137425-1981-Occena v. Commission On Elections20160322-9941-1geuubr PDF
137425-1981-Occena v. Commission On Elections20160322-9941-1geuubr PDF
137425-1981-Occena v. Commission On Elections20160322-9941-1geuubr PDF
SYNOPSIS
Two suits for Prohibition were filed assailing the validity of the Batasang Pambansa
Resolution Nos. 28, 104 and 106 proposing constitutional amendments. After hearing and
oral argument. the Supreme Court dismissed both petitions, reiterating the effectivity of
the present Constitution and upholding the validity of the questioned resolutions, the
Interim Batasang Pambansa, by a majority vote, having the power to propose amendments
for ratification by the sovereign people.
Petition dismissed.
SYLLABUS
DECISION
FERNANDO , C.J : p
The challenge in these two prohibition proceedings against the validity of three Batasang
Pambansa Resolutions 1 proposing constitutional amendments, goes further than merely
assailing their alleged constitutional infirmity. Petitioners Samuel Occena and Ramon A.
Gonzales, both members of the Philippine Bar and former delegates to the 1971
Constitutional Convention that framed the present Constitution, are suing as taxpayers.
The rather unorthodox aspect of these petitions is the assertion that the 1973 Constitution
is not the fundamental law, the Javellana 2 ruling to the contrary notwithstanding. To put it
at its mildest, such an approach has the arresting charm of novelty but nothing else. It is
in fact self defeating, for if such were indeed the case, petitioners have come to the wrong
forum. We sit as a Court duty-bound to uphold and apply that Constitution. To contend
otherwise as was done here would be, quite clearly, an exercise in futility. Nor are the
arguments of petitioners cast in the traditional form of constitutional litigation any more
persuasive. For reasons to be set forth, we dismiss the petitions.
The suits for prohibition were filed respectively on March 6 3 and March 12, 1981. 4 On
March 10 and 13 respectively, respondents were required to answer each within ten days
from notice. 5 There was a comment on the part of the respondents. Thereafter, both
cases were set for hearing and were duly argued on March 26 by petitioners and Solicitor
General Estelito P. Mendoza for respondents. With the submission of pertinent data in
amplification of the oral argument, the cases were deemed submitted for decision. LLpr
It is the ruling of the Court, as set forth at the outset, that the petitions must be dismissed.
1. It is much too late in the day to deny the force and applicability of the 1973
Constitution. In the dispositive portion of Javellana v. The Executive Secretary, 6
dismissing petitions for prohibition and mandamus to declare invalid its ratification, this
Court stated that it did so by a vote of six 7 to four. 8 It then concluded: "This being the vote
of the majority, there is no further judicial obstacle to the new Constitution being
considered in force and effect." 9 Such a statement served a useful purpose. It could even
be said that there was a need for it. It served to clear the atmosphere. It made manifest
that as of January 17, 1973, the present Constitution came into force and effect. With such
a pronouncement by the Supreme Court and with the recognition of the cardinal postulate
that what the Supreme Court says is not only entitled to respect but must also be obeyed,
a factor for instability was removed. Thereafter, as a matter of law, all doubts were
resolved. The 1973 Constitution is the fundamental law. It is as simple as that. What
cannot be too strongly stressed is that the function of judicial review has both a positive
and a negative aspect. As was so convincingly demonstrated by Professors Black 1 0 and
Murphy, 1 1 the Supreme Court can check as well as legitimate. In declaring what the law is,
it may not only nullify the acts of coordinate branches but may also sustain their validity. In
the latter case, there is an affirmation that what was done cannot be stigmatized as
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constitutionally deficient. The mere dismissal of a suit of this character suffices. That is
the meaning of the concluding statement in Javellana. Since then, this Court has invariably
applied the present Constitution. The latest case in point is People v. Sola, 1 2 promulgated
barely two weeks ago. During the first year alone of the effectivity of the present
Constitution, at least ten cases may be cited. 1 3
2. We come to the crucial issue, the power of the Interim Batasang Pambansa to
propose amendments and how it may be exercised. More specially as to the latter, the
extent of the changes that may be introduced, the number of votes necessary for the
validity of a proposal, and the standard required for a proper submission. As was stated
earlier, petitioners were unable to demonstrate that the challenged resolutions are tainted
by unconstitutionality.
