Republic of The Philippines Vs Maria Lourdes Sereno
Republic of The Philippines Vs Maria Lourdes Sereno
Republic of The Philippines Vs Maria Lourdes Sereno
FACTS:
The Republic of the Philippines, represented by Solicitor General Jose C. Calida, filed a Petition
for the issuance of the extraordinary writ of quo warranto to declare void Respondent Sereno’s
appointment as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court (SC) and to oust and altogether exclude her
therefrom.
Respondent served as a member of the faculty of the UP College of Law (UP) from 1986 to
2006. While, being employed at the UP Law, she also served as legal counsel for the Republic of
the Philippines for several agencies from 1994 until 2009. On July 2010, Respondent submitted
her application for the position of Associate Justice of the SC.
Despite the span of 20 years of employment with UP from 1986 to 2006 and despite having been
employed as legal counsel of various government agencies from 2003 to 2009, records from the
UP Human Resources Development Office, Central Records Division of the Office of the
Ombudsman, and the Office of Recruitment Selection and Nomination (ORSN) of the Judicial
and Bar Council (JBC) show that the only Statements of Assets, Liabilities, and Net Worth
(SALN) available on record and filed by Respondent were those for the years 1985, 1989, 1990,
1991, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, and 2002, or only 11 out of 25 SALNs that ought to
have been filed. No SALNs were filed from 2003 to 2006 when she was employed as legal
counsel for the Republic. Neither was a SALN filed when she resigned from U.P. College of
Law as of 1 June 2006 and when she supposedly re-entered government service as of 16 August
2010.
Respondent was appointed as Associate Justice in August 2010 by President Benigno Aquino III.
When the position for Chief Justice was declared vacant in 2012, the JBC announced the opening
for applications and nominations, requiring applicants to submit all previous SALNs up to 31
December 2011 instead of the usual last two years of public service and stating that, “applicants
with incomplete or out-of-date documentary requirements will not be interviewed or considered
for nomination.”
Respondent accepted several nominations for the position of Chief Justice, and submitted
requirements in support thereof.
On 20 July 2012, the JBC in a special meeting en banc deliberated on nominees with incomplete
documentary requirements. The minutes of the deliberation show that Respondent has not
submitted her SALNs for a period of ten years, from 1986 to 2006, the duration for which,
according to Senator Escudero (ex officio member of the JBC), she was a professor in UP and
was therefore required to submit SALNs.
Apart from Respondent, several other candidates had incomplete documents such that the JBC
En Banc agreed to extend the deadline for submission. It also delegated to the Execom the
determination of whether or not the candidate has substantially complied, failure to do so
resulting in the exclusion from the list of candidates to be interviewed and considered for
nomination.
Pursuant to this, the OSRN required Respondent to submit her SALNs for the years 1995-1999,
the period within which she was employed by UP. Respondent replied through a letter that
considering that such government records in UP are more than 15 years old, “it is reasonable to
consider it infeasible to retrieve all those files.” She also assured OSRN that UP has cleared her
of all responsibilities, accountabilities, and administrative charges in 2006. Lastly, she
emphasized that her service in the government was not continuous, having had a break between
2006 (when her service in UP ended) and 2010 (when she was appointed to the SC).
Such letter was not examined or deliberated upon by the JBC. Neither can the JBC Execom
produce minutes of the deliberations to consider the issue of substantial compliance with
documentary requirements. However, despite having submitted only three SALNs (2009-2011),
the Report regarding documentary requirements and SALNs of candidates shows that her name
was annotated with “COMPLETE REQUIREMENTS”, noting her letter that it was infeasible to
retrieve all files. The same annotation was found in another list regarding SALN submissions of
20 candidates, including Respondent.
