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BAYAN MUNA, as represented by G.R. No.

159618
Rep. SATUR OCAMPO, Rep. The Facts
CRISPIN BELTRAN, and Rep. Present:
LIZA L. MAZA, Petitioner Bayan Muna is a duly registered party-list group established to
Petitioner, CORONA, C.J., represent the marginalized sectors of society. Respondent Blas F. Ople, now
CARPIO, deceased, was the Secretary of Foreign Affairs during the period material to this
CARPIO MORALES,
case. Respondent Alberto Romulo was impleaded in his capacity as then
VELASCO, JR.,
NACHURA, Executive Secretary.[2]
LEONARDO-DE CASTRO,
- versus - BRION, Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court
PERALTA,
BERSAMIN, Having a key determinative bearing on this case is the Rome
DEL CASTILLO, Statute[3] establishing the International Criminal Court (ICC) with the power to
ABAD, exercise its jurisdiction over persons for the most serious crimes of international
VILLARAMA, JR., concern x x x and shall be complementary to the national criminal jurisdictions.
PEREZ, [4]
ALBERTO ROMULO, in his The serious crimes adverted to cover those considered grave under international
MENDOZA, and
capacity as Executive Secretary, SERENO, JJ. law, such as genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes, and crimes of
and BLAS F. OPLE, in his capacity aggression.[5]
as Secretary of Foreign Affairs, Promulgated:
Respondents. On December 28, 2000, the RP, through Charge dAffaires Enrique A.
February 1, 2011 Manalo, signed the Rome Statute which, by its terms, is subject to ratification,
x-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------x acceptance or approval by the signatory states.[6] As of the filing of the instant
petition, only 92 out of the 139 signatory countries appear to have completed the
DECISION
ratification, approval and concurrence process. The Philippines is not among the
VELASCO, JR., J.:
92.
The Case
RP-US Non-Surrender Agreement
[1]
This petition for certiorari, mandamus and prohibition under Rule 65
assails and seeks to nullify the Non-Surrender Agreement concluded by and On May 9, 2003, then Ambassador Francis J. Ricciardone sent US Embassy
between the Republic of the Philippines (RP) and the United States of America Note No. 0470 to the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) proposing the terms of
(USA).
the non-surrender bilateral agreement (Agreement, hereinafter) between the USA 3. When the [US] extradites, surrenders, or otherwise transfers a
and the RP. person of the Philippines to a third country, the [US] will not agree to
the surrender or transfer of that person by the third country to any
international tribunal, unless such tribunal has been established by the
Via Exchange of Notes No. BFO-028-03[7] dated May 13, 2003 (E/N BFO-
UN Security Council, absent the express consent of the Government of
028-03, hereinafter), the RP, represented by then DFA Secretary Ople, agreed with
the Republic of the Philippines [GRP].
and accepted the US proposals embodied under the US Embassy Note adverted to
and put in effect the Agreement with the US government. In esse, 4. When the [GRP] extradites, surrenders, or otherwise transfers
the Agreement aims to protect what it refers to and defines as persons of the RP a person of the [USA] to a third country, the [GRP] will not agree to the
and US from frivolous and harassment suits that might be brought against them in surrender or transfer of that person by the third country to any
international tribunals.[8] It is reflective of the increasing pace of the strategic international tribunal, unless such tribunal has been established by the
security and defense partnership between the two countries. As of May 2, 2003, UN Security Council, absent the express consent of the Government of
similar bilateral agreements have been effected by and between the US and 33 the [US].
other countries.[9]
5. This Agreement shall remain in force until one year after the
The Agreement pertinently provides as follows: date on which one party notifies the other of its intent to terminate the
Agreement. The provisions of this Agreement shall continue to apply
1. For purposes of this Agreement, persons are current or former with respect to any act occurring, or any allegation arising, before the
Government officials, employees (including contractors), or military effective date of termination.
personnel or nationals of one Party.

2. Persons of one Party present in the territory of the other shall In response to a query of then Solicitor General Alfredo L. Benipayo on the
not, absent the express consent of the first Party, status of the non-surrender agreement, Ambassador Ricciardone replied in his
letter of October 28, 2003 that the exchange of diplomatic notes constituted a
(a) be surrendered or transferred by any means to any legally binding agreement under international law; and that, under US law, the
international tribunal for any purpose, unless such tribunal
has been established by the UN Security Council, or
said agreement did not require the advice and consent of the US Senate.[10]

(b) be surrendered or transferred by any means to any other In this proceeding, petitioner imputes grave abuse of discretion to
entity or third country, or expelled to a third country, for the respondents in concluding and ratifying the Agreement and prays that it be struck
purpose of surrender to or transfer to any international down as unconstitutional, or at least declared as without force and effect.
tribunal, unless such tribunal has been established by the UN
Security Council.
For their part, respondents question petitioners standing to maintain a suit
and counter that the Agreement, being in the nature of an executive agreement,
does not require Senate concurrence for its efficacy. And for reasons detailed in
their comment, respondents assert the constitutionality of the Agreement. D. Whether the RP-US Non-Surrender Agreement is void and
unenforceable for grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or
excess of jurisdiction in connection with its execution.
The Issues
II. WHETHER THE RP-US NON SURRENDER AGREEMENT IS
VOID AB INITIO FOR CONTRACTING OBLIGATIONS
I. WHETHER THE [RP] PRESIDENT AND THE [DFA] THAT ARE EITHER IMMORAL OR OTHERWISE AT
SECRETARY x x x GRAVELY ABUSED THEIR DISCRETION VARIANCE WITH UNIVERSALLY RECOGNIZED PRINCIPLES
AMOUNTING TO LACK OR EXCESS OF JURISDICTION FOR OF INTERNATIONAL LAW.
CONCLUDING THE RP-US NON SURRENDER
AGREEMENT BY MEANS OF [E/N] BFO-028-03 DATED 13 III. WHETHER THE x x x AGREEMENT IS VALID, BINDING
MAY 2003, WHEN THE PHILIPPINE GOVERNMENT HAS AND EFFECTIVE WITHOUT THE CONCURRENCE BY AT
ALREADY SIGNED THE ROME STATUTE OF THE LEAST TWO-THIRDS (2/3) OF ALL THE MEMBERS OF THE
[ICC] ALTHOUGH THIS IS PENDING RATIFICATION BY THE SENATE x x x.[11]
PHILIPPINE SENATE.
A. Whether by entering into the x x x Agreement Respondents
gravely abused their discretion when they capriciously abandoned,
The foregoing issues may be summarized into two: first, whether or not
waived and relinquished our only legitimate recourse through
the Rome Statute of the [ICC] to prosecute and try persons as the Agreement was contracted validly, which resolves itself into the question of
defined in the x x x Agreement, x x x or literally any conduit of whether or not respondents gravely abused their discretion in concluding it;
American interests, who have committed crimes of genocide, and second, whether or not the Agreement, which has not been submitted to the
crimes against humanity, war crimes and the crime of aggression, Senate for concurrence, contravenes and undermines the Rome Statute and other
thereby abdicating Philippine Sovereignty.
treaties. But because respondents expectedly raised it, we shall first tackle the
B. Whether after the signing and pending ratification of the Rome issue of petitioners legal standing.
Statute of the [ICC] the [RP] President and the [DFA] Secretary x x The Courts Ruling
x are obliged by the principle of good faith to refrain from doing all
acts which would substantially impair the value of the undertaking This petition is bereft of merit.
as signed.

C. Whether the x x x Agreement constitutes an act which defeats the Procedural Issue: Locus Standi of Petitioner
object and purpose of the Rome Statute of the International
Criminal Court and contravenes the obligation of good faith Petitioner, through its three party-list representatives, contends that the
inherent in the signature of the President affixed on the Rome issue of the validity or invalidity of the Agreement carries with it constitutional
Statute of the International Criminal Court, and if so whether the x significance and is of paramount importance that justifies its standing. Cited in
x x Agreementis void and unenforceable on this ground.
this regard is what is usually referred to as the emergency powers cases, [12] in In a long line of cases, however, concerned citizens, taxpayers and
legislators when specific requirements have been met have been given standing
which ordinary citizens and taxpayers were accorded the personality to question by this Court.
the constitutionality of executive issuances.
When suing as a citizen, the interest of the petitioner assailing the
Locus standi is a right of appearance in a court of justice on a given constitutionality of a statute must be direct and personal. He must be able to
question.[13] Specifically, it is a partys personal and substantial interest in a case show, not only that the law or any government act is invalid, but also that he
where he has sustained or will sustain direct injury as a result [14] of the act being sustained or is in imminent danger of sustaining some direct injury as a result of
its enforcement, and not merely that he suffers thereby in some indefinite way. It
challenged, and calls for more than just a generalized grievance. [15] The term must appear that the person complaining has been or is about to be denied some
interest refers to material interest, as distinguished from one that is merely right or privilege to which he is lawfully entitled or that he is about to be
incidental.[16] The rationale for requiring a party who challenges the validity of a subjected to some burdens or penalties by reason of the statute or act complained
of. In fine, when the proceeding involves the assertion of a public right, the mere
law or international agreement to allege such a personal stake in the outcome of fact that he is a citizen satisfies the requirement of personal interest.[21]
the controversy is to assure the concrete adverseness which sharpens the
presentation of issues upon which the court so largely depends for illumination of
difficult constitutional questions.[17] In the case at bar, petitioners representatives have complied with the
qualifying conditions or specific requirements exacted under the locus
Locus standi, however, is merely a matter of procedure and it has been standi rule. As citizens, their interest in the subject matter of the petition is direct
recognized that, in some cases, suits are not brought by parties who have been and personal. At the very least, their assertions questioning the Agreement are
personally injured by the operation of a law or any other government act, but by made of a public right, i.e., to ascertain that the Agreement did not go against
concerned citizens, taxpayers, or voters who actually sue in the public interest. established national policies, practices, and obligations bearing on the States
[18]
Consequently, in a catena of cases,[19] this Court has invariably adopted a obligation to the community of nations.
liberal stance on locus standi.
At any event, the primordial importance to Filipino citizens in general of
Going by the petition, petitioners representatives pursue the instant suit the issue at hand impels the Court to brush aside the procedural barrier posed by
primarily as concerned citizens raising issues of transcendental importance, both the traditional requirement of locus standi, as we have done in a long line of
for the Republic and the citizenry as a whole. earlier cases, notably in the old but oft-cited emergency powers
cases[22] and Kilosbayan v. Guingona, Jr.[23] In cases of transcendental importance,
When suing as a citizen to question the validity of a law or other we wrote again in Bayan v. Zamora,[24] The Court may relax the standing
government action, a petitioner needs to meet certain specific requirements before requirements and allow a suit to prosper even where there is no direct injury to the
he can be clothed with standing. Francisco, Jr. v. Nagmamalasakit na mga party claiming the right of judicial review.
Manananggol ng mga Manggagawang Pilipino, Inc.[20] expounded on this
requirement, thus: Moreover, bearing in mind what the Court said in Taada v. Angara, that it
will not shirk, digress from or abandon its sacred duty and authority to uphold the
Constitution in matters that involve grave abuse of discretion brought before it in of exchange of notes is frequently resorted to, either because of its
appropriate cases, committed by any officer, agency, instrumentality or speedy procedure, or, sometimes, to avoid the process of legislative
approval.[28]
department of the government,[25] we cannot but resolve head on the issues raised
before us. Indeed, where an action of any branch of government is seriously
alleged to have infringed the Constitution or is done with grave abuse of In another perspective, the terms exchange of notes and executive
discretion, it becomes not only the right but in fact the duty of the judiciary to agreements have been used interchangeably, exchange of notes being considered a
settle it. As in this petition, issues are precisely raised putting to the fore the form of executive agreement that becomes binding through executive action.
propriety of the Agreement pending the ratification of the Rome Statute. [29]
On the other hand, executive agreements concluded by the President
sometimes take the form of exchange of notes and at other times that of more
Validity of the RP-US Non-Surrender Agreement formal documents denominated agreements or protocols.[30] As former US High
Commissioner to the Philippines Francis B. Sayre observed in his work, The
Petitioners initial challenge against the Agreement relates to form, its Constitutionality of Trade Agreement Acts:
threshold posture being that E/N BFO-028-03 cannot be a valid medium for The point where ordinary correspondence between this and other
concluding the Agreement. governments ends and agreements whether denominated executive
Petitioners contentionperhaps taken unaware of certain well-recognized agreements or exchange of notes or otherwise begin, may sometimes be
international doctrines, practices, and jargonsis untenable. One of these is the difficult of ready ascertainment.[31] x x x
doctrine of incorporation, as expressed in Section 2, Article II of the Constitution, It is fairly clear from the foregoing disquisition that E/N BFO-028-03be it
wherein the Philippines adopts the generally accepted principles of international viewed as the Non-Surrender Agreement itself, or as an integral instrument of
law and international jurisprudence as part of the law of the land and adheres to acceptance thereof or as consent to be boundis a recognized mode of concluding a
the policy of peace, cooperation, and amity with all nations. [26] An exchange of legally binding international written contract among nations.
notes falls into the category of inter-governmental agreements, [27] which is an
internationally accepted form of international agreement. The United Nations Senate Concurrence Not Required
Treaty Collections (Treaty Reference Guide) defines the term as follows:
Article 2 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties defines a treaty
as an international agreement concluded between states in written form and
An exchange of notes is a record of a routine agreement, that has governed by international law, whether embodied in a single instrument or in two
many similarities with the private law contract. The agreement consists or more related instruments and whatever its particular designation.
of the exchange of two documents, each of the parties being in the [32]
International agreements may be in the form of (1) treaties that require
possession of the one signed by the representative of the other. Under
the usual procedure, the accepting State repeats the text of the offering legislative concurrence after executive ratification; or (2) executive agreements
State to record its assent. The signatories of the letters may be that are similar to treaties, except that they do not require legislative concurrence
government Ministers, diplomats or departmental heads. The technique
and are usually less formal and deal with a narrower range of subject matters than trademark and copyright protection, postal and navigation arrangements and
treaties.[33] settlement of claims.

Under international law, there is no difference between treaties and In addition, petitioner foists the applicability to the instant case of Adolfo v.
executive agreements in terms of their binding effects on the contracting states CFI of Zambales and Merchant,[41] holding that an executive agreement through
concerned,[34] as long as the negotiating functionaries have remained within their an exchange of notes cannot be used to amend a treaty.
powers.[35] Neither, on the domestic sphere, can one be held valid if it violates the
Constitution.[36] Authorities are, however, agreed that one is distinct from another We are not persuaded.
for accepted reasons apart from the concurrence-requirement aspect. [37] As has
been observed by US constitutional scholars, a treaty has greater dignity than an The categorization of subject matters that may be covered by international
executive agreement, because its constitutional efficacy is beyond doubt, a treaty agreements mentioned in Eastern Sea Trading is not cast in stone. There are no
having behind it the authority of the President, the Senate, and the people; [38] a hard and fast rules on the propriety of entering, on a given subject, into a treaty or
ratified treaty, unlike an executive agreement, takes precedence over any prior an executive agreement as an instrument of international relations. The primary
statutory enactment.[39] consideration in the choice of the form of agreement is the parties intent and
desire to craft an international agreement in the form they so wish to further their
Petitioner parlays the notion that the Agreement is of dubious validity, respective interests. Verily, the matter of form takes a back seat when it comes to
partaking as it does of the nature of a treaty; hence, it must be duly concurred in effectiveness and binding effect of the enforcement of a treaty or an executive
by the Senate.Petitioner takes a cue from Commissioner of Customs v. Eastern agreement, as the parties in either international agreement each labor under
Sea Trading, in which the Court reproduced the following observations made by the pacta sunt servanda[42] principle.
US legal scholars: [I]nternational agreements involving political issues or changes
of national policy and those involving international arrangements of a permanent As may be noted, almost half a century has elapsed since the Court
character usually take the form of treaties [while] those embodying adjustments of rendered its decision in Eastern Sea Trading. Since then, the conduct of foreign
detail carrying out well established national policies and traditions and those affairs has become more complex and the domain of international law wider, as to
involving arrangements of a more or less temporary nature take the form of include such subjects as human rights, the environment, and the sea. In fact, in
executive agreements. [40] the US alone, the executive agreements executed by its President from 1980 to
2000 covered subjects such as defense, trade, scientific cooperation, aviation,
Pressing its point, petitioner submits that the subject of the Agreement does atomic energy, environmental cooperation, peace corps, arms limitation, and
not fall under any of the subject-categories that are enumerated in the Eastern Sea nuclear safety, among others.[43] Surely, the enumeration in Eastern Sea
Trading case, and that may be covered by an executive agreement, such as Trading cannot circumscribe the option of each state on the matter of which the
commercial/consular relations, most-favored nation rights, patent rights, international agreement format would be convenient to serve its best interest. As
Francis Sayre said in his work referred to earlier:
x x x It would be useless to undertake to discuss here the large Considering the above discussion, the Court need not belabor at length the
variety of executive agreements as such concluded from time to time. third main issue raised, referring to the validity and effectivity of
Hundreds of executive agreements, other than those entered into under
the Agreement without the concurrence by at least two-thirds of all the members
the trade-agreement act, have been negotiated with foreign
governments. x x x They cover such subjects as the inspection of of the Senate. The Court has, in Eastern Sea Trading,[48] as reiterated in Bayan,
[49]
vessels, navigation dues, income tax on shipping profits, the admission given recognition to the obligatory effect of executive agreements without the
of civil air craft, custom matters and commercial relations generally, concurrence of the Senate:
international claims, postal matters, the registration of trademarks and
copyrights, etc. x x x x x x [T]he right of the Executive to enter into binding
agreements without the necessity of subsequent Congressional approval
has been confirmed by long usage. From the earliest days of our history,
And lest it be overlooked, one type of executive agreement is a treaty- we have entered executive agreements covering such subjects as
authorized[44] or a treaty-implementing executive agreement,[45] which necessarily commercial and consular relations, most favored-nation rights, patent
rights, trademark and copyright protection, postal and navigation
would cover the same matters subject of the underlying treaty.
arrangements and the settlement of claims. The validity of these has
never been seriously questioned by our courts.
But over and above the foregoing considerations is the fact thatsave for the
situation and matters contemplated in Sec. 25, Art. XVIII of the
Constitution[46]when a treaty is required, the Constitution does not classify any The Agreement Not in Contravention of the Rome Statute
subject, like that involving political issues, to be in the form of, and ratified as, a
treaty. What the Constitution merely prescribes is that treaties need the It is the petitioners next contention that the Agreement undermines the
concurrence of the Senate by a vote defined therein to complete the ratification establishment of the ICC and is null and void insofar as it unduly restricts the
process. ICCs jurisdiction and infringes upon the effectivity of the Rome
Statute. Petitioner posits that the Agreement was constituted solely for the purpose
Petitioners reliance on Adolfo[47] is misplaced, said case being inapplicable of providing individuals or groups of individuals with immunity from the
owing to different factual milieus. There, the Court held that an executive jurisdiction of the ICC; and such grant of immunity through non-surrender
agreement cannot be used to amend a duly ratified and existing treaty, i.e., the agreements allegedly does not legitimately fall within the scope of Art. 98 of
Bases Treaty. Indeed, an executive agreement that does not require the the Rome Statute. It concludes that state parties with non-surrender agreements
concurrence of the Senate for its ratification may not be used to amend a treaty are prevented from meeting their obligations under the Rome Statute, thereby
that, under the Constitution, is the product of the ratifying acts of the Executive constituting a breach of Arts. 27,[50] 86,[51] 89[52] and 90[53] thereof.
and the Senate. The presence of a treaty, purportedly being subject to amendment Petitioner stresses that the overall object and purpose of the Rome Statute is
by an executive agreement, does not obtain under the premises. to ensure that those responsible for the worst possible crimes are brought to
justice in all cases, primarily by states, but as a last resort, by the ICC; thus, any
agreementlike the non-surrender agreementthat precludes the ICC from exercising the Court shall be governed by the provisions of this Statute. (Emphasis
its complementary function of acting when a state is unable to or unwilling to do ours.)
so, defeats the object and purpose of the Rome Statute.
Significantly, the sixth preambular paragraph of the Rome Statute declares
Petitioner would add that the President and the DFA Secretary, as
that it is the duty of every State to exercise its criminal jurisdiction over those
representatives of a signatory of the Rome Statute, are obliged by the imperatives
responsible for international crimes. This provision indicates that primary
of good faith to refrain from performing acts that substantially devalue the
jurisdiction over the so-called international crimes rests, at the first instance, with
purpose and object of the Statute, as signed. Adding a nullifying ingredient to
the state where the crime was committed; secondarily, with the ICC in appropriate
the Agreement, according to petitioner, is the fact that it has an immoral purpose
situations contemplated under Art. 17, par. 1[55] of the Rome Statute.
or is otherwise at variance with a priorly executed treaty.
Of particular note is the application of the principle of ne bis in
Contrary to petitioners pretense, the Agreement does not contravene or [56]
idem under par. 3 of Art. 20, Rome Statute, which again underscores the
undermine, nor does it differ from, the Rome Statute. Far from going against each
primacy of the jurisdiction of a state vis-a-vis that of the ICC. As far as relevant,
other, one complements the other. As a matter of fact, the principle of
the provision states that no person who has been tried by another court for
complementarity underpins the creation of the ICC. As aptly pointed out by
conduct x x x [constituting crimes within its jurisdiction] shall be tried by the
respondents and admitted by petitioners, the jurisdiction of the ICC is to be
[International Criminal] Court with respect to the same conduct x x x.
complementary to national criminal jurisdictions [of the signatory states]. [54] Art. 1
of the Rome Statute pertinently provides:
The foregoing provisions of the Rome Statute, taken collectively, argue
against the idea of jurisdictional conflict between the Philippines, as party to the
non-surrender agreement, and the ICC; or the idea of the Agreement substantially
impairing the value of the RPs undertaking under the Rome Statute. Ignoring for a
while the fact that the RP signed the Rome Statute ahead of the Agreement, it is
Article 1 abundantly clear to us that the Rome Statute expressly recognizes the primary
jurisdiction of states, like the RP, over serious crimes committed within their
The Court
respective borders, the complementary jurisdiction of the ICC coming into play
An International Crimininal Court (the Court) is hereby only when the signatory states are unwilling or unable to prosecute.
established. It x x x shall have the power to exercise its
jurisdiction over persons for the most serious crimes of international Given the above consideration, petitioners suggestionthat the RP, by
concern, as referred to in this Statute, and shall be complementary to entering into the Agreement, violated its duty required by the imperatives of good
national criminal jurisdictions. The jurisdiction and functioning of faith and breached its commitment under the Vienna Convention[57] to refrain from
performing any act tending to impair the value of a treaty, e.g., the Rome purpose of the Rome Statute. Any argument obliging the Philippines to follow any
Statutehas to be rejected outright. For nothing in the provisions of provision in the treaty would be premature.
the Agreement, in relation to the Rome Statute, tends to diminish the efficacy of
the Statute, let alone defeats the purpose of the ICC. Lest it be overlooked, the As a result, petitioners argument that State-Parties with non-surrender
Rome Statute contains a proviso that enjoins the ICC from seeking the surrender agreements are prevented from meeting their obligations under the Rome Statute,
of an erring person, should the process require the requested state to perform an specifically Arts. 27, 86, 89 and 90, must fail. These articles are only legally
act that would violate some international agreement it has entered into. We refer binding upon State-Parties, not signatories.
to Art. 98(2) of the Rome Statute, which reads:
Furthermore, a careful reading of said Art. 90 would show that
Article 98 the Agreement is not incompatible with the Rome Statute. Specifically, Art. 90(4)
provides that [i]f the requesting State is a State not Party to this Statute the
Cooperation with respect to waiver of immunity
requested State, if it is not under an international obligation to extradite the person
and consent to surrender
to the requesting State, shall give priority to the request for surrender from the
xxxx Court. x x x In applying the provision, certain undisputed facts should be pointed
out: first, the US is neither a State-Party nor a signatory to the Rome Statute;
2. The Court may not proceed with a request for surrender and second, there is an international agreement between the US and
which would require the requested State to act inconsistently with its the Philippines regarding extradition or surrender of persons, i.e., the Agreement.
obligations under international agreements pursuant to which the Clearly, even assuming that the Philippines is a State-Party, the Rome Statute still
consent of a sending State is required to surrender a person of that
State to the Court, unless the Court can first obtain the cooperation recognizes the primacy of international agreements entered into between States,
of the sending State for the giving of consent for the surrender. even when one of the States is not a State-Party to the Rome Statute.

Sovereignty Limited by International Agreements


Moreover, under international law, there is a considerable difference
between a State-Party and a signatory to a treaty. Under the Vienna Convention on Petitioner next argues that the RP has, through the Agreement, abdicated its
the Law of Treaties, a signatory state is only obliged to refrain from acts which sovereignty by bargaining away the jurisdiction of the ICC to prosecute US
would defeat the object and purpose of a treaty; [58] whereas a State-Party, on the nationals, government officials/employees or military personnel who commit
other hand, is legally obliged to follow all the provisions of a treaty in good faith. serious crimes of international concerns in the Philippines. Formulating
petitioners argument a bit differently, the RP, by entering into the Agreement, does
In the instant case, it bears stressing that the Philippines is only a signatory thereby abdicate its sovereignty, abdication being done by its waiving or
to the Rome Statute and not a State-Party for lack of ratification by the Senate. abandoning its right to seek recourse through the Rome Statute of the ICC for
Thus, it is only obliged to refrain from acts which would defeat the object and erring Americans committing international crimes in the country.
immunity like Heads of State, diplomats and members of the armed
We are not persuaded. As it were, the Agreement is but a form of forces contingents of a foreign State allowed to enter another States
territory. x x x
affirmance and confirmance of the Philippines national criminal
jurisdiction. National criminal jurisdiction being primary, as explained above, it is
To be sure, the nullity of the subject non-surrender agreement cannot be
always the responsibility and within the prerogative of the RP either to prosecute
predicated on the postulate that some of its provisions constitute a virtual
criminal offenses equally covered by the Rome Statute or to accede to the
abdication of its sovereignty. Almost every time a state enters into an international
jurisdiction of the ICC. Thus, the Philippines may decide to try persons of the US,
agreement, it voluntarily sheds off part of its sovereignty. The Constitution, as
as the term is understood in the Agreement, under our national criminal justice
drafted, did not envision a reclusive Philippines isolated from the rest of the
system. Or it may opt not to exercise its criminal jurisdiction over its erring
world. It even adheres, as earlier stated, to the policy of cooperation and amity
citizens or over US persons committing high crimes in the country and defer to
with all nations.[60]
the secondary criminal jurisdiction of the ICC over them. As to persons of the US
whom the Philippines refuses to prosecute, the country would, in effect,
By their nature, treaties and international agreements actually have a
accord discretion to the US to exercise either its national criminal jurisdiction
limiting effect on the otherwise encompassing and absolute nature of
over the person concerned or to give its consent to the referral of the matter to the
sovereignty. By their voluntary act, nations may decide to surrender or waive
ICC for trial. In the same breath, the US must extend the same privilege to
some aspects of their state power or agree to limit the exercise of their otherwise
the Philippines with respect to persons of the RP committing high crimes
exclusive and absolute jurisdiction. The usual underlying consideration in this
within US territorial jurisdiction.
partial surrender may be the greater benefits derived from a pact or a reciprocal
undertaking of one contracting party to grant the same privileges or immunities to
the other. On the rationale that the Philippines has adopted the generally accepted
principles of international law as part of the law of the land, a portion of
In the context of the Constitution, there can be no serious objection to
sovereignty may be waived without violating the Constitution. [61] Such waiver
the Philippines agreeing to undertake the things set forth in the Agreement. Surely,
does not amount to an unconstitutional diminution or deprivation of jurisdiction
one State can agree to waive jurisdictionto the extent agreed uponto subjects of
of Philippine courts.[62]
another State due to the recognition of the principle of extraterritorial
immunity. What the Court wrote in Nicolas v. Romulo[59]a case involving the Agreement Not Immoral/Not at Variance
implementation of the criminal jurisdiction provisions of the RP-US Visiting with Principles of International Law
Forces Agreementis apropos:

Nothing in the Constitution prohibits such agreements Petitioner urges that the Agreement be struck down as void ab initio for
recognizing immunity from jurisdiction or some aspects of jurisdiction imposing immoral obligations and/or being at variance with allegedly universally
(such as custody), in relation to long-recognized subjects of such
recognized principles of international law. The immoral aspect proceeds from the
fact that the Agreement, as petitioner would put it, leaves criminals immune from criminal jurisdiction pursuant to the non-surrender agreement over an offense
responsibility for unimaginable atrocities that deeply shock the conscience of considered criminal by both Philippine laws and the Rome Statute.
humanity; x x x it precludes our country from delivering an American criminal to No Grave Abuse of Discretion
the [ICC] x x x.[63]
Petitioners final point revolves around the necessity of the Senates
The above argument is a kind of recycling of petitioners earlier position, concurrence in the Agreement. And without specifically saying so,
which, as already discussed, contends that the RP, by entering into petitioner would argue that the non-surrender agreement was executed by the
the Agreement, virtually abdicated its sovereignty and in the process undermined President, thru the DFA Secretary, in grave abuse of discretion.
its treaty obligations under the Rome Statute, contrary to international law
principles.[64] The Court need not delve on and belabor the first portion of the above
posture of petitioner, the same having been discussed at length earlier on. As to
The Court is not persuaded. Suffice it to state in this regard that the non- the second portion, We wish to state that petitioner virtually faults the President
surrender agreement, as aptly described by the Solicitor General, is an assertion for performing, through respondents, a task conferred the President by the
by the Philippinesof its desire to try and punish crimes under its national law. x x Constitutionthe power to enter into international agreements.
x The agreement is a recognition of the primacy and competence of the countrys
judiciary to try offenses under its national criminal laws and dispense justice By constitutional fiat and by the nature of his or her office, the President, as
fairly and judiciously. head of state and government, is the sole organ and authority in the external
affairs of the country.[65] The Constitution vests in the President the power to enter
Petitioner, we believe, labors under the erroneous impression that into international agreements, subject, in appropriate cases, to the required
the Agreement would allow Filipinos and Americans committing high crimes of concurrence votes of the Senate.But as earlier indicated, executive agreements
international concern to escape criminal trial and punishment. This is manifestly may be validly entered into without such concurrence. As the President wields
incorrect. Persons who may have committed acts penalized under the Rome vast powers and influence, her conduct in the external affairs of the nation is,
Statute can be prosecuted and punished in the Philippines or in the US; or with the as Bayan would put it, executive altogether. The right of the President to enter
consent of the RP or the US, before the ICC, assuming, for the nonce, that all the into or ratify binding executive agreements has been confirmed by long practice.
[66]
formalities necessary to bind both countries to the Rome Statute have been
met. For perspective, what the Agreement contextually prohibits is the surrender
by either party of individuals to international tribunals, like the ICC, without the In thus agreeing to conclude the Agreement thru E/N BFO-028-03, then
consent of the other party, which may desire to prosecute the crime under its President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, represented by the Secretary of Foreign
existing laws. With the view we take of things, there is nothing immoral or Affairs, acted within the scope of the authority and discretion vested in her by the
violative of international law concepts in the act of the Philippines of assuming Constitution. At the end of the day, the Presidentby ratifying, thru her deputies,
the non-surrender agreementdid nothing more than discharge a constitutional duty authorities may surrender or extradite suspected or accused persons in
the Philippines to the appropriate international court, if any, or to another
and exercise a prerogative that pertains to her office. State pursuant to the applicable extradition laws and treaties. (Emphasis
supplied.)
While the issue of ratification of the Rome Statute is not determinative of
the other issues raised herein, it may perhaps be pertinent to remind all and sundry
that about the time this petition was interposed, such issue of ratification was laid A view is advanced that the Agreement amends existing municipal laws on
to rest in Pimentel, Jr. v. Office of the Executive Secretary. [67] As the Court the States obligation in relation to grave crimes against the law of nations, i.e.,
emphasized in said case, the power to ratify a treaty, the Statute in that instance, genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes. Relying on the above-quoted
rests with the President, subject to the concurrence of the Senate, whose role statutory proviso, the view posits that the Philippine is required to surrender to the
relative to the ratification of a treaty is limited merely to concurring in or proper international tribunal those persons accused of the grave crimes defined
withholding the ratification. And concomitant with this treaty-making power of under RA 9851, if it does not exercise its primary jurisdiction to prosecute them.
the President is his or her prerogative to refuse to submit a treaty to the Senate; or The basic premise rests on the interpretation that if it does not decide to
having secured the latters consent to the ratification of the treaty, refuse to ratify prosecute a foreign national for violations of RA 9851, the Philippines has only
it.[68] This prerogative, the Court hastened to add, is the Presidents alone and two options, to wit: (1) surrender the accused to the proper international tribunal;
cannot be encroached upon via a writ of mandamus. Barring intervening events, or (2) surrender the accused to another State if such surrender is pursuant to the
then, the Philippines remains to be just a signatory to the Rome Statute. Under applicable extradition laws and treaties. But the Philippines may exercise these
Art. 125[69] thereof, the final acts required to complete the treaty process and, thus, options only in cases where another court or international tribunal is already
bring it into force, insofar as the Philippines is concerned, have yet to be done. conducting the investigation or undertaking the prosecution of such crime;
otherwise, the Philippines must prosecute the crime before its own courts pursuant
Agreement Need Not Be in the Form of a Treaty to RA 9851.

On December 11, 2009, then President Arroyo signed into law Republic Act Posing the situation of a US national under prosecution by an international
No. (RA) 9851, otherwise known as the Philippine Act on Crimes Against tribunal for any crime under RA 9851, the Philippines has the option to surrender
International Humanitarian Law, Genocide, and Other Crimes Against such USnational to the international tribunal if it decides not to prosecute
Humanity. Sec. 17 of RA 9851, particularly the second paragraph thereof, such US national here. The view asserts that this option of the Philippines under
provides: Sec. 17 of RA 9851 is not subject to the consent of the US, and any derogation of
Sec. 17 of RA 9851, such as requiring the consent of the US before
Section 17. Jurisdiction. x x x x the Philippines can exercise such option, requires an amendatory law. In line with
In the interest of justice, the relevant Philippine authorities may dispense this scenario, the view strongly argues that the Agreement prevents
with the investigation or prosecution of a crime punishable under this Act if
another court or international tribunal is already conducting the investigation or the Philippineswithout the consent of the USfrom surrendering to any
undertaking the prosecution of such crime. Instead, the international tribunal US nationals accused of crimes covered by RA 9851, and,
thus, in effect amends Sec. 17 of RA 9851. Consequently, the view is strongly We are unable to lend cogency to the view thus taken. For one, we find that
impressed that the Agreement cannot be embodied in a simple executive the Agreement does not amend or is repugnant to RA 9851. For another, the view
agreement in the form of an exchange of notes but must be implemented through does not clearly state what precise principles of law, if any,
the Agreement alters. And for a third, it does not demonstrate in the concrete how
an extradition law or a treaty with the corresponding formalities.
the Agreement seeks to frustrate the objectives of the principles of law subsumed
in the Rome Statute.
Moreover, consonant with the foregoing view, citing Sec. 2, Art. II of the
Constitution, where the Philippines adopts, as a national policy, the generally Far from it, as earlier explained, the Agreement does not undermine the
Rome Statute as the former merely reinforces the primacy of the national
accepted principles of international law as part of the law of the land, the
jurisdiction of the US and the Philippines in prosecuting criminal offenses
Court is further impressed to perceive the Rome Statute as declaratory of committed by their respective citizens and military personnel, among others. The
customary international law. In other words, the Statute embodies principles of jurisdiction of the ICC pursuant to the Rome Statute over high crimes indicated
law which constitute customary international law or custom and for which reason thereat is clearly and unmistakably complementary to the national
criminal jurisdiction of the signatory states.
it assumes the status of an enforceable domestic law in the context of the
aforecited constitutional provision. As a corollary, it is argued that any derogation Moreover, RA 9851 clearly: (1) defines and establishes the crimes against
from the Rome Statute principles cannot be undertaken via a mere executive international humanitarian law, genocide and other crimes against humanity;[70] (2)
provides penal sanctions and criminal liability for their commission; [71] and (3)
agreement, which, as an exclusive act of the executive branch, can only establishes special courts for the prosecution of these crimes and for the State to
implement, but cannot amend or repeal, an existing law. The Agreement, so the exercise primary criminal jurisdiction.[72] Nowhere in RA 9851 is there a proviso
argument goes, seeks to frustrate the objects of the principles of law or alters that goes against the tenor of the Agreement.
customary rules embodied in the Rome Statute.
The view makes much of the above quoted second par. of Sec. 17, RA 9851
as requiring the Philippine State to surrender to the proper international tribunal
Prescinding from the foregoing premises, the view thus advanced considers those persons accused of crimes sanctioned under said law if it does not exercise
its primary jurisdiction to prosecute such persons. This view is not entirely
the Agreement inefficacious, unless it is embodied in a treaty duly ratified with the
correct, for the above quoted proviso clearly provides discretion to the Philippine
concurrence of the Senate, the theory being that a Senate- ratified treaty partakes State on whether to surrender or not a person accused of the crimes under RA
of the nature of a municipal law that can amend or supersede another law, in this 9851. The statutory proviso uses the word may. It is settled doctrine in statutory
instance Sec. 17 of RA 9851 and the status of the Rome Statute as constitutive of construction that the word may denotes discretion, and cannot be construed as
having mandatory effect.[73] Thus, the pertinent second pararagraph of Sec. 17, RA
enforceable domestic law under Sec. 2, Art. II of the Constitution. 9851 is simply permissive on the part of the Philippine State.
Besides, even granting that the surrender of a person is mandatorily as RA 9851 is a subsequent law, not a prior one. Notably, this argument cannot be
required when the Philippines does not exercise its primary jurisdiction in cases found in the ratio decidendi of the case, but only in the dissenting opinion.
where another court or international tribunal is already conducting the
investigation or undertaking the prosecution of such crime, still, the tenor of The view further contends that the RP-US Extradition Treaty is inapplicable
the Agreement is not repugnant to Sec. 17 of RA 9851. Said legal proviso aptly to RA 9851 for the reason that under par. 1, Art. 2 of the RP-US Extradition
provides that the surrender may be made to another State pursuant to the Treaty, [a]n offense shall be an extraditable offense if it is punishable under the
applicable extradition laws and treaties. The Agreement can already be considered laws in both Contracting Parties x x x,[79] and thereby concluding that while the
a treaty following this Courts decision in Nicolas v. Romulo[74] which Philippines has criminalized under RA 9851 the acts defined in the Rome Statute
cited Weinberger v. Rossi.[75] In Nicolas, We held that an executive agreement is a as war crimes, genocide and other crimes against humanity, there is no similar
treaty within the meaning of that word in international law and constitutes legislation in the US. It is further argued that, citing U.S. v. Coolidge, in the US, a
enforceable domestic law vis--vis the United States.[76] person cannot be tried in the federal courts for an international crime unless
Congress adopts a law defining and punishing the offense.
Likewise, the Philippines and the US already have an existing extradition
treaty, i.e., RP-US Extradition Treaty, which was executed on November 13, This view must fail.
1994. The pertinent Philippine law, on the other hand, is Presidential Decree No.
1069, issued on January 13, 1977. Thus, the Agreement, in conjunction with the On the contrary, the US has already enacted legislation punishing the high
RP-US Extradition Treaty, would neither violate nor run counter to Sec. 17 of RA crimes mentioned earlier. In fact, as early as October 2006, the US enacted a law
9851. criminalizing war crimes. Section 2441, Chapter 118, Part I, Title 18 of the United
States Code Annotated (USCA) provides for the criminal offense of war crimes
The views reliance on Suplico v. Neda[77] is similarly improper. In that case, which is similar to the war crimes found in both the Rome Statute and RA 9851,
several petitions were filed questioning the power of the President to enter into thus:
foreign loan agreements. However, before the petitions could be resolved by the
Court, the Office of the Solicitor General filed a Manifestation and Motion (a) Offense Whoever, whether inside or outside the United States, commits a
averring that the Philippine Government decided not to continue with the ZTE war crime, in any of the circumstances described in subsection (b), shall be
fined under this title or imprisoned for life or any term of years, or both, and
National Broadband Network Project, thus rendering the petition moot. In
if death results to the victim, shall also be subject to the penalty of death.
resolving the case, the Court took judicial notice of the act of the executive (b) Circumstances The circumstances referred to in subsection (a) are that the
department of the Philippines (the President) and found the petition to be indeed person committing such war crime or the victim of such war crime is a
moot. Accordingly, it dismissed the petitions. member of the Armed Forces of the United States or a national of the United
States (as defined in Section 101 of the Immigration and Nationality Act).
In his dissent in the abovementioned case, Justice Carpio discussed the (c) Definition As used in this Section the term war crime means any conduct
(1) Defined as a grave breach in any of the international conventions signed
legal implications of an executive agreement. He stated that an executive
at Geneva 12 August 1949, or any protocol to such convention to which
agreement has the force and effect of law x x x [it] cannot amend or the United States is a party;
repeal prior laws.[78] Hence, this argument finds no application in this case seeing
(2) Prohibited by Article 23, 25, 27 or 28 of the Annex to the
Hague Convention IV, Respecting the Laws and Customs of War on At the outset, it should be pointed out that the report used may not have any
Land, signed 18 October 1907;
weight or value under international law. Article 38 of the Statute of the
(3) Which constitutes a grave breach of common Article 3 (as defined in
subsection [d]) when committed in the context of and in association with International Court of Justice (ICJ) lists the sources of international law, as
an armed conflict not of an international character; or follows: (1) international conventions, whether general or particular, establishing
(4) Of a person who, in relation to an armed conflict and contrary to the rules expressly recognized by the contesting states; (2) international custom, as
provisions of the Protocol on Prohibitions or Restrictions on the Use of evidence of a general practice accepted as law; (3) the general principles of law
Mines, Booby-Traps and Other Devices as amended at Geneva on 3 May recognized by civilized nations; and (4) subject to the provisions of Article 59,
1996 (Protocol II as amended on 3 May 1996), when the United States is
judicial decisions and the teachings of the most highly qualified publicists of
a party to such Protocol, willfully kills or causes serious injury to
civilians.[80] the various nations, as subsidiary means for the determination of rules of law.
The report does not fall under any of the foregoing enumerated sources. It cannot
Similarly, in December 2009, the US adopted a law that criminalized even be considered as the teachings of highly qualified publicists. A highly
genocide, to wit: qualified publicist is a scholar of public international law and the term usually
refers to legal scholars or academic writers.[82] It has not been shown that the
1091. Genocide authors[83] of this report are highly qualified publicists.

