Gonzales Vs Hechanova
Gonzales Vs Hechanova
Gonzales Vs Hechanova
Hechanova
(State concurrence in international agreements nature of executive agreements)
FACTS
Respondent Executive Secretary authorized the importation of 67,000 tons of foreign
rice to be purchased from private sources, and created a rice procurement committee
composed of the other respondents herein for the implementation of said proposed
importation
Petitioner was averring that the respondents are acting without or in excess of
jurisdiction
o Because RA 3452 (which allegedly repeals or amends RA 2207) explicitly
prohibits the importation of rice and corn by the Rice and Corn Administration or
any other government agency
Respondents contended that the Government of the Philippines entered into 2 contracts
for the purchase of rice with Vietnam and Burma
o That these contracts constitute valid executive agreements under international
law;
o That these are binding upon signing of the representative parties thereto
o That in case of conflict with the statute and treaty, under American jurisprudence,
the one which is the latest in point of time should be favored
o They also said that the contracts have been consummated (Philippines already
paid the price)
ISSUE
Whether RA 3452 prevails over the executive agreements
HELD
NO
The Court is not satisfied that the status of the alleged executive agreements have been
sufficiently established
The parties to the contracts do not appear to have regarded the same as executive
agreements
Even if assuming that the contracts properly constitute as executive agreements it is
still null and void because from a constitutional viewpoint, said agreement are
inconsistent with provisions of RA 2207 and 3453
Although the president may (under the American constitutional system) enter into EAs
without legislative authority, he may not by EA, enter into a transaction which is
prohibited by prior statutes enacted
executive agreements but mere contracts, and therefore their contention that in case of
conflict the treaty should prevail will not apply; second, assuming that the contracts were
properly constitute an EA, that the same will still be void because it was not entered into
without legislative authority (and therefore violates Section 21, Article VII of the
Constitution)