(1) The existence of the power of the Interim Batasang Pambansa is indubitable. The
applicable provision in the 1976 Amendments is quite explicit. Insofar as pertinent it reads
thus: "The Interim Batasang Pambansa shall have the same powers and its Members shall
have the same functions, responsibilities, rights, privileges, and disqualifications as the
interim National Assembly and the regular National Assembly and the Members thereof."
1 4 One of such powers is precisely that of proposing amendments. The 1973 Constitution
in its Transitory Provisions vested the Interim National Assembly with the power to
propose amendments upon special call by the Prime Minister by a vote of the majority of
its members to be ratified in accordance with the Article on Amendments. 1 5 When,
therefore, the Interim Batasang Pambansa, upon the call of the President and Prime
Minister Ferdinand E. Marcos, met as a constituent body, it acted by virtue of such
competence. Its authority to do so is clearly beyond doubt. It could and did propose the
amendments embodied in the resolutions now being assailed. It may be observed
parenthetically that as far as petitioner Occena is concerned, the question of the authority
of the Interim Batasang Pambansa to propose amendments is not new. In Occena v.
Commission on Elections, 1 6 filed by the same petitioner, decided on January 28, 1980,
such a question was involved although not directly passed upon. To quote from the
opinion of the Court penned by Justice Antonio in that case: "Considering that the
proposed amendment to Section 7 of Article X of the Constitution extending the
retirement of members of the Supreme Court and judges of inferior courts from sixty-five
(65) to seventy (70) years is but a restoration of the age of retirement provided in the
1935 Constitution and has been intensively and extensively discussed at the Interim
Batasang Pambansa, as well as through the mass media, it cannot, therefore, be said that
our people are unaware of the advantages and disadvantages of the proposed
amendment." 1 7
(2) Petitioners would urge upon us the proposition that the amendments proposed are
so extensive in character that they go far beyond the limits of the authority conferred on
the Interim Batasang Pambansa as successor of the Interim National Assembly. For them,
what was done was to revise and not to amend. It suffices to quote from the opinion of
Justice Makasiar, speaking for the Court, in Del Rosario v. Commission on Elections 1 8 to
dispose of this contention. Thus: "3. And whether the Constitutional Convention will only
propose amendments to the Constitution or entirely overhaul the present Constitution and
propose an entirely new Constitution based on an ideology foreign to the democratic
system, is of no moment; because the same will be submitted to the people for
ratification. Once ratified by the sovereign people, there can be no debate about the validity
of the new Constitution. 4. The fact that the present Constitution may be revised and
replaced with a new one . . . is no argument against the validity of the law because
'amendment' includes the 'revision' or total overhaul of the entire Constitution. At any rate,
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whether the Constitution is merely amended in part or revised or totally changed would
become immaterial the moment the same is ratified by the sovereign people." 1 9 There is
here the adoption of the principle so well-known in American decisions as well as legal
texts that a constituent body can propose anything but conclude nothing. 2 0 We are not
disposed to deviate from such a principle not only sound in theory but also advantageous
in practice. LibLex
(3) That leaves only the questions of the vote necessary to propose amendments as
well as the standard for proper submission. Again, petitioners have not made out a case
that calls for a judgment in their favor. The language of the Constitution supplies the
answer to the above questions. The Interim Batasang Pambansa, sitting as a constituent
body, can propose amendments. In that capacity, only a majority vote is needed. It would
be an indefensible proposition to assert that the three-fourth votes required when it sits as
a legislative body applies as well when it has been convened as the agency through which
amendments could be proposed. That is not a requirement as far as a constitutional
convention is concerned. It is not a requirement either when, as in this case, the Interim
Batasang Pambansa exercises its constituent power to propose amendments. Moreover,
even on the assumption that the requirement of three-fourth votes applies, such
extraordinary majority was obtained. It is not disputed that Resolution No. 1 proposing an
amendment allowing a natural-born citizen of the Philippines naturalized in a foreign
country to own a limited area of land for residential purposes was approved by the vote of
122 to 5; Resolution No. 2 dealing with the Presidency, the Prime Minister and the Cabinet,
and the National Assembly by a vote of 147 to 5 with 1 abstention; and Resolution No. 3 on
the amendment to the Article on the Commission on Elections by a vote of 148 to 2 with 1
abstention. Where then is the alleged infirmity? As to the requisite standard for a proper
submission, the question may be viewed not only from the standpoint of the period that
must elapse before the holding of the plebiscite but also from the standpoint of such
amendments having been called to the attention of the people so that it could not plausibly
be maintained that they were properly informed as to the proposed changes. As to the
period, the Constitution indicates the way the matter should be resolved. There is no
ambiguity to the applicable provision: "Any amendment to, or revision of, this Constitution
shall be valid when ratified by a majority of the votes cast in a plebiscite which shall be
held not later than three months after the approval of such amendment or revision." 2 1 The
three resolutions were approved by the Interim Batasang Pambansa sitting as a
constituent assembly on February 5 and 27, 1981. In the Batasang Pambansa Blg. 22, the
date of the plebiscite is set for April 7, 1981. It is thus within the 90-day period provided by
the Constitution. Thus any argument to the contrary is unavailing. As for the people being
adequately informed, it cannot be denied that this time, as in the cited 1980 Occena
opinion of Justice Antonio, where the amendment restored to seventy the retirement age
of members of the judiciary, the proposed amendments have "been intensively and
extensively discussed at the Interim Batasang Pambansa, as well as through the mass
media, [so that] it cannot, therefore, be said that our people are unaware of the advantages
and disadvantages of the proposed amendment[s]." 2 2
I vote to give due course to the petitions at bar and to grant the application for a
temporary restraining order enjoining the plebiscite scheduled for April 7, 1981.