(a) Basic Offense Whoever, whether in the time of peace or in time Assuming arguendo that the report has weight, still, the perceived gaps in
of war and with specific intent to destroy, in whole or in substantial part,
the definitions of the crimes are nonexistent. To highlight, the table below shows
a national, ethnic, racial or religious group as such
(1) kills members of that group; the definitions of genocide and war crimes under the Rome Statute vis--vis the
(2) causes serious bodily injury to members of that group; definitions under US laws:
(3) causes the permanent impairment of the mental faculties of
members of the group through drugs, torture, or similar techniques;
(4) subjects the group to conditions of life that are intended to cause Rome Statute US Law
the physical destruction of the group in whole or in part; Article 6 1091. Genocide
(5) imposes measures intended to prevent births within the group; or Genocide
(6) transfers by force children of the group to another group; For the purpose of this Statute, genocide means (a) Basic Offense Whoever, whether in the time
shall be punished as provided in subsection (b).[81] any of the following acts committed with intent of peace or in time of war and with specific
to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, intent to destroy, in whole or in substantial part,
ethnical, racial or religious group, as such: a national, ethnic, racial or religious group as
Arguing further, another view has been advanced that the current US laws (a) Killing members of the group; such
do not cover every crime listed within the jurisdiction of the ICC and that there is (b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to (1) kills members of that group;
a gap between the definitions of the different crimes under the US laws versus the members of the group; (2) causes serious bodily injury to members of
Rome Statute. The view used a report written by Victoria K. Holt and Elisabeth (c) Deliberately inflicting on the group that group;
conditions of life calculated to bring about (3) causes the permanent impairment of the
W. Dallas, entitled On Trial: The US Military and the International Criminal its physical destruction in whole or in part; mental faculties of members of the
Court, as its basis. (d) Imposing measures intended to prevent group through drugs, torture, or similar
births within the group; techniques;
(e) Forcibly transferring children of the group (4) subjects the group to conditions of life that
to another group. are intended to cause the physical
destruction of the group in whole or in Evidently, the gaps pointed out as to the definition of the crimes are not present.
part;
(5) imposes measures intended to prevent In fact, the report itself stated as much, to wit:
births within the group; or
(6) transfers by force children of the group to Few believed there were wide differences between the crimes under the
another group; jurisdiction of the Court and crimes within the Uniform Code of Military Justice
shall be punished as provided in subsection (b). that would expose US personnel to the Court. Since US military lawyers were
Article 8 (a) Definition As used in this Section the term instrumental in drafting the elements of crimes outlined in the Rome Statute,
War Crimes war crime means any conduct they ensured that most of the crimes were consistent with those outlined in the
2. For the purpose of this Statute, war crimes (1) Defined as a grave breach in any of the UCMJ and gave strength to complementarity for the US. Small areas of potential
means: international conventions signed gaps between the UCMJ and the Rome Statute, military experts argued, could be
(a) Grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions at Geneva12 August 1949, or any
addressed through existing military laws.[87] x x x
of 12 August 1949, namely, any of the protocol to such convention to which
following acts against persons or property the United States is a party;
protected under the provisions of the relevant (2) Prohibited by Article 23, 25, 27 or 28 of The report went on further to say that [a]ccording to those involved, the
Geneva Convention: x x x[84] the Annex to the Hague Convention IV, elements of crimes laid out in the Rome Statute have been part of US military
(b) Other serious violations of the laws and Respecting the Laws and Customs of
customs applicable in international armed War on Land, signed 18 October 1907;
doctrine for decades.[88] Thus, the argument proffered cannot stand.
conflict, within the established framework of (3) Which constitutes a grave breach of
international law, namely, any of the following common Article 3 (as defined in Nonetheless, despite the lack of actual domestic legislation, the US notably
acts: subsection [d][85]) when committed in follows the doctrine of incorporation. As early as 1900, the esteemed Justice Gray
xxxx the context of and in association with an
(c) In the case of an armed conflict not of an armed conflict not of an international in The Paquete Habana[89] case already held international law as part of the law of
international character, serious violations of character; or the US, to wit:
article 3 common to the four Geneva (4) Of a person who, in relation to an armed
Conventions of 12 August 1949, namely, any of conflict and contrary to the provisions of International law is part of our law, and must be ascertained and
the following acts committed against persons the Protocol on Prohibitions or
taking no active part in the hostilities, including
administered by the courts of justice of appropriate jurisdiction as often as
Restrictions on the Use of Mines,
members of armed forces who have laid down Booby-Traps and Other Devices as
questions of right depending upon it are duly presented for their determination.
their arms and those placed hors de combat by amended at Geneva on 3 May 1996 For this purpose, where there is no treaty and no controlling executive or
sickness, wounds, detention or any other cause: (Protocol II as amended on 3 May legislative act or judicial decision, resort must be had to the customs and usages
xxxx 1996), when the United States is a party of civilized nations, and, as evidence of these, to the works of jurists and
(d) Paragraph 2 (c) applies to armed conflicts to such Protocol, willfully kills or causes commentators who by years of labor, research, and experience have made
not of an international character and thus does serious injury to civilians.[86] themselves peculiarly well acquainted with the subjects of which they treat. Such
not apply to situations of internal disturbances works are resorted to by judicial tribunals, not for the speculations of their
and tensions, such as riots, isolated and authors concerning what the law ought to be, but for the trustworthy evidence of
sporadic acts of violence or other acts of a
what the law really is.[90] (Emphasis supplied.)
similar nature.
(e) Other serious violations of the laws and
customs applicable in armed conflicts not of an
international character, within the established Thus, a person can be tried in the US for an international crime despite the
framework of international law, namely, any of lack of domestic legislation. The cited ruling in U.S. v. Coolidge,[91] which in turn
the following acts: x x x.
is based on the holding in U.S. v. Hudson,[92] only applies to common law and not
to the law of nations or international law.[93] Indeed, the Court in U.S. v. Customary international law or international custom is a source of
Hudson only considered the question, whether the Circuit Courts of the United international law as stated in the Statute of the ICJ. [100] It is defined as the general
States can exercise a common law jurisdiction in criminal cases.[94] Stated and consistent practice of states recognized and followed by them from a sense of
otherwise, there is no common law crime in the US but this is considerably legal obligation.[101] In order to establish the customary status of a particular norm,
different from international law. two elements must concur: State practice, the objective element; and opinio juris
sive necessitates, the subjective element.[102]
The US doubtless recognizes international law as part of the law of the
land, necessarily including international crimes, even without any local statute. State practice refers to the continuous repetition of the same or similar kind
[95]
In fact, years later, US courts would apply international law as a source of of acts or norms by States.[103] It is demonstrated upon the existence of the
criminal liability despite the lack of a local statute criminalizing it as such. So it following elements: (1) generality; (2) uniformity and consistency; and (3)
was that in Ex Parte Quirin[96] the US Supreme Court noted that [f]rom the very duration.[104] While, opinio juris, the psychological element, requires that the state
beginning of its history this Court has recognized and applied the law of war as practice or norm be carried out in such a way, as to be evidence of a belief that
including that part of the law of nations which prescribes, for the conduct of war, this practice is rendered obligatory by the existence of a rule of law requiring it.
the status, rights and duties of enemy nations as well as of enemy individuals. [97] It [105]

went on further to explain that Congress had not undertaken the task of codifying
the specific offenses covered in the law of war, thus: The term jus cogens means the compelling law.[106] Corollary, a jus
cogens norm holds the highest hierarchical position among all other customary
It is no objection that Congress in providing for the trial of such norms and principles.[107] As a result, jus cogens norms are deemed peremptory
offenses has not itself undertaken to codify that branch of international law
and non-derogable.[108] When applied to international crimes, jus cogens crimes
or to mark its precise boundaries, or to enumerate or define by statute all
the acts which that law condemns. An Act of Congress punishing the crime of have been deemed so fundamental to the existence of a just international legal
piracy as defined by the law of nations is an appropriate exercise of its order that states cannot derogate from them, even by agreement.[109]
constitutional authority, Art. I, s 8, cl. 10, to define and punish the offense since
it has adopted by reference the sufficiently precise definition of international law. These jus cogens crimes relate to the principle of universal jurisdiction, i.e.,
x x x Similarly by the reference in the 15th Article of War to offenders or any state may exercise jurisdiction over an individual who commits certain
offenses that x x x by the law of war may be triable by such military
heinous and widely condemned offenses, even when no other recognized basis for
commissions. Congress has incorporated by reference, as within the jurisdiction
of military commissions, all offenses which are defined as such by the law of jurisdiction exists.[110] The rationale behind this principle is that the crime
war x x x, and which may constitutionally be included within that jurisdiction. committed is so egregious that it is considered to be committed against all
[98]
x x x (Emphasis supplied.) members of the international community[111] and thus granting every State
jurisdiction over the crime.[112]
This rule finds an even stronger hold in the case of crimes against
humanity. It has been held that genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity Therefore, even with the current lack of domestic legislation on the part of
have attained the status of customary international law. Some even go so far as to the US, it still has both the doctrine of incorporation and universal jurisdiction to
state that these crimes have attained the status of jus cogens.[99] try these crimes.
Consequently, no matter how hard one insists, the ICC, as an international The required duration can be either short or long. x x x
tribunal, found in the Rome Statute is not declaratory of customary international
xxxx
law.
Duration therefore is not the most important element. More important is
The first element of customary international law, i.e., established, the consistency and the generality of the practice. x x x
widespread, and consistent practice on the part of States,[113] does not, under the
xxxx
premises, appear to be obtaining as reflected in this simple reality: As of October
12, 2010, only 114[114] States have ratified the Rome Statute, subsequent to its Once the existence of state practice has been established, it becomes
coming into force eight (8) years earlier, or on July 1, 2002. The fact that 114 necessary to determine why states behave the way they do. Do states behave
States out of a total of 194[115] countries in the world, or roughly 58.76%, have the way they do because they consider it obligatory to behave thus or do they do
it only as a matter of courtesy? Opinio juris, or the belief that a certain form of
ratified the Rome Statute casts doubt on whether or not the perceived principles
behavior is obligatory, is what makes practice an international rule. Without it,
contained in the Statute have attained the status of customary law and should be practice is not law.[116] (Emphasis added.)
deemed as obligatory international law. The numbers even tend to argue against
the urgency of establishing international criminal courts envisioned in the Rome
Statute. Lest it be overlooked, the Philippines, judging by the action or inaction of
Evidently, there is, as yet, no overwhelming consensus, let alone prevalent
its top officials, does not even feel bound by the Rome Statute. Res ipsa
loquitur. More than eight (8) years have elapsed since the Philippine practice, among the different countries in the world that the prosecution of
representative signed the Statute, but the treaty has not been transmitted to the internationally recognized crimes of genocide, etc. should be handled by a
Senate for the ratification process. particular international criminal court.

And this brings us to what Fr. Bernas, S.J. aptly said respecting the Absent the widespread/consistent-practice-of-states factor, the second or
application of the concurring elements, thus: the psychological element must be deemed non-existent, for an inquiry on why
states behave the way they do presupposes, in the first place, that they are actually
Custom or customary international law means a general and consistent behaving, as a matter of settled and consistent practice, in a certain manner. This
practice of states followed by them from a sense of legal obligation [opinio juris] implicitly requires belief that the practice in question is rendered obligatory by the
x x x. This statement contains the two basic elements of custom: the material existence of a rule of law requiring it. [117] Like the first element, the second
factor, that is how the states behave, and the psychological factor or subjective
element has likewise not been shown to be present.
factor, that is, why they behave the way they do.

xxxx Further, the Rome Statute itself rejects the concept of universal jurisdiction
over the crimes enumerated therein as evidenced by it requiring State consent.
[118]
The initial factor for determining the existence of custom is the actual behavior Even further, the Rome Statute specifically and unequivocally requires
of states. This includes several elements: duration, consistency, and generality of that: This Statute is subject to ratification, acceptance or approval by signatory
the practice of states.
States.[119] These clearly negate the argument that such has already attained
customary status.

More importantly, an act of the executive branch with a foreign government


must be afforded great respect. The power to enter into executive agreements has
long been recognized to be lodged with the President. As We held in Neri v.
Senate Committee on Accountability of Public Officers and Investigations, [t]he
power to enter into an executive agreement is in essence an executive power. This
authority of the President to enter into executive agreements without the
concurrence of the Legislature has traditionally been recognized in Philippine
jurisprudence.[120] The rationale behind this principle is the inviolable doctrine of
separation of powers among the legislative, executive and judicial branches of the
government. Thus, absent any clear contravention of the law, courts should
exercise utmost caution in declaring any executive agreement invalid.

In light of the above consideration, the position or view that the challenged
RP-US Non-Surrender Agreement ought to be in the form of a treaty, to be
effective, has to be rejected.

WHEREFORE, the petition for certiorari, mandamus and prohibition is


hereby DISMISSED for lack of merit. No costs.

SO ORDERED.
ENATOR AQUILINO PIMENTEL, JR., G.R. No. 158088
This is a petition for mandamus filed by petitioners to compel the
REP. ETTA ROSALES, PHILIPPINE
COALITION FOR THE ESTABLISHMENT Office of the Executive Secretary and the Department of Foreign Affairs to
OF THE INTERNATIONAL Present:
transmit the signed copy of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court
CRIMINAL COURT, TASK FORCE
DETAINEES OF THE PHILIPPINES, Davide, Jr., C.J., to the Senate of the Philippines for its concurrence in accordance with Section 21,
FAMILIES OF VICTIMS OF Puno,
Article VII of the 1987 Constitution.
INVOLUNTARY DISAPPEARANCES, Panganiban,
BIANCA HACINTHA R. ROQUE, Quisumbing,
HARRISON JACOB R. ROQUE, Ynares-Santiago, The Rome Statute established the International Criminal Court which shall have
AHMED PAGLINAWAN, RON P. SALO, *Sandoval-Gutierrez, the power to exercise its jurisdiction over persons for the most serious crimes of
LEAVIDES G. DOMINGO, EDGARDO *Carpio,
CARLO VISTAN, NOEL VILLAROMAN, Austria-Martinez, international concern xxx and shall be complementary to the national criminal
CELESTE CEMBRANO, LIZA ABIERA, *Corona, jurisdictions.[1] Its jurisdiction covers the crime of genocide, crimes against
JAIME ARROYO, MARWIL LLASOS, Carpio Morales,
CRISTINA ATENDIDO, ISRAFEL Callejo, Sr., humanity, war crimes and the crime of aggression as defined in the Statute. [2] The
FAGELA, and ROMEL BAGARES, Azcuna, Statute was opened for signature by all states in Rome on July 17, 1998 and had
Petitioners, Tinga,
Chico-Nazario, and remained open for signature until December 31, 2000 at the United Nations
- versus - Garcia, JJ. Headquarters in New York. The Philippines signed the Statute on December 28,

OFFICE OF THE EXECUTIVE 2000 through Charge d Affairs Enrique A. Manalo of the Philippine Mission to
SECRETARY, represented by Promulgated: the United Nations.[3] Its provisions, however, require that it be subject to
HON. ALBERTO ROMULO, and the
DEPARTMENT OF FOREIGN ratification, acceptance or approval of the signatory states.[4]
AFFAIRS, represented by HON. BLAS OPLE, July 6, 2005
Respondents. Petitioners filed the instant petition to compel the respondents the Office of the
x- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -x Executive Secretary and the Department of Foreign Affairs to transmit the signed

DECISION text of the treaty to the Senate of the Philippines for ratification.

PUNO J.: It is the theory of the petitioners that ratification of a treaty, under both domestic
law and international law, is a function of the Senate. Hence, it is the duty of the
executive department to transmit the signed copy of the Rome Statute to the review only if the case is brought before it by a party who has the legal standing
Senate to allow it to exercise its discretion with respect to ratification of treaties. to raise the constitutional or legal question. Legal standing means a personal and
Moreover, petitioners submit that the Philippines has a ministerial duty to ratify substantial interest in the case such that the party has sustained or will sustain
the Rome Statute under treaty law and customary international law. Petitioners direct injury as a result of the government act that is being challenged. The term
invoke the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties enjoining the states to interest is material interest, an interest in issue and to be affected by the decree, as
refrain from acts which would defeat the object and purpose of a treaty when they distinguished from mere interest in the question involved, or a mere incidental
have signed the treaty prior to ratification unless they have made their intention interest.[8]
clear not to become parties to the treaty.[5]
The petition at bar was filed by Senator Aquilino Pimentel, Jr. who asserts his
The Office of the Solicitor General, commenting for the respondents, questioned legal standing to file the suit as member of the Senate; Congresswoman Loretta
the standing of the petitioners to file the instant suit. It also contended that the Ann Rosales, a member of the House of Representatives and Chairperson of its
petition at bar violates the rule on hierarchy of courts. On the substantive issue Committee on Human Rights; the Philippine Coalition for the Establishment of
raised by petitioners, respondents argue that the executive department has no duty the International Criminal Court which is composed of individuals and corporate
to transmit the Rome Statute to the Senate for concurrence. entities dedicated to the Philippine ratification of the Rome Statute; the Task
Force Detainees of the Philippines, a juridical entity with the avowed purpose of
A petition for mandamus may be filed when any tribunal, corporation, board,
promoting the cause of human rights and human rights victims in the country; the
officer or person unlawfully neglects the performance of an act which the law
Families of Victims of Involuntary Disappearances, a juridical entity duly
specifically enjoins as a duty resulting from an office, trust, or station. [6] We have
organized and existing pursuant to Philippine Laws with the avowed purpose of
held that to be given due course, a petition for mandamus must have been
promoting the cause of families and victims of human rights violations in the
instituted by a party aggrieved by the alleged inaction of any tribunal, corporation,
country; Bianca Hacintha Roque and Harrison Jacob Roque, aged two (2) and one
board or person which unlawfully excludes said party from the enjoyment of a
(1), respectively, at the time of filing of the instant petition, and suing under the
legal right. The petitioner in every case must therefore be an aggrieved party in
doctrine of inter-generational rights enunciated in the case of Oposa vs.
the sense that he possesses a clear legal right to be enforced and a direct interest in
the duty or act to be performed.[7] The Court will exercise its power of judicial
Factoran, Jr.;[9] and a group of fifth year working law students from the sue to question the validity of any official action which they claim infringes their
University of the Philippines College of Law who are suing as taxpayers. prerogatives as legislators. The petition at bar invokes the power of the Senate to
grant or withhold its concurrence to a treaty entered into by the executive branch,
The question in standing is whether a party has alleged such a personal stake in
in this case, the Rome Statute. The petition seeks to order the executive branch to
the outcome of the controversy as to assure that concrete adverseness which
transmit the copy of the treaty to the Senate to allow it to exercise such authority.
sharpens the presentation of issues upon which the court so largely depends for
Senator Pimentel, as member of the institution, certainly has the legal standing to
illumination of difficult constitutional questions.[10]
assert such authority of the Senate.
We find that among the petitioners, only Senator Pimentel has the legal standing
We now go to the substantive issue.
to file the instant suit. The other petitioners maintain their standing as advocates
and defenders of human rights, and as citizens of the country. They have not The core issue in this petition for mandamus is whether the Executive Secretary
shown, however, that they have sustained or will sustain a direct injury from the and the Department of Foreign Affairs have a ministerial duty to transmit to the
non-transmittal of the signed text of the Rome Statute to the Senate. Their Senate the copy of the Rome Statute signed by a member of the Philippine
contention that they will be deprived of their remedies for the protection and Mission to the United Nations even without the signature of the President.
enforcement of their rights does not persuade. The Rome Statute is intended to
We rule in the negative.
complement national criminal laws and courts. Sufficient remedies are available
under our national laws to protect our citizens against human rights violations and In our system of government, the President, being the head of state, is regarded as
petitioners can always seek redress for any abuse in our domestic courts. the sole organ and authority in external relations and is the countrys sole
representative with foreign nations.[12] As the chief architect of foreign policy, the
As regards Senator Pimentel, it has been held that to the extent the powers
President acts as the countrys mouthpiece with respect to international affairs.
of Congress are impaired, so is the power of each member thereof, since his office
Hence, the President is vested with the authority to deal with foreign states and
confers a right to participate in the exercise of the powers of that institution.
[11]
governments, extend or withhold recognition, maintain diplomatic relations, enter
Thus, legislators have the standing to maintain inviolate the prerogatives,
into treaties, and otherwise transact the business of foreign relations. [13] In the
powers and privileges vested by the Constitution in their office and are allowed to
realm of treaty-making, the President has the sole authority to negotiate with other In filing this petition, the petitioners interpret Section 21, Article VII of the 1987
states. Constitution to mean that the power to ratify treaties belongs to the Senate.

Nonetheless, while the President has the sole authority to negotiate and We disagree.
enter into treaties, the Constitution provides a limitation to his power by requiring
Justice Isagani Cruz, in his book on International Law, describes the treaty-
the concurrence of 2/3 of all the members of the Senate for the validity of the
making process in this wise:
treaty entered into by him. Section 21, Article VII of the 1987 Constitution The usual steps in the treaty-making process are: negotiation,
provides that no treaty or international agreement shall be valid and effective signature, ratification, and exchange of the instruments of
ratification. The treaty may then be submitted for registration and
unless concurred in by at least two-thirds of all the Members of the Senate. The publication under the U.N. Charter, although this step is not essential
1935 and the 1973 Constitution also required the concurrence by the legislature to to the validity of the agreement as between the parties.
the treaties entered into by the executive. Section 10 (7), Article VII of the 1935 Negotiation may be undertaken directly by the head of state but he
Constitution provided: now usually assigns this task to his authorized representatives. These
Sec. 10. (7) The President shall have the power, with the concurrence representatives are provided with credentials known as full powers,
of two-thirds of all the Members of the Senate, to make treaties xxx. which they exhibit to the other negotiators at the start of the formal
discussions. It is standard practice for one of the parties to submit a
draft of the proposed treaty which, together with the counter-
Section 14 (1) Article VIII of the 1973 Constitution stated: proposals, becomes the basis of the subsequent negotiations. The
Sec. 14. (1) Except as otherwise provided in this Constitution, no negotiations may be brief or protracted, depending on the issues
treaty shall be valid and effective unless concurred in by a majority involved, and may even collapse in case the parties are unable to
of all the Members of the Batasang Pambansa. come to an agreement on the points under consideration.

If and when the negotiators finally decide on the terms of the treaty,
The participation of the legislative branch in the treaty-making process was the same is opened for signature. This step is primarily intended as a
means of authenticating the instrument and for the purpose of
deemed essential to provide a check on the executive in the field of foreign symbolizing the good faith of the parties; but, significantly, it does
relations.[14] By requiring the concurrence of the legislature in the treaties entered not indicate the final consent of the state in cases where
ratification of the treaty is required. The document is ordinarily
into by the President, the Constitution ensures a healthy system of checks and signed in accordance with the alternat, that is, each of the several
balance necessary in the nations pursuit of political maturity and growth.[15]
negotiators is allowed to sign first on the copy which he will bring
is generally held to be an executive act, undertaken by the head of the state or of
home to his own state.
the government.[17] Thus, Executive Order No. 459 issued by President Fidel V.
Ratification, which is the next step, is the formal act by which a state
Ramos on November 25, 1997 provides the guidelines in the negotiation of
confirms and accepts the provisions of a treaty concluded by its
representatives. The purpose of ratification is to enable the international agreements and its ratification. It mandates that after the treaty has
contracting states to examine the treaty more closely and to give
been signed by the Philippine representative, the same shall be transmitted to the
them an opportunity to refuse to be bound by it should they find
it inimical to their interests. It is for this reason that most treaties Department of Foreign Affairs. The Department of Foreign Affairs shall then
are made subject to the scrutiny and consent of a department of prepare the ratification papers and forward the signed copy of the treaty to the
the government other than that which negotiated them.
President for ratification. After the President has ratified the treaty, the
xxx Department of Foreign Affairs shall submit the same to the Senate for
The last step in the treaty-making process is the exchange of concurrence. Upon receipt of the concurrence of the Senate, the Department of
the instruments of ratification, which usually also signifies the Foreign Affairs shall comply with the provisions of the treaty to render it
effectivity of the treaty unless a different date has been agreed upon
by the parties. Where ratification is dispensed with and no effectivity effective. Section 7 of Executive Order No. 459 reads:
clause is embodied in the treaty, the instrument is deemed effective Sec. 7. Domestic Requirements for the Entry into Force of
upon its signature.[16] [emphasis supplied] a Treaty or an Executive Agreement. The domestic requirements
for the entry into force of a treaty or an executive agreement, or any
amendment thereto, shall be as follows:
Petitioners arguments equate the signing of the treaty by the Philippine
A. Executive Agreements.
representative with ratification. It should be underscored that the signing of the
treaty and the ratification are two separate and distinct steps in the treaty-making i. All executive agreements shall be transmitted to
the Department of Foreign Affairs after their
process. As earlier discussed, the signature is primarily intended as a means of signing for the preparation of the ratification
authenticating the instrument and as a symbol of the good faith of the parties. It is papers. The transmittal shall include the
highlights of the agreements and the benefits
usually performed by the states authorized representative in the diplomatic
which will accrue to the Philippines arising from
mission. Ratification, on the other hand, is the formal act by which a state them.
confirms and accepts the provisions of a treaty concluded by its representative. It
ii. The Department of Foreign Affairs, pursuant to
itself requires that the signature of the representatives of the states be subject to
the endorsement by the concerned agency, shall
transmit the agreements to the President of the ratification, acceptance or approval of the signatory states. Ratification is the act
Philippines for his ratification. The original
by which the provisions of a treaty are formally confirmed and approved by a
signed instrument of ratification shall then be
returned to the Department of Foreign Affairs for State. By ratifying a treaty signed in its behalf, a state expresses its willingness to
appropriate action.
be bound by the provisions of such treaty. After the treaty is signed by the states
B. Treaties. representative, the President, being accountable to the people, is burdened with
the responsibility and the duty to carefully study the contents of the treaty and
i. All treaties, regardless of their designation, shall
comply with the requirements provided in sub- ensure that they are not inimical to the interest of the state and its people. Thus,
paragraph[s] 1 and 2, item A (Executive the President has the discretion even after the signing of the treaty by the
Agreements) of this Section. In addition, the
Department of Foreign Affairs shall submit the Philippine representative whether or not to ratify the same. The Vienna
treaties to the Senate of the Philippines for Convention on the Law of Treaties does not contemplate to defeat or even restrain
concurrence in the ratification by the President. A
certified true copy of the treaties, in such numbers this power of the head of states. If that were so, the requirement of ratification of
as may be required by the Senate, together with a treaties would be pointless and futile. It has been held that a state has no legal or
certified true copy of the ratification instrument,
shall accompany the submission of the treaties to even moral duty to ratify a treaty which has been signed by its plenipotentiaries.
the Senate. [18]
There is no legal obligation to ratify a treaty, but it goes without saying that the
ii. Upon receipt of the concurrence by the Senate, refusal must be based on substantial grounds and not on superficial or whimsical
the Department of Foreign Affairs shall comply reasons. Otherwise, the other state would be justified in taking offense.[19]
with the provision of the treaties in effecting their
entry into force.
It should be emphasized that under our Constitution, the power to ratify is vested
in the President, subject to the concurrence of the Senate. The role of the Senate,
Petitioners submission that the Philippines is bound under treaty law and
however, is limited only to giving or withholding its consent, or concurrence, to
international law to ratify the treaty which it has signed is without basis. The
the ratification.[20] Hence, it is within the authority of the President to refuse to
signature does not signify the final consent of the state to the treaty. It is the
submit a treaty to the Senate or, having secured its consent for its ratification,
ratification that binds the state to the provisions thereof. In fact, the Rome Statute
refuse to ratify it.[21] Although the refusal of a state to ratify a treaty which has
been signed in its behalf is a serious step that should not be taken lightly, [22] such
decision is within the competence of the President alone, which cannot be
encroached by this Court via a writ of mandamus. This Court has no jurisdiction
over actions seeking to enjoin the President in the performance of his official
duties.[23] The Court, therefore, cannot issue the writ of mandamus prayed for by
the petitioners as it is beyond its jurisdiction to compel the executive branch of the
government to transmit the signed text of Rome Statute to the Senate.

IN VIEW WHEREOF, the petition is DISMISSED.

SO ORDERED.
G.R. No. L-14279 October 31, 1961 no governmental agency authorized to issue the import license required by the aforementioned
executive order.
THE COMMISSIONER OF CUSTOMS and THE COLLECTOR OF CUSTOMS, petitioners,
vs. The authority of the Central Bank to regulate no-dollar imports and the validity of the
EASTERN SEA TRADING, respondent. aforementioned Circulars Nos. 44, and 45 have already been passed upon and repeatedly upheld
by this Court (Pascual vs. Commissioner of Customs, L-10979 [June 30, 1959]; Acting
Office of the Solicitor General for petitioners. Commissioner of Customs vs. Leuterio, L-9142 [October 17, 1959] Commissioner of Customs vs.
Valentin Gutierrez for respondent. Pascual, L-9836 [November 18, 1959]; Commissioner of Customs vs. Serree Investment Co., L-
12007 [May 16, 1960]; Commissioner of Customs vs. Serree Investment Co., L-14274 [November
CONCEPCION, J.: 29, 1960]), for the reason that the broad powers of the Central Bank, under its charter, to maintain
our monetary stability and to preserve the international value of our currency, under section 2 of
Republic Act No. 265, in relation to section 14 of said Act — authorizing the bank to issue such
Petition for review of a judgment of the Court of Tax Appeals reversing a decision of the
rules and regulations as it may consider necessary for the effective discharge of the responsibilities
Commissioner of Customs.
and the exercise of the powers assigned to the Monetary Board and to the Central Bank — connote
the authority to regulate no-dollar imports, owing to the influence and effect that the same may and
Respondent Eastern Sea Trading was the consignee of several shipments of onion and garlic do have upon the stability of our peso and its international value.
which arrived at the Port of Manila from August 25 to September 7, 1954. Some shipments came
from Japan and others from Hong Kong. In as much as none of the shipments had the certificate
The Court of Tax Appeals entertained doubts on the legality of the executive agreement sought to
required by Central Bank Circulars Nos. 44 and 45 for the release thereof, the goods thus imported
be implemented by Executive Order No. 328, owing to the fact that our Senate had not concurred
were seized and subjected to forfeiture proceedings for alleged violations of section 1363(f) of the
in the making of said executive agreement. The concurrence of said House of Congress is required
Revised Administrative Code, in relation to the aforementioned circulars of the Central Bank. In due
by our fundamental law in the making of "treaties" (Constitution of the Philippines, Article VII,
course, the Collector of Customs of Manila rendered a decision on September 4, 1956, declaring
Section 10[7]), which are, however, distinct and different from "executive agreements," which may
said goods forfeited to the Government and — the goods having been, in the meantime, released
be validly entered into without such concurrence.
to the consignees on surety bonds, filed by the same, as principal, and the Alto Surety & Insurance
Co., Inc., as surety, in compliance with orders of the Court of First Instance of Manila, in Civil Cases
Nos. 23942 and 23852 thereof — directing that the amounts of said bonds be paid, by said Treaties are formal documents which require ratification with the approval of two thirds of
principal and surety, jointly and severally, to the Bureau of Customs, within thirty (30) days from the Senate. Executive agreements become binding through executive action without the
notice. need of a vote by the Senate or by Congress.

On appeal taken by the consignee, said decision was affirmed by the Commissioner of Customs on xxx xxx xxx
December 27, 1956. Subsequently, the consignee sought a review of the decision of said two (2)
officers by the Court of Tax Appeals, which reversed the decision of the Commissioner of Customs . . . the right of the Executive to enter into binding agreements without the necessity of
and ordered that the aforementioned bonds be cancelled and withdrawn. Hence, the present subsequent Congressional approval has been confirmed by long usage. From the earliest
petition of the Commissioner of Customs for review of the decision of the Court of Tax Appeals. days of our history we have entered into executive agreements covering such subjects as
commercial and consular relations, most-favored-nation rights, patent rights, trademark and
The latter is based upon the following premises, namely: that the Central Bank has no authority to copyright protection, postal and navigation arrangements and the settlement of claims. The
regulate transactions not involving foreign exchange; that the shipments in question are in the validity of these has never been seriously questioned by our courts.
nature of "no-dollar" imports; that, as such, the aforementioned shipments do not involve foreign
exchange; that, insofar as a Central Bank license and a certificate authorizing the importation or xxx xxx xxx
release of the goods under consideration are required by Central Bank Circulars Nos. 44 and 45,
the latter are null and void; and that the seizure and forfeiture of the goods imported from Japan Agreements with respect to the registration of trade-marks have been concluded by the
cannot be justified under Executive Order No. 328, 1 not only because the same seeks to implement Executive with various countries under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1881 (21 Stat. 502).
an executive agreement2 — extending the effectivity of our 3 Trades and Financial Agreements4 with Postal conventions regulating the reciprocal treatment of mail matters, money orders,
Japan — which (executive agreement), it believed, is of dubious validity, but, also, because there is parcel post, etc., have been concluded by the Postmaster General with various countries
under authorization by Congress beginning with the Act of February 20, 1792 (1 Stat. 232,
239). Ten executive agreements were concluded by the President pursuant to the McKinley on shipping profits, the admission of civil aircraft, customs matters, and commercial
Tariff Act of 1890 (26 Stat. 567, 612), and nine such agreements were entered into under relations generally, international claims, postal matters, the registration of trademarks and
the Dingley Tariff Act 1897 (30 Stat. 151, 203, 214). A very much larger number of copyrights, etcetera. Some of them were concluded not by specific congressional
agreements, along the lines of the one with Rumania previously referred to, providing for authorization but in conformity with policies declared in acts of Congress with respect to the
most-favored-nation treatment in customs and related matters have been entered into since general subject matter, such as tariff acts; while still others, particularly those with respect
the passage of the Tariff Act of 1922, not by direction of the Act but in harmony with it. of the settlement of claims against foreign governments, were concluded independently of
any legislation." (39 Columbia Law Review, pp. 651, 755.)
xxx xxx xxx
The validity of the executive agreement in question is thus patent. In fact, the so-called Parity
International agreements involving political issues or changes of national policy and those Rights provided for in the Ordinance Appended to our Constitution were, prior thereto, the subject
involving international arrangements of a permanent character usually take the form of of an executive agreement, made without the concurrence of two-thirds (2/3) of the Senate of the
treaties. But international agreements embodying adjustments of detail carrying out well- United States.
established national policies and traditions and those involving arrangements of a more or
less temporary nature usually take the form of executive agreements. Lastly, the lower court held that it would be unreasonable to require from respondent-appellee an
import license when the Import Control Commission was no longer in existence and, hence, there
xxx xxx xxx was, said court believed, no agency authorized to issue the aforementioned license. This
conclusion is untenable, for the authority to issue the aforementioned licenses was not vested
Furthermore, the United States Supreme Court has expressly recognized the validity and exclusively upon the Import Control Commission or Administration. Executive Order No. 328
constitutionality of executive agreements entered into without Senate approval. (39 provided for export or import licenses "from the Central Bank of the Philippines or the Import
Columbia Law Review, pp. 753-754) (See, also, U.S. vs. Curtis-Wright Export Corporation, Control Administration" or Commission. Indeed, the latter was created only to perform the task of
299 U.S. 304, 81 L. ed. 255; U.S. vs. Belmont, 301 U.S. 324, 81 L. ed. 1134; U.S. vs. Pink, implementing certain objectives of the Monetary Board and the Central Bank, which otherwise had
315 U.S. 203, 86 L. ed. 796; Ozanic vs. U.S., 188 F. 2d. 288; Yale Law Journal, Vol. 15, pp. to be undertaken by these two (2) agencies. Upon the abolition of said Commission, the duty to
1905-1906; California Law Review, Vol. 25, pp. 670-675; Hyde on International Law provide means and ways for the accomplishment of said objectives had merely to be discharged
[Revised Edition], Vol. 2, pp. 1405, 1416-1418; Willoughby on the U.S. Constitutional Law, directly by the Monetary Board and the Central Bank, even if the aforementioned Executive Order
Vol. I [2d ed.], pp. 537-540; Moore, International Law Digest, Vol. V, pp. 210-218; had been silent thereon.
Hackworth, International Law Digest, Vol. V, pp. 390-407). (Emphasis supplied.)
WHEREFORE, the decision appealed from is hereby reversed and another one shall be entered
In this connection, Francis B. Sayre, former U.S. High Commissioner to the Philippines, said in his affirming that of the Commissioner of Customs, with cost against respondents defendant-appellee,
work on "The Constitutionality of Trade Agreement Acts": Eastern Sea Trading. It is so ordered.

Agreements concluded by the President which fall short of treaties are commonly referred
to as executive agreements and are no less common in our scheme of government than
are the more formal instruments — treaties and conventions. They sometimes take the form
of exchanges of notes and at other times that of more formal documents denominated
"agreements" time or "protocols". The point where ordinary correspondence between this
and other governments ends and agreements — whether denominated executive
agreements or exchanges of notes or otherwise — begin, may sometimes be difficult of
ready ascertainment. It would be useless to undertake to discuss here the large variety of
executive agreements as such, concluded from time to time. Hundreds of executive
agreements, other than those entered into under the trade-agreements act, have been
negotiated with foreign governments. . . . It would seem to be sufficient, in order to show
that the trade agreements under the act of 1934 are not anomalous in character, that they
are not treaties, and that they have abundant precedent in our history, to refer to certain
classes of agreements heretofore entered into by the Executive without the approval of the
Senate. They cover such subjects as the inspection of vessels, navigation dues, income tax
BAYAN (Bagong Alyansang Makabayan), a JUNK VFA MOVEMENT, MARCELO B. FERNAN, FRANKLIN M. DRILON, BLAS F. OPLE
BISHOP TOMAS MILLAMENA (Iglesia Filipina Independiente), and RODOLFO G. BIAZON, respondents.
BISHOP ELMER BOLOCAN (United Church of Christ of the
Phil.), DR. REYNALDO LEGASCA, MD, KILUSANG
MAMBUBUKID NG PILIPINAS, KILUSANG MAYO UNO, [G.R. No. 138680. October 10, 2000]
GABRIELA, PROLABOR, and the PUBLIC INTEREST LAW
CENTER, petitioners, vs. EXECUTIVE SECRETARY RONALDO
ZAMORA, FOREIGN AFFAIRS SECRETARY DOMINGO SIAZON, INTEGRATED BAR OF THE PHILIPPINES, Represented by its
DEFENSE SECRETARY ORLANDO MERCADO, BRIG. GEN. National President, Jose Aguila Grapilon, petitioners,
ALEXANDER AGUIRRE, SENATE PRESIDENT MARCELO vs. JOSEPH EJERCITO ESTRADA, in his capacity as President,
FERNAN, SENATOR FRANKLIN DRILON, SENATOR BLAS Republic of the Philippines, and HON. DOMINGO SIAZON, in his
OPLE, SENATOR RODOLFO BIAZON, and SENATOR capacity as Secretary of Foreign Affairs, respondents.
FRANCISCO TATAD, respondents.