Respondent was appointed by President Benigno Aquino III on 25 August 2012. On August 17,
2012, an impeachment complaint was filed by Atty. Larry Gadon with the House Committee of
Justice. Included in the complaint was the allegation that Respondent failed to make a truthful
statement of her SALNs. Such complaint filed in the House spawned a letter dated 21 February
2018 of Atty. Eligio Mallari to the OSG requesting the latter to initiate a quo warranto
proceeding against Respondent.
The OSG argues that the quo warranto is an available remedy because what is being sought is to
question the validity of her appointment, while the impeachment complaint accuses her of
culpable violation of the Constitution and betrayal of public trust in office.
OSG contends that it is seasonably filed within the one-year reglementary period under Section
11, Rule 66 of the Rules of Court since Sereno’s transgressions only came to light during the
impeachment proceedings. Moreover, OSG claims that it has an imprescriptible right to bring a
quo warranto petition under the maxim nullum tempus occurit regi (“no time runs against the
king”) or prescription does not operate against the government. Even assuming that the one-year
period is applicable to the OSG, considering that SALNs are not published, the OSG will have
no other means by which to know the disqualification.
Moreover, OSG maintains that the SC has jurisdiction, citing A.M. No. 10-4-20-SC which
created a permanent Committee on Ethics and Ethical Standards, tasked to investigate
complaints involving graft and corruption and ethical violations against members of the SC and
contending that it is not a political question because such issue may be resolved through the
interpretation of the provisions of the Constitution, laws, JBC rules, and Canons of Judicial
Ethics.
OSG seeks to oust Sereno from her position as CJ on the ground that Sereno failed to show that
she is a person of proven integrity which is an indispensable qualification for membership in the
Judiciary under Section 7(3), Article VIII of the Constitution. According to OSG, because the
respondent failed to fulfill the JBC requirement of filing the complete SALNs, her integrity
remains unproven. The failure to submit her SALN, which is a legal obligation, should have
disqualified Sereno from being a candidate; therefore, she has no right to hold the office.
Contention of the Respondent:
Respondent, on the other hand, argues that the Chief Justice may only be ousted from office by
impeachment on the basis that the clear intention of the framers of the Constitution was to create
an exclusive category of public officers who can be removed only by impeachment and not
otherwise. Alternatively, she argues that the present petition is time-barred, as it should have
been filed within one year from the cause of ouster, and not from the discovery of the
disqualification.
Sereno likewise argues that the cases cited by OSG is not in all fours with the present case
because the President and the Vice President may, in fact, be removed by means other than
impeachment on the basis of Section 4, Article VII of the 1987 Constitution vesting in the Court
the power to be the “sole judge” of all contests relating to the qualifications of the President and
the Vice-President. There is no such provision for other impeachable officers. Moreover, on the
rest of the cases cited by the OSG, there is no mention that quo warranto may be allowed.
Sereno also argues that since a petition for quo warranto may be filed before the RTC, such
would result to a conundrum because a judge of lower court would have effectively exercised
disciplinary power and administrative supervision over an official of the Judiciary much higher
in rank and is contrary to Sections 6 and 11, Article VIII of the Constitution which vests upon
the SC disciplinary and administrative power over all courts and the personnel thereof.
Sereno likewise posits that if a Member of the SC can be ousted through quo warranto initiated
by the OSG, the Congress’ “check” on the SC through impeachment would be rendered inutile.
Furthermore, Sereno argues that it is already time-barred. Section 11, Rule 66 provides that a
petition for quo warranto must be filed within one (1) year from the “cause of ouster” and not
from the “discovery” of the disqualification.
Moreover, Sereno contends that the Court cannot presume that she failed to file her SALNs
because as a public officer, she enjoys the presumption that her appointment to office was
regular. OSG failed to overcome the presumption created by the certifications from UP HRDO
that she had been cleared of all administrative responsibilities and charges. Her integrity is a
political question which can only be decided by the JBC and the President.
Regarding her missing SALNs, Sereno contends that the fact that SALNs are missing cannot
give rise to the inference that they are not filed. The fact that 11 SALNs were filed should give
an inference to a pattern of filing, not of non-filing.
