Case 07-040.
SO
ORDERED.
ROBERTO A. ABAD
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
Associate
Justice Associate Justice
ARTURO D.
BRION DIOSDADO M. PERALTA
Associate Justice Associate
Justice
LUCAS P. BERSAMIN MARIANO
C.
Associate Justice Associate Justice
MARTIN S.
VILLARAMA, JR. JOSE P. PEREZ
Associate Justice Associate Justice
JOSE C. MENDOZA
Associate Justice
Pursuant to Section 13,
Article VIII of the Constitution, it is hereby certified that the conclusions
in the above Decision 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] Rollo (G.R. No. 189466), pp. 147-148.
[2]
[3] Rollo (G.R. No. 189506), pp. 53-54.
[4]
[5] Section 17. The Senate and the House
of Representatives shall each have an Electoral Tribunal which shall be the
sole judge of all contests relating to the election, returns, and
qualifications of their respective Members. Each Electoral Tribunal shall be
composed of nine Members, three of whom shall be Justices of the Supreme Court
to be designated by the Chief Justice, and the remaining six shall be Members
of the Senate or the House of Representatives, as the case may be, who shall be
chosen on the basis of proportional representation from the political parties
and the parties or organizations registered under the party-list system
represented therein. The senior Justice in the Electoral Tribunal shall be its
Chairman.
[6] G.R. No. 177271, May 4, 2007, 523 SCRA 1, 16-17.
[7] Republic Act 7941, Section 9.
[8] Republic Act 7941, Section 13.
[9] Section 17. The Senate and the House of
Representatives shall each have an Electoral Tribunal which shall be the sole
judge of all contests relating to the election, returns, and qualifications of
their respective Members. Each Electoral Tribunal shall be composed of nine
Members, three of whom shall be Justices of the Supreme Court to be designated
by the Chief Justice, and the remaining six shall be Members of the Senate or
the House of Representatives, as the case may be, who shall be chosen on the
basis of proportional representation from the political parties and the parties
or organizations registered under the party-list system represented therein.
The senior Justice in the Electoral Tribunal shall be its Chairman.
[10] Señeres v. Commission on Elections, G.R. No. 178678, April 16, 2009.