[G.R. No. 138698. October 10, 2000]


[G.R. No. 138572. October 10, 2000]

JOVITO R. SALONGA, WIGBERTO TAADA, ZENAIDA QUEZON-


PHILIPPINE CONSTITUTION ASSOCIATION, INC.(PHILCONSA), AVENCEA, ROLANDO SIMBULAN, PABLITO V. SANIDAD, MA.
EXEQUIEL B. GARCIA, AMADOGAT INCIONG, CAMILO L. SOCORRO I. DIOKNO, AGAPITO A. AQUINO, JOKER P.
SABIO, AND RAMON A. GONZALES, petitioners, vs. HON. ARROYO, FRANCISCO C. RIVERA JR., RENE A.V. SAGUISAG,
RONALDO B. ZAMORA, as Executive Secretary, HON. KILOSBAYAN, MOVEMENT OF ATTORNEYS FOR
ORLANDO MERCADO, as Secretary of National Defense, and BROTHERHOOD, INTEGRITY AND NATIONALISM, INC.
HON. DOMINGO L. SIAZON, JR., as Secretary of Foreign (MABINI), petitioners, vs. THE EXECUTIVE SECRETARY, THE
Affairs, respondents. SECRETARY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS, THE SECRETARY OF
NATIONAL DEFENSE, SENATE PRESIDENT MARCELO B.
FERNAN, SENATOR BLAS F. OPLE, SENATOR RODOLFO G.
[G.R. No. 138587. October 10, 2000] BIAZON, AND ALL OTHER PERSONS ACTING THEIR
CONTROL, SUPERVISION, DIRECTION, AND INSTRUCTION IN
RELATION TO THE VISITING FORCES AGREEMENT
TEOFISTO T. GUINGONA, JR., RAUL S. ROCO, and SERGIO R. (VFA), respondents.
OSMEA III, petitioners, vs. JOSEPH E. ESTRADA, RONALDO B.
ZAMORA, DOMINGO L. SIAZON, JR., ORLANDO B. MERCADO, DECISION
BUENA, J.: On October 6, 1998, the President, acting through respondent Executive Secretary
Ronaldo Zamora, officially transmitted to the Senate of the Philippines, [5] the Instrument
Confronting the Court for resolution in the instant consolidated petitions for of Ratification, the letter of the President [6] and the VFA, for concurrence pursuant to
certiorari and prohibition are issues relating to, and borne by, an agreement forged in Section 21, Article VII of the 1987 Constitution. The Senate, in turn, referred the VFA to
the turn of the last century between the Republic of the Philippines and the United its Committee on Foreign Relations, chaired by Senator Blas F. Ople, and its
States of America -the Visiting Forces Agreement. Committee on National Defense and Security, chaired by Senator Rodolfo G. Biazon,
The antecedents unfold. for their joint consideration and recommendation. Thereafter, joint public hearings were
held by the two Committees.[7]
On March 14, 1947, the Philippines and the United States of America forged a
Military Bases Agreement which formalized, among others, the use of installations in On May 3, 1999, the Committees submitted Proposed Senate Resolution No.
the Philippine territory by United States military personnel. To further strengthen their 443[8] recommending the concurrence of the Senate to the VFA and the creation of a
defense and security relationship, the Philippines and the United States entered into a Legislative Oversight Committee to oversee its implementation. Debates then ensued.
Mutual Defense Treaty on August 30, 1951. Under the treaty, the parties agreed to On May 27, 1999, Proposed Senate Resolution No. 443 was approved by the
respond to any external armed attack on their territory, armed forces, public vessels, Senate, by a two-thirds (2/3) vote [9] of its members. Senate Resolution No. 443 was
and aircraft.[1] then re-numbered as Senate Resolution No. 18. [10]
In view of the impending expiration of the RP-US Military Bases Agreement in On June 1, 1999, the VFA officially entered into force after an Exchange of Notes
1991, the Philippines and the United States negotiated for a possible extension of the between respondent Secretary Siazon and United States Ambassador Hubbard.
military bases agreement. On September 16, 1991, the Philippine Senate rejected the
proposed RP-US Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation and Security which, in effect, The VFA, which consists of a Preamble and nine (9) Articles, provides for the
would have extended the presence of US military bases in the Philippines. [2] With the mechanism for regulating the circumstances and conditions under which US Armed
expiration of the RP-US Military Bases Agreement, the periodic military exercises Forces and defense personnel may be present in the Philippines, and is quoted in its
conducted between the two countries were held in abeyance. Notwithstanding, the full text, hereunder:
defense and security relationship between the Philippines and the United States of Article I
America continued pursuant to the Mutual Defense Treaty. Definitions
On July 18, 1997, the United States panel, headed by US Defense Deputy
Assistant Secretary for Asia Pacific Kurt Campbell, met with the Philippine panel, As used in this Agreement, United States personnel means United States military
headed by Foreign Affairs Undersecretary Rodolfo Severino Jr., to exchange notes on and civilian personnel temporarily in the Philippines in connection with activities
the complementing strategic interests of the United States and the Philippines in the approved by the Philippine Government.
Asia-Pacific region. Both sides discussed, among other things, the possible elements
of the Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA for brevity). Negotiations by both panels on the Within this definition:
VFA led to a consolidated draft text, which in turn resulted to a final series of
conferences and negotiations[3] that culminated in Manila on January 12 and 13, 1998. 1. The term military personnel refers to military members of the United States Army,
Thereafter, then President Fidel V. Ramos approved the VFA, which was respectively Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, and Coast Guard.
signed by public respondent Secretary Siazon and Unites States Ambassador Thomas
Hubbard on February 10, 1998. 2. The term civilian personnel refers to individuals who are neither nationals of, nor
ordinary residents in the Philippines and who are employed by the United States
On October 5, 1998, President Joseph E. Estrada, through respondent Secretary armed forces or who are accompanying the United States armed forces, such as
of Foreign Affairs, ratified the VFA.[4] employees of the American Red Cross and the United Services Organization.

Article II
Respect for Law the United States commanding officer in accordance with the
international health regulations as promulgated by the World Health
It is the duty of the United States personnel to respect the laws of the Republic of Organization, and mutually agreed procedures.
the Philippines and to abstain from any activity inconsistent with the spirit of this
agreement, and, in particular, from any political activity in the Philippines. The 4. United States civilian personnel shall be exempt from visa requirements but
Government of the United States shall take all measures within its authority to shall present, upon demand, valid passports upon entry and departure of the
ensure that this is done. Philippines.

Article III 5. If the Government of the Philippines has requested the removal of any United
Entry and Departure States personnel from its territory, the United States authorities shall be
responsible for receiving the person concerned within its own territory or
1. The Government of the Philippines shall facilitate the admission of United otherwise disposing of said person outside of the Philippines.
States personnel and their departure from the Philippines in connection with
activities covered by this agreement. Article IV
Driving and Vehicle Registration
2. United States military personnel shall be exempt from passport and visa
regulations upon entering and departing the Philippines. 1. Philippine authorities shall accept as valid, without test or fee, a driving permit
or license issued by the appropriate United States authority to United States
3. The following documents only, which shall be presented on demand, shall be personnel for the operation of military or official vehicles.
required in respect of United States military personnel who enter the
Philippines: 2. Vehicles owned by the Government of the United States need not be
registered, but shall have appropriate markings.
(a) personal identity card issued by the appropriate United States authority
showing full name, date of birth, rank or grade and service number (if Article V
any), branch of service and photograph; Criminal Jurisdiction

(b) individual or collective document issued by the appropriate United States 1. Subject to the provisions of this article:
authority, authorizing the travel or visit and identifying the individual or
group as United States military personnel; and (a) Philippine authorities shall have jurisdiction over United States personnel with
respect to offenses committed within the Philippines and punishable under the
law of the Philippines.
(c) the commanding officer of a military aircraft or vessel shall present a
declaration of health, and when required by the cognizant representative (b) United States military authorities shall have the right to exercise within the
Philippines all criminal and disciplinary jurisdiction conferred on them by the
of the Government of the Philippines, shall conduct a quarantine military law of the United States over United States personnel in the Philippines.
inspection and will certify that the aircraft or vessel is free from
quarantinable diseases. Any quarantine inspection of United States 2. (a) Philippine authorities exercise exclusive jurisdiction over United States
personnel with respect to offenses, including offenses relating to the
aircraft or United States vessels or cargoes thereon shall be conducted by
security of the Philippines, punishable under the laws of the Philippines, but (e) When the United States military commander determines that an offense
not under the laws of the United States. charged by authorities of the Philippines against United states personnel arises
out of an act or omission done in the performance of official duty, the
(b) United States authorities exercise exclusive jurisdiction over United States commander will issue a certificate setting forth such determination. This
personnel with respect to offenses, including offenses relating to the certificate will be transmitted to the appropriate authorities of the Philippines and
security of the United States, punishable under the laws of the United will constitute sufficient proof of performance of official duty for the purposes of
States, but not under the laws of the Philippines. paragraph 3(b)(2) of this Article. In those cases where the Government of the
(c) For the purposes of this paragraph and paragraph 3 of this article, an Philippines believes the circumstances of the case require a review of the duty
offense relating to security means: certificate, United States military authorities and Philippine authorities shall
consult immediately. Philippine authorities at the highest levels may also present
any information bearing on its validity. United States military authorities shall
(1) treason;
take full account of the Philippine position. Where appropriate, United States
military authorities will take disciplinary or other action against offenders in
(2) sabotage, espionage or violation of any law relating to national official duty cases, and notify the Government of the Philippines of the actions
defense. taken.
(f) If the government having the primary right does not exercise jurisdiction, it shall
3. In cases where the right to exercise jurisdiction is concurrent, the following rules notify the authorities of the other government as soon as possible.
shall apply:
(g) The authorities of the Philippines and the United States shall notify each other
(a) Philippine authorities shall have the primary right to exercise jurisdiction over all of the disposition of all cases in which both the authorities of the Philippines and
offenses committed by United States personnel, except in cases provided for in the United States have the right to exercise jurisdiction.
paragraphs 1(b), 2 (b), and 3 (b) of this Article.
4. Within the scope of their legal competence, the authorities of the Philippines and
(b) United States military authorities shall have the primary right to exercise United States shall assist each other in the arrest of United States personnel in the
jurisdiction over United States personnel subject to the military law of the United Philippines and in handling them over to authorities who are to exercise jurisdiction
States in relation to. in accordance with the provisions of this article.
(1) offenses solely against the property or security of the United States or 5. United States military authorities shall promptly notify Philippine authorities of the
offenses solely against the property or person of United States personnel; arrest or detention of United States personnel who are subject of Philippine
and primary or exclusive jurisdiction. Philippine authorities shall promptly notify United
(2) offenses arising out of any act or omission done in performance of official States military authorities of the arrest or detention of any United States personnel.
duty. 6. The custody of any United States personnel over whom the Philippines is to
(c) The authorities of either government may request the authorities of the other exercise jurisdiction shall immediately reside with United States military authorities,
government to waive their primary right to exercise jurisdiction in a particular if they so request, from the commission of the offense until completion of all judicial
case. proceedings. United States military authorities shall, upon formal notification by the
Philippine authorities and without delay, make such personnel available to those
(d) Recognizing the responsibility of the United States military authorities to authorities in time for any investigative or judicial proceedings relating to the
maintain good order and discipline among their forces, Philippine authorities will, offense with which the person has been charged in extraordinary cases, the
upon request by the United States, waive their primary right to exercise Philippine Government shall present its position to the United States Government
jurisdiction except in cases of particular importance to the Philippines. If the regarding custody, which the United States Government shall take into full account.
Government of the Philippines determines that the case is of particular In the event Philippine judicial proceedings are not completed within one year, the
importance, it shall communicate such determination to the United States United States shall be relieved of any obligations under this paragraph. The one-
authorities within twenty (20) days after the Philippine authorities receive the year period will not include the time necessary to appeal. Also, the one-year period
United States request. will not include any time during which scheduled trial procedures are delayed
because United States authorities, after timely notification by Philippine authorities 11. United States personnel shall be subject to trial only in Philippine courts of
to arrange for the presence of the accused, fail to do so. ordinary jurisdiction, and shall not be subject to the jurisdiction of Philippine military
or religious courts.
7. Within the scope of their legal authority, United States and Philippine authorities
shall assist each other in the carrying out of all necessary investigation into Article VI
offenses and shall cooperate in providing for the attendance of witnesses and in Claims
the collection and production of evidence, including seizure and, in proper cases,
the delivery of objects connected with an offense. 1. Except for contractual arrangements, including United States foreign military sales
8. When United States personnel have been tried in accordance with the provisions of letters of offer and acceptance and leases of military equipment, both governments
this Article and have been acquitted or have been convicted and are serving, or waive any and all claims against each other for damage, loss or destruction to
have served their sentence, or have had their sentence remitted or suspended, or property of each others armed forces or for death or injury to their military and
have been pardoned, they may not be tried again for the same offense in the civilian personnel arising from activities to which this agreement applies.
Philippines. Nothing in this paragraph, however, shall prevent United States 2. For claims against the United States, other than contractual claims and those to
military authorities from trying United States personnel for any violation of rules of which paragraph 1 applies, the United States Government, in accordance with
discipline arising from the act or omission which constituted an offense for which United States law regarding foreign claims, will pay just and reasonable
they were tried by Philippine authorities. compensation in settlement of meritorious claims for damage, loss, personal injury
9. When United States personnel are detained, taken into custody, or prosecuted by or death, caused by acts or omissions of United States personnel, or otherwise
Philippine authorities, they shall be accorded all procedural safeguards established incident to the non-combat activities of the United States forces.
by the law of the Philippines. At the minimum, United States personnel shall be Article VII
entitled:
Importation and Exportation
(a) To a prompt and speedy trial;
1. United States Government equipment, materials, supplies, and other property
(b) To be informed in advance of trial of the specific charge or charges made imported into or acquired in the Philippines by or on behalf of the United States
against them and to have reasonable time to prepare a defense; armed forces in connection with activities to which this agreement applies, shall be
(c) To be confronted with witnesses against them and to cross examine such free of all Philippine duties, taxes and other similar charges. Title to such property
witnesses; shall remain with the United States, which may remove such property from the
Philippines at any time, free from export duties, taxes, and other similar charges.
(d) To present evidence in their defense and to have compulsory process for The exemptions provided in this paragraph shall also extend to any duty, tax, or
obtaining witnesses; other similar charges which would otherwise be assessed upon such property after
(e) To have free and assisted legal representation of their own choice on the same importation into, or acquisition within, the Philippines. Such property may be
basis as nationals of the Philippines; removed from the Philippines, or disposed of therein, provided that disposition of
such property in the Philippines to persons or entities not entitled to exemption
(f) To have the service of a competent interpreter; and from applicable taxes and duties shall be subject to payment of such taxes, and
duties and prior approval of the Philippine Government.
(g) To communicate promptly with and to be visited regularly by United States
authorities, and to have such authorities present at all judicial proceedings. 2. Reasonable quantities of personal baggage, personal effects, and other property
These proceedings shall be public unless the court, in accordance with for the personal use of United States personnel may be imported into and used in
Philippine laws, excludes persons who have no role in the proceedings. the Philippines free of all duties, taxes and other similar charges during the period
of their temporary stay in the Philippines. Transfers to persons or entities in the
10. The confinement or detention by Philippine authorities of United States personnel
Philippines not entitled to import privileges may only be made upon prior approval
shall be carried out in facilities agreed on by appropriate Philippine and United
of the appropriate Philippine authorities including payment by the recipient of
States authorities. United States Personnel serving sentences in the Philippines
applicable duties and taxes imposed in accordance with the laws of the
shall have the right to visits and material assistance.
Philippines. The exportation of such property and of property acquired in the
Philippines by United States personnel shall be free of all Philippine duties, taxes, Do petitioners have legal standing as concerned citizens, taxpayers, or legislators
and other similar charges. to question the constitutionality of the VFA?
Article VIII
II
Movement of Vessels and Aircraft
1. Aircraft operated by or for the United States armed forces may enter the Philippines Is the VFA governed by the provisions of Section 21, Article VII or of Section
upon approval of the Government of the Philippines in accordance with procedures 25, Article XVIII of the Constitution?
stipulated in implementing arrangements.
2. Vessels operated by or for the United States armed forces may enter the III
Philippines upon approval of the Government of the Philippines. The movement of
vessels shall be in accordance with international custom and practice governing Does the VFA constitute an abdication of Philippine sovereignty?
such vessels, and such agreed implementing arrangements as necessary.
a. Are Philippine courts deprived of their jurisdiction to hear and try offenses
3. Vehicles, vessels, and aircraft operated by or for the United States armed forces
committed by US military personnel?
shall not be subject to the payment of landing or port fees, navigation or over flight
charges, or tolls or other use charges, including light and harbor dues, while in the b. Is the Supreme Court deprived of its jurisdiction over offenses punishable by
Philippines. Aircraft operated by or for the United States armed forces shall reclusion perpetua or higher?
observe local air traffic control regulations while in the Philippines. Vessels owned
or operated by the United States solely on United States Government non- IV
commercial service shall not be subject to compulsory pilotage at Philippine ports.
Does the VFA violate:
Article IX
Duration and Termination a. the equal protection clause under Section 1, Article III of the Constitution?
b. the Prohibition against nuclear weapons under Article II, Section 8?
This agreement shall enter into force on the date on which the parties have
notified each other in writing through the diplomatic channel that they have c. Section 28 (4), Article VI of the Constitution granting the exemption from taxes and
duties for the equipment, materials supplies and other properties imported into or
completed their constitutional requirements for entry into force. This agreement acquired in the Philippines by, or on behalf, of the US Armed Forces?
shall remain in force until the expiration of 180 days from the date on which
either party gives the other party notice in writing that it desires to terminate the
agreement. LOCUS STANDI

Via these consolidated[11] petitions for certiorari and prohibition, petitioners - as


legislators, non-governmental organizations, citizens and taxpayers - assail the At the outset, respondents challenge petitioners standing to sue, on the ground
constitutionality of the VFA and impute to herein respondents grave abuse of discretion that the latter have not shown any interest in the case, and that petitioners failed to
in ratifying the agreement. substantiate that they have sustained, or will sustain direct injury as a result of the
operation of the VFA.[12] Petitioners, on the other hand, counter that the validity or
We have simplified the issues raised by the petitioners into the following: invalidity of the VFA is a matter of transcendental importance which justifies their
I standing.[13]
A party bringing a suit challenging the constitutionality of a law, act, or statute must
show not only that the law is invalid, but also that he has sustained or in is in
immediate, or imminent danger of sustaining some direct injury as a result of its In the same vein, petitioner Integrated Bar of the Philippines (IBP) is stripped of
enforcement, and not merely that he suffers thereby in some indefinite way. He must standing in these cases. As aptly observed by the Solicitor General, the IBP lacks the
show that he has been, or is about to be, denied some right or privilege to which he is legal capacity to bring this suit in the absence of a board resolution from its Board of
lawfully entitled, or that he is about to be subjected to some burdens or penalties by Governors authorizing its National President to commence the present action. [19]
reason of the statute complained of.[14]
Notwithstanding, in view of the paramount importance and the constitutional
In the case before us, petitioners failed to show, to the satisfaction of this Court, significance of the issues raised in the petitions, this Court, in the exercise of its sound
that they have sustained, or are in danger of sustaining any direct injury as a result of discretion, brushes aside the procedural barrier and takes cognizance of the petitions,
the enforcement of the VFA. As taxpayers, petitioners have not established that the as we have done in the early Emergency Powers Cases,[20] where we had occasion to
VFA involves the exercise by Congress of its taxing or spending powers. [15] On this rule:
point, it bears stressing that a taxpayers suit refers to a case where the act complained
of directly involves the illegal disbursement of public funds derived from taxation. x x x ordinary citizens and taxpayers were allowed to question the constitutionality
[16]
Thus, in Bugnay Const. & Development Corp. vs. Laron [17], we held: of several executive orders issued by President Quirino although they were involving
only an indirect and general interest shared in common with the public. The Court
x x x it is exigent that the taxpayer-plaintiff sufficiently show that he would be dismissed the objection that they were not proper parties and ruled
benefited or injured by the judgment or entitled to the avails of the suit as a real party that transcendental importance to the public of these cases demands that they be
in interest. Before he can invoke the power of judicial review, he must specifically settled promptly and definitely, brushing aside, if we must, technicalities of
prove that he has sufficient interest in preventing the illegal expenditure of money procedure. We have since then applied the exception in many other
raised by taxation and that he will sustain a direct injury as a result of the cases. (Association of Small Landowners in the Philippines, Inc. v. Sec. of Agrarian
enforcement of the questioned statute or contract. It is not sufficient that he has Reform, 175 SCRA 343). (Underscoring Supplied)
merely a general interest common to all members of the public.
This principle was reiterated in the subsequent cases of Gonzales vs. COMELEC,
Clearly, inasmuch as no public funds raised by taxation are involved in this case, [21]
Daza vs. Singson,[22] and Basco vs. Phil. Amusement and Gaming Corporation,
and in the absence of any allegation by petitioners that public funds are being [23]
where we emphatically held:
misspent or illegally expended, petitioners, as taxpayers, have no legal standing to
assail the legality of the VFA. Considering however the importance to the public of the case at bar, and in keeping
Similarly, Representatives Wigberto Taada, Agapito Aquino and Joker Arroyo, as with the Courts duty, under the 1987 Constitution, to determine whether or not the
petitioners-legislators, do not possess the requisite locus standi to maintain the present other branches of the government have kept themselves within the limits of the
suit. While this Court, in Phil. Constitution Association vs. Hon. Salvador Enriquez, Constitution and the laws and that they have not abused the discretion given to them,
[18]
sustained the legal standing of a member of the Senate and the House of the Court has brushed aside technicalities of procedure and has taken cognizance of
Representatives to question the validity of a presidential veto or a condition imposed
this petition. x x x
on an item in an appropriation bull, we cannot, at this instance, similarly uphold
petitioners standing as members of Congress, in the absence of a clear showing of
Again, in the more recent case of Kilosbayan vs. Guingona, Jr.,[24] thisCourt ruled
any direct injury to their person or to the institution to which they belong.
that in cases of transcendental importance, the Court may relax the standing
Beyond this, the allegations of impairment of legislative power, such as the requirements and allow a suit to prosper even where there is no direct injury to
delegation of the power of Congress to grant tax exemptions, are more apparent than the party claiming the right of judicial review.
real. While it may be true that petitioners pointed to provisions of the VFA which
Although courts generally avoid having to decide a constitutional question based
allegedly impair their legislative powers, petitioners failed however to sufficiently show
on the doctrine of separation of powers, which enjoins upon the departments of the
that they have in fact suffered direct injury.
government a becoming respect for each others acts, [25] this Court nevertheless Philippines, regardless of subject matter, coverage, or particular designation or
resolves to take cognizance of the instant petitions. appellation, requires the concurrence of the Senate to be valid and effective.
In contrast, Section 25, Article XVIII is a special provision that applies to treaties
APPLICABLE CONSTITUTIONAL PROVISION which involve the presence of foreign military bases, troops or facilities in the
Philippines. Under this provision, the concurrence of the Senate is only one of the
requisites to render compliance with the constitutional requirements and to consider
One focal point of inquiry in this controversy is the determination of which provision the agreement binding on the Philippines.Section 25, Article XVIII further requires that
of the Constitution applies, with regard to the exercise by the senate of its foreign military bases, troops, or facilities may be allowed in the Philippines only by
constitutional power to concur with the VFA. Petitioners argue that Section 25, Article virtue of a treaty duly concurred in by the Senate, ratified by a majority of the votes
XVIII is applicable considering that the VFA has for its subject the presence of foreign cast in a national referendum held for that purpose if so required by Congress, and
military troops in the Philippines.Respondents, on the contrary, maintain that Section recognized as such by the other contracting state.
21, Article VII should apply inasmuch as the VFA is not a basing arrangement but an It is our considered view that both constitutional provisions, far from contradicting
agreement which involves merely the temporary visits of United States personnel each other, actually share some common ground. These constitutional provisions both
engaged in joint military exercises. embody phrases in the negative and thus, are deemed prohibitory in mandate and
The 1987 Philippine Constitution contains two provisions requiring the concurrence character. In particular, Section 21 opens with the clause No treaty x x x, and Section
of the Senate on treaties or international agreements. Section 21, Article VII, which 25 contains the phrase shall not be allowed. Additionally, in both instances, the
herein respondents invoke, reads: concurrence of the Senate is indispensable to render the treaty or international
agreement valid and effective.
No treaty or international agreement shall be valid and effective unless concurred in To our mind, the fact that the President referred the VFA to the Senate under
by at least two-thirds of all the Members of the Senate. Section 21, Article VII, and that the Senate extended its concurrence under the same
provision, is immaterial. For in either case, whether under Section 21, Article VII or
Section 25, Article XVIII, provides: Section 25, Article XVIII, the fundamental law is crystalline that the concurrence of the
Senate is mandatory to comply with the strict constitutional requirements.
After the expiration in 1991 of the Agreement between the Republic of the
On the whole, the VFA is an agreement which defines the treatment of United
Philippines and the United States of America concerning Military Bases, foreign States troops and personnel visiting the Philippines. It provides for the guidelines to
military bases, troops, or facilities shall not be allowed in the Philippines except govern such visits of military personnel, and further defines the rights of the United
under a treaty duly concurred in by the senate and, when the Congress so requires, States and the Philippine government in the matter of criminal jurisdiction, movement
ratified by a majority of the votes cast by the people in a national referendum held of vessel and aircraft, importation and exportation of equipment, materials and
for that purpose, and recognized as a treaty by the other contracting State. supplies.
Undoubtedly, Section 25, Article XVIII, which specifically deals with treaties
Section 21, Article VII deals with treatise or international agreements in general, in involving foreign military bases, troops, or facilities, should apply in the instant case. To
which case, the concurrence of at least two-thirds (2/3) of all the Members of the a certain extent and in a limited sense, however, the provisions of section 21, Article
Senate is required to make the subject treaty, or international agreement, valid and VII will find applicability with regard to the issue and for the sole purpose of
binding on the part of the Philippines. This provision lays down the general rule on determining the number of votes required to obtain the valid concurrence of the
treatise or international agreements and applies to any form of treaty with a wide Senate, as will be further discussed hereunder.
variety of subject matter, such as, but not limited to, extradition or tax treatise or those
economic in nature. All treaties or international agreements entered into by the It is a finely-imbedded principle in statutory construction that a special provision or
law prevails over a general one. Lex specialis derogat generali. Thus, where there is
in the same statute a particular enactment and also a general one which, in its most To this end, the intention of the framers of the Charter, as manifested during the
comprehensive sense, would include what is embraced in the former, the particular deliberations of the 1986 Constitutional Commission, is consistent with this
enactment must be operative, and the general enactment must be taken to affect only interpretation:
such cases within its general language which are not within the provision of the
MR. MAAMBONG. I just want to address a question or two to Commissioner Bernas.
particular enactment.[26]
This formulation speaks of three things: foreign military bases, troops or facilities. My first
In Leveriza vs. Intermediate Appellate Court,[27] we enunciated: question is: If the country does enter into such kind of a treaty, must it cover the
three-bases, troops or facilities-or could the treaty entered into cover only one or
x x x that another basic principle of statutory construction mandates that general two?
legislation must give way to a special legislation on the same subject, and generally FR. BERNAS. Definitely, it can cover only one. Whether it covers only one or it covers
be so interpreted as to embrace only cases in which the special provisions are not three, the requirement will be the same.
applicable (Sto. Domingo vs. de los Angeles, 96 SCRA 139), that a specific statute MR. MAAMBONG. In other words, the Philippine government can enter into a treaty
prevails over a general statute (De Jesus vs. People, 120 SCRA 760) and that where covering not bases but merely troops?
two statutes are of equal theoretical application to a particular case, the one designed
FR. BERNAS. Yes.
therefor specially should prevail (Wil Wilhensen Inc. vs. Baluyot, 83 SCRA 38).
MR. MAAMBONG. I cannot find any reason why the government can enter into a treaty
Moreover, it is specious to argue that Section 25, Article XVIII is inapplicable to covering only troops.
mere transient agreements for the reason that there is no permanent placing of FR. BERNAS. Why not? Probably if we stretch our imagination a little bit more, we will find
structure for the establishment of a military base. On this score, the Constitution makes some. We just want to cover everything.[29] (Underscoring Supplied)
no distinction between transient and permanent. Certainly, we find nothing in Section
25, Article XVIII that requires foreign troops or facilities to be stationed or Moreover, military bases established within the territory of another state is no
placed permanently in the Philippines. longer viable because of the alternatives offered by new means and weapons of
warfare such as nuclear weapons, guided missiles as well as huge sea vessels that
It is a rudiment in legal hermenuetics that when no distinction is made by law, the can stay afloat in the sea even for months and years without returning to their home
Court should not distinguish- Ubi lex non distinguit nec nos distinguire debemos. country. These military warships are actually used as substitutes for a land-home base
not only of military aircraft but also of military personnel and facilities. Besides, vessels
In like manner, we do not subscribe to the argument that Section 25, Article XVIII is
are mobile as compared to a land-based military headquarters.
not controlling since no foreign military bases, but merely foreign troops and facilities,
are involved in the VFA. Notably, a perusal of said constitutional provision reveals that At this juncture, we shall then resolve the issue of whether or not the requirements
the proscription covers foreign military bases, troops, or facilities. Stated differently, of Section 25 were complied with when the Senate gave its concurrence to the VFA.
this prohibition is not limited to the entry of troops and facilities without any foreign
bases being established. The clause does not refer to foreign military bases, Section 25, Article XVIII disallows foreign military bases, troops, or facilities in the
troops, or facilities collectively but treats them as separate and independent country, unless the following conditions are sufficiently met, viz: (a) it must be under
subjects. The use of comma and the disjunctive word or clearly signifies disassociation a treaty; (b) the treaty must be duly concurred in by the Senate and, when so
and independence of one thing from the others included in the enumeration, [28]such required by congress, ratified by a majority of the votes cast by the people in a national
that, the provision contemplates three different situations - a military treaty the subject referendum; and (c) recognized as a treaty by the other contracting state.
of which could be either (a) foreign bases, (b) foreign troops, or (c) foreign facilities - There is no dispute as to the presence of the first two requisites in the case of the
any of the three standing alone places it under the coverage of Section 25, Article VFA. The concurrence handed by the Senate through Resolution No. 18 is in
XVIII. accordance with the provisions of the Constitution, whether under the general
requirement in Section 21, Article VII, or the specific mandate mentioned in Section 25,
Article XVIII, the provision in the latter article requiring ratification by a majority of the
votes cast in a national referendum being unnecessary since Congress has not States Senate pursuant to its own constitutional process, and that it should not be
required it. considered merely an executive agreement by the United States.
As to the matter of voting, Section 21, Article VII particularly requires that a treaty In opposition, respondents argue that the letter of United States Ambassador
or international agreement, to be valid and effective, must be concurred in by at least Hubbard stating that the VFA is binding on the United States Government is
two-thirds of all the members of the Senate. On the other hand, Section 25, Article conclusive, on the point that the VFA is recognized as a treaty by the United States of
XVIII simply provides that the treaty be duly concurred in by the Senate. America. According to respondents, the VFA, to be binding, must only be accepted as
a treaty by the United States.
Applying the foregoing constitutional provisions, a two-thirds vote of all the
members of the Senate is clearly required so that the concurrence contemplated by This Court is of the firm view that the phrase recognized as a treaty means that
law may be validly obtained and deemed present. While it is true that Section 25, the other contracting party accepts or acknowledges the agreement as a treaty. [32] To
Article XVIII requires, among other things, that the treaty-the VFA, in the instant case- require the other contracting state, the United States of America in this case, to
be duly concurred in by the Senate, it is very true however that said provision must be submit the VFA to the United States Senate for concurrence pursuant to its
related and viewed in light of the clear mandate embodied in Section 21, Article VII, Constitution,[33] is to accord strict meaning to the phrase.
which in more specific terms, requires that the concurrence of a treaty, or international
Well-entrenched is the principle that the words used in the Constitution are to be
agreement, be made by a two -thirds vote of all the members of the Senate. Indeed,
given their ordinary meaning except where technical terms are employed, in which
Section 25, Article XVIII must not be treated in isolation to section 21, Article, VII.
case the significance thus attached to them prevails. Its language should be
As noted, the concurrence requirement under Section 25, Article XVIII must be understood in the sense they have in common use. [34]
construed in relation to the provisions of Section 21, Article VII. In a more particular
Moreover, it is inconsequential whether the United States treats the VFA only as an
language, the concurrence of the Senate contemplated under Section 25, Article XVIII
executive agreement because, under international law, an executive agreement is as
means that at least two-thirds of all the members of the Senate favorably vote to
binding as a treaty.[35] To be sure, as long as the VFA possesses the elements of an
concur with the treaty-the VFA in the instant case.
agreement under international law, the said agreement is to be taken equally as a
Under these circumstances, the charter provides that the Senate shall be treaty.
composed of twenty-four (24) Senators. [30] Without a tinge of doubt, two-thirds (2/3) of
A treaty, as defined by the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, is an
this figure, or not less than sixteen (16) members, favorably acting on the proposal is
international instrument concluded between States in written form and governed by
an unquestionable compliance with the requisite number of votes mentioned in Section
international law, whether embodied in a single instrument or in two or more related
21 of Article VII. The fact that there were actually twenty-three (23) incumbent
instruments, and whatever its particular designation. [36] There are many other terms
Senators at the time the voting was made, [31] will not alter in any significant way the
used for a treaty or international agreement, some of which are: act, protocol,
circumstance that more than two-thirds of the members of the Senate concurred with
agreement, compromis d arbitrage, concordat, convention, declaration, exchange of notes,
the proposed VFA, even if the two-thirds vote requirement is based on this figure of
pact, statute, charter and modus vivendi. All writers, from Hugo Grotius onward, have
actual members (23). In this regard, the fundamental law is clear that two-thirds of the
pointed out that the names or titles of international agreements included under the
24 Senators, or at least 16 favorable votes, suffice so as to render compliance with the
general term treaty have little or no legal significance. Certain terms are useful, but
strict constitutional mandate of giving concurrence to the subject treaty.
they furnish little more than mere description.[37]
Having resolved that the first two requisites prescribed in Section 25, Article XVIII
Article 2(2) of the Vienna Convention provides that the provisions of paragraph 1
are present, we shall now pass upon and delve on the requirement that the VFA should
regarding the use of terms in the present Convention are without prejudice to the use
be recognized as a treaty by the United States of America.
of those terms, or to the meanings which may be given to them in the internal law of
Petitioners content that the phrase recognized as a treaty, embodied in section 25, the State.
Article XVIII, means that the VFA should have the advice and consent of the United
Thus, in international law, there is no difference between treaties and executive FR. BERNAS. Yes, but we will accept whatever they say. If they say that we have done
agreements in their binding effect upon states concerned, as long as the negotiating everything to make it a treaty, then as far as we are concerned, we will accept it as a
functionaries have remained within their powers. [38] International law continues to make treaty.[41]
no distinction between treaties and executive agreements: they are equally binding The records reveal that the United States Government, through Ambassador
obligations upon nations.[39] Thomas C. Hubbard, has stated that the United States government has fully committed
In our jurisdiction, we have recognized the binding effect of executive agreements to living up to the terms of the VFA. [42] For as long as the united States of America
even without the concurrence of the Senate or Congress. In Commissioner of accepts or acknowledges the VFA as a treaty, and binds itself further to comply with its
Customs vs. Eastern Sea Trading,[40] we had occasion to pronounce: obligations under the treaty, there is indeed marked compliance with the mandate of
the Constitution.
x x x the right of the Executive to enter into binding agreements without the Worth stressing too, is that the ratification, by the President, of the VFA and the
necessity of subsequent congressional approval has been confirmed by long concurrence of the Senate should be taken as a clear an unequivocal expression of
usage. From the earliest days of our history we have entered into executive our nations consent to be bound by said treaty, with the concomitant duty to uphold the
agreements covering such subjects as commercial and consular relations, most- obligations and responsibilities embodied thereunder.
favored-nation rights, patent rights, trademark and copyright protection, postal and Ratification is generally held to be an executive act, undertaken by the head of the
navigation arrangements and the settlement of claims. The validity of these has never state or of the government, as the case may be, through which the formal acceptance
been seriously questioned by our courts. of the treaty is proclaimed.[43] A State may provide in its domestic legislation the
process of ratification of a treaty. The consent of the State to be bound by a treaty is
xxxxxxxxx expressed by ratification when: (a) the treaty provides for such ratification, (b) it is
otherwise established that the negotiating States agreed that ratification should be
Furthermore, the United States Supreme Court has expressly recognized the validity required, (c) the representative of the State has signed the treaty subject to ratification,
and constitutionality of executive agreements entered into without Senate or (d) the intention of the State to sign the treaty subject to ratification appears from the
full powers of its representative, or was expressed during the negotiation. [44]
approval. (39 Columbia Law Review, pp. 753-754) (See, also, U.S. vs. Curtis
Wright Export Corporation, 299 U.S. 304, 81 L. ed. 255; U.S. vs. Belmont, 301 In our jurisdiction, the power to ratify is vested in the President and not, as
U.S. 324, 81 L. ed. 1134; U.S. vs. Pink, 315 U.S. 203, 86 L. ed. 796; Ozanic vs. commonly believed, in the legislature. The role of the Senate is limited only to giving or
U.S. 188 F. 2d. 288; Yale Law Journal, Vol. 15 pp. 1905-1906; California Law withholding its consent, or concurrence, to the ratification. [45]
Review, Vol. 25, pp. 670-675; Hyde on International Law [revised Edition], Vol. With the ratification of the VFA, which is equivalent to final acceptance, and with
2, pp. 1405, 1416-1418; willoughby on the U.S. Constitution Law, Vol. I [2d ed.], the exchange of notes between the Philippines and the United States of America, it
pp. 537-540; Moore, International Law Digest, Vol. V, pp. 210-218; Hackworth, now becomes obligatory and incumbent on our part, under the principles of
International Law Digest, Vol. V, pp. 390-407). (Italics Supplied) (Emphasis international law, to be bound by the terms of the agreement. Thus, no less than
Section 2, Article II of the Constitution, [46]declares that the Philippines adopts the
Ours)
generally accepted principles of international law as part of the law of the land and
adheres to the policy of peace, equality, justice, freedom, cooperation and amity with
The deliberations of the Constitutional Commission which drafted the 1987
all nations.
Constitution is enlightening and highly-instructive:
As a member of the family of nations, the Philippines agrees to be bound by
MR. MAAMBONG. Of course it goes without saying that as far as ratification of the other
state is concerned, that is entirely their concern under their own laws. generally accepted rules for the conduct of its international relations. While the
international obligation devolves upon the state and not upon any particular branch,
institution, or individual member of its government, the Philippines is nonetheless
responsible for violations committed by any branch or subdivision of its government or As regards the power to enter into treaties or international agreements, the
any official thereof. As an integral part of the community of nations, we are responsible Constitution vests the same in the President, subject only to the concurrence of at
to assure that our government, Constitution and laws will carry out our international least two-thirds vote of all the members of the Senate. In this light, the negotiation of
obligation.[47] Hence, we cannot readily plead the Constitution as a convenient excuse the VFA and the subsequent ratification of the agreement are exclusive acts which
for non-compliance with our obligations, duties and responsibilities under international pertain solely to the President, in the lawful exercise of his vast executive and
law. diplomatic powers granted him no less than by the fundamental law itself. Into the field
of negotiation the Senate cannot intrude, and Congress itself is powerless to invade it.
Beyond this, Article 13 of the Declaration of Rights and Duties of States adopted [53]
Consequently, the acts or judgment calls of the President involving the VFA-
by the International Law Commission in 1949 provides: Every State has the duty to
specifically the acts of ratification and entering into a treaty and those necessary or
carry out in good faith its obligations arising from treaties and other sources of
incidental to the exercise of such principal acts - squarely fall within the sphere of his
international law, and it may not invoke provisions in its constitution or its laws as an
constitutional powers and thus, may not be validly struck down, much less calibrated
excuse for failure to perform this duty.[48]
by this Court, in the absence of clear showing of grave abuse of power or discretion.
Equally important is Article 26 of the convention which provides that Every treaty in
It is the Courts considered view that the President, in ratifying the VFA and in
force is binding upon the parties to it and must be performed by them in good
submitting the same to the Senate for concurrence, acted within the confines and limits
faith. This is known as the principle of pacta sunt servanda which preserves the
of the powers vested in him by the Constitution. It is of no moment that the President,
sanctity of treaties and have been one of the most fundamental principles of positive
in the exercise of his wide latitude of discretion and in the honest belief that the VFA
international law, supported by the jurisprudence of international tribunals. [49]
falls within the ambit of Section 21, Article VII of the Constitution, referred the VFA to
the Senate for concurrence under the aforementioned provision. Certainly, no abuse of
NO GRAVE ABUSE OF DISCRETION
discretion, much less a grave, patent and whimsical abuse of judgment, may be
imputed to the President in his act of ratifying the VFA and referring the same to the
Senate for the purpose of complying with the concurrence requirement embodied in
In the instant controversy, the President, in effect, is heavily faulted for exercising a the fundamental law. In doing so, the President merely performed a constitutional task
power and performing a task conferred upon him by the Constitution-the power to and exercised a prerogative that chiefly pertains to the functions of his office. Even if
enter into and ratify treaties. Through the expediency of Rule 65 of the Rules of Court, he erred in submitting the VFA to the Senate for concurrence under the provisions of
petitioners in these consolidated cases impute grave abuse of discretion on the part Section 21 of Article VII, instead of Section 25 of Article XVIII of the Constitution, still,
of the chief Executive in ratifying the VFA, and referring the same to the Senate the President may not be faulted or scarred, much less be adjudged guilty of
pursuant to the provisions of Section 21, Article VII of the Constitution. committing an abuse of discretion in some patent, gross, and capricious manner.
On this particular matter, grave abuse of discretion implies such capricious and For while it is conceded that Article VIII, Section 1, of the Constitution has
whimsical exercise of judgment as is equivalent to lack of jurisdiction, or, when the broadened the scope of judicial inquiry into areas normally left to the political
power is exercised in an arbitrary or despotic manner by reason of passion or personal departments to decide, such as those relating to national security, it has not altogether
hostility, and it must be so patent and gross as to amount to an evasion of positive duty done away with political questions such as those which arise in the field of foreign
enjoined or to act at all in contemplation of law. [50] relations.[54] The High Tribunals function, as sanctioned by Article VIII, Section 1, is
merely (to) check whether or not the governmental branch or agency has gone beyond
By constitutional fiat and by the intrinsic nature of his office, the President, as head the constitutional limits of its jurisdiction, not that it erred or has a different view. In the
of State, is the sole organ and authority in the external affairs of the country. In many absence of a showing (of) grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack of jurisdiction,
ways, the President is the chief architect of the nations foreign policy; his dominance in there is no occasion for the Court to exercise its corrective powerIt has no power to
the field of foreign relations is (then) conceded. [51] Wielding vast powers an influence, look into what it thinks is apparent error.[55]
his conduct in the external affairs of the nation, as Jefferson describes, is executive
altogether."[52] As to the power to concur with treaties, the constitution lodges the same with the
Senate alone. Thus, once the Senate[56] performs that power, or exercises its
prerogative within the boundaries prescribed by the Constitution, the concurrence
cannot, in like manner, be viewed to constitute an abuse of power, much less grave
abuse thereof. Corollarily, the Senate, in the exercise of its discretion and acting within
the limits of such power, may not be similarly faulted for having simply performed a
task conferred and sanctioned by no less than the fundamental law.
For the role of the Senate in relation to treaties is essentially legislative in
character;[57] the Senate, as an independent body possessed of its own erudite mind,
has the prerogative to either accept or reject the proposed agreement, and whatever
action it takes in the exercise of its wide latitude of discretion, pertains to the wisdom
rather than the legality of the act. In this sense, the Senate partakes a principal, yet
delicate, role in keeping the principles of separation of powers and of checks and
balances alive and vigilantly ensures that these cherished rudiments remain true to their
form in a democratic government such as ours. The Constitution thus animates,
through this treaty-concurring power of the Senate, a healthy system of checks and
balances indispensable toward our nations pursuit of political maturity and
growth. True enough, rudimentary is the principle that matters pertaining to the wisdom
of a legislative act are beyond the ambit and province of the courts to inquire.
In fine, absent any clear showing of grave abuse of discretion on the part of
respondents, this Court- as the final arbiter of legal controversies and staunch sentinel
of the rights of the people - is then without power to conduct an incursion and meddle
with such affairs purely executive and legislative in character and nature. For the
Constitution no less, maps out the distinct boundaries and limits the metes and bounds
within which each of the three political branches of government may exercise the
powers exclusively and essentially conferred to it by law.
WHEREFORE, in light of the foregoing disquisitions, the instant petitions are
hereby DISMISSED.
SO ORDERED.
RTHUR D. LIM and PAULINO R. ERSANDO, petitioners, comparable historical parallels, these acts caused billions of dollars worth of destruction of
vs. HONORABLE EXECUTIVE SECRETARY as alter ego of HER property and incalculable loss of hundreds of lives.
EXCELLENCY GLORIA MACAPAGAL-ARROYO, and On February 1, 2002, petitioners Arthur D. Lim and Paulino P. Ersando filed this petition
HONORABLE ANGELO REYES in his capacity as Secretary of for certiorari and prohibition, attacking the constitutionality of the joint exercise. They were
[2]

National Defense, respondents. joined subsequently by SANLAKAS and PARTIDO NG MANGGAGAWA, both party-list
organizations, who filed a petition-in-intervention on February 11, 2002.
SANLAKAS and PARTIDO NG MANGGAGAWA, petitioners-
Lim and Ersando filed suit in their capacities as citizens, lawyers and taxpayers.
intervenors, vs. GLORIA MACAPAGAL-ARROYO, ALBERTO ROMULO, SANLAKAS and PARTIDO, on the other hand, aver that certain members of their organization
ANGELO REYES, respondents. are residents of Zamboanga and Sulu, and hence will be directly affected by the operations
being conducted in Mindanao. They likewise pray for a relaxation on the rules relative to locus
DECISION standi citing the unprecedented importance of the issue involved.
DE LEON, JR., J.: On February 7, 2002 the Senate conducted a hearing on the Balikatan exercise wherein
Vice-President Teofisto T. Guingona, Jr., who is concurrently Secretary of Foreign Affairs,
This case involves a petition for certiorari and prohibition as well as a petition-in- presented the Draft Terms of Reference (TOR). Five days later, he approved the TOR, which
[3]

intervention, praying that respondents be restrained from proceeding with the so-called we quote hereunder:
Balikatan 02-1 and that after due notice and hearing, that judgment be rendered issuing a
permanent writ of injunction and/or prohibition against the deployment of U.S. troops in I. POLICY LEVEL
Basilan and Mindanao for being illegal and in violation of the Constitution.
The facts are as follows: 1. The Exercise shall be Consistent with the Philippine Constitution and all its
activities shall be in consonance with the laws of the land and the provisions of the
Beginning January of this year 2002, personnel from the armed forces of the United States
of America started arriving in Mindanao to take part, in conjunction with the Philippine RP-US Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA).
military, in Balikatan 02-1. These so-called Balikatan exercises are the largest combined
training operations involving Filipino and American troops. In theory, they are a simulation of 2. The conduct of this training Exercise is in accordance with pertinent United
joint military maneuvers pursuant to the Mutual Defense Treaty, a bilateral defense agreement
[1] Nations resolutions against global terrorism as understood by the respective parties.
entered into by the Philippines and the United States in 1951.
3. No permanent US basing and support facilities shall be established. Temporary
Prior to the year 2002, the last Balikatan was held in 1995. This was due to the paucity of
any formal agreement relative to the treatment of United States personnel visiting the structures such as those for troop billeting, classroom instruction and messing may be
Philippines. In the meantime, the respective governments of the two countries agreed to hold set up for use by RP and US Forces during the Exercise.
joint exercises on a reduced scale. The lack of consensus was eventually cured when the two
nations concluded the Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA) in 1999. 4. The Exercise shall be implemented jointly by RP and US Exercise Co-Directors
under the authority of the Chief of Staff, AFP. In no instance will US Forces operate
The entry of American troops into Philippine soil is proximately rooted in the international
anti-terrorism campaign declared by President George W. Bush in reaction to the tragic events independently during field training exercises (FTX). AFP and US Unit Commanders
that occurred on September 11, 2001. On that day, three (3) commercial aircrafts were hijacked, will retain command over their respective forces under the overall authority of the
flown and smashed into the twin towers of the World Trade Center in New York City and the Exercise Co-Directors. RP and US participants shall comply with operational
Pentagon building in Washington, D.C. by terrorists with alleged links to the al-Qaeda (the instructions of the APP during the FTX.
Base), a Muslim extremist organization headed by the infamous Osama bin Laden. Of no
5. The exercise shall be conducted and completed within a period of not more than a. RP and US participants shall be given a country and area briefing at the start of the
six months, with the projected participation of 660 US personnel and 3,800 RP Exercise. This briefing shall acquaint US Forces on the culture and sensitivities of
Forces. The Chief of Staff, AFP shall direct the Exercise Co-Directors to wind up and the Filipinos and the provisions of the VFA. The briefing shall also promote the full
terminate the Exercise and other activities within the six month Exercise period. cooperation on the part of the RP and US participants for the successful conduct of
the Exercise.
6. The Exercise is a mutual counter-terrorism advising, assisting and training
Exercise relative to Philippine efforts against the ASG, and will be conducted on the b. RP and US participating forces may share, in accordance with their respective
Island of Basilan. Further advising, assisting and training exercises shall be laws and regulations, in the use of their resources, equipment and other assets. They
conducted in Malagutay and the Zamboanga area. Related activities in Cebu will be will use their respective logistics channels.
for support of the Exercise.
c. Medical evaluation shall be jointly planned and executed utilizing RP and US
7. Only 160 US Forces organized in 12-man Special Forces Teams shall be deployed assets and resources.
with AFP field commanders. The US teams shall remain at the Battalion
Headquarters and, when approved, Company Tactical headquarters where they can d. Legal liaison officers from each respective party shall be appointed by the
observe and assess the performance of the APP Forces. Exercise Directors.