Respondent urges the Court to apply in her favor the case of Concerned Taxpayer v. Doblada,
Jr., and deem as sufficient and acceptable her statement that she “maintains that she consistently
filed her SALNs.” Respondent argues that the Court’s rationale in Doblada that one cannot
readily conclude failure to file SALNs simply because these documents are missing in the Office
of the Court Administrator's files should likewise be made applicable to her case.
In Respondent’s Reply, she also raised the issue of forum-shopping against Petitioner.
Respondent filed motions for the inhibition of five Justices (Bersamin, Peralta, Jardeleza, Tijam,
and Leonardo-de Castro), imputing actual bias for having testified in the House Committee for
Justice on the impeachment complaint and on Justice Tijam for allegedly stating, in a Manila
Times article, that Respondent is in culpable violation of the Constitution if she continues to
ignore the impeachment process. She alleged that their testimonies show that they harbored
personal resentment and ill feelings towards her, and that she has already been pre-judged by
some as having committed a culpable violation of the Constitution for having failed to submit
her SALNs, among others. She also sought to disqualify Justice Martires for his insinuations
during the Oral Arguments questioning her mental and psychological fitness.
INTERVENORS’ ARGUMENTS:
The intervenors argue that it is not incumbent upon Sereno to prove to the JBC that she
possessed the integrity required by the Constitution; rather, the onus of determining whether or
not she qualified for the post fell upon the JBC. Moreover, submission of SALNs is not a
constitutional requirement; what is only required is the imprimatur of the JBC. The intervenors
likewise contend that “qualifications” such as citizenship, age, and experience are enforceable
while “characteristics” such as competence, integrity, probity, and independence are mere
subjective considerations.
Issues:
A. Preliminary Issues
B. Substantive Issues
1. Whether the Court can assume jurisdiction and give due course to the instant
petition for quo warranto against Respondent who is an impeachable officer and
against whom an impeachment complaint has already been filed with the House of
Representatives;
2. Whether the petition is dismissible outright on the ground of prescription;
3. Whether Respondent is eligible for the position of Chief Justice:
a. Whether the determination of a candidate’s eligibility for nomination is the sole and
exclusive function of the JBC, and whether such determination partakes of the
character of a political question outside the Court’s supervisory and review powers;
b. Whether Respondent failed to file her SALNs as mandated by the Constitution and
required by the law and its implementing rules and regulations; and if so, whether
the failure to file SALNs voids the nomination and appointment of Respondent as
Chief Justice;
c. Whether Respondent failed to comply with the submission of SALNs as required by
the JBC; and if so, whether the failure to submit SALNs to the JBC voids the
nomination and appointment of Respondent as Chief Justice; and
d. In case of a finding that Respondent is ineligible to hold the position of Chief
Justice, whether the subsequent nomination by the JBC and the appointment by the
President cured such ineligibility.
The Court noted the IBP’s intervention and resolved to deny the motions for intervention filed by
several other groups. It observed that intervention is not a matter of right but of sound judicial
discretion; that movant-intervenors have no legal interest in the case, as required in order to
qualify a person to intervene; and that the remedy of quo warranto is vested in the people, and
not in a particular group. Lastly, such individuals do not claim a right to the questioned position,
which is the only time when an individual himself/herself may commence an action for quo
warranto. In this case, the movants-intervenors are neither individuals claiming to be entitled to
the questioned position nor are they the ones charged with the usurpation thereof.