1. Consistently with my dissenting opinion in Sanidad vs. Comelec 1 on the invalidity of
the October 1976 amendments proposals to the 1973 Constitution for not having been
proposed nor adopted in accordance with the mandatory provisions thereof, as restated
by the in Hidalgo vs. Marcos 2 and De la Llana vs. Comelec 3 questioning the validity of the
December 17, 1977 referendum exercise as to the continuance in office as incumbent
President and to be Prime Minister after the organization of the Interim Batasang
Pambansa as provided for in Amendment No. 3 of the 1976 Amendments, I am
constrained to dissent from the majority decision of dismissal of the petitions.
I had held in Sanidad that the transcendental constituent power to propose and approve
amendments to the Constitution as well as to set up the machinery and prescribe the
procedure for the ratification of the amendments proposals has been withheld by the
Constitution from the President (Prime Minister) as sole repository of executive power
and that so long as the regular National Assembly provided for in Article VIII of the
Constitution had not come to existence and the proposals for constitutional amendments
were now deemed necessary to be discussed and adopted for submittal to the people,
strict adherence with the mandatory requirements of the amending process as provided in
the Constitution must be complied with. This means, under the prevailing doctrine of
Tolentino vs. Comelec 4 that the proposed amendments to be valid must come from the
constitutional agency vested with the constituent power to do so, i.e. in the Interim
National Assembly provided in the Transitory Article XVII which would then have to be
convened and not from the executive power as vested in the President (Prime Minister)
from whom such constituent power has been withheld. prcd
Justice Sanchez therein ended the passage with an apt citation that ". . . The great men
who builded the structure of our state in this respect had the mental vision of a good
Constitution voiced by Judge Cooley, who has said 'A good Constitution should be beyond
the reach of temporary excitement and popular caprice or passion. It is needed for
stability and steadiness; it must yield to the thought of the people; not to the whim of the
people, or the thought evolved in excitement or hot blood, but the sober second thought,
which alone, if the government is to be safe, can be allowed efficacy . . . Changes in
government are to be feared unless the benefit is certain.' As Montaign says: 'All great
mutations shake and disorder a state. Good does not necessarily succeed evil; another evil
may succeed and a worse.'"
Footnotes
It may be mentioned that the first of such cases, Garcia, was promulgated on July 25,
1973 with the writer of this opinion as ponente and the next case, Buendia, also on the
same date, with Justice Teehankee as ponente, both of whom were dissenters in
Javellana, but who felt bound to abide by the majority decision.
14. 1976 Amendments, par. 2. The last sentence follows: "However, it shall not exercise the
powers provided in Article VIII, Section 14(1) of the Constitution." Article VIII, Section 14,
par. (1) reads as follows: "Except as otherwise provided in this Constitution, no treaty
shall be valid and effective unless concurred in by a majority of all the Members of the
National Assembly."
15. Article XVII, Section 15 of the Constitution reads as follows: "The interim National
Assembly, upon special call by the interim Prime Minister may, by a majority vote of all
its Members, propose amendments to this Constitution. Such amendments shall take
effect when ratified in accordance with Article Sixteen hereof."