8. US exercise participants shall not engage in combat, without prejudice to their 3. PUBLIC AFFAIRS
right of self-defense.
a. Combined RP-US Information Bureaus shall be established at the Exercise
9. These terms of Reference are for purposes of this Exercise only and do not create Directorate in Zamboanga City and at GHQ, AFP in Camp Aguinaldo, Quezon City.
additional legal obligations between the US Government and the Republic of the
Philippines. b. Local media relations will be the concern of the AFP and all public affairs
guidelines shall be jointly developed by RP and US Forces.
II. EXERCISE LEVEL
c. Socio-Economic Assistance Projects shall be planned and executed jointly by RP
1. TRAINING and US Forces in accordance with their respective laws and regulations, and in
consultation with community and local government officials.
a. The Exercise shall involve the conduct of mutual military assisting, advising and
training of RP and US Forces with the primary objective of enhancing the Contemporaneously, Assistant Secretary for American Affairs Minerva Jean A. Falcon and
operational capabilities of both forces to combat terrorism. United States Charge d Affaires Robert Fitts signed the Agreed Minutes of the discussion
between the Vice-President and Assistant Secretary Kelly.
[4]

b. At no time shall US Forces operate independently within RP territory. Petitioners Lim and Ersando present the following arguments:
I
c. Flight plans of all aircraft involved in the exercise will comply with the local air
traffic regulations. THE PHILIPPINES AND THE UNITED STATES SIGNED THE MUTUAL
DEFENSE TREATY (MDT) in 1951 TO PROVIDE MUTUAL MILITARY
2. ADMINISTRATION & LOGISTICS
ASSISTANCE IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE CONSTITUTIONAL PROCESSES monopoly in the field of foreign relations and her role as commander-in-chief of the Philippine
OF EACH COUNTRY ONLY IN THE CASE OF AN ARMED ATTACK BY AN armed forces.
EXTERNAL AGGRESSOR, MEANING A THIRD COUNTRY AGAINST ONE OF Given the primordial importance of the issue involved, it will suffice to reiterate our view
THEM. on this point in a related case:

BY NO STRETCH OF THE IMAGINATION CAN IT BE SAID THAT THE ABU Notwithstanding, in view of the paramount importance and the constitutional
SAYYAF BANDITS IN BASILAN CONSTITUTE AN EXTERNAL ARMED significance of the issues raised in the petitions, this Court, in the exercise of its
FORCE THAT HAS SUBJECT THE PHILIPPINES TO AN ARMED EXTERNAL sound discretion, brushes aside the procedural barrier and takes cognizance of
ATTACK TO WARRANT U.S. MILITARY ASSISTANCE UNDER THE MDT OF the petitions, as we have done in the early Emergency Powers Cases, where we
1951. had occasion to rule:
II x x x ordinary citizens and taxpayers were allowed to question the
constitutionality of several executive orders issued by President Quirino
NEITHER DOES THE VFA OF 1999 AUTHORIZE AMERICAN SOLDIERS TO although they were involving only an indirect and general interest shared in
ENGAGE IN COMBAT OPERATIONS IN PHILIPPINE TERRITORY, NOT EVEN common with the public. The Court dismissed the objection that they were
TO FIRE BACK IF FIRED UPON. not proper parties and ruled that transcendental importance to the public
of these cases demands that they be settled promptly and definitely,
Substantially the same points are advanced by petitioners SANLAKAS and PARTIDO.
brushing aside, if we must, technicalities of procedure. We have since
In his Comment, the Solicitor General points to infirmities in the petitions regarding, inter then applied the exception in many other cases. [citation omitted]
alia, Lim and Ersandos standing to file suit, the prematurity of the action, as well as the
impropriety of availing of certiorari to ascertain a question of fact. Anent their locus standi, the This principle was reiterated in the subsequent cases of Gonzales vs.
Solicitor General argues that first, they may not file suit in their capacities as taxpayers
COMELEC, Daza vs. Singson, and Basco vs. Phil. Amusement and Gaming
inasmuch as it has not been shown that Balikatan 02-1 involves the exercise of Congress taxing
or spending powers. Second, their being lawyers does not invest them with sufficient Corporation, where we emphatically held:
personality to initiate the case, citing our ruling in Integrated Bar of the Philippines v.
Zamora. Third, Lim and Ersando have failed to demonstrate the requisite showing of direct
[5] Considering however the importance to the public of the case at bar, and in
personal injury. We agree. keeping with the Courts duty, under the 1987 Constitution, to determine
whether or not the other branches of the government have kept themselves
It is also contended that the petitioners are indulging in speculation. The Solicitor General
is of the view that since the Terms of Reference are clear as to the extent and duration of within the limits of the Constitution and the laws that they have not abused
Balikatan 02-1, the issues raised by petitioners are premature, as they are based only on a the discretion given to them, the Court has brushed aside technicalities of
fear of future violation of the Terms of Reference. Even petitioners resort to a special civil procedure and has taken cognizance of this petition. xxx
action for certiorari is assailed on the ground that the writ may only issue on the basis of
established facts. Again, in the more recent case of Kilosbayan vs. Guingona, Jr., this Court ruled
Apart from these threshold issues, the Solicitor General claims that there is actually no that in cases of transcendental importance, the court may relax the standing
question of constitutionality involved. The true object of the instant suit, it is said, is to obtain requirements and allow a suit to prosper even where there is no direct injury to
an interpretation of the VFA. The Solicitor General asks that we accord due deference to the the party claiming the right of judicial review.
executive determination that Balikatan 02-1 is covered by the VFA, considering the Presidents
Although courts generally avoid having to decide a constitutional question based on agreement, and in particular, from any political activity. All other activities, in other words,
[9]

the doctrine of separation of powers, which enjoins upon the departments of the are fair game.
government a becoming respect for each others acts, this Court nevertheless resolves We are not left completely unaided, however. The Vienna Convention on the Law of
to take cognizance of the instant petitions. [6]
Treaties, which contains provisos governing interpretations of international agreements, state:

Hence, we treat with similar dispatch the general objection to the supposed prematurity of SECTION 3. INTERPRETATION OF TREATIES
the action. At any rate, petitioners' concerns on the lack of any specific regulation on the
latitude of activity US personnel may undertake and the duration of their stay has been Article 31
addressed in the Terms of Reference.
The holding of Balikatan 02-1 must be studied in the framework of the treaty antecedents General rule of interpretation
to which the Philippines bound itself. The first of these is the Mutual Defense Treaty (MDT, for
brevity). The MDT has been described as the core of the defense relationship between the 1. A treaty shall be interpreted in good faith in accordance with the ordinary meaning
Philippines and its traditional ally, the United States. Its aim is to enhance the strategic and to be given to the terms of the treaty in their context and in the light of its object and
technological capabilities of our armed forces through joint training with its American purpose.
counterparts; the Balikatan is the largest such training exercise directly supporting the MDTs
objectives. It is this treaty to which the VFA adverts and the obligations thereunder which it 2. The context for the purpose of the interpretation of a treaty shall comprise, in
seeks to reaffirm.
addition to the text, including its preamble and annexes:
The lapse of the US-Philippine Bases Agreement in 1992 and the decision not to renew it
created a vacuum in US-Philippine defense relations, that is, until it was replaced by the (a) any agreement relating to the treaty which was made between all the
Visiting Forces Agreement. It should be recalled that on October 10, 2000, by a vote of eleven parties in connexion with the conclusion of the treaty;
to three, this court upheld the validity of the VFA. The VFA provides the regulatory
[7]

mechanism by which United States military and civilian personnel [may visit] temporarily in (b) any instrument which was made by one or more parties in connexion
the Philippines in connection with activities approved by the Philippine Government. It contains
provisions relative to entry and departure of American personnel, driving and vehicle
with the conclusion of the treaty and accepted by the other
registration, criminal jurisdiction, claims, importation and exportation, movement of vessels parties as an instrument related to the party.
and aircraft, as well as the duration of the agreement and its termination.It is the VFA which
gives continued relevance to the MDT despite the passage of years. Its primary goal is to 3. There shall be taken into account, together with the context:
facilitate the promotion of optimal cooperation between American and Philippine military
forces in the event of an attack by a common foe. (a) any subsequent agreement between the parties regarding the
The first question that should be addressed is whether Balikatan 02-1 is covered by the interpretation of the treaty or the application of its provisions;
Visiting Forces Agreement. To resolve this, it is necessary to refer to the VFA itself. Not much
help can be had therefrom, unfortunately, since the terminology employed is itself the source of (b) any subsequent practice in the application of the treaty which
the problem. The VFA permits United States personnel to engage, on an impermanent basis, in establishes the agreement of the parties regarding its
activities, the exact meaning of which was left undefined. The expression is ambiguous, interpretation;
permitting a wide scope of undertakings subject only to the approval of the Philippine
government. The sole encumbrance placed on its definition is couched in the negative, in that
[8]
(c) any relevant rules of international law applicable in the relations
United States personnel must abstain from any activity inconsistent with the spirit of this between the parties.
4. A special meaning shall be given to a term if it is established that the parties so The Terms of Reference rightly fall within the context of the VFA.
intended. After studied reflection, it appeared farfetched that the ambiguity surrounding the meaning
of the word activities arose from accident. In our view, it was deliberately made that way to
Article 32 give both parties a certain leeway in negotiation. In this manner, visiting US forces may sojourn
in Philippine territory for purposes other than military. As conceived, the joint exercises may
Supplementary means of interpretation include training on new techniques of patrol and surveillance to protect the nations marine
resources, sea search-and-rescue operations to assist vessels in distress, disaster relief
Recourse may be had to supplementary means of interpretation, including the operations, civic action projects such as the building of school houses, medical and
preparatory work of the treaty and the circumstances of its conclusion, in order to humanitarian missions, and the like.
confirm the meaning resulting from the application of article 31, or to determine the Under these auspices, the VFA gives legitimacy to the current Balikatan exercises. It is
meaning when the interpretation according to article 31: only logical to assume that Balikatan 02-1, a mutual anti-terrorism advising, assisting and
training exercise, falls under the umbrella of sanctioned or allowable activities in the context of
(a) leaves the meaning ambiguous or obscure; or the agreement. Both the history and intent of the Mutual Defense Treaty and the VFA support
the conclusion that combat-relatedactivities as opposed to combat itself such as the one subject
(b) leads to a result which is manifestly absurd or unreasonable. of the instant petition, are indeed authorized.
That is not the end of the matter, though. Granted that Balikatan 02-1 is permitted under the
It is clear from the foregoing that the cardinal rule of interpretation must involve an terms of the VFA, what may US forces legitimately do in furtherance of their aim to provide
examination of the text, which is presumed to verbalize the parties intentions. The Convention advice, assistance and training in the global effort against terrorism? Differently phrased, may
likewise dictates what may be used as aids to deduce the meaning of terms, which it refers to as American troops actually engage in combat in Philippine territory? The Terms of Reference are
the context of the treaty, as well as other elements may be taken into account alongside the explicit enough. Paragraph 8 of section I stipulates that US exercise participants
aforesaid context. As explained by a writer on the Convention, may not engage in combat except in self-defense. We wryly note that this sentiment is
admirable in the abstract but difficult in implementation. The target of Balikatan 02-1, the Abu
[t]he Commissions proposals (which were adopted virtually without change by the Sayyaf, cannot reasonably be expected to sit idly while the battle is brought to their very
conference and are now reflected in Articles 31 and 32 of the Convention) were doorstep. They cannot be expected to pick and choose their targets for they will not have the
clearly based on the view that the text of a treaty must be presumed to be the luxury of doing so. We state this point if only to signify our awareness that the parties straddle a
authentic expression of the intentions of the parties; the Commission accordingly fine line, observing the honored legal maxim Nemo potest facere per alium quod non potest
came down firmly in favour of the view that the starting point of interpretation is the facere per directum. The indirect violation is actually petitioners worry, that in reality,
[11]

Balikatan 02-1 is actually a war principally conducted by the United States government, and
elucidation of the meaning of the text, not an investigation ab initio into the that the provision on self-defense serves only as camouflage to conceal the true nature of the
intentions of the parties. This is not to say that the travaux prparatoires of a treaty, or exercise. A clear pronouncement on this matter thereby becomes crucial.
the circumstances of its conclusion, are relegated to a subordinate, and wholly
ineffective, role. As Professor Briggs points out, no rigid temporal prohibition on In our considered opinion, neither the MDT nor the VFA allow foreign troops to engage in
an offensive war on Philippine territory. We bear in mind the salutary proscription stated in the
resort to travaux prparatoires of a treaty was intended by the use of the phrase Charter of the United Nations, to wit:
supplementary means of interpretation in what is now Article 32 of the Vienna
Convention. The distinction between the general rule of interpretation and the Article 2
supplementary means of interpretation is intended rather to ensure that the
supplementary means do not constitute an alternative, autonomous method of The Organization and its Members, in pursuit of the Purposes stated in Article 1,
interpretation divorced from the general rule. [10]
shall act in accordance with the following Principles.
xxx xxx xxx xxx Sec. 25. After the expiration in 1991 of the Agreement between the Republic of the
Philippines and the United States of America concerning Military Bases, foreign
4. All Members shall refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of military bases, troops or facilities shall not be allowed in the Philippines except
force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state, or in any under a treaty duly concurred in by the Senate and, when the Congress so requires,
other manner inconsistent with the Purposes of the United Nations. ratified by a majority of the votes cast by the people in a national referendum held
for that purpose, and recognized as a treaty by the other contracting state.
xxx xxx xxx xxx
In the same manner, both the Mutual Defense Treaty and the Visiting Forces Agreement, as The aforequoted provisions betray a marked antipathy towards foreign military presence in
in all other treaties and international agreements to which the Philippines is a party, must be the country, or of foreign influence in general. Hence, foreign troops are allowed entry into the
read in the context of the 1987 Constitution. In particular, the Mutual Defense Treaty was Philippines only by way of direct exception. Conflict arises then between the fundamental law
concluded way before the present Charter, though it nevertheless remains in effect as a valid and our obligations arising from international agreements.
source of international obligation. The present Constitution contains key provisions useful in A rather recent formulation of the relation of international law vis--vis municipal law was
determining the extent to which foreign military troops are allowed in Philippine territory. Thus, expressed in Philip Morris, Inc. v. Court of Appeals, to wit:
[13]

in the Declaration of Principles and State Policies, it is provided that:


xxx xxx xxx xxx xxx Withal, the fact that international law has been made part of the law of the land
does not by any means imply the primacy of international law over national law in
SEC. 2. The Philippines renounces war as an instrument of national policy, adopts the municipal sphere. Under the doctrine of incorporation as applied in most
the generally accepted principles of international law as part of the law of the land countries, rules of international law are given a standing equal, not superior, to
and adheres to the policy of peace, equality, justice, freedom, cooperation, and amity national legislation.
with all nations.
This is not exactly helpful in solving the problem at hand since in trying to find a middle
xxx xxx xxx xxx ground, it favors neither one law nor the other, which only leaves the hapless seeker with an
unsolved dilemma. Other more traditional approaches may offer valuable insights.
SEC. 7. The State shall pursue an independent foreign policy. In its relations with From the perspective of public international law, a treaty is favored over municipal law
other states the paramount consideration shall be national sovereignty, territorial pursuant to the principle of pacta sunt servanda. Hence, [e]very treaty in force is binding upon
integrity, national interest, and the right to self-determination. the parties to it and must be performed by them in good faith. Further, a party to a treaty is not
[14]

allowed to invoke the provisions of its internal law as justification for its failure to perform a
SEC. 8. The Philippines, consistent with the national interest, adopts and pursues a treaty.
[15]

policy of freedom from nuclear weapons in the country. Our Constitution espouses the opposing view. Witness our jurisdiction as stated in section 5
of Article VIII:
xxx xxx xxx xxx
The Constitution also regulates the foreign relations powers of the Chief Executive when it The Supreme Court shall have the following powers:
provides that [n]o treaty or international agreement shall be valid and effective unless concurred
in by at least two-thirds of all the members of the Senate. Even more pointedly, the Transitory
[12]
xxx xxx xxx xxx
Provisions state:
(2) Review, revise, reverse, modify, or affirm on appeal or certiorari, as the law or
the Rules of Court may provide, final judgments and order of lower courts in:
(A) All cases in which the constitutionality or validity of any treaty, international or jurisdiction or grave abuse of discretion. The phrase grave abuse of discretion has a precise
executive agreement, law, presidential decree, proclamation, order, instruction, meaning in law, denoting abuse of discretion too patent and gross as to amount to an evasion of
ordinance, or regulation is in question. a positive duty, or a virtual refusal to perform the duty enjoined or act in contemplation of law,
or where the power is exercised in an arbitrary and despotic manner by reason of passion and
xxx xxx xxx xxx personal hostility. [19]

In Ichong v. Hernandez, we ruled that the provisions of a treaty are always subject to
[16] In this connection, it will not be amiss to add that the Supreme Court is not a trier of facts. [20]

qualification or amendment by a subsequent law, or that it is subject to the police power of the Under the expanded concept of judicial power under the Constitution, courts are charged
State. In Gonzales v. Hechanova, [17]
with the duty to determine whether or not there has been a grave abuse of discretion amounting
to lack or excess of jurisdiction on the part of any branch or instrumentality of the government.
xxx As regards the question whether an international agreement may be invalidated From the facts obtaining, we find that the holding of Balikatan 02-1 joint military exercise
[21]

by our courts, suffice it to say that the Constitution of the Philippines has clearly has not intruded into that penumbra of error that would otherwise call for correction on our
settled it in the affirmative, by providing, in Section 2 of Article VIII thereof, that the part. In other words, respondents in the case at bar have not committed grave abuse of
Supreme Court may not be deprived of its jurisdiction to review, revise, reverse, discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction.
modify, or affirm on appeal, certiorari, or writ of error as the law or the rules of court WHEREFORE, the petition and the petition-in-intervention are hereby DISMISSED
may provide, final judgments and decrees of inferior courts in (1) All cases in which without prejudice to the filing of a new petition sufficient in form and substance in the proper
the constitutionality or validity of any treaty, law, ordinance, or executive order or Regional Trial Court.
regulation is in question. In other words, our Constitution authorizes the nullification SO ORDERED.
of a treaty, not only when it conflicts with the fundamental law, but, also, when it
runs counter to an act of Congress.

The foregoing premises leave us no doubt that US forces are prohibited from engaging in
an offensive war on Philippine territory.
Yet a nagging question remains: are American troops actively engaged in combat alongside
Filipino soldiers under the guise of an alleged training and assistance exercise? Contrary to
what petitioners would have us do, we cannot take judicial notice of the events transpiring
down south, as reported from the saturation coverage of the media. As a rule, we do not take
[18]

cognizance of newspaper or electronic reports per se, not because of any issue as to their truth,
accuracy, or impartiality, but for the simple reason that facts must be established in accordance
with the rules of evidence. As a result, we cannot accept, in the absence of concrete proof,
petitioners allegation that the Arroyo government is engaged in doublespeak in trying to pass
off as a mere training exercise an offensive effort by foreign troops on native soil. The petitions
invite us to speculate on what is really happening in Mindanao, to issue, make factual findings
on matters well beyond our immediate perception, and this we are understandably loath to do.
It is all too apparent that the determination thereof involves basically a question of fact. On
this point, we must concur with the Solicitor General that the present subject matter is not a fit
topic for a special civil action for certiorari. We have held in too many instances that questions
of fact are not entertained in such a remedy. The sole object of the writ is to correct errors of
SUZETTE NICOLAS y SOMBILON, G.R. No. 175888 i
Petitioner, n

Present: h
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PUNO, C.J., s
QUISUMBING,
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AZCUNA, i
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CHICO-NAZARIO,
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I APPEALS, and all persons acting in their
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L Respondents.

S X - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -X
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E. TAADA, JOSE DE LA RAMA, e
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and BENJAMIN POZON, n
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Respondents. Promulgated:
G February 11, 2009
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M DECISION
E
N
CONTRARY TO LAW.[1]
AZCUNA, J.:
These are petitions for certiorari, etc. as special civil actions and/or for Pursuant to the Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA) between the Republic of
review of the Decision of the Court of Appeals in Lance Corporal Daniel J. Smith the Philippines and the United States, entered into on February 10, 1998,
v. Hon. Benjamin T. Pozon, et al., in CA-G.R. SP No. 97212, dated January 2, the United States, at its request, was granted custody of defendant Smith pending
2007. the proceedings.

The facts are not disputed. During the trial, which was transferred from the Regional Trial Court
(RTC) of Zambales to the RTC of Makati for security reasons, the United States
Respondent Lance Corporal (L/CPL) Daniel Smith is a member of the Government faithfully complied with its undertaking to bring defendant Smith to
United States Armed Forces. He was charged with the crime of rape committed the trial court every time his presence was required.
against a Filipina, petitioner herein, sometime on November 1, 2005, as follows:
On December 4, 2006, the RTC of Makati, following the end of the trial,
The undersigned accused LCpl. Daniel Smith, Ssgt. Chad Brian rendered its Decision, finding defendant Smith guilty, thus:
Carpentier, Dominic Duplantis, Keith Silkwood and Timoteo L.
Soriano, Jr. of the crime of Rape under Article 266-A of the Revised WHEREFORE, premises considered, for failure of the
Penal Code, as amended by Republic Act 8353, upon a complaint under prosecution to adduce sufficient evidence against accused S/SGT.
oath filed by Suzette S. Nicolas, which is attached hereto and made an CHAD BRIAN CARPENTER, L/CPL. KEITH SILKWOOD AND
integral part hereof as Annex A, committed as follows: L/CPL. DOMINIC DUPLANTIS, all of the US Marine Corps assigned
at the USS Essex, are hereby ACQUITTED to the crime charged.
That on or about the First (1 st) day of November 2005, inside
the Subic Bay Freeport Zone, Olongapo City and within the jurisdiction
of this Honorable Court, the above-named accuseds (sic), being then The prosecution having presented sufficient evidence against
members of the United States Marine Corps, except Timoteo L. accused L/CPL. DANIEL J. SMITH, also of the US Marine Corps at
Soriano, Jr., conspiring, confederating together and mutually helping the USS Essex, this Court hereby finds him GUILTY BEYOND
one another, with lewd design and by means of force, threat and REASONABLE DOUBT of the crime of RAPE defined under Article
intimidation, with abuse of superior strength and taking advantage of
the intoxication of the victim, did then and there willfully, unlawfully 266-A, paragraph 1 (a) of the Revised Penal Code, as amended by R.A.
and feloniously sexually abuse and have sexual intercourse with or 8353, and, in accordance with Article 266-B, first paragraph thereof,
carnal knowledge of one Suzette S. Nicolas, a 22-year old unmarried hereby sentences him to suffer the penalty of reclusion
woman inside a Starex Van with Plate No. WKF-162, owned by perpetua together with the accessory penalties provided for under
Starways Travel and Tours, with Office address at 8900 P. Victor St.,
Guadalupe, Makati City, and driven by accused Timoteo L. Soriano, Jr.,
Article 41 of the same Code.
against the will and consent of the said Suzette S. Nicolas, to her
damage and prejudice. Pursuant to Article V, paragraph No. 10, of the Visiting Forces
Agreement entered into by the Philippines and the United States,
accused L/CPL. DANIEL J. SMITH shall serve his sentence in the
facilities that shall, thereafter, be agreed upon by appropriate Philippine DATE: 12-19-06 DATE: December 19, 2006__
and United States authorities. Pending agreement on such facilities,
accused L/CPL. DANIEL J. SMITH is hereby temporarily committed
to the Makati City Jail. and the Romulo-Kenney Agreement of December 22, 2006 which states:

Accused L/CPL. DANIEL J. SMITH is further sentenced to The Department of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of
indemnify complainant SUZETTE S. NICOLAS in the amount the Philippines and the Embassy of the United States of America agree
of P50,000.00 as compensatory damages plus P50,000.00 as moral that, in accordance with the Visiting Forces Agreement signed between
damages. the two nations, upon transfer of Lance Corporal Daniel J. Smith,
United States Marine Corps, from the Makati City Jail, he will be
SO ORDERED.[2] detained at the first floor, Rowe (JUSMAG) Building, U.S. Embassy
Compound in a room of approximately 10 x 12 square feet. He will be
guarded round the clock by U.S. military personnel. The Philippine
As a result, the Makati court ordered Smith detained at the Makati jail until police and jail authorities, under the direct supervision of the Philippine
further orders. Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG) will have access
to the place of detention to ensure the United States is in compliance
On December 29, 2006, however, defendant Smith was taken out of the with the terms of the VFA.
Makati jail by a contingent of Philippine law enforcement agents, purportedly
acting under orders of the Department of the Interior and Local Government, and
The matter was brought before the Court of Appeals which decided
brought to a facility for detention under the control of the United States
on January 2, 2007, as follows:
government, provided for under new agreements between the Philippines and the
United States, referred to as the Romulo-Kenney Agreement of December 19, WHEREFORE, all the foregoing considered, we resolved to
2006 which states: DISMISS the petition for having become moot.[3]

The Government of the Republic of the Philippines and the Hence, the present actions.
Government of the United States of America agree that, in accordance
with the Visiting Forces Agreement signed between our two nations,
Lance Corporal Daniel J. Smith, United States Marine Corps, be The petitions were heard on oral arguments on September 19, 2008, after
returned to U.S. military custody at the U.S. Embassy in Manila. which the parties submitted their memoranda.

(Sgd.) KRISTIE A. KENNEY (Sgd.) ALBERTO G. ROMULO Petitioners contend that the Philippines should have custody of defendant
Representative of the United States Representative of the Republic L/CPL Smith because, first of all, the VFA is void and unconstitutional.
of America of the Philippines
This is noteworthy, because what this means is that Clark and Subic and the
This issue had been raised before, and this Court resolved in favor of the other places in the Philippines covered by the RP-US Military Bases Agreement
constitutionality of the VFA. This was in Bayan v. Zamora,[4] brought by Bayan, of 1947 were not Philippine territory, as they were excluded from the cession and
one of petitioners in the present cases. retained by the US.

Against the barriers of res judicata vis--vis Bayan, and stare decisis vis--vis Accordingly, the Philippines had no jurisdiction over these bases except to
all the parties, the reversal of the previous ruling is sought on the ground that the the extent allowed by the United States. Furthermore, the RP-US Military Bases
issue is of primordial importance, involving the sovereignty of the Republic, as Agreement was never advised for ratification by the United States Senate, a
well as a specific mandate of the Constitution. disparity in treatment, because the Philippines regarded it as a treaty and had it
concurred in by our Senate.
The provision of the Constitution is Art. XVIII, Sec. 25 which states:
Subsequently, the United States agreed to turn over these bases to
Sec. 25. After the expiration in 1991 of the Agreement between the Philippines; and with the expiration of the RP-US Military Bases Agreement
the Philippines and the United States of America concerning Military in 1991, the territory covered by these bases were finally ceded to the Philippines.
Bases, foreign military bases, troops, or facilities shall not be allowed in
the Philippines except under a treaty duly concurred in by the Senate
and, when the Congress so requires, ratified by a majority of the votes To prevent a recurrence of this experience, the provision in question was
cast by the people in a national referendum held for that purpose, and adopted in the 1987 Constitution.
recognized as a treaty by the other contracting State.
The provision is thus designed to ensure that any agreement allowing the
presence of foreign military bases, troops or facilities in Philippine territory shall
The reason for this provision lies in history and the Philippine experience in be equally binding on the Philippines and the foreign sovereign State
regard to the United States military bases in the country. involved. The idea is to prevent a recurrence of the situation in which the terms
and conditions governing the presence of foreign armed forces in our territory
It will be recalled that under the Philippine Bill of 1902, which laid the were binding upon us but not upon the foreign State.
basis for the Philippine Commonwealth and, eventually, for the recognition of
independence, the United States agreed to cede to the Philippines all the territory Applying the provision to the situation involved in these cases, the question
it acquired from Spain under the Treaty of Paris, plus a few islands later added to is whether or not the presence of US Armed Forces in Philippine territory
its realm, except certain naval ports and/or military bases and facilities, which the pursuant to the VFA is allowed under a treaty duly concurred in by the Senate
United States retained for itself. xxx and recognized as a treaty by the other contracting State.

This Court finds that it is, for two reasons.


all governments, and desiring to strengthen the fabric of peace in the
[5]
First, as held in Bayan v. Zamora, the VFA was duly concurred in by the Pacific area.
Philippine Senate and has been recognized as a treaty by the United States as
Recalling with mutual pride the historic relationship which brought
attested and certified by the duly authorized representative of the United their two peoples together in a common bond of sympathy and mutual
States government. ideals to fight side-by-side against imperialist aggression during the last
war.
The fact that the VFA was not submitted for advice and consent of the
United States Senate does not detract from its status as a binding international Desiring to declare publicly and formally their sense of unity and
agreement or treaty recognized by the said State. For this is a matter of their common determination to defend themselves against external
armed attack, so that no potential aggressor could be under the illusion
internal United States law. Notice can be taken of the internationally known that either of them stands alone in the Pacific area.
practice by the United States of submitting to its Senate for advice and consent
agreements that are policymaking in nature, whereas those that carry out or Desiring further to strengthen their present efforts for collective
further implement these policymaking agreements are merely submitted to defense for the preservation of peace and security pending the
Congress, under the provisions of the so-called CaseZablocki Act, within sixty development of a more comprehensive system of regional security in
days from ratification.[6] the Pacific area.

Agreeing that nothing in this present instrument shall be considered or


The second reason has to do with the relation between the VFA and the RP- interpreted as in any way or sense altering or diminishing any existing
US Mutual Defense Treaty of August 30, 1951. This earlier agreement was signed agreements or understandings between the Republic of
and duly ratified with the concurrence of both the Philippine Senate and the the Philippines and the United States of America.
United States Senate.
Have agreed as follows:
The RP-US Mutual Defense Treaty states:[7]
ARTICLE I. The parties undertake, as set forth in the Charter of the
United Nations, to settle any international disputes in which they may
MUTUAL DEFENSE TREATY BETWEEN THE REPUBLIC OF be involved by peaceful means in such a manner that international
THE PHILIPPINES AND THE UNITED STATES OF peace and security and justice are not endangered and to refrain in their
AMERICA. Signed at Washington, August 30, 1951. international relation from the threat or use of force in any manner
inconsistent with the purposes of the United Nations.
The Parties of this Treaty
ARTICLE II. In order more effectively to achieve the objective of this
Reaffirming their faith in the purposes and principles of the Charter of Treaty, the Parties separately and jointly by self-help and mutual
the United Nations and their desire to live in peace with all peoples and aid will maintain and develop their individual and collective
capacity to resist armed attack.
ARTICLE VIII. This Treaty shall remain in force indefinitely. Either
ARTICLE III. The Parties, through their Foreign Ministers or their Party may terminate it one year after notice has been given to the other
deputies, will consult together from time to time regarding the party.
implementation of this Treaty and whenever in the opinion of either of
them the territorial integrity, political independence or security of either IN WITHNESS WHEREOF the undersigned Plenipotentiaries have
of the Parties is threatened by external armed attack in the Pacific. signed this Treaty.

ARTICLE IV. Each Party recognizes that an armed attack in the Pacific DONE in duplicate at Washington this thirtieth day of August, 1951.
area on either of the parties would be dangerous to its own peace and
safety and declares that it would act to meet the common dangers in For the Republic of the Philippines:
accordance with its constitutional processes. (Sgd.) CARLOS P. ROMULO
(Sgd.) JOAQUIN M. ELIZALDE
Any such armed attack and all measures taken as a result thereof shall (Sgd.) VICENTE J. FRANCISCO
be immediately reported to the Security Council of the United (Sgd.) DIOSDADO MACAPAGAL
Nations. Such measures shall be terminated when the Security Council
has taken the measures necessary to restore and maintain international For the United States of America:
peace and security.
(Sgd.) DEAN ACHESON
ARTICLE V. For the purpose of Article IV, an armed attack on either of (Sgd.) JOHN FOSTER DULLES
the Parties is deemed to include an armed attack on the metropolitan (Sgd.) TOM CONNALLY
territory of either of the Parties, or on the island territories under its (Sgd.) ALEXANDER WILEY[8]
jurisdiction in the Pacific Ocean, its armed forces, public vessels or
aircraft in the Pacific.
Clearly, therefore, joint RP-US military exercises for the purpose of
ARTICLE VI. This Treaty does not affect and shall not be interpreted as developing the capability to resist an armed attack fall squarely under the
affecting in any way the rights and obligations of the Parties under the
provisions of the RP-US Mutual Defense Treaty. The VFA, which is the
Charter of the United Nations or the responsibility of the United
Nations for the maintenance of international peace and security. instrument agreed upon to provide for the joint RP-US military exercises, is
simply an implementing agreement to the main RP-US Military Defense
ARTICLE VII. This Treaty shall be ratified by the Republic of Treaty. The Preamble of the VFA states:
the Philippines and the United Nations of America in accordance with
their respective constitutional processes and will come into force when The Government of the United States of America and the Government
instruments of ratification thereof have been exchanged by them of the Republic of the Philippines,
at Manila.
Reaffirming their faith in the purposes and principles of the Charter of
the United Nations and their desire to strengthen international and The VFA being a valid and binding agreement, the parties are required as a
regional security in the Pacific area;
matter of international law to abide by its terms and provisions.
Reaffirming their obligations under the Mutual Defense Treaty
of August 30, 1951; The VFA provides that in cases of offenses committed by the members of
the US Armed Forces in the Philippines, the following rules apply:
Noting that from time to time elements of the United States armed
forces may visit the Republic of the Philippines;
Article V
Considering that cooperation between the United States and the Criminal Jurisdiction
Republic of the Philippines promotes their common security
interests; xxx
6. The custody of any United States personnel over whom the
Recognizing the desirability of defining the treatment of United Philippines is to exercise jurisdiction shall immediately reside with
States personnel visiting the Republic of the Philippines; United States military authorities, if they so request, from the
commission of the offense until completion of all judicial
Have agreed as follows:[9] proceedings. United States military authorities shall, upon formal
notification by the Philippine authorities and without delay, make such
Accordingly, as an implementing agreement of the RP-US Mutual Defense personnel available to those authorities in time for any investigative or
Treaty, it was not necessary to submit the VFA to the US Senate for advice and judicial proceedings relating to the offense with which the person has
consent, but merely to the US Congress under the CaseZablocki Act within 60 been charged. In extraordinary cases, the Philippine Government shall
days of its ratification. It is for this reason that the US has certified that it present its position to the United States Government regarding custody,
which the United States Government shall take into full account. In the
recognizes the VFA as a binding international agreement, i.e., a treaty, and this
event Philippine judicial proceedings are not completed within one
substantially complies with the requirements of Art. XVIII, Sec. 25 of our year, the United States shall be relieved of any obligations under this
Constitution.[10] paragraph. The one year period will not include the time necessary to
appeal. Also, the one year period will not include any time during
The provision of Art. XVIII, Sec. 25 of the Constitution, is complied with which scheduled trial procedures are delayed because United
by virtue of the fact that the presence of the US Armed Forces through the VFA is States authorities, after timely notification by Philippine authorities to
arrange for the presence of the accused, fail to do so.
a presence allowed under the RP-US Mutual Defense Treaty. Since the RP-US
Mutual Defense Treaty itself has been ratified and concurred in by both the
Petitioners contend that these undertakings violate another provision of the
Philippine Senate and the US Senate, there is no violation of the Constitutional
Constitution, namely, that providing for the exclusive power of this Court to adopt
provision resulting from such presence.
rules of procedure for all courts in the Philippines (Art. VIII, Sec. 5[5]). They
argue that to allow the transfer of custody of an accused to a foreign power is to the Philippines adopts the generally accepted principles of international law as
provide for a different rule of procedure for that accused, which also violates the part of the law of the land. (Art. II, Sec. 2).
equal protection clause of the Constitution (Art. III, Sec. 1.).
Applying, however, the provisions of VFA, the Court finds that there is a
Again, this Court finds no violation of the Constitution. different treatment when it comes to detention as against custody. The moment the
accused has to be detained, e.g., after conviction, the rule that governs is the
The equal protection clause is not violated, because there is a substantial following provision of the VFA:
basis for a different treatment of a member of a foreign military armed forces
allowed to enter our territory and all other accused.[11] Article V
Criminal Jurisdiction
The rule in international law is that a foreign armed forces allowed to enter
xxx
ones territory is immune from local jurisdiction, except to the extent agreed Sec. 10. The confinement or detention by Philippine authorities
upon. The Status of Forces Agreements involving foreign military units around of United States personnel shall be carried out in facilities agreed on by
the world vary in terms and conditions, according to the situation of the parties appropriate Philippines and United Statesauthorities. United
involved, and reflect their bargaining power. But the principle remains, i.e., the States personnel serving sentences in the Philippines shall have the
receiving State can exercise jurisdiction over the forces of the sending State only right to visits and material assistance.
to the extent agreed upon by the parties.[12]
It is clear that the parties to the VFA recognized the difference between
As a result, the situation involved is not one in which the power of this
custody during the trial and detention after conviction, because they provided for
Court to adopt rules of procedure is curtailed or violated, but rather one in which,
a specific arrangement to cover detention. And this specific arrangement clearly
as is normally encountered around the world, the laws (including rules of
states not only that the detention shall be carried out in facilities agreed on by
procedure) of one State do not extend or apply except to the extent agreed
authorities of both parties, but also that the detention shall be by Philippine
upon to subjects of another State due to the recognition of extraterritorial
authorities. Therefore, the Romulo-Kenney Agreements of December 19 and 22,
immunity given to such bodies as visiting foreign armed forces.
2006, which are agreements on the detention of the accused in the United
States Embassy, are not in accord with the VFA itself because such detention is
Nothing in the Constitution prohibits such agreements recognizing
not by Philippine authorities.
immunity from jurisdiction or some aspects of jurisdiction (such as custody), in
relation to long-recognized subjects of such immunity like Heads of State,
Respondents should therefore comply with the VFA and negotiate with
diplomats and members of the armed forces contingents of a foreign State allowed
representatives of the United States towards an agreement on detention facilities
to enter another States territory. On the contrary, the Constitution states that
under Philippine authorities as mandated by Art. V, Sec. 10 of the VFA.
of the US Senate advice and consent resolution? Peralta, J., no
Next, the Court addresses the recent decision of the United States Supreme part.
Court in Medellin v. Texas ( 552 US ___ No. 06-984, March 25, 2008), which held
that treaties entered into by the United States are not automatically part of their After deliberation, the Court holds, on these points, as follows:
domestic law unless these treaties are self-executing or there is an implementing
legislation to make them enforceable. First, the VFA is a self-executing Agreement, as that term is defined
in Medellin itself, because the parties intend its provisions to be enforceable,
On February 3, 2009, the Court issued a Resolution, thus: precisely because the Agreement is intended to carry out obligations and
undertakings under the RP-US Mutual Defense Treaty. As a matter of fact, the
G.R. No. 175888 (Suzette Nicolas y Sombilon v. Alberto Romulo, et VFA has been implemented and executed, with the US faithfully complying with
al.); G.R. No. 176051 (Jovito R. Salonga, et al. v. Daniel Smith, its obligation to produce L/CPL Smith before the court during the trial.
et al.); and G.R. No. 176222 (Bagong Alyansang Makabayan
[BAYAN], et al. v. President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, et al.). Secondly, the VFA is covered by implementing legislation, namely, the Case-
Zablocki Act, USC Sec. 112(b), inasmuch as it is the very purpose and intent of
The parties, including the Solicitor General, are required to submit
within three (3) days a Comment/Manifestation on the following points: the US Congress that executive agreements registered under this Act within 60
days from their ratification be immediately implemented. The parties to these
1. What is the implication on the RP-US Visiting Forces present cases do not question the fact that the VFA has been registered under the
Agreement of the recent US Supreme Court decision in Jose Case-Zablocki Act.
Ernesto Medellin v. Texas, dated March 25, 2008, to the effect
that treaty stipulations that are not self-executory can only be In sum, therefore, the VFA differs from the Vienna Convention on Consular
enforced pursuant to legislation to carry them into effect; and
that, while treaties may comprise international commitments, Relations and the Avena decision of the International Court of Justice (ICJ),
they are not domestic law unless Congress has enacted subject matter of the Medellin decision. The Convention and the ICJ decision are
implementing statutes or the treaty itself conveys an intention not self-executing and are not registrable under the Case-Zablocki Act, and thus
that it be self-executory and is ratified on these terms? lack legislative implementing authority.