There is no basis for the Associate Justices to inhibit. Movant must prove bias and prejudice by
clear and convincing evidence to disqualify a judge. Justice Tijam’s statement, taken as a whole,
was only to prod the Respondent to observe and respect the constitutional process of
impeachment. It does not appear that there are grounds for compulsory inhibition. As to
voluntary inhibition, the mere fact that some of the Associate Justices participated in the hearings
of the Committee on Justice determining probable cause for the impeachment of Respondent
does not disqualify them to hear the instant petition. Their appearance was in deference to the
House of Representatives whose constitutional duty to investigate the impeachment complaint
filed against Respondent could not be doubted. Their appearance was with the prior consent of
the Supreme Court En Banc and they faithfully observed the parameters that the Court set for the
purpose. Their statements in the hearing should be carefully viewed within this context, and
should not be hastily interpreted as an adverse attack against Respondent.
Ruling on the Substantive Issues:
1. Whether the Court can assume jurisdiction and give due course to the instant petition
for quo warranto against Respondent who is an impeachable officer and against whom an
impeachment complaint has already been filed with the House of Representatives. YES
The SC have concurrent jurisdiction with the CA and RTC to issue the
extraordinary writs, including quo warranto. A direct invocation of the SC’s
original jurisdiction to issue such writs is allowed when there are special and
important reasons therefor, and in this case, direct resort to SC is justified
considering that the action is directed against the Chief Justice. Granting that the
petition is likewise of transcendental importance and has far-reaching
implications, the Court is empowered to exercise its power of judicial review. To
exercise restraint in reviewing an impeachable officer’s appointment is a clear
renunciation of a judicial duty. an outright dismissal of the petition based on
speculation that Sereno will eventually be tried on impeachment is a clear
abdication of the Court’s duty to settle actual controversy squarely presented
before it. Quo warranto proceedings are essentially judicial in character – it calls
for the exercise of the Supreme Court’s constitutional duty and power to decide
cases and settle actual controversies. This constitutional duty cannot be abdicated
or transferred in favor of, or in deference to, any other branch of the government
including the Congress, even as it acts as an impeachment court through the
Senate
That the enumeration of “impeachable offenses” is made absolute such that only
those enumerated offenses are treated as grounds for impeachment does not mean
that it is to be taken as a complete statement of the causes of removal from office.
The word “may” cannot also be understood to qualify only the imposable
penalties because it would lead to the conclusion that other lesser penalties may
be imposed — a situation not contemplated in the language of the Constitutional
provision.
The courts should be able to inquire into the validity of appointments even of
impeachable officers. To hold otherwise is to allow an absurd situation where the
appointment of an impeachable officer cannot be questioned, on the basis of
citizenship or membership in the Bar, for example. Unless such an officer
commits any of the grounds for impeachment and is actually impeached, he can
continue discharging the functions of his office even when he is clearly
disqualified from holding it. Such would result in permitting unqualified and
ineligible public officials to continue occupying key positions, exercising
sensitive sovereign functions until they are successfully removed from office
through impeachment.
In this case, it is incidental that the non-filing of SALNs also formed part of the
allegations in the Articles of Impeachment, which in itself is a Constitutional
requirement, the violation of which constitutes culpable violation of the
Constitution. But unlike other impeachable officers, Respondent’s position also
demands compliance with the qualifications of having to be a person of proven
competence, integrity, probity, and independence — and the failure to submit
SALNs goes into the very qualification of integrity.
For the guidance of the bench and the bar, and to obviate confusion in the future
as to when quo warranto as a remedy to oust an ineligible public official may be
availed of, and in keeping with the Court’s function of harmonizing the laws and
the rules with the Constitution, the Court herein demarcates that an act or
omission committed prior to or at the time of appointment or election relating to
an official’s qualifications to hold office as to render such appointment or election
invalid is properly the subject of a quo warranto petition, provided that the
requisites for the commencement thereof are present. On the contrary, acts or
omissions, even if it relates to the qualification of integrity, being a continuing
requirement but nonetheless committed during the incumbency of a validly
appointed and/or validly elected official, cannot be the subject of a quo warranto
proceeding, but of something else, which may either be impeachment if the public
official concerned is impeachable and the act or omission constitutes an
impeachable offense, or disciplinary, administrative or criminal action, if
otherwise.