2. Whether the VFA is enforceable in the US as domestic law, Finally, the RP-US Mutual Defense Treaty was advised and consented to by
either because it is self-executory or because there exists
the US Senate on March 20, 1952, as reflected in the US Congressional Record,
legislation to implement it.
82ndCongress, Second Session, Vol. 98 Part 2, pp. 2594-2595.
3. Whether the RP-US Mutual Defense Treaty of August 30,
1951 was concurred in by the US Senate and, if so, is there proof The framers of the Constitution were aware that the application of
international law in domestic courts varies from country to country.
after which they are recognized by the Congress and may be
As Ward N. Ferdinandusse states in his Treatise, DIRECT APPLICATION implemented.
OF INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW IN NATIONAL COURTS, some
countries require legislation whereas others do not. As regards the implementation of the RP-US Mutual Defense Treaty,
military aid or assistance has been given under it and this can only be done
It was not the intention of the framers of the 1987 Constitution, in adopting through implementing legislation. The VFA itself is another form of
Article XVIII, Sec. 25, to require the other contracting State to convert their implementation of its provisions.
system to achieve alignment and parity with ours. It was simply required that the
treaty be recognized as a treaty by the other contracting State. With that, it WHEREFORE, the petitions are PARTLY GRANTED, and the Court of
becomes for both parties a binding international obligation and the enforcement of Appeals Decision in CA-G.R. SP No. 97212 dated January 2,
that obligation is left to the normal recourse and processes under international law. 2007 is MODIFIED. The Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA) between the
Republic of the Philippines and the United States, entered into on February 10,
Furthermore, as held by the US Supreme Court in Weinberger v. Rossi, 1998, is UPHELD as constitutional, but the Romulo-Kenney Agreements of
[13]
an executive agreement is a treaty within the meaning of that word in December 19 and 22, 2006 are DECLARED not in accordance with the VFA,
international law and constitutes enforceable domestic law vis--vis the United and respondent Secretary of Foreign Affairs is hereby ordered to forthwith
States. Thus, the US Supreme Court in Weinberger enforced the provisions of the negotiate with the United States representatives for the appropriate agreement on
executive agreement granting preferential employment to Filipinos in the US detention facilities under Philippine authorities as provided in Art. V, Sec. 10 of
Bases here. the VFA, pending which the status quo shall be maintained until further orders by
this Court.

Accordingly, there are three types of treaties in the American system: The Court of Appeals is hereby directed to resolve without delay the related
matters pending therein, namely, the petition for contempt and the appeal of
1. Art. II, Sec. 2 treaties These are advised and consented to by the US L/CPL Daniel Smith from the judgment of conviction.
Senate in accordance with Art. II, Sec. 2 of the US Constitution.
No costs.
2. ExecutiveCongressional Agreements: These are joint agreements of
the President and Congress and need not be submitted to the Senate. SO ORDERED.
3. Sole Executive Agreements. These are agreements entered into by
the President. They are to be submitted to Congress within sixty (60)
days of ratification under the provisions of the Case-Zablocki Act,
PHARMACEUTICAL AND HEALTH CARE ASSOCIATION OF THE PHILIPPINES, petitioner, However, on June 28, 2006, petitioner, representing its members that are manufacturers of
vs. breastmilk substitutes, filed the present Petition for Certiorari and Prohibition with Prayer for the
HEALTH SECRETARY FRANCISCO T. DUQUE III; HEALTH UNDER SECRETARIES DR. Issuance of a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) or Writ of Preliminary Injunction.
ETHELYN P. NIETO, DR. MARGARITA M. GALON, ATTY. ALEXANDER A. PADILLA, & DR.
JADE F. DEL MUNDO; and ASSISTANT SECRETARIES DR. MARIO C. VILLAVERDE, DR. The main issue raised in the petition is whether respondents officers of the DOH acted without or in
DAVID J. LOZADA, AND DR. NEMESIO T. GAKO,respondents. excess of jurisdiction, or with grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction,
and in violation of the provisions of the Constitution in promulgating the RIRR. 3
DECISION
On August 15, 2006, the Court issued a Resolution granting a TRO enjoining respondents from
AUSTRIA-MARTINEZ, J.: implementing the questioned RIRR.

The Court and all parties involved are in agreement that the best nourishment for an infant is After the Comment and Reply had been filed, the Court set the case for oral arguments on June 19,
mother's milk. There is nothing greater than for a mother to nurture her beloved child straight from 2007. The Court issued an Advisory (Guidance for Oral Arguments) dated June 5, 2007, to wit:
her bosom. The ideal is, of course, for each and every Filipino child to enjoy the unequaled benefits
of breastmilk. But how should this end be attained? The Court hereby sets the following issues:

Before the Court is a petition for certiorari under Rule 65 of the Rules of Court, seeking to nullify 1. Whether or not petitioner is a real party-in-interest;
Administrative Order (A.O.) No. 2006-0012 entitled, Revised Implementing Rules and
Regulations of Executive Order No. 51, Otherwise Known as The "Milk Code," Relevant 2. Whether Administrative Order No. 2006-0012 or the Revised Implementing Rules and
International Agreements, Penalizing Violations Thereof, and for Other Purposes (RIRR). Regulations (RIRR) issued by the Department of Health (DOH) is not constitutional;
Petitioner posits that the RIRR is not valid as it contains provisions that are not constitutional and
go beyond the law it is supposed to implement.
2.1 Whether the RIRR is in accord with the provisions of Executive Order No. 51 (Milk
Code);
Named as respondents are the Health Secretary, Undersecretaries, and Assistant Secretaries of
the Department of Health (DOH). For purposes of herein petition, the DOH is deemed impleaded
2.2 Whether pertinent international agreements1 entered into by the Philippines are part of
as a co-respondent since respondents issued the questioned RIRR in their capacity as officials of
the law of the land and may be implemented by the DOH through the RIRR; If in the
said executive agency.1
affirmative, whether the RIRR is in accord with the international agreements;
Executive Order No. 51 (Milk Code) was issued by President Corazon Aquino on October 28, 1986
2.3 Whether Sections 4, 5(w), 22, 32, 47, and 52 of the RIRR violate the due process
by virtue of the legislative powers granted to the president under the Freedom Constitution. One of
clause and are in restraint of trade; and
the preambular clauses of the Milk Code states that the law seeks to give effect to Article 11 2 of the
International Code of Marketing of Breastmilk Substitutes (ICMBS), a code adopted by the World
Health Assembly (WHA) in 1981. From 1982 to 2006, the WHA adopted several Resolutions to the 2.4 Whether Section 13 of the RIRR on Total Effect provides sufficient standards.
effect that breastfeeding should be supported, promoted and protected, hence, it should be
ensured that nutrition and health claims are not permitted for breastmilk substitutes. _____________

In 1990, the Philippines ratified the International Convention on the Rights of the Child. Article 24 of 1 (1) United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child; (2) the WHO and Unicef "2002
said instrument provides that State Parties should take appropriate measures to diminish infant and Global Strategy on Infant and Young Child Feeding;" and (3) various World Health
child mortality, and ensure that all segments of society, specially parents and children, are informed Assembly (WHA) Resolutions.
of the advantages of breastfeeding.
The parties filed their respective memoranda.
On May 15, 2006, the DOH issued herein assailed RIRR which was to take effect on July 7, 2006.
The petition is partly imbued with merit.
On the issue of petitioner's standing Petitioner assails the RIRR for allegedly going beyond the provisions of the Milk Code, thereby
amending and expanding the coverage of said law. The defense of the DOH is that the RIRR
With regard to the issue of whether petitioner may prosecute this case as the real party-in-interest, implements not only the Milk Code but also various international instruments 10 regarding infant and
the Court adopts the view enunciated in Executive Secretary v. Court of Appeals, 4 to wit: young child nutrition. It is respondents' position that said international instruments are deemed part
of the law of the land and therefore the DOH may implement them through the RIRR.
The modern view is that an association has standing to complain of injuries to its members.
This view fuses the legal identity of an association with that of its members. An The Court notes that the following international instruments invoked by respondents, namely: (1)
association has standing to file suit for its workers despite its lack of direct interest if The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child; (2) The International Covenant on
its members are affected by the action. An organization has standing to assert the Economic, Social and Cultural Rights; and (3) the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
concerns of its constituents. Discrimination Against Women, only provide in general terms that steps must be taken by State
Parties to diminish infant and child mortality and inform society of the advantages of breastfeeding,
xxxx ensure the health and well-being of families, and ensure that women are provided with services
and nutrition in connection with pregnancy and lactation. Said instruments do not contain specific
provisions regarding the use or marketing of breastmilk substitutes.
x x x We note that, under its Articles of Incorporation, the respondent was organized x x x to
act as the representative of any individual, company, entity or association on matters
related to the manpower recruitment industry, and to perform other acts and activities The international instruments that do have specific provisions regarding breastmilk substitutes are
necessary to accomplish the purposes embodied therein. The respondent is, thus, the the ICMBS and various WHA Resolutions.
appropriate party to assert the rights of its members, because it and its members are
in every practical sense identical. x x x The respondent [association] is but the Under the 1987 Constitution, international law can become part of the sphere of domestic law
medium through which its individual members seek to make more effective the either by transformation or incorporation.11 The transformation method requires that an
expression of their voices and the redress of their grievances. 5 (Emphasis supplied) international law be transformed into a domestic law through a constitutional mechanism such as
local legislation. The incorporation method applies when, by mere constitutional declaration,
which was reasserted in Purok Bagong Silang Association, Inc. v. Yuipco,6 where the Court ruled international law is deemed to have the force of domestic law. 12
that an association has the legal personality to represent its members because the results of the
case will affect their vital interests.7 Treaties become part of the law of the land through transformation pursuant to Article VII, Section
21 of the Constitution which provides that "[n]o treaty or international agreement shall be valid and
Herein petitioner's Amended Articles of Incorporation contains a similar provision just like in effective unless concurred in by at least two-thirds of all the members of the Senate." Thus, treaties
Executive Secretary, that the association is formed "to represent directly or through approved or conventional international law must go through a process prescribed by the Constitution for it to
representatives the pharmaceutical and health care industry before the Philippine Government and be transformed into municipal law that can be applied to domestic conflicts. 13
any of its agencies, the medical professions and the general public." 8 Thus, as an organization,
petitioner definitely has an interest in fulfilling its avowed purpose of representing members who are The ICMBS and WHA Resolutions are not treaties as they have not been concurred in by at least
part of the pharmaceutical and health care industry. Petitioner is duly authorized 9 to take the two-thirds of all members of the Senate as required under Section 21, Article VII of the 1987
appropriate course of action to bring to the attention of government agencies and the courts any Constitution.
grievance suffered by its members which are directly affected by the RIRR. Petitioner, which is
mandated by its Amended Articles of Incorporation to represent the entire industry, would be remiss However, the ICMBS which was adopted by the WHA in 1981 had been transformed into domestic
in its duties if it fails to act on governmental action that would affect any of its industry members, no law through local legislation, the Milk Code. Consequently, it is the Milk Code that has the force and
matter how few or numerous they are. Hence, petitioner, whose legal identity is deemed fused with effect of law in this jurisdiction and not the ICMBS per se.
its members, should be considered as a real party-in-interest which stands to be benefited or
injured by any judgment in the present action. The Milk Code is almost a verbatim reproduction of the ICMBS, but it is well to emphasize at this
point that the Code did not adopt the provision in the ICMBS absolutely prohibiting
On the constitutionality of the provisions of the RIRR advertising or other forms of promotion to the general public of products within the scope of the
ICMBS. Instead, the Milk Code expressly provides that advertising, promotion, or other
First, the Court will determine if pertinent international instruments adverted to by respondents are marketing materials may be allowed if such materials are duly authorized and approved by
part of the law of the land. the Inter-Agency Committee (IAC).
On the other hand, Section 2, Article II of the 1987 Constitution, to wit: xxxx

SECTION 2. The Philippines renounces war as an instrument of national policy, adopts the The initial factor for determining the existence of custom is the actual behavior of states.
generally accepted principles of international law as part of the law of the land and This includes several elements: duration, consistency, and generality of the practice of
adheres to the policy of peace, equality, justice, freedom, cooperation and amity with all states.
nations. (Emphasis supplied)
The required duration can be either short or long. x x x
embodies the incorporation method.14
xxxx
In Mijares v. Ranada,15 the Court held thus:
Duration therefore is not the most important element. More important is the consistency and
[G]enerally accepted principles of international law, by virtue of the incorporation clause of the generality of the practice. x x x
the Constitution, form part of the laws of the land even if they do not derive from treaty
obligations. The classical formulation in international law sees those customary rules xxxx
accepted as binding result from the combination [of] two elements: the established,
widespread, and consistent practice on the part of States; and a psychological element Once the existence of state practice has been established, it becomes necessary to
known as the opinion juris sive necessitates (opinion as to law or necessity). Implicit in the determine why states behave the way they do. Do states behave the way they do
latter element is a belief that the practice in question is rendered obligatory by the existence because they consider it obligatory to behave thus or do they do it only as a matter of
of a rule of law requiring it.16 (Emphasis supplied) courtesy? Opinio juris, or the belief that a certain form of behavior is obligatory, is
what makes practice an international rule. Without it, practice is not law.22(Underscoring
"Generally accepted principles of international law" refers to norms of general or customary and Emphasis supplied)
international law which are binding on all states, 17 i.e., renunciation of war as an instrument of
national policy, the principle of sovereign immunity, 18 a person's right to life, liberty and due Clearly, customary international law is deemed incorporated into our domestic system. 23
process,19 and pacta sunt servanda,20 among others. The concept of "generally accepted principles
of law" has also been depicted in this wise:
WHA Resolutions have not been embodied in any local legislation. Have they attained the status of
customary law and should they then be deemed incorporated as part of the law of the land?
Some legal scholars and judges look upon certain "general principles of law" as a primary source of
international law because they have the "character of jus rationale" and are "valid through all
The World Health Organization (WHO) is one of the international specialized agencies allied with
kinds of human societies."(Judge Tanaka in his dissenting opinion in the 1966 South West Africa
the United Nations (UN) by virtue of Article 57, 24 in relation to Article 6325 of the UN Charter. Under
Case, 1966 I.C.J. 296). O'Connell holds that certain priniciples are part of international law
the 1946 WHO Constitution, it is the WHA which determines the policies of the WHO, 26 and has the
because they are "basic to legal systems generally" and hence part of the jus gentium. These
power to adopt regulations concerning "advertising and labeling of biological, pharmaceutical and
principles, he believes, are established by a process of reasoning based on the common identity of
similar products moving in international commerce," 27and to "make recommendations to members
all legal systems. If there should be doubt or disagreement, one must look to state practice and
with respect to any matter within the competence of the Organization." 28 The legal effect of its
determine whether the municipal law principle provides a just and acceptable solution. x x
regulations, as opposed to recommendations, is quite different.
x 21 (Emphasis supplied)
Regulations, along with conventions and agreements, duly adopted by the WHA bind member
Fr. Joaquin G. Bernas defines customary international law as follows:
states thus:
Custom or customary international law means "a general and consistent practice of states
Article 19. The Health Assembly shall have authority to adopt conventions or agreements
followed by them from a sense of legal obligation [opinio juris]." (Restatement) This
with respect to any matter within the competence of the Organization. A two-thirds vote of
statement contains the two basic elements of custom: the material factor, that is,
the Health Assembly shall be required for the adoption of such conventions or
how states behave, and the psychological or subjective factor, that is, why they
agreements, which shall come into force for each Member when accepted by it in
behave the way they do.
accordance with its constitutional processes.
Article 20. Each Member undertakes that it will, within eighteen months after the adoption In January 1981, the Executive Board of the World Health Organization at its sixty-seventh
by the Health Assembly of a convention or agreement, take action relative to the session, considered the fourth draft of the code, endorsed it, and unanimously
acceptance of such convention or agreement. Each Member shall notify the Director- recommended to the Thirty-fourth World Health Assembly the text of a resolution by
General of the action taken, and if it does not accept such convention or agreement within which it would adopt the code in the form of a recommendation rather than a
the time limit, it will furnish a statement of the reasons for non-acceptance. In case of regulation. x x x (Emphasis supplied)
acceptance, each Member agrees to make an annual report to the Director-General in
accordance with Chapter XIV. The legal value of WHA Resolutions as recommendations is summarized in Article 62 of the WHO
Constitution, to wit:
Article 21. The Health Assembly shall have authority to adopt regulations concerning: (a)
sanitary and quarantine requirements and other procedures designed to prevent the Art. 62. Each member shall report annually on the action taken with respect to
international spread of disease; (b) nomenclatures with respect to diseases, causes of recommendations made to it by the Organization, and with respect to conventions,
death and public health practices; (c) standards with respect to diagnostic procedures for agreements and regulations.
international use; (d) standards with respect to the safety, purity and potency of biological,
pharmaceutical and similar products moving in international commerce; (e) advertising and Apparently, the WHA Resolution adopting the ICMBS and subsequent WHA Resolutions urging
labeling of biological, pharmaceutical and similar products moving in international member states to implement the ICMBS are merely recommendatory and legally non-
commerce. binding. Thus, unlike what has been done with the ICMBS whereby the legislature enacted
most of the provisions into law which is the Milk Code, the subsequent WHA
Article 22. Regulations adopted pursuant to Article 21 shall come into force for all Resolutions,30 specifically providing for exclusive breastfeeding from 0-6 months, continued
Members after due notice has been given of their adoption by the Health Assembly except breastfeeding up to 24 months, and absolutely prohibiting advertisements and promotions
for such Members as may notify the Director-General of rejection or reservations within the of breastmilk substitutes, have not been adopted as a domestic law.
period stated in the notice. (Emphasis supplied)
It is propounded that WHA Resolutions may constitute "soft law" or non-binding norms, principles
On the other hand, under Article 23, recommendations of the WHA do not come into force for and practices that influence state behavior.31
members, in the same way that conventions or agreements under Article 19 and regulations
under Article 21 come into force. Article 23 of the WHO Constitution reads: "Soft law" does not fall into any of the categories of international law set forth in Article 38, Chapter
III of the 1946 Statute of the International Court of Justice. 32 It is, however, an expression of non-
Article 23. The Health Assembly shall have authority to make recommendations to binding norms, principles, and practices that influence state behavior. 33 Certain declarations and
Members with respect to any matter within the competence of the Organization. (Emphasis resolutions of the UN General Assembly fall under this category. 34 The most notable is the UN
supplied) Declaration of Human Rights, which this Court has enforced in various cases,
specifically, Government of Hongkong Special Administrative Region v. Olalia,35 Mejoff v. Director of
The absence of a provision in Article 23 of any mechanism by which the recommendation would Prisons,36 Mijares v. Rañada37 and Shangri-la International Hotel Management, Ltd. v. Developers
come into force for member states is conspicuous. Group of Companies, Inc..38

The former Senior Legal Officer of WHO, Sami Shubber, stated that WHA recommendations are The World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), a specialized agency attached to the UN with
generally not binding, but they "carry moral and political weight, as they constitute the judgment on the mandate to promote and protect intellectual property worldwide, has resorted to soft law as a
a health issue of the collective membership of the highest international body in the field of rapid means of norm creation, in order "to reflect and respond to the changing needs and demands
health."29 Even the ICMBS itself was adopted as a mere recommendation, as WHA Resolution No. of its constituents."39 Other international organizations which have resorted to soft law include the
34.22 states: International Labor Organization and the Food and Agriculture Organization (in the form of
the Codex Alimentarius).40
"The Thirty-Fourth World Health Assembly x x x adopts, in the sense of Article 23 of the
Constitution, the International Code of Marketing of Breastmilk Substitutes annexed to the WHO has resorted to soft law. This was most evident at the time of the Severe Acute Respiratory
present resolution." (Emphasis supplied) Syndrome (SARS) and Avian flu outbreaks.

The Introduction to the ICMBS also reads as follows: Although the IHR Resolution does not create new international law binding on WHO
member states, it provides an excellent example of the power of "soft law" in
international relations. International lawyers typically distinguish binding rules of Second, the Court will determine whether the DOH may implement the provisions of the WHA
international law-"hard law"-from non-binding norms, principles, and practices that Resolutions by virtue of its powers and functions under the Revised Administrative Code even in
influence state behavior-"soft law." WHO has during its existence generated many the absence of a domestic law.
soft law norms, creating a "soft law regime" in international governance for public
health. Section 3, Chapter 1, Title IX of the Revised Administrative Code of 1987 provides that the DOH
shall define the national health policy and implement a national health plan within the framework
The "soft law" SARS and IHR Resolutions represent significant steps in laying the political of the government's general policies and plans, and issue orders and regulations concerning
groundwork for improved international cooperation on infectious diseases. These the implementation of established health policies.
resolutions clearly define WHO member states' normative duty to cooperate fully with other
countries and with WHO in connection with infectious disease surveillance and response to It is crucial to ascertain whether the absolute prohibition on advertising and other forms of
outbreaks. promotion of breastmilk substitutes provided in some WHA Resolutions has been adopted as part
of the national health policy.
This duty is neither binding nor enforceable, but, in the wake of the SARS epidemic,
the duty is powerful politically for two reasons. First, the SARS outbreak has taught the Respondents submit that the national policy on infant and young child feeding is embodied in A.O.
lesson that participating in, and enhancing, international cooperation on infectious disease No. 2005-0014, dated May 23, 2005. Basically, the Administrative Order declared the following
controls is in a country's self-interest x x x if this warning is heeded, the "soft law" in the policy guidelines: (1) ideal breastfeeding practices, such as early initiation of breastfeeding,
SARS and IHR Resolution could inform the development of general and consistent state exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months, extended breastfeeding up to two years and
practice on infectious disease surveillance and outbreak response, perhaps crystallizing beyond; (2) appropriate complementary feeding, which is to start at age six months; (3)
eventually into customary international law on infectious disease prevention and control. 41 micronutrient supplementation; (4) universal salt iodization; (5) the exercise of other feeding
options; and (6) feeding in exceptionally difficult circumstances. Indeed, the primacy of
In the Philippines, the executive department implemented certain measures recommended by breastfeeding for children is emphasized as a national health policy. However, nowhere in A.O.
WHO to address the outbreaks of SARS and Avian flu by issuing Executive Order (E.O.) No. 201 No. 2005-0014 is it declared that as part of such health policy, the advertisement or
on April 26, 2003 and E.O. No. 280 on February 2, 2004, delegating to various departments broad promotion of breastmilk substitutes should be absolutely prohibited.
powers to close down schools/establishments, conduct health surveillance and monitoring, and ban
importation of poultry and agricultural products. The national policy of protection, promotion and support of breastfeeding cannot automatically be
equated with a total ban on advertising for breastmilk substitutes.
It must be emphasized that even under such an international emergency, the duty of a state to
implement the IHR Resolution was still considered not binding or enforceable, although said In view of the enactment of the Milk Code which does not contain a total ban on the advertising and
resolutions had great political influence. promotion of breastmilk substitutes, but instead, specifically creates an IAC which will regulate said
advertising and promotion, it follows that a total ban policy could be implemented only pursuant to
As previously discussed, for an international rule to be considered as customary law, it must be a law amending the Milk Code passed by the constitutionally authorized branch of government, the
established that such rule is being followed by states because they consider it obligatory to legislature.
comply with such rules (opinio juris). Respondents have not presented any evidence to prove that
the WHA Resolutions, although signed by most of the member states, were in fact enforced or Thus, only the provisions of the Milk Code, but not those of subsequent WHA Resolutions, can
practiced by at least a majority of the member states; neither have respondents proven that any be validly implemented by the DOH through the subject RIRR.
compliance by member states with said WHA Resolutions was obligatory in nature.
Third, the Court will now determine whether the provisions of the RIRR are in accordance with
Respondents failed to establish that the provisions of pertinent WHA Resolutions are customary those of the Milk Code.
international law that may be deemed part of the law of the land.
In support of its claim that the RIRR is inconsistent with the Milk Code, petitioner alleges the
Consequently, legislation is necessary to transform the provisions of the WHA Resolutions into following:
domestic law. The provisions of the WHA Resolutions cannot be considered as part of the
law of the land that can be implemented by executive agencies without the need of a law 1. The Milk Code limits its coverage to children 0-12 months old, but the RIRR extended its
enacted by the legislature. coverage to "young children" or those from ages two years old and beyond:
3. The Milk Code only regulates and does not impose unreasonable requirements for
MILK CODE RIRR advertising and promotion; RIRR imposes an absolute ban on such activities for breastmilk
substitutes intended for infants from 0-24 months old or beyond, and forbids the use of
health and nutritional claims. Section 13 of the RIRR, which provides for a "total effect" in
the promotion of products within the scope of the Code, is vague:
WHEREAS, in order to ensure that safe and Section 2. Purpose – These Revised Rules
adequate nutrition for infants is provided, there and Regulations are hereby promulgated to
is a need to protect and promote breastfeeding ensure the provision of safe and adequate
and to inform the public about the proper use of nutrition for infants and young children MILK CODE RIRR
breastmilk substitutes and supplements and promotion, protection and support of
related products through adequate, consistent breastfeeding and by ensuring the proper use
and objective information and appropriate of breastmilk substitutes, breastmilk SECTION 6. The General Public and Section 4. Declaration of Principles –
regulation of the marketing and distribution of supplements and related products when these Mothers. – following are the underlying principles
the said substitutes, supplements and related are medically indicated and only when which the revised rules and regulations
products; necessary, on the basis of adequate (a) No advertising, promotion or other premised upon:
information and through appropriate marketing marketing materials, whether written, audio or
SECTION 4(e). "Infant" means a person falling and distribution. visual, for products within the scope of this x x x x
within the age bracket of 0-12 months. Code shall be printed, published, distributed,
Section 5(ff). "Young Child" means a person exhibited and broadcast unless such materials f. Advertising, promotions, or sponsor-shi
from the age of more than twelve (12) months are duly authorized and approved by an inter- infant formula, breastmilk substitutes and
up to the age of three (3) years (36 months). agency committee created herein pursuant to related products are prohibited.
the applicable standards provided for in this
Code. Section 11. Prohibition – No advert
2. The Milk Code recognizes that infant formula may be a proper and possible substitute for promotions, sponsorships, or mark
breastmilk in certain instances; but the RIRR provides "exclusive breastfeeding for infants materials and activities for breas
from 0-6 months" and declares that "there is no substitute nor replacement for breastmilk": substitutes intended for infants and y
children up to twenty-four (24) months, sha
allowed, because they tend to convey or
MILK CODE RIRR subliminal messages or impressions
undermine breastmilk and breastfeedin
otherwise exaggerate breastmilk substi
and/or replacements, as well as re
WHEREAS, in order to ensure that safe and Section 4. Declaration of Principles – products covered within the scope of this C
adequate nutrition for infants is provided, there following are the underlying principles from
is a need to protect and promote breastfeeding which the revised rules and regulations are
Section 13. "Total Effect" - Promotio
and to inform the public about the proper use of premised upon:
products within the scope of this Code mu
breastmilk substitutes and supplements and
objective and should not equate or make
related products through adequate, consistent a. Exclusive breastfeeding is for infants
product appear to be as good or equ
and objective information and appropriate to six (6) months.
breastmilk or breastfeeding in the advert
regulation of the marketing and distribution of
concept. It must not in any case under
the said substitutes, supplements and related b. There is no substitute or replacement
breastmilk or breastfeeding. The "total e
products; breastmilk. should not directly or indirectly suggest
buying their product would produce b
individuals, or resulting in greater
intelligence, ability, harmony or in any ma
bring better health to the baby or other such (a) Containers and/or labels shall be designed and English languages, and which mes
exaggerated and unsubstantiated claim. to provide the necessary information about the cannot be readily separated therefrom, re
appropriate use of the products, and in such a the following points:
Section 15. Content of Materials. way as not to discourage breastfeeding.
following shall not be included in advertising, (a) The words or phrase "Important Notic
promotional and marketing materials: (b) Each container shall have a clear, "Government Warning" or their equivalent;
conspicuous and easily readable and
a. Texts, pictures, illustrations or information understandable message in Pilipino or English (b) A statement of the superiority
which discourage or tend to undermine the printed on it, or on a label, which message can breastfeeding;
benefits or superiority of breastfeeding or which not readily become separated from it, and
idealize the use of breastmilk substitutes and which shall include the following points: (c) A statement that there is no substitut
milk supplements. In this connection, no breastmilk;
pictures of babies and children together with (i) the words "Important Notice" or their
their mothers, fathers, siblings, grandparents, equivalent; (d) A statement that the product shall be
other relatives or caregivers (or yayas) shall be only on the advice of a health worker as t
used in any advertisements for infant formula (ii) a statement of the superiority of need for its use and the proper methods of
and breastmilk supplements; breastfeeding;
(e) Instructions for appropriate prepara
b. The term "humanized," "maternalized," (iii) a statement that the product shall be used and a warning against the health hazard
"close to mother's milk" or similar words in only on the advice of a health worker as to the inappropriate preparation; and
describing breastmilk substitutes or milk need for its use and the proper methods of use;
supplements; and (f) The health hazards of unnecessar
improper use of infant formula and
c. Pictures or texts that idealize the use of (iv) instructions for appropriate preparation, related products including information
infant and milk formula. and a warning against the health hazards of powdered infant formula may co
inappropriate preparation. pathogenic microorganisms and must
Section 16. All health and nutrition claims for prepared and used appropriately.
products within the scope of the Code are
absolutely prohibited. For this purpose, any
phrase or words that connotes to increase
5. The Milk Code allows dissemination of information on infant formula to health
emotional, intellectual abilities of the infant and
professionals; the RIRR totally prohibits such activity:
young child and other like phrases shall not be
allowed.

MILK CODE RIRR


4. The RIRR imposes additional labeling requirements not found in the Milk Code:

SECTION 7. Health Care System. – Section 22. No manufacturer, distributo


MILK CODE RIRR representatives of products covered by
(b) No facility of the health care system shall Code shall be allowed to conduct o
be used for the purpose of promoting infant involved in any activity on breastfee
formula or other products within the scope of promotion, education and production
SECTION 10. Containers/Label. – Section 26. Content – Each container/label this Code. This Code does not, however, Information, Education and Communic
shall contain such message, in both Filipino
preclude the dissemination of information to (IEC) materials on breastfeeding, holding of or seminars for women and children activitie
health professionals as provided in Section participating as speakers in classes or to avoid the use of these venues to m
8(b). seminars for women and children activities and their brands or company names.
to avoid the use of these venues to market
SECTION 8. Health Workers. - their brands or company names. SECTION 32. Primary Responsibility
Health Workers - It is the pri
(b) Information provided by manufacturers and SECTION 16. All health and nutrition claims for responsibility of the health workers to prom
distributors to health professionals regarding products within the scope of the Code are protect and support breastfeeding
products within the scope of this Code shall be absolutely prohibited. For this purpose, any appropriate infant and young child fee
restricted to scientific and factual matters and phrase or words that connotes to increase Part of this responsibility is to continuo
such information shall not imply or create a emotional, intellectual abilities of the infant and update their knowledge and skills
belief that bottle-feeding is equivalent or young child and other like phrases shall not be breastfeeding. No assistance, support, log
superior to breastfeeding. It shall also include allowed. or training from milk companies shal
the information specified in Section 5(b). permitted.

6. The Milk Code permits milk manufacturers and distributors to extend assistance in 7. The Milk Code regulates the giving of donations; RIRR absolutely prohibits it.
research and continuing education of health professionals; RIRR absolutely forbids the
same.
MILK CODE RIRR

MILK CODE RIRR


SECTION 6. The General Public and Section 51. Donations Within the Scop
Mothers. – This Code - Donations of products, mate
SECTION 8. Health Workers – Section 4. Declaration of Principles – defined and covered under the Milk Code
(f) Nothing herein contained shall prevent these implementing rules and regulations,
(e) Manufacturers and distributors of products The following are the underlying principles from donations from manufacturers and distributors be strictly prohibited.
within the scope of this Code may assist in the which the revised rules and regulations are of products within the scope of this Code upon
research, scholarships and continuing premised upon: request by or with the approval of the Ministry Section 52. Other Donations By
education, of health professionals, in of Health. Companies Not Covered by this Co
accordance with the rules and regulations i. Milk companies, and their Donations of products, equipments, and
promulgated by the Ministry of Health. representatives, should not form part of any like, not otherwise falling within the scop
policymaking body or entity in relation to the this Code or these Rules, given by
advancement of breasfeeding. companies and their agents, representat
whether in kind or in cash, may only
coursed through the Inter Agency Comm
SECTION 22. No manufacturer, distributor, or
(IAC), which shall determine whether
representatives of products covered by the
donation be accepted or otherwise.
Code shall be allowed to conduct or be
involved in any activity on breastfeeding
promotion, education and production of
Information, Education and Communication 8. The RIRR provides for administrative sanctions not imposed by the Milk Code.
(IEC) materials on breastfeeding, holding of or
participating as speakers in classes or
MILK CODE RIRR (DBM) and the Department of Trade
Industry (DTI);

Section 46. Administrative Sanctions. – f) An additional penalty of Two Thou-sand


following administrative sanctions shall be Hundred (P2,500.00) Pesos per day sha
imposed upon any person, juridical or natural, made for every day the violation conti
found to have violated the provisions of the after having received the order from the IA
Code and its implementing Rules and other such appropriate body, notifying
Regulations: penalizing the company for the infraction.

a) 1st violation – Warning; For purposes of determining whether or


there is "repeated" violation, each pro
violation belonging or owned by a comp
b) 2nd violation – Administrative fine of a
including those of their subsidiaries,
minimum of Ten Thousand (P10,000.00) to
deemed to be violations of the concerned
Fifty Thousand (P50,000.00) Pesos, depending
company and shall not be based on
on the gravity and extent of the violation,
specific violating product alone.
including the recall of the offending product;

c) 3rd violation – Administrative Fine of a


minimum of Sixty Thousand (P60,000.00) to 9. The RIRR provides for repeal of existing laws to the contrary.
One Hundred Fifty Thousand (P150,000.00)
Pesos, depending on the gravity and extentThe Court
of shall resolve the merits of the allegations of petitioner seriatim.
the violation, and in addition thereto, the recall
of the offending product, and suspension1.ofPetitioner
the is mistaken in its claim that the Milk Code's coverage is limited only to children 0-12
Certificate of Product Registration (CPR);months old. Section 3 of the Milk Code states:

d) 4th violation –Administrative Fine of a SECTION 3. Scope of the Code – The Code applies to the marketing, and practices related
minimum of Two Hundred Thousand thereto, of the following products: breastmilk substitutes, including infant formula; other milk
(P200,000.00) to Five Hundred (P500,000.00) products, foods and beverages, including bottle-fed complementary foods, when marketed
Thousand Pesos, depending on the gravity and or otherwise represented to be suitable, with or without modification, for use as a partial or
extent of the violation; and in addition thereto, total replacement of breastmilk; feeding bottles and teats. It also applies to their quality and
the recall of the product, revocation of the availability, and to information concerning their use.
CPR, suspension of the License to Operate
(LTO) for one year; Clearly, the coverage of the Milk Code is not dependent on the age of the child but on the kind of
product being marketed to the public. The law treats infant formula, bottle-fed complementary
e) 5th and succeeding repeated violations – breastmilk substitute as separate and distinct product categories.
food, and
Administrative Fine of One Million
(P1,000,000.00) Pesos, the recall of the 4(h) of the Milk Code defines infant formula as "a breastmilk substitute x x x to satisfy the
Section
offending product, cancellation of thenormalCPR, nutritional requirements of infants up to between four to six months of age, and adapted to
revocation of the License to Operate (LTO)their of
physiological characteristics"; while under Section 4(b), bottle-fed complementary food refers
the company concerned, includingto "any the food, whether manufactured or locally prepared, suitable as a complement to breastmilk or
blacklisting of the company to be furnished theformula, when either becomes insufficient to satisfy the nutritional requirements of the infant."
infant
Department of Budget and Management An infant under Section 4(e) is a person falling within the age bracket 0-12 months. It is the
nourishment of this group of infants or children aged 0-12 months that is sought to be promoted Health is a legitimate subject matter for regulation by the DOH (and certain other administrative
and protected by the Milk Code. agencies) in exercise of police powers delegated to it. The sheer span of jurisprudence on that
matter precludes the need to further discuss it. .48 However, health information, particularly
But there is another target group. Breastmilk substitute is defined under Section 4(a) as "any food advertising materials on apparently non-toxic products like breastmilk substitutes and supplements,
being marketed or otherwise presented as a partial or total replacement for breastmilk, whether or is a relatively new area for regulation by the DOH.49
not suitable for that purpose." This section conspicuously lacks reference to any particular
age-group of children. Hence, the provision of the Milk Code cannot be considered As early as the 1917 Revised Administrative Code of the Philippine Islands, 50 health information was
exclusive for children aged 0-12 months. In other words, breastmilk substitutes may also be already within the ambit of the regulatory powers of the predecessor of DOH. 51 Section 938 thereof
intended for young children more than 12 months of age. Therefore, by regulating breastmilk charged it with the duty to protect the health of the people, and vested it with such powers as "(g)
substitutes, the Milk Code also intends to protect and promote the nourishment of children more the dissemination of hygienic information among the people and especially the inculcation of
than 12 months old. knowledge as to the proper care of infants and the methods of preventing and combating
dangerous communicable diseases."
Evidently, as long as what is being marketed falls within the scope of the Milk Code as provided in
Section 3, then it can be subject to regulation pursuant to said law, even if the product is to be used Seventy years later, the 1987 Administrative Code tasked respondent DOH to carry out the state
by children aged over 12 months. policy pronounced under Section 15, Article II of the 1987 Constitution, which is "to protect and
promote the right to health of the people and instill health consciousness among them."52 To that
There is, therefore, nothing objectionable with Sections 242 and 5(ff)43 of the RIRR. end, it was granted under Section 3 of the Administrative Code the power to "(6) propagate health
information and educate the population on important health, medical and environmental matters
2. It is also incorrect for petitioner to say that the RIRR, unlike the Milk Code, does not recognize which have health implications."53
that breastmilk substitutes may be a proper and possible substitute for breastmilk.
When it comes to information regarding nutrition of infants and young children, however, the Milk
The entirety of the RIRR, not merely truncated portions thereof, must be considered and construed Code specifically delegated to the Ministry of Health (hereinafter referred to as DOH) the power to
together. As held in De Luna v. Pascual,44 "[t]he particular words, clauses and phrases in the Rule ensure that there is adequate, consistent and objective information on breastfeeding and use of
should not be studied as detached and isolated expressions, but the whole and every part thereof breastmilk substitutes, supplements and related products; and the power to control such
must be considered in fixing the meaning of any of its parts and in order to produce a harmonious information. These are expressly provided for in Sections 12 and 5(a), to wit:
whole."
SECTION 12. Implementation and Monitoring –
Section 7 of the RIRR provides that "when medically indicated and only when necessary, the use
of breastmilk substitutes is proper if based on complete and updated information." Section 8 of xxxx
the RIRR also states that information and educational materials should include information on the
proper use of infant formula when the use thereof is needed. (b) The Ministry of Health shall be principally responsible for the implementation and
enforcement of the provisions of this Code. For this purpose, the Ministry of Health shall
Hence, the RIRR, just like the Milk Code, also recognizes that in certain cases, the use of have the following powers and functions:
breastmilk substitutes may be proper.
(1) To promulgate such rules and regulations as are necessary or proper for the
3. The Court shall ascertain the merits of allegations 3 and 4 together as they are interlinked with
45 46 implementation of this Code and the accomplishment of its purposes and
each other. objectives.

To resolve the question of whether the labeling requirements and advertising regulations under the xxxx
RIRR are valid, it is important to deal first with the nature, purpose, and depth of the regulatory
powers of the DOH, as defined in general under the 1987 Administrative Code, 47 and as delegated (4) To exercise such other powers and functions as may be necessary for or
in particular under the Milk Code. incidental to the attainment of the purposes and objectives of this Code.

SECTION 5. Information and Education –


(a) The government shall ensure that objective and consistent information is provided on (d) The term "humanized," "maternalized" or similar terms shall not be used. (Emphasis
infant feeding, for use by families and those involved in the field of infant nutrition. This supplied)
responsibility shall cover the planning, provision, design and dissemination of information,
and the control thereof, on infant nutrition. (Emphasis supplied) The DOH is also authorized to control the purpose of the information and to whom such information
may be disseminated under Sections 6 through 9 of the Milk Code 54 to ensure that the information
Further, DOH is authorized by the Milk Code to control the content of any information on that would reach pregnant women, mothers of infants, and health professionals and workers in the
breastmilk vis-à-visbreastmilk substitutes, supplement and related products, in the following health care system is restricted to scientific and factual matters and shall not imply or create a
manner: belief that bottlefeeding is equivalent or superior to breastfeeding.

SECTION 5. x x x It bears emphasis, however, that the DOH's power under the Milk Code to control information
regarding breastmilk vis-a-vis breastmilk substitutes is not absolute as the power to control does
(b) Informational and educational materials, whether written, audio, or visual, dealing with not encompass the power to absolutely prohibit the advertising, marketing, and promotion of
the feeding of infants and intended to reach pregnant women and mothers of infants, shall breastmilk substitutes.
include clear information on all the following points: (1) the benefits and superiority of
breastfeeding; (2) maternal nutrition, and the preparation for and maintenance of The following are the provisions of the Milk Code that unequivocally indicate that the control over
breastfeeding; (3) the negative effect on breastfeeding of introducing partial bottlefeeding; information given to the DOH is not absolute and that absolute prohibition is not contemplated by
(4) the difficulty of reversing the decision not to breastfeed; and (5) where needed, the the Code:
proper use of infant formula, whether manufactured industrially or home-prepared. When
such materials contain information about the use of infant formula, they shall a) Section 2 which requires adequate information and appropriate marketing and
include the social and financial implications of its use; the health hazards of distribution of breastmilk substitutes, to wit:
inappropriate foods or feeding methods; and, in particular, the health hazards of
unnecessary or improper use of infant formula and other breastmilk substitutes. SECTION 2. Aim of the Code – The aim of the Code is to contribute to the provision
Such materials shall not use any picture or text which may idealize the use of of safe and adequate nutrition for infants by the protection and promotion of
breastmilk substitutes. breastfeeding and by ensuring the proper use of breastmilk substitutes and
breastmilk supplements when these are necessary, on the basis of adequate
SECTION 8. Health Workers – information and through appropriate marketing and distribution.

xxxx b) Section 3 which specifically states that the Code applies to the marketing of and
practices related to breastmilk substitutes, including infant formula, and to information
(b) Information provided by manufacturers and distributors to health professionals regarding concerning their use;
products within the scope of this Code shall be restricted to scientific and factual
matters, and such information shall not imply or create a belief that bottlefeeding is c) Section 5(a) which provides that the government shall ensure that objective and
equivalent or superior to breastfeeding. It shall also include the information specified consistent information is provided on infant feeding;
in Section 5(b).
d) Section 5(b) which provides that written, audio or visual informational and educational
SECTION 10. Containers/Label – materials shall not use any picture or text which may idealize the use of breastmilk
substitutes and should include information on the health hazards of unnecessary or
(a) Containers and/or labels shall be designed to provide the necessary information about improper use of said product;
the appropriate use of the products, and in such a way as not to discourage
breastfeeding. e) Section 6(a) in relation to Section 12(a) which creates and empowers the IAC to review
and examine advertising, promotion, and other marketing materials;
xxxx
f) Section 8(b) which states that milk companies may provide information to health
professionals but such information should be restricted to factual and scientific matters and
shall not imply or create a belief that bottlefeeding is equivalent or superior to a-vis breastmilk substitutes be consistent, at the same time giving the government control over
breastfeeding; and planning, provision, design, and dissemination of information on infant feeding.

g) Section 10 which provides that containers or labels should not contain information that Thus, Section 26(c) of the RIRR which requires containers and labels to state that the product
would discourage breastfeeding and idealize the use of infant formula. offered is not a substitute for breastmilk, is a reasonable means of enforcing Section 8(b) of the
Milk Code and deterring circumvention of the protection and promotion of breastfeeding as
It is in this context that the Court now examines the assailed provisions of the RIRR regarding embodied in Section 260 of the Milk Code.
labeling and advertising.
Section 26(f)61 of the RIRR is an equally reasonable labeling requirement. It implements Section
Sections 1355 on "total effect" and 26 56 of Rule VII of the RIRR contain some labeling requirements, 5(b) of the Milk Code which reads:
specifically: a) that there be a statement that there is no substitute to breastmilk; and b) that there
be a statement that powdered infant formula may contain pathogenic microorganisms and must be SECTION 5. x x x
prepared and used appropriately. Section 16 57of the RIRR prohibits all health and nutrition claims
for products within the scope of the Milk Code, such as claims of increased emotional and xxxx
intellectual abilities of the infant and young child.
(b) Informational and educational materials, whether written, audio, or visual, dealing with
These requirements and limitations are consistent with the provisions of Section 8 of the Milk Code, the feeding of infants and intended to reach pregnant women and mothers of infants, shall
to wit: include clear information on all the following points: x x x (5) where needed, the proper use
of infant formula, whether manufactured industrially or home-prepared. When such
SECTION 8. Health workers - materials contain information about the use of infant formula, they shall include the social
and financial implications of its use; the health hazards of inappropriate foods or
xxxx feeding methods; and, in particular, the health hazards of unnecessary or improper
use of infant formula and other breastmilk substitutes. Such materials shall not use any
(b) Information provided by manufacturers and distributors to health professionals regarding picture or text which may idealize the use of breastmilk substitutes. (Emphasis supplied)
products within the scope of this Code shall be restricted to scientific and factual
matters, and such information shall notimply or create a belief that bottlefeeding The label of a product contains information about said product intended for the buyers thereof.
is equivalent or superior to breastfeeding. It shall also include the information specified in The buyers of breastmilk substitutes are mothers of infants, and Section 26 of the RIRR merely
Section 5.58 (Emphasis supplied) adds a fair warning about the likelihood of pathogenic microorganisms being present in infant
formula and other related products when these are prepared and used inappropriately.
and Section 10(d)59 which bars the use on containers and labels of the terms "humanized,"
"maternalized," or similar terms. Petitioner’s counsel has admitted during the hearing on June 19, 2007 that formula milk is prone to
contaminations and there is as yet no technology that allows production of powdered infant formula
These provisions of the Milk Code expressly forbid information that would imply or create a belief that eliminates all forms of contamination.62
that there is any milk product equivalent to breastmilk or which is humanized or maternalized, as
such information would be inconsistent with the superiority of breastfeeding. Ineluctably, the requirement under Section 26(f) of the RIRR for the label to contain the message
regarding health hazards including the possibility of contamination with pathogenic microorganisms
It may be argued that Section 8 of the Milk Code refers only to information given to health workers is in accordance with Section 5(b) of the Milk Code.
regarding breastmilk substitutes, not to containers and labels thereof. However, such restrictive
application of Section 8(b) will result in the absurd situation in which milk companies and The authority of DOH to control information regarding breastmilk vis-a-vis breastmilk substitutes
distributors are forbidden to claim to health workers that their products are substitutes or and supplements and related products cannot be questioned. It is its intervention into the area of
equivalents of breastmilk, and yet be allowed to display on the containers and labels of their advertising, promotion, and marketing that is being assailed by petitioner.
products the exact opposite message. That askewed interpretation of the Milk Code is precisely
what Section 5(a) thereof seeks to avoid by mandating that all information regarding breastmilk vis- In furtherance of Section 6(a) of the Milk Code, to wit:
SECTION 6. The General Public and Mothers. – (3) To prescribe the internal and operational procedure for the exercise of its powers
and functions as well as the performance of its duties and responsibilities; and
(a) No advertising, promotion or other marketing materials, whether written, audio or visual,
for products within the scope of this Code shall be printed, published, distributed, exhibited (4) To promulgate such rules and regulations as are necessary or proper for
and broadcast unless such materials are duly authorized and approved by an inter-agency the implementation of Section 6(a) of this Code. x x x (Emphasis supplied)
committee created herein pursuant to the applicable standards provided for in this Code.
However, Section 11 of the RIRR, to wit:
the Milk Code invested regulatory authority over advertising, promotional and marketing materials
to an IAC, thus: SECTION 11. Prohibition – No advertising, promotions, sponsorships, or marketing
materials and activities for breastmilk substitutes intended for infants and young children up
SECTION 12. Implementation and Monitoring - to twenty-four (24) months, shall be allowed, because they tend to convey or give
subliminal messages or impressions that undermine breastmilk and breastfeeding or
(a) For purposes of Section 6(a) of this Code, an inter-agency committee composed of the otherwise exaggerate breastmilk substitutes and/or replacements, as well as related
following members is hereby created: products covered within the scope of this Code.

prohibits advertising, promotions, sponsorships or marketing materials and activities for breastmilk
substitutes in line with the RIRR’s declaration of principle under Section 4(f), to wit:
Minister of Health ------------------- Chairman
SECTION 4. Declaration of Principles –

xxxx
Minister of Trade and Industry ------------------- Member
(f) Advertising, promotions, or sponsorships of infant formula, breastmilk substitutes and
other related products are prohibited.
Minister of Justice ------------------- Member
The DOH, through its co-respondents, evidently arrogated to itself not only the regulatory authority
given to the IAC but also imposed absolute prohibition on advertising, promotion, and marketing.

Yet, oddly enough, Section 12 of the RIRR reiterated the requirement of the Milk Code in Section 6
Minister of Social Services and Development ------------------- Member
thereof for prior approval by IAC of all advertising, marketing and promotional materials prior to
dissemination.

The members may designate their duly authorized representative to every meeting of the Even respondents, through the OSG, acknowledged the authority of IAC, and repeatedly insisted,
Committee. during the oral arguments on June 19, 2007, that the prohibition under Section 11 is not actually
operational, viz:
The Committee shall have the following powers and functions:
SOLICITOR GENERAL DEVANADERA:
(1) To review and examine all advertising. promotion or other marketing materials,
whether written, audio or visual, on products within the scope of this Code; xxxx

(2) To approve or disapprove, delete objectionable portions from and prohibit the x x x Now, the crux of the matter that is being questioned by Petitioner is whether or not
printing, publication, distribution, exhibition and broadcast of, all advertising there is an absolute prohibition on advertising making AO 2006-12 unconstitutional. We
promotion or other marketing materials, whether written, audio or visual, on maintained that what AO 2006-12 provides is not an absolute prohibition because Section
products within the scope of this Code; 11 while it states and it is entitled prohibition it states that no advertising, promotion,
sponsorship or marketing materials and activities for breast milk substitutes intended for Your Honor, please, first we would like to stress that there is no total absolute ban. Second,
infants and young children up to 24 months shall be allowed because this is the standard the Inter-Agency Committee is under the Department of Health, Your Honor.
they tend to convey or give subliminal messages or impression undermine that breastmilk
or breastfeeding x x x. xxxx

We have to read Section 11 together with the other Sections because the other Section, ASSOCIATE JUSTICE NAZARIO:
Section 12, provides for the inter agency committee that is empowered to process and
evaluate all the advertising and promotion materials. x x x Did I hear you correctly, Madam Solicitor, that there is no absolute ban on advertising
of breastmilk substitutes in the Revised Rules?
xxxx
SOLICITOR GENERAL DEVANADERA:
What AO 2006-12, what it does, it does not prohibit the sale and manufacture, it simply
regulates the advertisement and the promotions of breastfeeding milk substitutes. Yes, your Honor.

xxxx ASSOCIATE JUSTICE NAZARIO:

Now, the prohibition on advertising, Your Honor, must be taken together with the provision But, would you nevertheless agree that there is an absolute ban on advertising of
on the Inter-Agency Committee that processes and evaluates because there may be some breastmilk substitutes intended for children two (2) years old and younger?
information dissemination that are straight forward information dissemination. What the AO
2006 is trying to prevent is any material that will undermine the practice of breastfeeding,
SOLICITOR GENERAL DEVANADERA:
Your Honor.
It's not an absolute ban, Your Honor, because we have the Inter-Agency Committee that
xxxx
can evaluate some advertising and promotional materials, subject to the standards that we
have stated earlier, which are- they should not undermine breastfeeding, Your Honor.
ASSOCIATE JUSTICE SANTIAGO:
xxxx
Madam Solicitor General, under the Milk Code, which body has authority or power to
promulgate Rules and Regulations regarding the Advertising, Promotion and Marketing of
x x x Section 11, while it is titled Prohibition, it must be taken in relation with the other
Breastmilk Substitutes?
Sections, particularly 12 and 13 and 15, Your Honor, because it is recognized that the Inter-
Agency Committee has that power to evaluate promotional materials, Your Honor.
SOLICITOR GENERAL DEVANADERA:
ASSOCIATE JUSTICE NAZARIO:
Your Honor, please, it is provided that the Inter-Agency Committee, Your Honor.
So in short, will you please clarify there's no absolute ban on advertisement regarding milk
xxxx substitute regarding infants two (2) years below?

ASSOCIATE JUSTICE SANTIAGO: SOLICITOR GENERAL DEVANADERA:

x x x Don't you think that the Department of Health overstepped its rule making authority We can proudly say that the general rule is that there is a prohibition, however, we take
when it totally banned advertising and promotion under Section 11 prescribed the total exceptions and standards have been set. One of which is that, the Inter-Agency Committee
effect rule as well as the content of materials under Section 13 and 15 of the rules and can allow if the advertising and promotions will not undermine breastmilk and
regulations? breastfeeding, Your Honor.63

SOLICITOR GENERAL DEVANADERA:


Sections 11 and 4(f) of the RIRR are clearly violative of the Milk Code. (b) Each container shall have a clear, conspicuous and easily readable and understandable
message in Pilipino or English printed on it, or on a label, which message can not readily
However, although it is the IAC which is authorized to promulgate rules and regulations for the become separated from it, and which shall include the following points:
approval or rejection of advertising, promotional, or other marketing materials under Section 12(a)
of the Milk Code, said provision must be related to Section 6 thereof which in turn provides that the (i) the words "Important Notice" or their equivalent;
rules and regulations must be "pursuant to the applicable standards provided for in this Code." Said
standards are set forth in Sections 5(b), 8(b), and 10 of the Code, which, at the risk of being (ii) a statement of the superiority of breastfeeding;
repetitious, and for easy reference, are quoted hereunder:
(iii) a statement that the product shall be used only on the advice of a health worker
SECTION 5. Information and Education – as to the need for its use and the proper methods of use; and

xxxx (iv) instructions for appropriate preparation, and a warning against the health
hazards of inappropriate preparation.
(b) Informational and educational materials, whether written, audio, or visual, dealing with
the feeding of infants and intended to reach pregnant women and mothers of infants, shall Section 12(b) of the Milk Code designates the DOH as the principal implementing agency for the
include clear information on all the following points: (1) the benefits and superiority of enforcement of the provisions of the Code. In relation to such responsibility of the DOH, Section
breastfeeding; (2) maternal nutrition, and the preparation for and maintenance of 5(a) of the Milk Code states that:
breastfeeding; (3) the negative effect on breastfeeding of introducing partial bottlefeeding;
(4) the difficulty of reversing the decision not to breastfeed; and (5) where needed, the SECTION 5. Information and Education –
proper use of infant formula, whether manufactured industrially or home-prepared. When
such materials contain information about the use of infant formula, they shall include the
(a) The government shall ensure that objective and consistent information is provided on
social and financial implications of its use; the health hazards of inappropriate foods of
infant feeding, for use by families and those involved in the field of infant nutrition. This
feeding methods; and, in particular, the health hazards of unnecessary or improper use of
responsibility shall cover the planning, provision, design and dissemination of information,
infant formula and other breastmilk substitutes. Such materials shall not use any picture or
and the control thereof, on infant nutrition. (Emphasis supplied)
text which may idealize the use of breastmilk substitutes.
Thus, the DOH has the significant responsibility to translate into operational terms the
xxxx
standards set forth in Sections 5, 8, and 10 of the Milk Code, by which the IAC shall screen
advertising, promotional, or other marketing materials.
SECTION 8. Health Workers. –
It is pursuant to such responsibility that the DOH correctly provided for Section 13 in the RIRR
xxxx which reads as follows:

(b) Information provided by manufacturers and distributors to health professionals regarding SECTION 13. "Total Effect" - Promotion of products within the scope of this Code must be
products within the scope of this Code shall be restricted to scientific and factual objective and should not equate or make the product appear to be as good or equal to
matters and such information shall not imply or create a belief that bottle feeding is breastmilk or breastfeeding in the advertising concept. It must not in any case undermine
equivalent or superior to breastfeeding. It shall also include the information specified in breastmilk or breastfeeding. The "total effect" should not directly or indirectly suggest that
Section 5(b). buying their product would produce better individuals, or resulting in greater love,
intelligence, ability, harmony or in any manner bring better health to the baby or other such
xxxx exaggerated and unsubstantiated claim.

SECTION 10. Containers/Label – Such standards bind the IAC in formulating its rules and regulations on advertising, promotion, and
marketing. Through that single provision, the DOH exercises control over the information content of
(a) Containers and/or labels shall be designed to provide the necessary information about advertising, promotional and marketing materials on breastmilk vis-a-vis breastmilk substitutes,
the appropriate use of the products, and in such a way as not to discourage breastfeeding.
supplements and other related products. It also sets a viable standard against which the IAC may children. Nothing in Section 22 of the RIRR prohibits milk companies from giving assistance for
screen such materials before they are made public. research or continuing education to health professionals; hence, petitioner's argument against this
particular provision must be struck down.
In Equi-Asia Placement, Inc. vs. Department of Foreign Affairs,64 the Court held:
It is Sections 971 and 1072 of the RIRR which govern research assistance. Said sections of the RIRR
x x x [T]his Court had, in the past, accepted as sufficient standards the following: "public provide that research assistance for health workers and researchers may be allowed upon
interest," "justice and equity," "public convenience and welfare," and "simplicity, economy approval of an ethics committee, and with certain disclosure requirements imposed on the
and welfare."65 milk company and on the recipient of the research award.

In this case, correct information as to infant feeding and nutrition is infused with public interest and The Milk Code endows the DOH with the power to determine how such research or educational
welfare. assistance may be given by milk companies or under what conditions health workers may accept
the assistance. Thus, Sections 9 and 10 of the RIRR imposing limitations on the kind of research
4. With regard to activities for dissemination of information to health professionals, the Court also done or extent of assistance given by milk companies are completely in accord with the Milk Code.
finds that there is no inconsistency between the provisions of the Milk Code and the RIRR. Section
7(b)66 of the Milk Code, in relation to Section 8(b) 67 of the same Code, allows dissemination of Petitioner complains that Section 32 73 of the RIRR prohibits milk companies from giving assistance,
information to health professionals but such information is restricted to scientific and factual support, logistics or training to health workers. This provision is within the prerogative given to the
matters. DOH under Section 8(e)74of the Milk Code, which provides that manufacturers and distributors of
breastmilk substitutes may assist in researches, scholarships and the continuing education, of
Contrary to petitioner's claim, Section 22 of the RIRR does not prohibit the giving of health professionals in accordance with the rules and regulations promulgated by the Ministry of
information to health professionals on scientific and factual matters. What it prohibits is the Health, now DOH.
involvement of the manufacturer and distributor of the products covered by the Code in activities for
the promotion, education and production of Information, Education and Communication (IEC) 6. As to the RIRR's prohibition on donations, said provisions are also consistent with the Milk Code.
materials regarding breastfeeding that are intended for women and children. Said provision Section 6(f) of the Milk Code provides that donations may be made by manufacturers and
cannot be construed to encompass even the dissemination of information to health distributors of breastmilk substitutes upon the request or with the approval of the DOH. The law
professionals, as restricted by the Milk Code. does not proscribe the refusal of donations. The Milk Code leaves it purely to the discretion of the
DOH whether to request or accept such donations. The DOH then appropriately exercised its
5. Next, petitioner alleges that Section 8(e) 68 of the Milk Code permits milk manufacturers and discretion through Section 5175 of the RIRR which sets forth its policy not to request or approve
distributors to extend assistance in research and in the continuing education of health donations from manufacturers and distributors of breastmilk substitutes.
professionals, while Sections 22 and 32 of the RIRR absolutely forbid the same. Petitioner also
assails Section 4(i)69 of the RIRR prohibiting milk manufacturers' and distributors' participation in It was within the discretion of the DOH when it provided in Section 52 of the RIRR that any
any policymaking body in relation to the advancement of breastfeeding. donation from milk companies not covered by the Code should be coursed through the IAC which
shall determine whether such donation should be accepted or refused. As reasoned out by
Section 4(i) of the RIRR provides that milk companies and their representatives should not form respondents, the DOH is not mandated by the Milk Code to accept donations. For that matter, no
part of any policymaking body or entity in relation to the advancement of breastfeeding. The Court person or entity can be forced to accept a donation. There is, therefore, no real inconsistency
finds nothing in said provisions which contravenes the Milk Code. Note that under Section 12(b) of between the RIRR and the law because the Milk Code does not prohibit the DOH from refusing
the Milk Code, it is the DOH which shall be principally responsible for the implementation and donations.
enforcement of the provisions of said Code. It is entirely up to the DOH to decide which entities to
call upon or allow to be part of policymaking bodies on breastfeeding. Therefore, the RIRR's 7. With regard to Section 46 of the RIRR providing for administrative sanctions that are not found in
prohibition on milk companies’ participation in any policymaking body in relation to the the Milk Code, the Court upholds petitioner's objection thereto.
advancement of breastfeeding is in accord with the Milk Code.
Respondent's reliance on Civil Aeronautics Board v. Philippine Air Lines, Inc. 76 is misplaced. The
Petitioner is also mistaken in arguing that Section 22 of the RIRR prohibits milk companies from glaring difference in said case and the present case before the Court is that, in the Civil
giving reasearch assistance and continuing education to health professionals. Section 2270 of the Aeronautics Board, the Civil Aeronautics Administration (CAA) was expressly granted by the law
RIRR does not pertain to research assistance to or the continuing education of health (R.A. No. 776) the power to impose fines and civil penalties, while the Civil Aeronautics Board
professionals; rather, it deals with breastfeeding promotion and education for women and (CAB) was granted by the same law the power to review on appeal the order or decision of the
CAA and to determine whether to impose, remit, mitigate, increase or compromise such fine and SECTION 57. Repealing Clause - All orders, issuances, and rules and regulations or parts
civil penalties. Thus, the Court upheld the CAB's Resolution imposing administrative fines. thereof inconsistent with these revised rules and implementing regulations are hereby
repealed or modified accordingly.
In a more recent case, Perez v. LPG Refillers Association of the Philippines, Inc.,77 the Court upheld
the Department of Energy (DOE) Circular No. 2000-06-10 Section 57 of the RIRR does not provide for the repeal of laws but only orders, issuances and rules
implementing Batas Pambansa (B.P.) Blg. 33. The circular provided for fines for the commission of and regulations. Thus, said provision is valid as it is within the DOH's rule-making power.
prohibited acts. The Court found that nothing in the circular contravened the law because the DOE
was expressly authorized by B.P. Blg. 33 and R.A. No. 7638 to impose fines or penalties. An administrative agency like respondent possesses quasi-legislative or rule-making power or the
power to make rules and regulations which results in delegated legislation that is within the
In the present case, neither the Milk Code nor the Revised Administrative Code grants the DOH the confines of the granting statute and the Constitution, and subject to the doctrine of non-delegability
authority to fix or impose administrative fines. Thus, without any express grant of power to fix or and separability of powers.78 Such express grant of rule-making power necessarily includes the
impose such fines, the DOH cannot provide for those fines in the RIRR. In this regard, the DOH power to amend, revise, alter, or repeal the same.79 This is to allow administrative agencies
again exceeded its authority by providing for such fines or sanctions in Section 46 of the RIRR. flexibility in formulating and adjusting the details and manner by which they are to implement the
Said provision is, therefore, null and void. provisions of a law,80 in order to make it more responsive to the times. Hence, it is a standard
provision in administrative rules that prior issuances of administrative agencies that are inconsistent
The DOH is not left without any means to enforce its rules and regulations. Section 12(b) (3) of the therewith are declared repealed or modified.
Milk Code authorizes the DOH to "cause the prosecution of the violators of this Code and other
pertinent laws on products covered by this Code." Section 13 of the Milk Code provides for the In fine, only Sections 4(f), 11 and 46 are ultra vires, beyond the authority of the DOH to promulgate
penalties to be imposed on violators of the provision of the Milk Code or the rules and regulations and in contravention of the Milk Code and, therefore, null and void. The rest of the provisions of the
issued pursuant to it, to wit: RIRR are in consonance with the Milk Code.

SECTION 13. Sanctions – Lastly, petitioner makes a "catch-all" allegation that:

(a) Any person who violates the provisions of this Code or the rules and regulations x x x [T]he questioned RIRR sought to be implemented by the Respondents
issued pursuant to this Code shall, upon conviction, be punished by a penalty of two (2) is unnecessary and oppressive, and is offensive to the due process clause of the
months to one (1) year imprisonment or a fine of not less than One Thousand Pesos Constitution, insofar as the same is in restraint of trade and because a provision
(P1,000.00) nor more than Thirty Thousand Pesos (P30,000.00) or both. Should the offense therein is inadequate to provide the public with a comprehensible basis to determine
be committed by a juridical person, the chairman of the Board of Directors, the president, whether or not they have committed a violation.81 (Emphasis supplied)
general manager, or the partners and/or the persons directly responsible therefor, shall be
penalized. Petitioner refers to Sections 4(f),82 4(i),83 5(w),84 11,85 22,86 32,87 46,88 and 5289 as the provisions that
suppress the trade of milk and, thus, violate the due process clause of the Constitution.
(b) Any license, permit or authority issued by any government agency to any health worker,
distributor, manufacturer, or marketing firm or personnel for the practice of their profession The framers of the constitution were well aware that trade must be subjected to some form of
or occupation, or for the pursuit of their business, may, upon recommendation of the regulation for the public good. Public interest must be upheld over business interests. 90 In Pest
Ministry of Health, be suspended or revoked in the event of repeated violations of this Management Association of the Philippines v. Fertilizer and Pesticide Authority,91 it was held thus:
Code, or of the rules and regulations issued pursuant to this Code. (Emphasis supplied)
x x x Furthermore, as held in Association of Philippine Coconut Desiccators v. Philippine
8. Petitioner’s claim that Section 57 of the RIRR repeals existing laws that are contrary to the RIRR Coconut Authority, despite the fact that "our present Constitution enshrines free
is frivolous. enterprise as a policy, it nonetheless reserves to the government the power to
intervene whenever necessary to promote the general welfare." There can be no
Section 57 reads: question that the unregulated use or proliferation of pesticides would be hazardous to our
environment. Thus, in the aforecited case, the Court declared that "free enterprise does
not call for removal of ‘protective regulations’." x x x It must be clearly explained and
proven by competent evidence just exactly how such protective regulation would
result in the restraint of trade. [Emphasis and underscoring supplied]
In this case, petitioner failed to show that the proscription of milk manufacturers’ participation in any The Court is not convinced that the definition of "milk company" provided in the RIRR would bring
policymaking body (Section 4(i)), classes and seminars for women and children (Section 22); the about any change in the treatment or regulation of "distributors" and "manufacturers" of breastmilk
giving of assistance, support and logistics or training (Section 32); and the giving of donations substitutes, as defined under the Milk Code.
(Section 52) would unreasonably hamper the trade of breastmilk substitutes. Petitioner has not
established that the proscribed activities are indispensable to the trade of breastmilk substitutes. Except Sections 4(f), 11 and 46, the rest of the provisions of the RIRR are in consonance with the
Petitioner failed to demonstrate that the aforementioned provisions of the RIRR are unreasonable objective, purpose and intent of the Milk Code, constituting reasonable regulation of an industry
and oppressive for being in restraint of trade. which affects public health and welfare and, as such, the rest of the RIRR do not constitute illegal
restraint of trade nor are they violative of the due process clause of the Constitution.
Petitioner also failed to convince the Court that Section 5(w) of the RIRR is unreasonable and
oppressive. Said section provides for the definition of the term "milk company," to wit: WHEREFORE, the petition is PARTIALLY GRANTED. Sections 4(f), 11 and 46 of Administrative
Order No. 2006-0012 dated May 12, 2006 are declared NULL and VOID for being ultra vires. The
SECTION 5 x x x. (w) "Milk Company" shall refer to the owner, manufacturer, distributor of Department of Health and respondents are PROHIBITED from implementing said provisions.
infant formula, follow-up milk, milk formula, milk supplement, breastmilk substitute or
replacement, or by any other description of such nature, including their representatives who The Temporary Restraining Order issued on August 15, 2006 is LIFTED insofar as the rest of the
promote or otherwise advance their commercial interests in marketing those products; provisions of Administrative Order No. 2006-0012 is concerned.

On the other hand, Section 4 of the Milk Code provides: SO ORDERED.

(d) "Distributor" means a person, corporation or any other entity in the public or private
sector engaged in the business (whether directly or indirectly) of marketing at the wholesale
or retail level a product within the scope of this Code. A "primary distributor" is a
manufacturer's sales agent, representative, national distributor or broker.

xxxx

(j) "Manufacturer" means a corporation or other entity in the public or private sector
engaged in the business or function (whether directly or indirectly or through an agent or
and entity controlled by or under contract with it) of manufacturing a products within the
scope of this Code.

Notably, the definition in the RIRR merely merged together under the term "milk company" the
entities defined separately under the Milk Code as "distributor" and "manufacturer." The RIRR also
enumerated in Section 5(w) the products manufactured or distributed by an entity that would qualify
it as a "milk company," whereas in the Milk Code, what is used is the phrase "products within the
scope of this Code." Those are the only differences between the definitions given in the Milk Code
and the definition as re-stated in the RIRR.

Since all the regulatory provisions under the Milk Code apply equally to both manufacturers and
distributors, the Court sees no harm in the RIRR providing for just one term to encompass both
entities. The definition of "milk company" in the RIRR and the definitions of "distributor" and
"manufacturer" provided for under the Milk Code are practically the same.
GEN. AVELINO I. RAZON, G.R. No. 182498 Tagitis (Tagitis) and granted the Writ of Amparo at the petition of his wife, Mary
JR., Chief, Philippine Jean B. Tagitis (respondent). The dispositive portion of the CA decision reads:
National Police (PNP); Police Present:
Chief Superintendent RAUL WHEREFORE, premises considered, petition is
CASTAEDA, Chief, Criminal PUNO, C.J., hereby GRANTED. The Court hereby FINDS that this is an enforced
Investigation and Detection CARPIO, disappearance within the meaning of the United Nations instruments,
Group (CIDG); Police Senior CORONA, as used in the Amparo Rules. The privileges of the writ of amparo are
Superintendent LEONARDO CARPIO MORALES, hereby extended to Engr. Morced Tagitis.
A. ESPINA, Chief, Police CHICO-NAZARIO,
Anti-Crime and Emergency VELASCO, JR., Consequently: (1) respondent GEN. EDGARDO M.
Response (PACER); and NACHURA, DOROMAL, Chief, Criminal Investigation and Detention Group
GEN. JOEL R. GOLTIAO, LEONARDO-DE CASTRO, (CIDG) who should order COL. JOSE VOLPANE PANTE, CIDG-9
Regional Director of ARMM, BRION, Chief, Zamboanga City, to aid him; (2) respondent GEN. AVELINO I.
PNP, PERALTA, RAZON, Chief, PNP, who should order his men, namely: (a)
Petitioners, BERSAMIN, respondent GEN. JOEL GOLTIAO, Regional Director of ARMM
- versus - DEL CASTILLO, PNP, (b) COL. AHIRON AJIRIM, both head of TASK FORCE
ABAD, and TAGITIS, and (c) respondent SR. SUPERINTENDENT
VILLARAMA, JR., JJ. LEONARDO A. ESPINA, Chief, Police Anti-Crime and Emergency
MARY JEAN B. TAGITIS, Response, to aid him as their superior- are hereby DIRECTED to
herein represented by ATTY. exert extraordinary diligence and efforts, not only to protect the life,
FELIPE P. ARCILLA, JR., liberty and security of Engr. Morced Tagitis, but also to extend
Attorney-in-Fact, Promulgated: the privileges of the writ of amparo to Engr. Morced Tagitis and his
family, and to submit a monthly report of their actions to this Court, as
Respondent.
a way of PERIODIC REVIEW to enable this Court to monitor the
December 3, 2009
action of respondents.

This amparo case is hereby DISMISSED as to respondent LT.


x-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------x GEN. ALEXANDER YANO, Commanding General, Philippine Army,
DECISION and as to respondent GEN. RUBEN RAFAEL, Chief Anti-Terror Task
BRION, J.: Force Comet, Zamboanga City, both being with the military, which is a
separate and distinct organization from the police and the CIDG, in
We review in this petition for review on certiorari[1] the decision dated terms of operations, chain of command and budget.
March 7, 2008 of the Court of Appeals (CA) in C.A-G.R. AMPARO No. 00009.
[2]
This CA decision confirmed the enforced disappearance of Engineer Morced N. This Decision reflects the nature of the Writ of Amparo a protective remedy
against violations or threats of violation against the rights to life, liberty and
security.[3] It embodies, as a remedy, the courts directive to police agencies to The established facts show that Tagitis, a consultant for the World Bank and the
undertake specified courses of action to address the disappearance of an Senior Honorary Counselor for the Islamic Development Bank (IDB) Scholarship
individual, in this case, Engr. Morced N. Tagitis. It does not determine guilt nor Programme, was last seen in Jolo, Sulu. Together with Arsimin Kunnong
pinpoint criminal culpability for the disappearance; rather, it (Kunnong), an IDB scholar, Tagitis arrived in Jolo by boat in the early morning of
determines responsibility, or at least accountability, for the enforced October 31, 2007 from a seminar in Zamboanga City. They immediately checked-
disappearance for purposes of imposing the appropriate remedies to address the in at ASY Pension House. Tagitis asked Kunnong to buy him a boat ticket for his
disappearance. Responsibility refers to the extent the actors have been return trip the following day to Zamboanga.When Kunnong returned from this
established by substantial evidence to have participated in whatever way, by errand, Tagitis was no longer around.[5] The receptionist related that Tagitis went
action or omission, in an enforced disappearance, as a measure of the remedies out to buy food at around 12:30 in the afternoon and even left his room key with
this Court shall craft, among them, the directive to file the appropriate criminal the desk.[6] Kunnong looked for Tagitis and even sent a text message to the latters
and civil cases against the responsible parties in the proper Manila-based secretary who did not know of Tagitis whereabouts and activities
courts. Accountability, on the other hand, refers to the measure of remedies that either; she advised Kunnong to simply wait.[7]
should be addressed to those who exhibited involvement in the enforced
disappearance without bringing the level of their complicity to the level of On November 4, 2007, Kunnong and Muhammad Abdulnazeir N. Matli, a UP
responsibility defined above; or who are imputed with knowledge relating to the professor of Muslim studies and Tagitis fellow student counselor at the IDB,
enforced disappearance and who carry the burden of disclosure; or those who reported Tagitis disappearance to the Jolo Police Station.[8] On November 7, 2007,
carry, but have failed to discharge, the burden of extraordinary diligence in the Kunnong executed a sworn affidavit attesting to what he knew of the
investigation of the enforced disappearance. In all these cases, the issuance of the circumstances surrounding Tagitis disappearance.[9]
Writ of Amparo is justified by our primary goal of addressing the disappearance,
so that the life of the victim is preserved and his liberty and security are restored. More than a month later (on December 28, 2007), the respondent filed a Petition
for the Writ of Amparo (petition) with the CA through her Attorney-in-Fact, Atty.
We highlight this nature of a Writ of Amparo case at the outset to stress that the Felipe P. Arcilla.[10] The petition was directed against Lt. Gen. Alexander Yano,
unique situations that call for the issuance of the writ, as well as the Commanding General, Philippine Army; Gen. Avelino I. Razon, Chief, Philippine
considerations and measures necessary to address these situations, may not at all National Police (PNP); Gen. Edgardo M. Doromal, Chief, Criminal Investigation
be the same as the standard measures and procedures in ordinary court actions and and Detention Group (CIDG); Sr. Supt. Leonardo A. Espina, Chief, Police Anti-
proceedings. In this sense, the Rule on the Writ of Amparo[4] (Amparo Rule) issued Crime and Emergency Response; Gen. Joel Goltiao, Regional Director, ARMM-
by this Court is unique. The Amparo Rule should be read, too, as a work in PNP; and Gen. Ruben Rafael, Chief, Anti-Terror Task Force Comet [collectively
progress, as its directions and finer points remain to evolve through time and referred to as petitioners]. After reciting Tagitis personal circumstances and the
jurisprudence and through the substantive laws that Congress may promulgate. facts outlined above, the petition went on to state:
xxxx
THE FACTUAL ANTECEDENTS 7. Soon after the student left the room, Engr. Tagitis went out of the pension house to
take his early lunch but while out on the street, a couple of burly men believed
to be police intelligence operatives, forcibly took him and boarded the latter
The background facts, based on the petition and the records of the case, are on a motor vehicle then sped away without the knowledge of his student,
summarized below. Arsimin Kunnong;
8. As instructed, in the late afternoon of the same day, Kunnong returned to the pension xxxx
house, and was surprised to find out that subject Engr. Tagitis cannot [sic] be 17. [Respondent] filed her complaint with the PNP Police Station in the ARMM in
contacted by phone and was not also around and his room was closed and Cotobato and in Jolo, as suggested by her friends, seeking their help to find her
locked; husband, but [respondents] request and pleadings failed to produce any positive
results;
9. Kunnong requested for the key from the desk of the pension house who [sic] assisted
him to open the room of Engr. Tagitis, where they discovered that the personal 18. Instead of helping the [respondent], she [sic] was told of an intriguing tale by the
belongings of Engr. Tagitis, including cell phones, documents and other personal police that her husband, subject of the petition, was not missing but was with
belongings were all intact inside the room; another woman having good time somewhere, which is a clear indication of the
[petitioners] refusal to help and provide police assistance in locating her missing
10. When Kunnong could not locate Engr. Tagitis, the former sought the help of another husband;
IDB scholar and reported the matter to the local police agency;
19. The continued failure and refusal of the [petitioners] to release and/or turn-over
11. Arsimin Kunnong including his friends and companions in Jolo, exerted efforts in subject Engr. Tagitis to his family or even to provide truthful information to [the
trying to locate the whereabouts of Engr. Tagitis and when he reported the matter respondent] of the subjects whereabouts, and/or allow [the respondent] to visit
to the police authorities in Jolo, he was immediately given a ready answer that her husband Engr. Morced Tagitis, caused so much sleepless nights and serious
Engr. Tagitis could have been abducted by the Abu Sayyaf group and other anxieties;
groups known to be fighting against the government;
20. Lately, [the respondent] was again advised by one of the [petitioners] to go to the
12. Being scared with [sic] these suggestions and insinuations of the police officers, ARMM Police Headquarters again in Cotobato City and also to the different
Kunnong reported the matter to the [respondent, wife of Engr. Tagitis] by phone Police Headquarters including [those] in Davao City, in Zamboanga City, in
and other responsible officers and coordinators of the IDB Scholarship Jolo, and in Camp Crame, Quezon City, and all these places have been visited by
Programme in the Philippines, who alerted the office of the Governor of ARMM the [respondent] in search for her husband, which entailed expenses for her trips
who was then preparing to attend the OIC meeting in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia; to these places thereby resorting her to borrowings and beggings [sic] for
financial help from friends and relatives only to try complying [sic] to the
13. [Respondent], on the other hand, approached some of her co-employees with the different suggestions of these police officers, despite of which, her efforts
Land Bank in Digos branch, Digos City, Davao del Sur who likewise sought help produced no positive results up to the present time;
from some of their friends in the military who could help them find/locate the
whereabouts of her husband; 21. In fact at times, some police officers, who [sympathized with] the sufferings
undergone by the [respondent], informed her that they are not the proper persons
14. All of these efforts of the [respondent] did not produce any positive results except that she should approach, but assured her not to worry because her husband is
the information from persons in the military who do not want to be identified [sic] in good hands;
that Engr. Tagitis is in the hands of the uniformed men;
22. The unexplained uncooperative behavior of the [petitioners] to the [respondents]
15. According to reliable information received by the [respondent], subject Engr. request for help and failure and refusal of the [petitioners] to extend the needed
Tagitis is in the custody of police intelligence operatives, specifically with the help, support and assistance in locating the whereabouts of Engr. Tagitis who had
CIDG, PNP Zamboanga City,being held against his will in an earnest been declared missing since October 30, 2007 which is almost two (2) months
attempt of the police to involve and connect Engr. Tagitis with the different now, clearly indicates that the [petitioners] are actually in physical possession
terrorist groups; and custody of [respondents] husband, Engr. Tagitis;
roamed around Jolo, Sulu with an unidentified companion. It was only after a
xxxx few days when the said victim did not return that the matter was reported to Jolo
MPS. Afterwards, elements of Sulu PPO conducted a thorough investigation to
25. [The respondent] has exhausted all administrative avenues and remedies but to trace and locate the whereabouts of the said missing person, but to no avail. The
no avail, and under the circumstances, [the respondent] has no other plain, said PPO is still conducting investigation that will lead to the immediate findings
speedy and adequate remedy to protect and get the release of subject Engr. of the whereabouts of the person.
Morced Tagitis from the illegal clutches of the [petitioners], their intelligence
operatives and the like which are in total violation of the subjects human and b) Likewise, the Regional Chief, 9RCIDU submitted a Progress
constitutional rights, except the issuance of a WRIT OF AMPARO. [Emphasis Report to the Director, CIDG. The said report stated among others that: subject
supplied] person attended an Education Development Seminar set on October 28, 2007
conducted at Ateneo de Zamboanga, Zamboanga City together with a Prof.
On the same day the petition was filed, the CA immediately issued the Writ Matli. On October 30, 2007, at around 5:00 oclock in the morning, Engr. Tagitis
of Amparo, set the case for hearing on January 7, 2008, and directed the reportedly arrived at Jolo Sulu wharf aboard M/V Bounty Cruise, he was then
billeted at ASY Pension House. At about 6:15 oclock in the morning of the same
petitioners to file their verified return within seventy-two (72) hours from service
date, he instructed his student to purchase a fast craft ticket bound for
of the writ.[11] Zamboanga City and will depart from Jolo, Sulu on October 31, 2007. That on
or about 10:00 oclock in the morning, Engr. Tagitis left the premises of ASY
In their verified Return filed during the hearing of January 27, 2008, the Pension House as stated by the cashier of the said pension house. Later in the
petitioners denied any involvement in or knowledge of Tagitis alleged afternoon, the student instructed to purchase the ticket arrived at the pension
abduction. They argued that the allegations of the petition were incomplete and house and waited for Engr. Tagitis, but the latter did not return. On its part, the
elements of 9RCIDU is now conducting a continuous case build up and
did not constitute a cause of action against them; were baseless, or at best
information gathering to locate the whereabouts of Engr. Tagitis.
speculative; and were merely based on hearsay evidence. [12]
c) That the Director, CIDG directed the conduct of the search in all
The affidavit of PNP Chief Gen. Avelino I. Razon, attached to the Return, divisions of the CIDG to find Engr. Tagitis who was allegedly abducted or
stated that: he did not have any personal knowledge of, or any participation in, the illegally detained by covert CIDG-PNP Intelligence Operatives since October
alleged disappearance; that he had been designated by President Gloria 30, 2007, but after diligent and thorough search, records show that no such
person is being detained in CIDG or any of its department or divisions.
Macapagal Arroyo as the head of a special body called TASK FORCE USIG, to
address concerns about extralegal killings and enforced disappearances; the Task 5. On this particular case, the Philippine National Police exhausted all possible
Force, inter alia, coordinated with the investigators and local police, held case efforts, steps and actions available under the circumstances and continuously
conferences, rendered legal advice in connection to these cases; and gave the search and investigate [sic] the instant case. This immense mandate, however,
following summary:[13] necessitates the indispensable role of the citizenry, as the PNP cannot stand alone
without the cooperation of the victims and witnesses to identify the perpetrators
xxxx to bring them before the bar of justice and secure their conviction in court.
4.
a) On November 5, 2007, the Regional Director, Police Regional
Office ARMM submitted a report on the alleged disappearance of one Engr.
Morced Tagitis. According to the said report, the victim checked-in at ASY
Pension House on October 30, 2007 at about 6:00 in the morning and then
The petitioner PNP-CIDG Chief, Gen. Edgardo M. Doromal, submitted as well Likewise attached to the Return of the Writ was PNP-PACER [15] Chief PS Supt.
his affidavit, also attached to the Return of the Writ, attesting that upon receipt of Leonardo A. Espinas affidavit which alleged that:[16]
the Writ of Amparo, he caused the following:[14]
xxxx xxxx
That immediately upon receipt on December 29, 2007 of the Resolution of the
Honorable Special Fourth Division of the Court of Appeals, I immediately That, I and our men and women in PACER vehemently deny any participation in
directed the Investigation Division of this Group [CIDG] to conduct urgent the alleged abduction or illegally [sic] detention of ENGR. MORCED N.
investigation on the alleged enforced disappearance of Engineer Morced Tagitis. TAGITS on October 30, 2007. As a matter of fact, nowhere in the writ was
mentioned that the alleged abduction was perpetrated by elements of PACER nor
That based on record, Engr. Morced N. Tagitis attended an Education was there any indication that the alleged abduction or illegal detention of ENGR.
Development Seminar on October 28, 2007 at Ateneo de Zamboanga at TAGITIS was undertaken jointly by our men and by the alleged covert CIDG-
Zamboanga City together with Prof. Abdulnasser Matli. On October 30, 2007, at PNP intelligence operatives alleged to have abducted or illegally detained
around six oclock in the morning he arrived at Jolo, Sulu. He was assisted by his ENGR. TAGITIS.
student identified as Arsimin Kunnong of the Islamic Development Bank who That I was shocked when I learned that I was implicated in the alleged
was also one of the participants of the said seminar. He checked in at ASY disappearance of ENGR. MORCED in my capacity as the chief PACER [sic]
pension house located [sic] Kakuyagan, Patikul, Sulu on October 30, 2007 with considering that our office, the Police Anti-Crime and Emergency Response
[sic] unidentified companion. At around six oclock in the morning of even date, (PACER), a special task force created for the purpose of neutralizing or
Engr. Tagitis instructed his student to purchase a fast craft ticket for Zamboanga eradicating kidnap-for-ransom groups which until now continue to be one of the
City. In the afternoon of the same date, Kunnong arrived at the pension house menace of our society is a respondent in kidnapping or illegal detention
carrying the ticket he purchased for Engr. Tagitis, but the latter was nowhere to case. Simply put, our task is to go after kidnappers and charge them in court and
be found anymore. Kunnong immediately informed Prof. Abdulnasser Matli who to abduct or illegally detain or kidnap anyone is anathema to our mission.
reported the incident to the police. The CIDG is not involved in the
disappearance of Engr. Morced Tagitis to make out a case of an enforced That right after I learned of the receipt of the WRIT OF AMPARO, I directed the
disappearance which presupposes a direct or indirect involvement of the Chief of PACER Mindanao Oriental (PACER-MOR) to conduct pro-active
government. measures to investigate, locate/search the subject, identify and apprehend the
persons responsible, to recover and preserve evidence related to the
That herein [petitioner] searched all divisions and departments for a person disappearance of ENGR. MORCED TAGITIS, which may aid in the prosecution
named Engr. Morced N. Tagitis, who was allegedly abducted or illegally of the person or persons responsible, to identify witnesses and obtain statements
detained by covert CIDG-PNP Intelligence Operatives since October 30, 2007 from them concerning the disappearance and to determine the cause, manner,
and after a diligent and thorough research records show that no such person is location and time of disappearance as well as any pattern or practice that may
being detained in CIDG or any of its department or divisions. have brought about the disappearance.