e. The exercise of judicial restraint on the ground that the Senate, sitting
as an impeachment court, has the sole power to try and decide all cases of
impeachment, is thus misplaced. An outright dismissal of the petition based on
speculation that Respondent will eventually be tried on impeachment is a clear
abdication of the Court’s duty to settle an actual controversy squarely presented
before it. There is also no possibility of a constitutional crisis upon which an
abdication of such duty is to be premised because, as discussed, it is within the
Court’s judicial power to settle justiciable issues or actual controversies involving
rights, which are legally demandable and enforceable. It is not arrogating upon
itself the power to impeach, which is a political exercise.
a. Prescription does not lie against the State. The one-year limitation is not
applicable when the Petitioner is not a mere private individual pursuing a private
interest, but the government itself seeking relief for a public wrong and suing for
public interest. In the three instances enumerated by Rules of Court, the Solicitor
General is mandated under the Rules to commence the necessary quo warranto
petition, as seen in the use of the word “must.” In Agcaoili v. Suguitan, “As a
general principle it may be stated that ordinary statutes of limitation, civil or
penal, have no application to quo warranto proceeding brought to enforce a
public right.” In effect, when the government is the real party in interest, and is
proceeding mainly to assert its rights, there can be no defense on the ground of
laches or prescription.
Respondent cleverly hid the fact of non-filing by stating that she should not be
required to submit the said documents as she was considered to be coming from
private practice; that it was not feasible to retrieve most of her records in the
academe considering that the same are more than fifteen years old; and that U.P.
already cleared her of “all academic/administrative responsibilities, money and
property accountabilities and from administrative charges”. She has never been
clear on whether she had filed the required SALNs or not. Given the foregoing,
there can be no acquiescence or inaction, in this case, on the part of the Republic
as would amount to an abandonment of its right to seek redress against a public
wrong and vindicate public interest.
Lastly, the Court finds it more important to rule on the merits of the novel issues
imbued with public interest presented before Us than to dismiss the case outright
merely on technicality.
a. Whether the determination of a candidate’s eligibility for nomination is the sole and
exclusive function of the JBC and whether such determination partakes of the
character of a political question outside the Court’s supervisory and review powers.
NO
The Court’s supervisory authority over the JBC includes ensuring that the JBC
complies with its own rules. In interpreting the power of the Court vis-a-vis the
power of the JBC, it is consistently held that the Court’s supervisory power
consists of seeing to it that the JBC complies with its own rules and procedures.
Furthermore, while a certain leeway must be given to the JBC in screening
aspiring magistrates, the same does not give it an unbridled discretion to ignore
Constitutional and legal requirements. The question of whether or not a nominee
possesses the requisite qualifications is determined based on facts and therefore
does not depend on, nor call for, the exercise of discretion on the part of the
nominating body. Proceeding from this, qualifications under the Constitution
cannot be waived or bargained away by the JBC — one such qualification is the
requirement of possession of proven integrity required not only in the
Constitution, but also mentioned in administrative cases, in the Canons of the
New Code of Judicial Conduct as a continuing requirement, the Code of
Professional Integrity, and in the JBC-009 Rules.
b. Whether Respondent failed to file her SALNs as mandated by the Constitution and
required by the law and its implementing rules and regulations; and if so, whether
the failure to file SALNs voids the nomination and appointment of Respondent as
Chief Justice. YES
Respondent’s argument that failure to file SALN does not negate integrity does
not persuade. Whether or not Respondent accumulated unexplained wealth is not
in issue at this time, but whether she, in the first place, complied with the
mandatory requirement of filing of SALNs.