That nevertheless, in order to determine the circumstances surrounding Engr. That I further directed the chief of PACER-MOR, Police Superintendent JOSE
Morced Tagitis [sic] alleged enforced disappearance, the undersigned had ARNALDO BRIONES JR., to submit a written report regarding the
undertaken immediate investigation and will pursue investigations up to its full disappearance of ENGR. MORCED.
completion in order to aid in the prosecution of the person or persons responsible
therefore. That in compliance with my directive, the chief of PACER-MOR sent through
fax his written report.
That the investigation and measures being undertaken to locate/search the 7. The last known instance of communication with him was when Arsimin
subject in coordination with Police Regional Office, Autonomous Region of Kunnong, a student scholar, was requested by him to purchase a vessel ticket at
Muslim Mindanao (PRO-ARMM) and Jolo Police Provincial Office (PPO) and the Office of Weezam Express, however, when the student returned back to ASY
other AFP and PNP units/agencies in the area are ongoing with the instruction Pension House, he no longer found Engr. Tagitis there and when he immediately
not to leave any stone unturned so to speak in the investigation until the inquired at the information counter regarding his whereabouts [sic], the person in
perpetrators in the instant case are brought to the bar of justice. charge in the counter informed him that Engr. Tagitis had left the premises on
October 30, 2007 around 1 oclock p.m. and never returned back to his room;
That I have exercised EXTRAORDINARY DILIGENCE in dealing with the
WRIT OF AMPARO just issued. 8. Immediately after learning the incident, I called and directed the Provincial
Director of Sulu Police Provincial Office and other units through phone call and
text messages to conduct investigation [sic] to determine the whereabouts of the
Finally, the PNP PRO ARMM Regional Director PC Supt. Joel R. Goltiao (Gen. aggrieved party and the person or persons responsible for the threat, act or
Goltiao), also submitted his affidavit detailing the actions that he had taken upon omission, to recover and preserve evidence related to the disappearance of Engr.
Tagitis, to identify witnesses and obtain statements from them concerning his
receipt of the report on Tagitis disappearance, viz:[17]
disappearance, to determine the cause and manner of his disappearance, to
xxxx
identify and apprehend the person or persons involved in the disappearance so
that they shall be brought before a competent court;
3) For the record:
9. Thereafter, through my Chief of the Regional Investigation and Detection
1. I am the Regional Director of Police Regional Office ARMM
Management Division, I have caused the following directives:
now and during the time of the incident;
a) Radio Message Cite No. RIDMD-1122-07-358 dated November 22,
xxxx
2007 directing PD Sulu PPO to conduct joint investigation with CIDG
and CIDU ARMM on the matter;
4. It is my duty to look into and take appropriate measures on any cases
of reported enforced disappearances and when they are being alluded to my
b) Radio Message Cite No. RIDMD-1128-07-361 dated November 28, 2007
office;
directing PD Sulu PPO to expedite compliance to my previous directive;
5. On November 5, 2007, the Provincial Director of Sulu Police Provincial
c) Memorandum dated December 14, 2007 addressed to PD Sulu PPO
Office reported to me through Radio Message Cite No. SPNP3-1105-07-2007
reiterating our series of directives for investigation and directing him to
that on November 4, 2007 at around 3:30 p.m., a certain Abdulnasser Matli, an
undertake exhaustive coordination efforts with the owner of ASY Pension
employee of Islamic Development Bank, appeared before the Office of the Chief
House and student scholars of IDB in order to secure corroborative
of Police, Jolo Police Station, and reported the disappearance of Engr. Morced
statements regarding the disappearance and whereabouts of said
Tagitis, scholarship coordinator of Islamic Development Bank, Manila;
personality;
6. There was no report that Engr. Tagibis was last seen in the company of or
d) Memorandum dated December 24, 2007 addressed to PD Sulu PPO
taken by any member of the Philippine National Police but rather he just
directing him to maximize efforts to establish clues on the whereabouts
disappeared from ASY Pension House situated at Kakuyagan Village, Village,
of Engr. Tagitis by seeking the cooperation of Prof. Abdulnasser Matli
Patikul, Sulu, on October 30, 2007, without any trace of forcible abduction or
and Arsimin Kunnong and/or whenever necessary, for them to voluntarily
arrest;
submit for polygraph examination with the NBI so as to expunge all
clouds of doubt that they may somehow have knowledge or idea to his 4) In spite of our exhaustive efforts, the whereabouts of Engr. Tagitis cannot be
disappearance; determined but our office is continuously intensifying the conduct of information
gathering, monitoring and coordination for the immediate solution of the case.
e) Memorandum dated December 27, 2007 addressed to the Regional
Chief, Criminal Investigation and Detection Group, Police Regional Since the disappearance of Tagistis was practically admitted and taking note of
Office 9, Zamboanga City, requesting assistance to investigate the cause favorable actions so far taken on the disappearance, the CA directed Gen. Goltiao
and unknown disappearance of Engr. Tagitis considering that it is within
as the officer in command of the area of disappearance to form TASK FORCE
their area of operational jurisdiction;
TAGITIS.[18]
f) Memorandum from Chief, Intelligence Division, PRO ARMM dated
December 30, 2007 addressed to PD Sulu PPO requiring them to submit Task Force Tagitis
complete investigation report regarding the case of Engr. Tagitis;
On January 11, 2008, Gen. Goltiao designated PS Supt. Ahiron Ajirim (PS Supt.
10. In compliance to our directives, PD Sulu PPO has exerted his [sic] efforts to
Ajirim) to head TASK FORCE TAGITIS.[19] The CA subsequently set three
conduct investigation [sic] on the matter to determine the whereabouts of Engr.
Tagitis and the circumstances related to his disappearance and submitted the hearings to monitor whether TASK FORCE TAGITIS was exerting extraordinary
following: efforts in handling the disappearance of Tagitis.[20] As planned, (1) the first hearing
would be to mobilize the CIDG, Zamboanga City; (2) the second hearing would
a) Progress Report dated November 6, 2007 through Radio Message Cite No. be to mobilize intelligence with Abu Sayyaf and ARMM; and (3) the third hearing
SPNP3-1106-10-2007; would be to mobilize the Chief of Police of Jolo, Sulu and the Chief of Police of
Zamboanga City and other police operatives.[21]
b) Radio Message Cite No. SPIDMS-1205-47-07 informing this office that they
are still monitoring the whereabouts of Engr. Tagitis; In the hearing on January 17, 2008, TASK FORCE TAGITIS submitted to the CA
an intelligence report from PSL Usman S. Pingay, the Chief of Police of the Jolo
c) Investigation Report dated December 31, 2007 from the Chief of Police, Jolo Police Station, stating a possible motive for Tagitis disappearance. [22] The
Police Station, Sulu PPO; intelligence report was apparently based on the sworn affidavit dated January 4,
2008 of Muhammad Abdulnazeir N. Matli (Prof. Matli), Professor of Islamic
11. This incident was properly reported to the PNP Higher Headquarters as
Studies at the University of the Philippines and an Honorary Student Counselor of
shown in the following:
the IDB Scholarship Program in the Philippines, who told the Provincial
a) Memorandum dated November 6, 2007 addressed to the Chief, PNP Governor of Sulu that:[23]
informing him of the facts of the disappearance and the action being taken by
our office; [Based] on reliable information from the Office of Muslim Affairs in Manila,
Tagitis has reportedly taken and carried away more or less Five Million Pesos
b) Memorandum dated November 6, 2007 addressed to the Director, (P5,000,000.00) deposited and entrusted to his [personal] bank accounts by the
Directorate for Investigation and Detection Management, NHQ PNP; Central Office of IDB, Jeddah, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, which [was] intended
for the IDB Scholarship Fund.
c) Memorandum dated December 30, 2007 addressed to the Director, DIDM;
In the same hearing, PS Supt. Ajirim testified that since the CIDG was alleged to
be responsible, he personally went to the CIDG office in Zamboanga City to
conduct an ocular inspection/investigation, particularly of their detention cells. On February 4, 2008, the CA issued an ALARM WARNING that TASK FORCE
[24]
PS Supt. Ajirim stated that the CIDG, while helping TASK FORCE TAGITIS TAGITIS did not appear to be exerting extraordinary efforts in resolving Tagitis
investigate the disappearance of Tagitis, persistently denied any knowledge or disappearance on the following grounds:[28]
complicity in any abduction.[25] He further testified that prior to the hearing, he
had already mobilized and given specific instructions to their supporting units to (1) This Court FOUND that it was only as late as January 28, 2008,
perform their respective tasks; that they even talked to, but failed to get any lead after the hearing, that GEN. JOEL GOLTIAO and COL. AHIRON AJIRIM had
requested for clear photographs when it should have been standard operating
from the respondent in Jolo.[26] In his submitted investigation report dated January
procedure in kidnappings or disappearances that the first agenda was for the
16, 2008, PS Supt. Ajirim concluded:[27] police to secure clear pictures of the missing person, Engr. Morced Tagitis, for
dissemination to all parts of the country and to neighboring countries. It had
9. Gleaned from the undersigned inspection and observation at the Headquarters 9
been three (3) months since GEN. JOEL GOLTIAO admitted having
RCIDU and the documents at hand, it is my own initial conclusion that the
been informed on November 5, 2007 of the alleged abduction of Engr. Morced
9RCIDU and other PNP units in the area had no participation neither [sic]
Tagitis by alleged bad elements of the CIDG. It had been more than one (1)
something to do with [sic] mysterious disappearance of Engr. Morced Tagitis last
month since the Writ of Amparo had been issued on December 28, 2007. It had
October 30, 2007. Since doubt has been raised regarding the emolument on the
been three (3) weeks when battle formation was ordered through Task Force
Islamic Development Bank Scholar program of IDB that was reportedly
Tagitis, on January 17, 2008. It was only on January 28, 2008 when the Task
deposited in the personal account of Engr. Tagitis by the IDB central office in
Force Tagitis requested for clear and recent photographs of the missing person,
Jeddah, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.Secondly, it could might [sic] be done by
Engr. Morced Tagitis, despite the Task Force Tagitis claim that they already had
resentment or sour grape among students who are applying for the scholar [sic]
an all points bulletin, since November 5, 2007, on the missing person, Engr.
and were denied which was allegedly conducted/screened by the subject being
Morced Tagitis. How could the police look for someone who disappeared if no
the coordinator of said program.
clear photograph had been disseminated?
20. It is also premature to conclude but it does or it may and [sic] presumed that the
(2) Furthermore, Task Force Tagitis COL. AHIROM AJIRIM
motive behind the disappearance of the subject might be due to the funds he
informed this Court that P/Supt KASIM was designated as Col. Ahirom Ajirims
maliciously spent for his personal interest and wanted to elude responsibilities
replacement in the latters official designated post. Yet, P/Supt KASIMs
from the institution where he belong as well as to the Islamic student scholars
subpoena was returned to this Court unserved. Since this Court was made to
should the statement of Prof. Matli be true or there might be a professional
understand that it was P/Supt KASIM who was the petitioners unofficial source
jealousy among them.
of the military intelligence information that Engr. Morced Tagitis was abducted
by bad elements of the CIDG (par. 15 of the Petition), the close contact between
xxxx
P/Supt KASIM and Col. Ahirom Ajirim of TASK FORCE TAGITIS should have
It is recommended that the Writ of Amparo filed against the respondents be
ensured the appearance of Col. KASIM in response to this courts subpoena and
dropped and dismissed considering on [sic] the police and military actions in the
COL. KASIM could have confirmed the military intelligence information that
area particularly the CIDG are exerting their efforts and religiously doing their
bad elements of the CIDG had abducted Engr. Morced Tagitis.
tasked [sic] in the conduct of its intelligence monitoring and investigation for the
early resolution of this instant case. But rest assured, our office, in coordination
with other law-enforcement agencies in the area, are continuously and
religiously conducting our investigation for the resolution of this case.
Testimonies for the Respondent
[37]
On January 7, 2008, the respondent, Mary Jean B. Tagitis, testified on direct She also testified that she was with three other people, namely, Mrs. Marydel
examination that she went to Jolo and Zamboanga in her efforts to locate her Martin Talbin and her two friends from Mati City, Davao Oriental, when Col.
husband. She said that a friend from Zamboanga holding a high position in the Kasim read to them the contents of the highly confidential report at Camp
military (whom she did not then identify) gave her information that allowed her to Katitipan, Davao City. The respondent further narrated that the report indicated
specify her allegations, particularly paragraph 15 of the petition.[29] This friend that her husband met with people belonging to a terrorist group and that he was
also told her that her husband [was] in good hands. [30] The respondent also under custodial investigation. She then told Col. Kasim that her husband was a
testified that she sought the assistance of her former boss in Davao City, Land diabetic taking maintenance medication, and asked that the Colonel relay to the
Bank Bajada Branch Manager Rudy Salvador, who told her that PNP CIDG is persons holding him the need to give him his medication.[38]
holding [her husband], Engineer Morced Tagitis.[31] The respondent recounted that
she went to Camp Katitipan in Davao City where she met Col. Julasirim Ahadin On February 11, 2008, TASK FORCE TAGITIS submitted two narrative
Kasim (Col. Kasim/Sr. Supt Kasim) who read to her and her friends (who were reports,[39] signed by the respondent, detailing her efforts to locate her husband
then with her) a highly confidential report that contained the alleged activities of which led to her meetings with Col. Ancanan of the Philippine Army and Col.
Engineer Tagitis and informed her that her husband was abducted because he is Kasim of the PNP. In her narrative report concerning her meeting with Col.
under custodial investigation for being a liaison for J.I. or Jemaah Islamiah.[32] Ancanan, the respondent recounted, viz:[40]
On November 11, 2007, we went to Zamboanga City with my friend Mrs.
On January 17, 2008, the respondent on cross-examination testified that she is Marydel Talbin. Our flight from Davao City is 9:00 oclock in the morning; we
arrived at Zamboanga Airport at around 10:00 oclock. We [were] fetched by the
Tagitis second wife, and they have been married for thirteen years; Tagitis was
two staffs of Col. Ancanan. We immediately proceed [sic] to West Mindanao
divorced from his first wife.[33] She last communicated with her husband on Command (WESTMINCOM).
October 29, 2007 at around 7:31 p.m. through text messaging; Tagitis was then on On that same day, we had private conversation with Col. Ancanan. He
his way to Jolo, Sulu, from Zamboanga City.[34] interviewed me and got information about the personal background of Engr.
Morced N. Tagitis. After he gathered all information, he revealed to us the
The respondent narrated that she learned of her husbands disappearance on contents of text messages they got from the cellular phone of the subject Engr.
Tagitis. One of the very important text messages of Engr. Tagitis sent to his
October 30, 2007 when her stepdaughter, Zaynah Tagitis (Zaynah), informed her
daughter Zaynah Tagitis was that she was not allowed to answer any telephone
that she had not heard from her father since the time they arranged to meet in calls in his condominium unit.
Manila on October 31, 2007.[35] The respondent explained that it took her a few
days (or on November 5, 2007) to personally ask Kunnong to report her husbands While we were there he did not tell us any information of the whereabouts of
disappearance to the Jolo Police Station, since she had the impression that her Engr. Tagitis. After the said meeting with Col. Ancanan, he treated us as guests
husband could not communicate with her because his cellular phones battery did to the city. His two staffs accompanied us to the mall to purchase our plane ticket
going back to Davao City on November 12, 2007.
not have enough power, and that he would call her when he had fully-charged his
When we arrived in Davao City on November 12, 2007 at 9:00 in the morning,
cellular phones battery.[36] Col. Ancanan and I were discussing some points through phone calls. He assured
me that my husband is alive and hes last looked [sic] in Talipapao, Jolo,
The respondent also identified the high-ranking military friend, who gave her the Sulu. Yet I did not believe his given statements of the whereabouts of my
information found in paragraph 15 of her petition, as Lt. Col. Pedro L. Ancanan, husband, because I contacted some of my friends who have access to the groups
Jr (Col. Ancanan). She met him in Camp Karingal, Zamboanga through her boss. of MILF, MNLF and ASG. I called up Col. Ancanan several times begging to tell
me the exact location of my husband and who held him but he refused.
was written in a long bond paper with PNP Letterhead. It was not shown to us,
While I was in Jolo, Sulu on November 30, 2007, I called him up again because yet Col. Kasim was the one who read it for us.
the PNP, Jolo did not give me any information of the whereabouts of my
husband. Col. Ancanan told me that Sana ngayon alam mo na kung saan ang He asked a favor to me that Please dont quote my Name! Because this is a raw
kinalalagyan ng asawa mo. When I was in Zamboanga, I was thinking of report. He assured me that my husband is alive and he is in the custody of the
dropping by the office of Col. Ancanan, but I was hesitant to pay him a visit for military for custodial investigation.I told him to please take care of my husband
the reason that the Chief of Police of Jolo told me not to contact any AFP because he has aliments and he recently took insulin for he is a diabetic patient.
officials and he promised me that he can solve the case of my husband (Engr.
Tagitis) within nine days. In my petition for writ of amparo, I emphasized the information that I got from
Kasim.
I appreciate the effort of Col. Ancanan on trying to solve the case of my husband On February 11, 2008, the respondent presented Mrs. Marydel Martin Talbin
Engr. Morced Tagitis, yet failed to do so. (Mrs. Talbin) to corroborate her testimony regarding her efforts to locate her
husband, in relation particularly with the information she received from Col.
The respondent also narrated her encounter with Col. Kasim, as follows:[41] Kasim. Mrs. Talbin testified that she was with the respondent when she went to
On November 7, 2007, I went to Land Bank of the Philippines, Bajada Branch, Zamboanga to see Col. Ancanan, and to Davao City at Camp Katitipan to meet
Davao City to meet Mr. Rudy Salvador. I told him that my husband, Engineer Col. Kasim.[42]
Morced Tagitis was presumed to be abducted in Jolo, Sulu on October 30,
2007. I asked him a favor to contact his connections in the military in Jolo, Sulu In Zamboanga, Mrs. Talbin recounted that they met with Col. Ancanan, who told
where the abduction of Engr. Tagitis took place. Mr. Salvador immediately called them that there was a report and that he showed them a series of text messages
up Camp Katitipan located in Davao City looking for high-ranking official who
from Tagitis cellular phone, which showed that Tagitis and his daughter would
can help me gather reliable information behind the abduction of subject Engineer
Tagitis. meet in Manila on October 30, 2007.[43]

On that same day, Mr. Salvador and my friend, Anna Mendoza, Executive She further narrated that sometime on November 24, 2007, she went with the
Secretary, accompanied me to Camp Katitipan to meet Col. Kasim. Mr. Salvador respondent together with two other companions, namely, Salvacion Serrano and
introduced me to Col. Kasim and we had a short conversation. And he assured Mini Leong, to Camp Katitipan to talk to Col. Kasim. [44] The respondent asked
me that hell do the best he can to help me find my husband.
Col. Kasim if he knew the exact location of Engr. Tagitis. Col. Kasim told them
After a few weeks, Mr. Salvador called me up informing me up informing me that Tagitis was in good hands, although he was not certain whether he was with
that I am to go to Camp Katitipan to meet Col. Kasim for he has an urgent, the PNP or with the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP). She further recounted
confidential information to reveal. that based on the report Col. Kasim read in their presence, Tagitis was under
custodial investigation because he was being charged with terrorism; Tagitis in
On November 24, 2007, we went back to Camp Katitipan with my three fact had been under surveillance since January 2007 up to the time he was
friends. That was the time that Col. Kasim read to us the confidential report that
abducted when he was seen talking to Omar Patik and a certain Santos of
Engr. Tagitis was allegedly connected [with] different terrorist [groups], one of
which he mentioned in the report was OMAR PATIK and a certain SANTOS - a Bulacan, a Balik Islam charged with terrorism. Col. Kasim also told them that he
Balik Islam. could not give a copy of the report because it was a raw report. [45] She also related
It is also said that Engr. Tagitis is carrying boxes of medicines for the injured that the Col. Kasim did not tell them exactly where Tagitis was being kept,
terrorists as a supplier. These are the two information that I can still remember. It although he mentioned Talipapao, Sulu.Prof., lalabas din yan.[50] Prof. Matli also
emphasized that despite what his January 4, 2008 affidavit indicated, [51] he never any information regarding the whereabouts of Tagitis and the person(s)
told PS Supt. Pingay, or made any accusation, that Tagitis took away money responsible for his abduction.[64]
entrusted to him.[52] Prof. Matli confirmed, however, that that he had received an
e-mail report[53] from Nuraya Lackian of the Office of Muslim Affairs in Manila In the same hearing on February 11, 2008, the petitioners also presented Police
that the IDB was seeking assistance of the office in locating the funds of IDB Senior Superintendent Jose Volpane Pante (Col. Pante), Chief of the CIDG-9, to
scholars deposited in Tagitis personal account.[54] disprove the respondents allegation that Tagitis was in the custody of CIDG-
Zamboanga City.[65] Col. Pante clarified that the CIDG was the investigative arm
On cross-examination by the respondents counsel, Prof. Matli testified that his of the PNP, and that the CIDG investigates and prosecutes all cases involving
January 4, 2008 affidavit was already prepared when PS Supt. Pingay asked him violations in the Revised Penal Code particularly those considered as heinous
to sign it.[55]Prof Matli clarified that although he read the affidavit before signing crimes.[66] Col. Pante further testified that the allegation that 9 RCIDU personnel
it, he was not so much aware of [its] contents.[56] were involved in the disappearance of Tagitis was baseless, since they did not
conduct any operation in Jolo, Sulu before or after Tagitis reported disappearance.
[67]
On February 11, 2008, the petitioners presented Col. Kasim to rebut material Col. Pante added that the four (4) personnel assigned to the Sulu CIDT had no
portions of the respondents testimony, particularly the allegation that he had stated capability to conduct any operation, since they were only assigned to investigate
that Tagitis was in the custody of either the military or the PNP. [57] Col. Kasim matters and to monitor the terrorism situation.[68] He denied that his office
categorically denied the statements made by the respondent in her narrative conducted any surveillance on Tagitis prior to the latters disappearance.[69] Col.
report, specifically: (1) that Tagitis was seen carrying boxes of medicines as Pante further testified that his investigation of Tagitis disappearance was
supplier for the injured terrorists; (2) that Tagitis was under the custody of the unsuccessful; the investigation was still facing a blank wall on the whereabouts of
military, since he merely said to the respondent that your husband is in good Tagitis.[70]
hands and is probably taken cared of by his armed abductors; and (3) that
Tagitis was under custodial investigation by the military, the PNP or the CIDG THE CA RULING
Zamboanga City.[58] Col. Kasim emphasized that the informal letter he received On March 7, 2008, the CA issued its decision [71] confirming that the disappearance
from his informant in Sulu did not indicate that Tagitis was in the custody of the of Tagitis was an enforced disappearance under the United Nations (UN)
CIDG.[59] He also stressed that the information he provided to the respondent was Declaration on the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearances.
[72]
merely a raw report sourced from barangay intelligence that still needed The CA ruled that when military intelligence pinpointed the investigative arm
confirmation and follow-up as to its veracity.[60] of the PNP (CIDG) to be involved in the abduction, the missing-person case
On cross-examination, Col. Kasim testified that the information he gave the qualified as an enforced disappearance. The conclusion that the CIDG was
respondent was given to him by his informant, who was a civilian asset, through a involved was based on the respondents testimony, corroborated by her
letter which he considered as unofficial.[61] Col. Kasim stressed that the letter was companion, Mrs. Talbin. The CA noted that the information that the CIDG, as the
only meant for his consumption and not for reading by others. [62] He testified police intelligence arm, was involved in Tagitis abduction came from no less than
further that he destroyed the letter right after he read it to the respondent and her the military an independent agency of government. The CA thus greatly relied on
companions because it was not important to him and also because the the raw report from Col. Kasims asset, pointing to the CIDGs involvement in
information it contained had no importance in relation with the abduction of Tagitis abduction.The CA held that raw reports from an asset carried great weight
Tagitis.[63] He explained that he did not keep the letter because it did not contain in the intelligence world. It also labeled as suspect Col. Kasims subsequent and
belated retraction of his statement that the military, the police, or the CIDG was respondent took before petitioning for the writ; the finding that the rights to life,
involved in the abduction of Tagitis. liberty and security of Tagitis had been violated; the sufficiency of evidence
supporting the conclusion that Tagitis was abducted; the conclusion that the CIDG
The CA characterized as too farfetched and unbelievable and a bedlam of Zamboanga was responsible for the abduction; and, generally, the ruling that the
speculation police theories painting the disappearance as intentional on the part of respondent discharged the burden of proving the allegations of the petition by
Tagitis. He had no previous brushes with the law or any record of overstepping substantial evidence.[74]
the bounds of any trust regarding money entrusted to him; no student of the IDB
scholarship program ever came forward to complain that he or she did not get his THE COURTS RULING
or her stipend. The CA also found no basis for the police theory that Tagitis was
trying to escape from the clutches of his second wife, on the basis of the We do not find the petition meritorious.
respondents testimony that Tagitis was a Muslim who could have many wives
under the Muslim faith, and that there was no issue at all when the latter divorced
his first wife in order to marry the second. Finally, the CA also ruled out Sufficiency in Form and Substance
kidnapping for ransom by the Abu Sayyaf or by the ARMM paramilitary as the
cause for Tagitis disappearance, since the respondent, the police and the military
In questioning the sufficiency in form and substance of the
noted that there was no acknowledgement of Tagitis abduction or demand for
payment of ransom the usual modus operandi of these terrorist groups. respondents Amparo petition, the petitioners contend that the petition violated
Section 5(c), (d), and (e) of the Amparo Rule. Specifically, the petitioners allege
Based on these considerations, the CA thus extended the privilege of the writ to that the respondent failed to:
Tagitis and his family, and directed the CIDG Chief, Col. Jose Volpane Pante,
PNP Chief Avelino I. Razon, TASK FORCE TAGITIS heads Gen. Joel Goltiao
and Col. Ahiron Ajirim, and PACER Chief Sr. Supt. Leonardo A. Espina to exert 1) allege any act or omission the petitioners committed in violation of
extraordinary diligence and efforts to protect the life, liberty and security of Tagitis rights to life, liberty and security;
Tagitis, with the obligation to provide monthly reports of their actions to the
CA. At the same time, the CA dismissed the petition against the then respondents 2) allege in a complete manner how Tagitis was abducted, the persons
from the military, Lt. Gen Alexander Yano and Gen. Ruben Rafael, based on the responsible for his disappearance, and the respondents source
finding that it was PNP-CIDG, not the military, that was involved. of information;
On March 31, 2008, the petitioners moved to reconsider the CA decision, but the
3) allege that the abduction was committed at the petitioners instructions or
CA denied the motion in its Resolution of April 9, 2008.[73]
with their consent;
THE PETITION 4) implead the members of CIDG regional office in Zamboanga alleged to
In this Rule 45 appeal questioning the CAs March 7, 2008 decision, the
have custody over her husband;
petitioners mainly dispute the sufficiency in form and substance of
the Amparo petition filed before the CA; the sufficiency of the legal remedies the 5) attach the affidavits of witnesses to support her accusations;
6) allege any action or inaction attributable to the petitioners in the disappeared, or who actually acted to kidnap, abduct or arrest him or her, or where
performance of their duties in the investigation of Tagitis disappearance; the victim is detained, because these information may purposely be hidden or
and covered up by those who caused the disappearance. In this type of situation, to
7) specify what legally available efforts she took to determine the fate or require the level of specificity, detail and precision that the petitioners apparently
whereabouts of her husband. want to read into the Amparo Rule is to make this Rule a token gesture of judicial
concern for violations of the constitutional rights to life, liberty and security.
A petition for the Writ of Amparo shall be signed and verified and shall
allege, among others (in terms of the portions the petitioners cite):[75]
To read the Rules of Court requirement on pleadings while addressing the
(c) The right to life, liberty and security of the aggrieved party unique Amparo situation, the test in reading the petition should be to determine
violated or threatened with violation by an unlawful act or whether it contains the details available to the petitioner under the
omission of the respondent, and how such threat or violation is
committed with the attendant circumstances detailed in circumstances, while presenting a cause of action showing a violation of the
supporting affidavits; victims rights to life, liberty and security through State or private party
action. The petition should likewise be read in its totality, rather than in terms of
(d) The investigation conducted, if any, specifying the names,
personal circumstances, and addresses of the investigating its isolated component parts, to determine if the required elements namely, of the
authority or individuals, as well as the manner and conduct of the disappearance, the State or private action, and the actual or threatened violations
investigation, together with any report;
of the rights to life, liberty or security are present.
(e) The actions and recourses taken by the petitioner to determine
the fate or whereabouts of the aggrieved party and the identity of In the present case, the petition amply recites in its paragraphs 4 to 11 the
the person responsible for the threat, act or omission; and
circumstances under which Tagitis suddenly dropped out of sight after engaging
The framers of the Amparo Rule never intended Section 5(c) to be complete in normal activities, and thereafter was nowhere to be found despite efforts to
in every detail in stating the threatened or actual violation of a victims rights. As locate him. The petition alleged, too, under its paragraph 7, in relation to
in any other initiatory pleading, the pleader must of course state the ultimate facts paragraphs 15 and 16, that according to reliable information, police operatives
constituting the cause of action, omitting the evidentiary details. [76] In were the perpetrators of the abduction. It also clearly alleged how Tagitis rights to
an Amparo petition, however, this requirement must be read in light of the nature life, liberty and security were violated when he was forcibly taken and boarded on
and purpose of the proceeding, which addresses a situation of uncertainty; the a motor vehicle by a couple of burly men believed to be police intelligence
petitioner may not be able to describe with certainty how the victim exactly operatives, and then taken into custody by the respondents police intelligence
operatives since October 30, 2007, specifically by the CIDG, PNP Zamboanga Section 5(d) of the Amparo Rule requires that prior investigation of an
City, x x x held against his will in an earnest attempt of the police to involve and alleged disappearance must have been made, specifying the manner and results of
connect [him] with different terrorist groups.[77] the investigation.Effectively, this requirement seeks to establish at the earliest
opportunity the level of diligence the public authorities undertook in relation with
These allegations, in our view, properly pleaded ultimate facts within the the reported disappearance.[79]
pleaders knowledge about Tagitis disappearance, the participation by agents of the We reject the petitioners argument that the respondents petition did not
State in this disappearance, the failure of the State to release Tagitis or to provide comply with the Section 5(d) requirements of the Amparo Rule, as the petition
sufficient information about his whereabouts, as well as the actual violation of his specifies in its paragraph 11 that Kunnong and his companions immediately
right to liberty. Thus, the petition cannot be faulted for any failure in its statement reported Tagitis disappearance to the police authorities in Jolo, Sulu as soon as
of a cause of action. they were relatively certain that he indeed had disappeared. The police, however,
gave them the ready answer that Tagitis could have been abducted by the Abu
If a defect can at all be attributed to the petition, this defect is its lack of Sayyaf group or other anti-government groups. The respondent also alleged in
supporting affidavit, as required by Section 5(c) of the Amparo Rule. Owing to paragraphs 17 and 18 of her petition that she filed a complaint with the PNP
the summary nature of the proceedings for the writ and to facilitate the resolution Police Station in Cotobato and in Jolo, but she was told of an intriguing tale by
of the petition, the Amparo Rule incorporated the requirement for supporting the police that her husband was having a good time with another woman. The
affidavits, with the annotation that these can be used as the affiants direct disappearance was alleged to have been reported, too, to no less than the
testimony.[78] This requirement, however, should not be read as an absolute one Governor of the ARMM, followed by the respondents personal inquiries that
that necessarily leads to the dismissal of the petition if not strictly yielded the factual bases for her petition.[80]
followed. Where, as in this case, the petitioner has substantially complied with the
requirement by submitting a verified petition sufficiently detailing the facts relied These allegations, to our mind, sufficiently specify that reports have been
upon, the strict need for the sworn statement that an affidavit represents is made to the police authorities, and that investigations should have followed. That
essentially fulfilled. We note that the failure to attach the required affidavits was the petition did not state the manner and results of the investigation that
fully cured when the respondent and her witness (Mrs. Talbin) personally testified the Amparo Rule requires, but rather generally stated the inaction of the police,
in the CA hearings held on January 7 and 17 and February 18, 2008 to swear to their failure to perform their duty to investigate, or at the very least, their reported
and flesh out the allegations of the petition. Thus, even on this point, the petition failed efforts, should not be a reflection on the completeness of the petition. To
cannot be faulted. require the respondent to elaborately specify the names, personal circumstances,
motor vehicle then sped away without the knowledge of his student, Arsimin
and addresses of the investigating authority, as well the manner and conduct of the Kunnong;
investigation is an overly strict interpretation of Section 5(d), given the
xxxx
respondents frustrations in securing an investigation with meaningful results.
Under these circumstances, we are more than satisfied that the allegations of the 10. When Kunnong could not locate Engr. Tagitis, the former sought the help of another
IDB scholar and reported the matter to the local police agency;
petition on the investigations undertaken are sufficiently complete for purposes of
bringing the petition forward. 11. Arsimin Kunnong, including his friends and companions in Jolo, exerted efforts in
trying to locate the whereabouts of Engr. Tagitis and when he reported the matter
to the police authorities in Jolo, he was immediately given a ready answer that
Section 5(e) is in the Amparo Rule to prevent the use of a petition that Engr. Tagitis could [have been] abducted by the Abu Sayyaf group and other
groups known to be fighting against the government;
otherwise is not supported by sufficient allegations to constitute a proper cause of
action as a means to fish for evidence. [81] The petitioners contend that the 12. Being scared with these suggestions and insinuations of the police officers, Kunnong
reported the matter to the [respondent](wife of Engr. Tagitis) by phone and other
respondents petition did not specify what legally available efforts were taken by responsible officers and coordinators of the IDB Scholarship Programme in the
the respondent, and that there was an undue haste in the filing of the petition Philippines who alerted the office of the Governor of ARMM who was then
preparing to attend the OIC meeting in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia;
when, instead of cooperating with authorities, the respondent immediately
invoked the Courts intervention. 13. [The respondent], on the other hand, approached some of her co-employees
with the Land Bank in Digos branch, Digos City, Davao del Sur, who likewise
sought help from some of their friends in the military who could help them
We do not see the respondents petition as the petitioners view it. find/locate the whereabouts of her husband;

xxxx
Section 5(e) merely requires that the Amparo petitioner (the respondent in 15. According to reliable information received by the [respondent], subject Engr. Tagitis
the present case) allege the actions and recourses taken to determine the fate or is in the custody of police intelligence operatives, specifically with the CIDG,
PNP Zamboanga City, being held against his will in an earnest attempt of the
whereabouts of the aggrieved party and the identity of the person responsible for police to involve and connect Engr. Tagitis with the different terrorist groups;
the threat, act or omission. The following allegations of the respondents petition
duly outlined the actions she had taken and the frustrations she encountered, thus xxxx
17. [The respondent] filed her complaint with the PNP Police Station at the ARMM in
compelling her to file her petition. Cotobato and in Jolo, as suggested by her friends, seeking their help to find her
xxxx husband, but [the respondents] request and pleadings failed to produce any
7. Soon after the student left the room, Engr. Tagitis went out of the pension house to positive results
take his early lunch but while out on the street, a couple of burly men believed to xxxx
be police intelligence operatives, forcibly took him and boarded the latter on a 20. Lately, [respondent] was again advised by one of the [petitioners] to go to the
ARMM Police Headquarters again in Cotobato City and also to the different
Police Headquarters including the police headquarters in Davao City, in
of December 7, 1941.[82] The Third Reichs Night and Fog Program, a State policy,
Zamboanga City, in Jolo, and in Camp Crame, Quezon City, and all these places
have been visited by the [respondent] in search for her husband, which entailed was directed at persons in occupied territories endangering German security; they
expenses for her trips to these places thereby resorting her to borrowings and
beggings [sic] for financial help from friends and relatives only to try complying
were transported secretly to Germany where they disappeared without a trace. In
to the different suggestions of these police officers, despite of which, her efforts order to maximize the desired intimidating effect, the policy prohibited
produced no positive results up to the present time;
government officials from providing information about the fate of these targeted
xxxx persons.[83]
25. [The respondent] has exhausted all administrative avenues and remedies but
to no avail, and under the circumstances, [respondent] has no other plain, speedy
and adequate remedy to protect and get the release of subject Engr. Morced In the mid-1970s, the phenomenon of enforced disappearances resurfaced,
Tagitis from the illegal clutches of [the petitioners], their intelligence operatives
and the like which are in total violation of the subjects human and constitutional shocking and outraging the world when individuals, numbering anywhere from
rights, except the issuance of a WRIT OF AMPARO. 6,000 to 24,000, were reported to have disappeared during the military regime in
Argentina. Enforced disappearances spread in Latin America, and the issue
Based on these considerations, we rule that the respondents petition for the became an international concern when the world noted its widespread and
Writ of Amparo is sufficient in form and substance and that the Court of Appeals systematic use by State security forces in that continent under Operation
had every reason to proceed with its consideration of the case. Condor[84] and during the Dirty War[85] in the 1970s and 1980s. The escalation of
the practice saw political activists secretly arrested, tortured, and killed as part of
governments counter-insurgency campaigns. As this form of political brutality
The Desaparecidos became routine elsewhere in the continent, the Latin American media
standardized the term disappearance to describe the phenomenon. The victims of
The present case is one of first impression in the use and application of the enforced disappearances were called the desaparecidos,[86] which literally means
Rule on the Writ of Amparo in an enforced disappearance situation. For a deeper the disappeared ones.[87] In general, there are three different kinds of
appreciation of the application of this Rule to an enforced disappearance situation, disappearance cases:
a brief look at the historical context of the writ and enforced disappearances
would be very helpful. 1) those of people arrested without witnesses or without positive identification
of the arresting agents and are never found again;