iii. Respondent chronically failed to file her SALNs and thus violated the
Constitution, the law and the Code of Judicial Conduct. A member of the
Judiciary who commits such violations cannot be deemed to be a person of
proven integrity. Respondent could have easily dispelled doubts as to the
filing or non-filing of the unaccounted SALNs by presenting them before the
Court. Yet, Respondent opted to withhold such information or such evidence,
if at all, for no clear reason. Her defenses do not lie: 1) The Doblada doctrine
does not persuade because in that case Doblada was able to present contrary
proof that the missing SALNs were, in fact, transmitted to the OCA, thus
rendering inaccurate the OCA report that she did not file SALNs for a number
of years, as opposed to the present case where no proof of existence and filing
were presented; 2) Being on leave from government service is not equivalent
to separation from service such that she was still required to submit SALNs
during her leave; 3) While Respondent is not required by law to keep a record
of her SALNs, logic dictates that she should have obtained a certification to
attest to the fact of filing; 4) That UP HRDO never asked Respondent to
comply with the SALN laws holds no water as the duty to comply with such is
incumbent with the Respondent, and because there was no duty for the UP
HRDO to order compliance under the rules implemented at that time; 5) That
Respondent’s compliance with the SALN requirement was reflected in the
matrix of requirements and shortlist prepared by the JBC is dispelled by the
fact that the appointment goes into her qualifications which were mistakenly
believed to be present, and that she should have been disqualified at the
outset.
iv. Respondent failed to properly and promptly file her SALNs, again in violation of the
Constitutional and statutory requirements. The SALNs filed by Respondent covering
her years of government service in U.P. appear to have been executed and filed under
suspicious circumstances; her SALNs filed with the UPHRDO were either belatedly
filed or belatedly notarized, while SALNs filed as Chief Justice were also attended by
irregularities. This puts in question the truthfulness of such SALNs, and would
amount to dishonesty if attended by malicious intent to conceal the truth or to make
false statements.
i. The JBC required the submission of at least ten SALNs from those applicants
who are incumbent Associate Justices, absent which, the applicant ought not
to have been interviewed, much less been considered for nomination. The
established and undisputed fact is Respondent failed to submit the required
number of SALNs in violation of the rules set by the JBC itself during the
process of nomination. The JBC determined that she did not submit her
SALNs from 1986 to 2006 and that, as remarked by Senator Escudero, the
filing thereof during those years was already required. There was no
indication that the JBC deemed the three SALNs (for the years 2009, 2010
and 2011) submitted by Respondent for her 20 years as a professor in the U.P.
College of Law and two years as Justice, as substantial compliance.
Respondent was specifically singled out from the rest of the applicants for
having failed to submit a single piece of SALN for her years of service in the
U.P. College of Law.
In the end, it appears that the JBC En Banc decided to require only the
submission of the past ten (10) SALNs, or from 2001-2011, for applicants to
the Chief Justice position. It is clear that the JBC En Banc did not do away
with the requirement of submission of SALNs, only that substantial
compliance therewith, i.e., the submission of the SALNs for the immediately
preceding 10 years instead of all SALNs, was deemed sufficient. Records
clearly show that the only remaining applicant-incumbent Justice who was not
determined by the JBC En Banc to have substantially complied was
Respondent, who submitted only three SALNs, i.e., 2009, 2010 and 2011,
even after extensions of the deadline for the submission to do so. Her
justifications do not persuade. Contrary to her argument that the SALNs are
old and are infeasible to retrieve, the Republic was able to retrieve some of the
SALNs dating back to 1985.
Respondent curiously failed to mention that she, in fact, did not file several
SALNs during the course of her employment in U.P. Such failure to disclose a
material fact and the concealment thereof from the JBC betrays any claim of
integrity especially from a Member of the Supreme Court.
For these reasons, the JBC should no longer have considered Respondent for
interview as it already required the submission of, at least, the SALNs
corresponding to the immediately preceding 10 years up to December 31,
2011.
ii. Respondent’s failure to submit to the JBC her SALNs for several years
means that her integrity was not established at the time of her application.
The requirement to submit SALNs is made more emphatic when the applicant
is eyeing the position of Chief Justice. On the June 4, 2012, JBC En Banc
meeting, Senator Escudero proposed the addition of the requirement of SALN
in order for the next Chief Justice to avoid what CJ Corona had gone through.
Further, the failure to submit the required SALNs means that the JBC and the
public are divested of the opportunity to consider the applicant’s fitness or
propensity to commit corruption or dishonesty. In Sereno’s case, for example,
the waiver of the confidentiality of bank deposits would be practically useless
for the years that she failed to submit her SALN since the JBC cannot verify
whether the same matches the entries indicated in the SALN.
d. Whether the subsequent nomination by the JBC and the appointment by the
President cured such ineligibility.
ii. The Court also took into account, while conceding that the petition is not an
administrative case nor an inquiry into tax evasion against her, that
a. She engaged in private practice even if she had no permit from U.P. to do so
while she was in government service.
b. She represented that after her resignation from U.P. in 2006, she was engaged,
full time, in private practice. However, in her Personal Data Sheet (PDS), it
was stated that she was engaged as counsel by the government in the PIATCO
cases from 1994 up to 2009.
c. She claims that it is the ministerial duty of the Head of the Office to ensure
that the SALNs of its personnel are properly filed and accomplished.
However, U.P. HRDO could not have been expected to perform its ministerial
duty of issuing compliance orders to Respondent because such rule was not
yet in existence at that time.
d. Her PDS shows that she was Deputy Commissioner of the Commission on
Human Rights only later to be disclaimed by her during the Oral Argument
stating that it was only a functional title.
e. In her Letter dated July 23, 2012 to the JBC, respondent represented that her
SALNs were infeasible to retrieve when the SALNs that she selectively filed
were available all along in U.P. and in fact the OSG was able to get copies of
the same.
f. In the Letter, the Respondent reasoned that it is "infeasible to retrieve" all her
SALNs because of the age of said documents, i.e., that they are more than
fifteen years old. However, during her Oral Arguments, she explained that it
was "infeasible" to retrieve them only because of time constraints.
g. She claims that the other candidates for the Chief Justice position did not
comply with the SALN requirement for the application, when it was only she
who did not comply.
h. She committed tax fraud when she failed to truthfully declare her income in
her income tax returns for the years 2007-2009 and in her value-added tax
(VAT) returns for the years 2005-2009.
iii. Further, Respondent's disposition and propensity to commit dishonesty and lack of
candidness are manifested through her subsequent acts committed during her
incumbency as Chief Justice, which are now matters of public record and also
determined to be constituting probable cause for impeachment:
The effect of a finding that a person appointed to an office is ineligible therefor is that his
presumably valid appointment will give him color of title that confers on him the status of a de
facto officer. For lack of a Constitutional qualification, Respondent is ineligible to hold the
position of Chief Justice and is merely holding a colorable right or title thereto. As such,
Respondent has never attained the status of an impeachable official and her removal from the
office, other than by impeachment, is justified. The remedy, therefore, of a quo warranto at the
instance of the State is proper to oust Respondent from the appointive position of Chief Justice.
Upon a finding that Respondent is in fact ineligible to hold the position of Chief Justice and is
therefore unlawfully holding and exercising such public office, the consequent judgment under
Section 9, Rule 66 of the Rules of Court is the ouster and exclusion of Respondent from holding
and exercising the rights, functions and duties of the Office of the Chief Justice.
FALLO:
WHEREFORE, the Petition for Quo warranto is GRANTED. Respondent Maria Lourdes P.A.
Sereno is found DISQUALIFIED from and is hereby adjudged GUILTY of UNLAWFULLY
HOLDING and EXERCISING the OFFICE OF THE CHIEF JUSTICE. Accordingly,
Respondent Maria Lourdes P. A. Sereno is OUSTED and EXCLUDED therefrom.