The phenomenon of enforced disappearance arising from State action first 2) those of prisoners who are usually arrested without an appropriate warrant
and held in complete isolation for weeks or months while their families are
attracted notice in Adolf Hitlers Nact und Nebel Erlass or Night and Fog Decree unable to discover their whereabouts and the military authorities deny having
them in custody until they eventually reappear in one detention center or
another; and
The Amparo Rule expressly provides that the writ shall cover extralegal
3) those of victims of salvaging who have disappeared until their lifeless bodies
are later discovered.[88]
killings and enforced disappearances or threats thereof. [93] We note that although
the writ specifically covers enforced disappearances, this concept is neither
In the Philippines, enforced disappearances generally fall within the first defined nor penalized in this jurisdiction. The records of the Supreme Court
two categories,[89] and 855 cases were recorded during the period of martial law Committee on the Revision of Rules (Committee) reveal that the drafters of
from 1972 until 1986. Of this number, 595 remained missing, 132 surfaced alive the Amparo Rule initially considered providing an elemental definition of the
and 127 were found dead. During former President Corazon C. Aquinos term, 820 concept of enforced disappearance:[94]
people were reported to have disappeared and of these, 612 cases were JUSTICE MARTINEZ: I believe that first and foremost we should come up or
formulate a specific definition [for] extrajudicial killings and enforced
documented. Of this number, 407 remain missing, 108 surfaced alive and 97 were disappearances. From that definition, then we can proceed to formulate the rules,
found dead. The number of enforced disappearances dropped during former definite rules concerning the same.
President Fidel V. Ramos term when only 87 cases were reported, while the three- CHIEF JUSTICE PUNO: As things stand, there is no law penalizing
year term of former President Joseph E. Estrada yielded 58 reported extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances so initially also we have
to [come up with] the nature of these extrajudicial killings and enforced
cases. KARAPATAN, a local non-governmental organization, reports that as of disappearances [to be covered by the Rule] because our concept of killings
March 31, 2008, the records show that there were a total of 193 victims of and disappearances will define the jurisdiction of the courts. So well have to
agree among ourselves about the nature of killings and disappearances for
enforced disappearance under incumbent President Gloria M. Arroyos instance, in other jurisdictions, the rules only cover state actors. That is an
administration. The Commission on Human Rights records show a total of 636 element incorporated in their concept of extrajudicial killings and enforced
disappearances. In other jurisdictions, the concept includes acts and omissions
verified cases of enforced disappearances from 1985 to 1993. Of this number, 406 not only of state actors but also of non state actors. Well, more specifically in the
remained missing, 92 surfaced alive, 62 were found dead, and 76 still have case of the Philippines for instance, should these rules include the killings, the
disappearances which may be authored by let us say, the NPAs or the leftist
undetermined status.[90] Currently, the United Nations Working Group on Enforced organizations and others. So, again we need to define the nature of the
or Involuntary Disappearance[91] reports 619 outstanding cases of enforced or extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances that will be covered by these
rules. [Emphasis supplied] [95]
involuntary disappearances covering the period December 1, 2007 to November
30, 2008.[92]
In the end, the Committee took cognizance of several bills filed in the
House of Representatives[96] and in the Senate[97] on extrajudicial killings and
Enforced Disappearances
Under Philippine Law enforced disappearances, and resolved to do away with a clear textual definition
of these terms in the Rule. The Committee instead focused on the nature and procedural rules, can set the procedural standards and thereby directly compel the
scope of the concerns within its power to address and provided the appropriate public authorities to act on actual or threatened violations of constitutional rights.
remedy therefor, mindful that an elemental definition may intrude into the To state the obvious, judicial intervention can make a difference even if only
ongoing legislative efforts.[98] procedurally in a situation when the very same investigating public authorities
may have had a hand in the threatened or actual violations of constitutional rights.
As the law now stands, extra-judicial killings and enforced disappearances
in this jurisdiction are not crimes penalized separately from the component Lest this Court intervention be misunderstood, we clarify once again that
criminal acts undertaken to carry out these killings and enforced disappearances we do not rule on any issue of criminal culpability for the extrajudicial killing or
and are now penalized under the Revised Penal Code and special laws.[99] The enforced disappearance. This is an issue that requires criminal action before our
simple reason is that the Legislature has not spoken on the matter; the criminal courts based on our existing penal laws. Our intervention is in
determination of what acts are criminal and what the corresponding penalty these determining whether an enforced disappearance has taken place and who is
criminal acts should carry are matters of substantive law that only the Legislature responsible or accountable for this disappearance, and to define and impose the
has the power to enact under the countrys constitutional scheme and power appropriate remedies to address it. The burden for the public authorities to
structure. discharge in these situations, under the Rule on the Writ of Amparo, is
twofold. The first is to ensure that all efforts at disclosure and investigation are
Even without the benefit of directly applicable substantive laws on extra- undertaken under pain of indirect contempt from this Court when governmental
judicial killings and enforced disappearances, however, the Supreme Court is not efforts are less than what the individual situations require. The second is to
powerless to act under its own constitutional mandate to promulgate rules address the disappearance, so that the life of the victim is preserved and his or her
concerning the protection and enforcement of constitutional rights, pleading, liberty and security restored. In these senses, our orders and directives relative to
practice and procedure in all courts,[100]since extrajudicial killings and enforced the writ are continuing efforts that are not truly terminated until the extrajudicial
disappearances, by their nature and purpose, constitute State or private party killing or enforced disappearance is fully addressed by the complete
violation of the constitutional rights of individuals to life, liberty and determination of the fate and the whereabouts of the victim, by the production of
security. Although the Courts power is strictly procedural and as such does not the disappeared person and the restoration of his or her liberty and security, and,
diminish, increase or modify substantive rights, the legal protection that the Court in the proper case, by the commencement of criminal action against the guilty
can provide can be very meaningful through the procedures it sets in addressing parties.
extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances. The Court, through its
Enforced Disappearance
Under International Law Deeply concerned that in many countries, often in a persistent manner,
enforced disappearances occur, in the sense that persons are arrested,
detained or abducted against their will or otherwise deprived of their liberty
From the International Law perspective, involuntary or enforced by officials of different branches or levels of Government, or by organized
groups or private individuals acting on behalf of, or with the support, direct
disappearance is considered a flagrant violation of human rights. [101] It does not or indirect, consent or acquiescence of the Government, followed by a
only violate the right to life, liberty and security of the desaparecido; it affects refusal to disclose the fate or whereabouts of the persons concerned or a
refusal to acknowledge the deprivation of their liberty, which places such
their families as well through the denial of their right to information regarding the persons outside the protection of the law. [Emphasis supplied]
circumstances of the disappeared family member. Thus, enforced disappearances
have been said to be a double form of torture, with doubly paralyzing impact for
Fourteen years after (or on December 20, 2006), the UN General Assembly
the victims, as they are kept ignorant of their own fates, while family members are
adopted the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from
deprived of knowing the whereabouts of their detained loved ones and suffer as
Enforced Disappearance (Convention).[105] The Convention was opened for
well the serious economic hardship and poverty that in most cases follow the
signature in Paris, France on February 6, 2007.[106] Article 2 of the Convention
disappearance of the household breadwinner.[102]
defined enforced disappearance as follows:

The UN General Assembly first considered the issue of Disappeared For the purposes of this Convention, enforced disappearance is
considered to be the arrest, detention, abduction or any other form of deprivation
Persons in December 1978 under Resolution 33/173. The Resolution expressed of liberty by agents of the State or by persons or groups of persons acting with
the General Assemblys deep concern arising from reports from various parts of the authorization, support or acquiescence of the State, followed by a refusal to
acknowledge the deprivation of liberty or by concealment of the fate or
the world relating to enforced or involuntary disappearances, and requested the whereabouts of the disappeared person, which place such a person outside the
UN Commission on Human Rights to consider the issue of enforced protection of the law. [Emphasis supplied]

disappearances with a view to making appropriate recommendations.[103]


The Convention is the first universal human rights instrument to assert that there
is a right not to be subject to enforced disappearance [107] and that this right is non-
In 1992, in response to the reality that the insidious practice of enforced derogable.[108] It provides that no one shall be subjected to enforced disappearance
disappearance had become a global phenomenon, the UN General Assembly under any circumstances, be it a state of war, internal political instability, or any
other public emergency. It obliges State Parties to codify enforced disappearance
adopted the Declaration on the Protection of All Persons from Enforced as an offense punishable with appropriate penalties under their criminal law. [109] It
Disappearance (Declaration).[104] This Declaration, for the first time, provided in also recognizes the right of relatives of the disappeared persons and of the society
its third preambular clause a working description of enforced disappearance, as as a whole to know the truth on the fate and whereabouts of the disappeared and
on the progress and results of the investigation. [110] Lastly, it classifies enforced
follows:
disappearance as a continuing offense, such that statutes of limitations shall not and flagrant violation of human rights and fundamental freedoms
apply until the fate and whereabouts of the victim are established.[111] proclaimed in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and reaffirmed and
developed in international instruments in this field. [Emphasis supplied]

Binding Effect of UN As a matter of human right and fundamental freedom and as a policy matter made
Action on the Philippines
in a UN Declaration, the ban on enforced disappearance cannot but have its
effects on the country, given our own adherence to generally accepted principles
To date, the Philippines has neither signed nor ratified the Convention, so that the
of international law as part of the law of the land.[115]
country is not yet committed to enact any law penalizing enforced disappearance
as a crime.The absence of a specific penal law, however, is not a stumbling block In the recent case of Pharmaceutical and Health Care Association of the
for action from this Court, as heretofore mentioned; underlying every enforced Philippines v. Duque III,[116] we held that:
disappearance is a violation of the constitutional rights to life, liberty and security
Under the 1987 Constitution, international law can become part of the
that the Supreme Court is mandated by the Constitution to protect through its sphere of domestic law either by transformation or incorporation. The
rule-making powers. transformation method requires that an international law be transformed into a
domestic law through a constitutional mechanism such as local legislation. The
incorporation method applies when, by mere constitutional declaration,
Separately from the Constitution (but still pursuant to its terms), the Court international law is deemed to have the force of domestic law. [Emphasis
supplied]
is guided, in acting on Amparo cases, by the reality that the Philippines is a
member of the UN, bound by its Charter and by the various conventions we
We characterized generally accepted principles of international law as norms of
signed and ratified, particularly the conventions touching on humans rights. Under
general or customary international law that are binding on all states. We held
the UN Charter, the Philippines pledged to promote universal respect for, and
further:[117]
observance of, human rights and fundamental freedoms for all without
distinctions as to race, sex, language or religion.[112]Although no universal [G]enerally accepted principles of international law, by virtue of the
incorporation clause of the Constitution, form part of the laws of the land even if
agreement has been reached on the precise extent of the human rights and they do not derive from treaty obligations. The classical formulation in
international law sees those customary rules accepted as binding result from
fundamental freedoms guaranteed to all by the Charter,[113] it was the UN itself
the combination [of] two elements: the established, widespread, and
that issued the Declaration on enforced disappearance, and this Declaration states: consistent practice on the part of States; and a psychological element known
[114] as the opinion juris sive necessitates (opinion as to law or necessity). Implicit in
the latter element is a belief that the practice in question is rendered
obligatory by the existence of a rule of law requiring it. [Emphasis in the
Any act of enforced disappearance is an offence to dignity. It is condemned as
original]
a denial of the purposes of the Charter of the United Nations and as a grave
in accordance with the Inter-American Convention and have defined activities
The most widely accepted statement of sources of international law today is involving enforced disappearance to be criminal.[125]
Article 38(1) of the Statute of the International Court of Justice, which provides
that the Court shall apply international custom, as evidence of a general practice Second, in Europe, the European Convention on Human Rights has no
accepted as law.[118] The material sources of custom include State practice, State explicit provision dealing with the protection against enforced disappearance. The
legislation, international and national judicial decisions, recitals in treaties and European Court of Human Rights (ECHR), however, has applied the Convention
other international instruments, a pattern of treaties in the same form, the practice in a way that provides ample protection for the underlying rights affected by
of international organs, and resolutions relating to legal questions in the UN enforced disappearance through the Conventions Article 2 on the right to life;
General Assembly.[119] Sometimes referred to as evidence of international law, Article 3 on the prohibition of torture; Article 5 on the right to liberty and
[120]
these sources identify the substance and content of the obligations of States security; Article 6, paragraph 1 on the right to a fair trial; and Article 13 on the
and are indicative of the State practice and opinio juris requirements of right to an effective remedy. A leading example demonstrating the protection
international law.[121] We note the following in these respects: afforded by the European Convention is Kurt v. Turkey,[126] where the ECHR
found a violation of the right to liberty and security of the disappeared person
First, barely two years from the adoption of the Declaration, the when the applicants son disappeared after being taken into custody by Turkish
Organization of American States (OAS) General Assembly adopted the Inter- forces in the Kurdish village of Agilli in November 1993. It further found the
American Convention on Enforced Disappearance of Persons in June 1994. applicant (the disappeared persons mother) to be a victim of a violation of Article
[122]
State parties undertook under this Convention not to practice, permit, or 3, as a result of the silence of the authorities and the inadequate character of the
tolerate the forced disappearance of persons, even in states of emergency or investigations undertaken. The ECHR also saw the lack of any meaningful
suspension of individual guarantees.[123] One of the key provisions includes the investigation by the State as a violation of Article 13.[127]
States obligation to enact the crime of forced disappearance in their respective
national criminal laws and to establish jurisdiction over such cases when the Third, in the United States, the status of the prohibition on enforced
crime was committed within their jurisdiction, when the victim is a national of disappearance as part of customary international law is recognized in the most
that State, and when the alleged criminal is within its territory and it does not recent edition of Restatement of the Law: The Third, [128] which provides that [a]
proceed to extradite him, which can be interpreted as establishing universal State violates international law if, as a matter of State policy, it practices,
jurisdiction among the parties to the Inter-American Convention. [124] At present, encourages, or condones (3) the murder or causing the disappearance of
Colombia, Guatemala, Paraguay, Peru and Venezuela have enacted separate laws individuals.[129] We significantly note that in a related matter that finds close
identification with enforced disappearance the matter of torture the United States
Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit Court held in Filartiga v. Pena- widespread or systematic attack against any civilian population, with knowledge
Irala[130] that the prohibition on torture had attained the status of customary of the attack. While more than 100 countries have ratified the Rome Statute,
[133]
the Philippines is still merely a signatory and has not yet ratified it. We note
international law. The court further elaborated on the significance of UN
that Article 7(1) of the Rome Statute has been incorporated in the statutes of other
declarations, as follows: international and hybrid tribunals, including Sierra Leone Special Court, the
These U.N. declarations are significant because they specify with great Special Panels for Serious Crimes in Timor-Leste, and the Extraordinary
precision the obligations of member nations under the Charter. Since their Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia.[134] In addition, the implementing legislation
adoption, "(m)embers can no longer contend that they do not know what human of State Parties to the Rome Statute of the ICC has given rise to a number of
rights they promised in the Charter to promote. Moreover, a U.N. Declaration is,
according to one authoritative definition, "a formal and solemn instrument, national criminal provisions also covering enforced disappearance.[135]
suitable for rare occasions when principles of great and lasting importance are
being enunciated. Accordingly, it has been observed that the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights "no longer fits into the dichotomy of binding treaty While the Philippines is not yet formally bound by the terms of the
against non-binding pronouncement,' but is rather an authoritative statement of Convention on enforced disappearance (or by the specific terms of the Rome
the international community." Thus, a Declaration creates an expectation of
adherence, and "insofar as the expectation is gradually justified by State practice, Statute) and has not formally declared enforced disappearance as a specific crime,
a declaration may by custom become recognized as laying down rules binding the above recital shows that enforced disappearance as a State practice has
upon the States." Indeed, several commentators have concluded that the
Universal Declaration has become, in toto, a part of binding, customary been repudiated by the international community, so that the ban on it is now
international law. [Citations omitted] a generally accepted principle of international law, which we should consider a
Fourth, in interpreting Article 2 (right to an effective domestic remedy) of part of the law of the land, and which we should act upon to the extent
the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), to which the already allowed under our laws and the international conventions that bind
Philippines is both a signatory and a State Party, the UN Human Rights us.
Committee, under the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, has The following civil or political rights under the Universal Declaration of
stated that the act of enforced disappearance violates Articles 6 (right to life), 7 Human Rights, the ICCPR and the International Convention on Economic, Social
(prohibition on torture, cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment) and and Cultural Rights (ICESR) may be infringed in the course of a disappearance:
[136]
9 (right to liberty and security of the person) of the ICCPR, and the act may also
amount to a crime against humanity.[131] 1) the right to recognition as a person before the law;
2) the right to liberty and security of the person;
Fifth, Article 7, paragraph 1 of the 1998 Rome Statute establishing the 3) the right not to be subjected to torture and other cruel, inhuman or
International Criminal Court (ICC) also covers enforced disappearances insofar as degrading treatment or punishment;
4) the right to life, when the disappeared person is killed;
they are defined as crimes against humanity, [132] i.e., crimes committed as part of a
5) the right to an identity;
6) the right to a fair trial and to judicial guarantees; those rights The Committee attaches importance to States Parties'
7) the right to an effective remedy, including reparation and establishing appropriate judicial and administrative mechanisms for
compensation; addressing claims of rights violations under domestic
8) the right to know the truth regarding the circumstances of a law Administrative mechanisms are particularly required to give
disappearance. effect to the general obligation to investigate allegations of
9) the right to protection and assistance to the family; violations promptly, thoroughly and effectivelythrough independent
10) the right to an adequate standard of living; and impartial bodies. A failure by a State Party to investigate
11) the right to health; and allegations of violations could in and of itself give rise to a separate
12) the right to education [Emphasis supplied] breach of the Covenant. Cessation of an ongoing violation is an
essential element of the right to an effective remedy. [Emphasis
Article 2 of the ICCPR, which binds the Philippines as a state party, supplied]
provides:
Article 2 The UN Human Rights Committee further stated in the same General
3. Each State Party to the present Covenant undertakes: Comment No. 31 that failure to investigate as well as failure to bring to justice the
(a) To ensure that any person whose rights or freedoms as herein perpetrators of ICCPR violations could in and of itself give rise to a separate
recognized are violated shall have an effective remedy, breach of the Covenant, thus:[138]
notwithstanding that the violation has been committed by persons
acting in an official capacity; 18. Where the investigations referred to in paragraph 15 reveal
(b) To ensure that any person claiming such a remedy shall have his violations of certain Covenant rights, States Parties must ensure that
right thereto determined by competent judicial, administrative or those responsible are brought to justice. As with failure to
legislative authorities, or by any other competent authority provided investigate, failure to bring to justice perpetrators of such
for by the legal system of the State, and to develop the possibilities of violations could in and of itself give rise to a separate breach of the
judicial remedy; Covenant. These obligations arise notably in respect of those
(c) To ensure that the competent authorities shall enforce such remedies violations recognized as criminal under either domestic or
when granted. [Emphasis supplied] international law, such as torture and similar cruel, inhuman and
degrading treatment (article 7), summary and arbitrary killing (article
In General Comment No. 31, the UN Human Rights Committee opined that the 6) and enforced disappearance (articles 7 and 9 and, frequently,
right to an effective remedy under Article 2 of the ICCPR includes the obligation 6). Indeed, the problem of impunity for these violations, a matter of
of the State to investigate ICCPR violations promptly, thoroughly, and sustained concern by the Committee, may well be an important
effectively, viz:[137] contributing element in the recurrence of the violations. When
committed as part of a widespread or systematic attack on a civilian
population, these violations of the Covenant are crimes against
15. Article 2, paragraph 3, requires that in addition to effective
humanity (see Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, article
protection of Covenant rights, States Parties must ensure that
7). [Emphasis supplied]
individuals also have accessible and effective remedies to vindicate
In Secretary of National Defense v. Manalo,[139] this Court, in ruling that the [A]ny deprivation of liberty must not only have been effected in
right to security of persons is a guarantee of the protection of ones right by the conformity with the substantive and procedural rules of national law but
must equally be in keeping with the very purpose of Article 5, namely
government, held that:
to protect the individual from arbitrariness... Having assumed control
over that individual, it is incumbent on the authorities to account for his
The right to security of person in this third sense is a corollary of the
or her whereabouts. For this reason, Article 5 must be seen as
policy that the State guarantees full respect for human rights under
requiring the authorities to take effective measures to safeguard
Article II, Section 11 of the 1987 Constitution. As the government is the
against the risk of disappearance and to conduct a prompt effective
chief guarantor of order and security, the Constitutional guarantee of
investigation into an arguable claim that a person has been taken
the rights to life, liberty and security of person is rendered ineffective if
into custody and has not been seen since. [Emphasis supplied]
government does not afford protection to these rights especially when
they are under threat. Protection includes conducting effective
investigations, organization of the government apparatus to extend These rulings effectively serve as the backdrop for the Rule on the Writ
protection to victims of extralegal killings or enforced
disappearances (or threats thereof) and/or their families, and of Amparo, which the Court made effective on October 24, 2007. Although
bringing offenders to the bar of justice. The Inter-American Court of the Amparo Rule still has gaps waiting to be filled through substantive law, as
Human Rights stressed the importance of investigation in evidenced primarily by the lack of a concrete definition of enforced
the Velasquez Rodriguez Case, viz:
disappearance, the materials cited above, among others, provide ample
(The duty to investigate) must be undertaken in guidance and standards on how, through the medium of the Amparo Rule,
a serious manner and not as a mere formality
the Court can provide remedies and protect the constitutional rights to life,
preordained to be ineffective. An investigation must
have an objective and be assumed by the State as its own liberty and security that underlie every enforced disappearance.
legal duty, not as a step taken by private interests that
depends upon the initiative of the victim or his Evidentiary Difficulties Posed
family or upon their offer of proof, without an effective by the Unique Nature of an
search for the truth by the government. [Emphasis Enforced Disappearance
supplied]

Before going into the issue of whether the respondent has discharged the
Manalo significantly cited Kurt v. Turkey,[140] where the ECHR interpreted the burden of proving the allegations of the petition for the Writ of Amparo by the
right to security not only as a prohibition on the State against arbitrary deprivation degree of proof required by the Amparo Rule, we shall discuss briefly the unique
of liberty, but also as the imposition of a positive duty to afford protection to the
evidentiary difficulties presented by enforced disappearance cases; these
right to liberty. The Court notably quoted the following ECHR ruling:
difficulties form part of the setting that the implementation of the Amparo Rule
shall encounter.
that may have begun.[145] The problem for the victims family is the States virtual
These difficulties largely arise because the State itself the party whose monopoly of access to pertinent evidence. The Inter-American Court of Human
Rights (IACHR) observed in the landmark case of Velasquez Rodriguez[146] that
involvement is alleged investigates enforced disappearances. Past experiences in
inherent to the practice of enforced disappearance is the deliberate use of the
other jurisdictions show that the evidentiary difficulties are generally threefold. States power to destroy the pertinent evidence. The IACHR described the
concealment as a clear attempt by the State to commit the perfect crime.[147]
First, there may be a deliberate concealment of the identities of the
direct perpetrators.[141] Experts note that abductors are well organized, armed Third is the element of denial; in many cases, the State authorities
and usually members of the military or police forces, thus: deliberately deny that the enforced disappearance ever occurred. [148] Deniability is
central to the policy of enforced disappearances, as the absence of any proven
The victim is generally arrested by the security forces or by persons disappearance makes it easier to escape the application of legal standards ensuring
acting under some form of governmental authority. In many countries the victims human rights.[149]Experience shows that government officials typically
the units that plan, implement and execute the program are generally respond to requests for information about desaparecidos by saying that they are
specialized, highly-secret bodies within the armed or security forces. not aware of any disappearance, that the missing people may have fled the
They are generally directed through a separate, clandestine chain of
country, or that their names have merely been invented.[150]
command, but they have the necessary credentials to avoid or prevent
any interference by the "legal" police forces. These authorities take their
victims to secret detention centers where they subject them to These considerations are alive in our minds, as these are the difficulties we
interrogation and torture without fear of judicial or other controls. [142] confront, in one form or another, in our consideration of this case.

In addition, there are usually no witnesses to the crime; if there are, these Evidence and Burden of Proof in
Enforced Disappearances Cases
witnesses are usually afraid to speak out publicly or to testify on the
disappearance out of fear for their own lives.[143] We have had occasion to note
this difficulty in Secretary of Defense v. Manalo[144] when we acknowledged that Sections 13, 17 and 18 of the Amparo Rule define the nature of
an Amparo proceeding and the degree and burden of proof the parties to the case
where powerful military officers are implicated, the hesitation of witnesses to
carry, as follows:
surface and testify against them comes as no surprise.
Section 13. Summary Hearing. The hearing on the petition shall
be summary. However, the court, justice or judge may call for a
Second, deliberate concealment of pertinent evidence of the preliminary conference to simplify the issues and determine the
disappearance is a distinct possibility; the central piece of evidence in an possibility of obtaining stipulations and admissions from the parties.
enforced disappearance i.e., the corpus delicti or the victims body is usually
xxxx
concealed to effectively thwart the start of any investigation or the progress of one
Section 17. Burden of Proof and Standard of Diligence Required. The Thus, in these proceedings, the Amparo petitioner needs only to properly
parties shall establish their claims by substantial evidence.
comply with the substance and form requirements of a Writ of Amparo petition, as
The respondent who is a private individual must prove that
ordinary diligence as required by applicable laws, rules and regulations discussed above, and prove the allegations by substantial evidence. Once a
was observed in the performance of duty. rebuttable case has been proven, the respondents must then respond and prove
The respondent who is a public official or employee must prove their defenses based on the standard of diligence required. The rebuttable case, of
that extraordinary diligence as required by applicable laws, rules and course, must show that an enforced disappearance took place under circumstances
regulations was observed in the performance of duty.
showing a violation of the victims constitutional rights to life, liberty or security,
The respondent public official or employee cannot invoke the
presumption that official duty has been regularly performed or evade and the failure on the part of the investigating authorities to appropriately
responsibility or liability. respond.
Section 18. Judgment. If the allegations in the petition are proven by
substantial evidence, the court shall grant the privilege of the writ and The landmark case of Ang Tibay v. Court of Industrial Relations[151] provided
such reliefs as may be proper and appropriate; otherwise, the privilege the Court its first opportunity to define the substantial evidence required to arrive
shall be denied. [Emphasis supplied]
at a valid decision in administrative proceedings. To directly quote Ang Tibay:

Substantial evidence is more than a mere scintilla. It means such


These characteristics namely, of being summary and the use of substantial relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support
evidence as the required level of proof (in contrast to the usual preponderance of a conclusion. [citations omitted] The statute provides that the rules of evidence
prevailing in courts of law and equity shall not be controlling. The obvious
evidence or proof beyond reasonable doubt in court proceedings) reveal the clear purpose of this and similar provisions is to free administrative boards from the
intent of the framers of the Amparo Rule to have the equivalent of an compulsion of technical rules so that the mere admission of matter which would
be deemed incompetent in judicial proceedings would not invalidate the
administrative proceeding, albeit judicially conducted, in administrative order. [citations omitted] But this assurance of a desirable
addressing Amparo situations. The standard of diligence required the duty of flexibility in administrative procedure does not go so far as to justify orders
without a basis in evidence having rational probative force. [Emphasis supplied]
public officials and employees to observe extraordinary diligence point, too, to the
extraordinary measures expected in the protection of constitutional rights and in
the consequent handling and investigation of extra-judicial killings and enforced In Secretary of Defense v. Manalo,[152] which was the Courts first petition
disappearance cases. for a Writ of Amparo, we recognized that the full and exhaustive proceedings that
the substantial evidence standard regularly requires do not need to apply due to
the summary nature of Amparo proceedings. We said:
The remedy [of the writ of amparo] provides rapid judicial relief as it be considered, so long as they lead to conclusions consistent with
partakes of a summary proceeding that requires only substantial evidence to the facts.
make the appropriate reliefs available to the petitioner; it is not an action to 131. Circumstantial or presumptive evidence is especially important
determine criminal guilt requiring proof beyond reasonable doubt, or liability for
in allegations of disappearances, because this type of repression is
damages requiring preponderance of evidence, or administrative responsibility
requiring substantial evidence that will require full and exhaustive characterized by an attempt to suppress all information about the
proceedings. [Emphasis supplied] kidnapping or the whereabouts and fate of the victim. [Emphasis
supplied]
Not to be forgotten in considering the evidentiary aspects
In concluding that the disappearance of Manfredo Velsquez (Manfredo) was
of Amparo petitions are the unique difficulties presented by the nature of enforced carried out by agents who acted under cover of public authority, the IACHR
disappearances, heretofore discussed, which difficulties this Court must frontally relied on circumstantial evidence including the hearsay testimony of Zenaida
meet if the Amparo Rule is to be given a chance to achieve its objectives. These Velsquez, the victims sister, who described Manfredos kidnapping on the basis of
evidentiary difficulties compel the Court to adopt standards appropriate and conversations she had with witnesses who saw Manfredo kidnapped by men in
responsive to the circumstances, without transgressing the due process civilian clothes in broad daylight. She also told the Court that a former Honduran
military official had announced that Manfredo was kidnapped by a special
requirements that underlie every proceeding.
military squadron acting under orders of the Chief of the Armed Forces. [155] The
IACHR likewise considered the hearsay testimony of a second witness who
In the seminal case of Velasquez Rodriguez,[153] the IACHR faced with a asserted that he had been told by a Honduran military officer about the
lack of direct evidence that the government of Honduras was involved in disappearance, and a third witness who testified that he had spoken in prison to a
Velasquez Rodriguez disappearance adopted a relaxed and informal evidentiary man who identified himself as Manfredo.[156]
standard, and established the rule that presumes governmental responsibility for a
Velasquez stresses the lesson that flexibility is necessary under the unique
disappearance if it can be proven that the government carries out a general
circumstances that enforced disappearance cases pose to the courts; to have an
practice of enforced disappearances and the specific case can be linked to that effective remedy, the standard of evidence must be responsive to the evidentiary
practice.[154] The IACHR took note of the realistic fact that enforced difficulties faced. On the one hand, we cannot be arbitrary in the admission and
disappearances could be proven only through circumstantial or indirect evidence appreciation of evidence, as arbitrariness entails violation of rights and cannot be
or by logical inference; otherwise, it was impossible to prove that an individual used as an effective counter-measure; we only compound the problem if a wrong
had been made to disappear. It held: is addressed by the commission of another wrong. On the other hand, we cannot
be very strict in our evidentiary rules and cannot consider evidence the way we do
130. The practice of international and domestic courts shows that direct in the usual criminal and civil cases; precisely, the proceedings before us are
evidence, whether testimonial or documentary, is not the only type of administrative in nature where, as a rule, technical rules of evidence are not
evidence that may be legitimately considered in reaching a strictly observed. Thus, while we must follow the substantial evidence rule, we
decision. Circumstantial evidence, indicia, and presumptions may must observe flexibility in considering the evidence we shall take into account.
The fair and proper rule, to our mind, is to consider all the pieces of evidence The Convention defines enforced disappearance as the arrest, detention,
adduced in their totality, and to consider any evidence otherwise inadmissible
abduction or any other form of deprivation of liberty by agents of the State or by
under our usual rules to be admissible if it is consistent with the admissible
evidence adduced. In other words, we reduce our rules to the most basic test of persons or groups of persons acting with the authorization, support or
reason i.e., to the relevance of the evidence to the issue at hand and its acquiescence of the State, followed by a refusal to acknowledge the deprivation of
consistency with all other pieces of adduced evidence. Thus, even hearsay liberty or by concealment of the fate or whereabouts of the disappeared person,
evidence can be admitted if it satisfies this basic minimum test. which place such a person outside the protection of the law. [159] Under this
definition, the elements that constitute enforced disappearance are essentially
We note in this regard that the use of flexibility in the consideration of evidence is fourfold:[160]
not at all novel in the Philippine legal system. In child abuse cases, Section 28 of
(a) arrest, detention, abduction or any form of deprivation of liberty;
the Rule on Examination of a Child Witness [157] is expressly recognized as an
exception to the hearsay rule. This Rule allows the admission of the hearsay (b) carried out by agents of the State or persons or groups of persons acting
with the authorization, support or acquiescence of the State;
testimony of a child describing any act or attempted act of sexual abuse in any (c) followed by a refusal to acknowledge the detention, or a concealment of the
criminal or non-criminal proceeding, subject to certain prerequisites and the right fate of the disappeared person; and
of cross-examination by the adverse party. The admission of the statement is (d) placement of the disappeared person outside the protection of the law.
determined by the court in light of specified subjective and objective [Emphasis supplied]
considerations that provide sufficient indicia of reliability of the child witness.
[158]
These requisites for admission find their counterpart in the present case under We find no direct evidence indicating how the victim actually
the above-described conditions for the exercise of flexibility in the consideration disappeared. The direct evidence at hand only shows that Tagitis went out of the
of evidence, including hearsay evidence, in extrajudicial killings and enforced ASY Pension House after depositing his room key with the hotel desk and was
disappearance cases. never seen nor heard of again. The undisputed conclusion, however, from all
concerned the petitioner, Tagitis colleagues and even the police authorities is that
Assessment of the Evidence Tagistis disappeared under mysterious circumstances and was never seen
again. The respondent injected the causal element in her petition and testimony, as
The threshold question for our resolution is: was there an enforced we shall discuss below.
disappearance within the meaning of this term under the UN Declaration we have
cited?
We likewise find no direct evidence showing that operatives of PNP CIDG
Q: What is J.I.?
Zamboanga abducted or arrested Tagitis. If at all, only the respondents allegation
that Tagistis was under CIDG Zamboanga custody stands on record, but it is not A: Jemaah Islamiah, sir.
supported by any other evidence, direct or circumstantial.
Q: Was there any information that was read to you during one of those
visits of yours in that Camp?
In her direct testimony, the respondent pointed to two sources of
A: Col. Casim did not furnish me a copy of his report because he
information as her bases for her allegation that Tagistis had been placed under
said those reports are highly confidential, sir.
government custody (in contrast with CIDG Zamboanga custody). The first was
an unnamed friend in Zamboanga (later identified as Col. Ancanan), who Q: Was it read to you then even though you were not furnished a
copy?
occupied a high position in the military and who allegedly mentioned that Tagitis
was in good hands. Nothing came out of this claim, as both the respondent herself A: Yes, sir. In front of us, my friends.
and her witness, Mrs. Talbin, failed to establish that Col. Ancanan gave them any
Q: And what was the content of that highly confidential report?
information that Tagitis was in government custody. Col. Ancanan, for his part,
admitted the meeting with the respondent but denied giving her any information A: Those alleged activities of Engineer Tagitis, sir.[161] [Emphasis supplied]
about the disappearance.
She confirmed this testimony in her cross-examination:
The more specific and productive source of information was Col.
Q: You also mentioned that you went to Camp Katitipan in Davao City?
Kasim, whom the respondent, together with her witness Mrs. Talbin, met in
Camp Katitipan in Davao City. To quote the relevant portions of the respondents A: Yes, maam.
testimony:
Q: And a certain Col. Kasim told you that your husband was
Q: Were you able to speak to other military officials regarding the abducted and under custodial investigation?
whereabouts of your husband particularly those in charge of any
records or investigation? A: Yes, maam.

A: I went to Camp Katitipan in Davao City. Then one military officer, Q: And you mentioned that he showed you a report?
Col. Casim, told me that my husband is being abducted
[sic] because he is under custodial investigation because he is A: Yes, maam.
allegedly parang liason ng J.I., sir.
Q: Were you able to read the contents of that report? A: I did not go to CIDG Zamboanga. I went to Camp Karingal
instead. Enough na yun na effort ko because I know that they
A: He did not furnish me a copy of those [sic] report because those would deny it, maam.[164]
[sic] were highly confidential. That is a military report,
maam.
On February 11, 2008, the respondent presented Mrs. Talbin to corroborate
Q: But you were able to read the contents? her testimony that her husband was abducted and held under custodial
investigation by the PNP-CIDG Zamboanga City, viz:
A: No. But he read it in front of us, my friends, maam.
Q: You said that you went to Camp Katitipan in Davao City sometime
Q: How many were you when you went to see Col. Kasim?
November 24, 2007, who was with you when you went there?
A: There were three of us, maam.
A: Mary Jean Tagitis, sir.
Q: Who were your companions?
Q: Only the two of you?
A: Mrs. Talbin, tapos yung dalawang friends nya from Mati City,
A: No. We have some other companions. We were four at that time, sir.
Davao Oriental, maam.[162]
xxxx
Q: Who were they?
Q: When you were told that your husband is in good hands, what was
your reaction and what did you do?
A: Salvacion Serrano, Mini Leong, Mrs. Tagitis and me, sir.
A: May binasa kasi sya that my husband has a parang meeting with
Q: Were you able to talk, see some other officials at Camp Katitipan
other people na parang mga terorista na mga tao. Tapos at the
during that time?
end of the report is [sic] under custodial investigation.So I told
A: Col. Kasim (PS Supt. Julasirim Ahadin Kasim) only, sir.
him Colonel, my husband is sick. He is diabetic at
nagmemaintain yun ng gamot. Pakisabi lang sa naghohold sa
Q: Were you able to talk to him?
asawa ko na bigyan siya ng gamot, maam.[163]
A: Yes, sir.
xxxx
Q: You mentioned that you received information that Engineer Tagitis is
Q: The four of you?
being held by the CIDG in Zamboanga, did you go to CIDG
Zamboanga to verify that information?
A: Yes, sir.

Q: What information did you get from Col. Kasim during that time?
Q: After that incident, what did you do if any?
A: The first time we met with [him] I asked him if he knew of the exact
location, if he can furnish us the location of Engr. Tagitis. And he A: We just left and as Ive mentioned, we just waited because that raw
was reading this report. He told us that Engr. Tagitis is in good information that he was reading to us [sic] after the custodial
hands. He is with the military, but he is not certain whether investigation, Engineer Tagitis will be released. [Emphasis
he is with the AFP or PNP. He has this serious case. He was supplied][166]
charged of terrorism because he was under surveillance from
January 2007 up to the time that he was abducted. He told us
that he was under custodial investigation. As Ive said earlier, Col. Kasim never denied that he met with the respondent and her friends,
he was seen under surveillance from January. He was seen and that he provided them information based on the input of an unnamed asset.
talking to Omar Patik, a certain Santos of Bulacan who is He simply claimed in his testimony that the informal letter he received from his
also a Balik Islam and charged with terrorism. He was seen
carrying boxes of medicines.Then we asked him how long will informant in Sulu did not indicate that Tagitis was in the custody of the CIDG. He
he be in custodial investigation. He said until we can get some also stressed that the information he provided the respondent was merely a raw
information. But he also told us that he cannot give us that report
report from barangay intelligence that still needed confirmation and follow up as
because it was a raw report. It was not official, sir.
to its veracity.[167]
Q: You said that he was reading a report, was that report in document
form, in a piece of paper or was it in the computer or what?
To be sure, the respondents and Mrs. Talbins testimonies were far from
A: As far as I can see it, sir, it is written in white bond paper. I dont perfect, as the petitioners pointed out. The respondent mistakenly characterized
know if it was computerized but Im certain that it was Col. Kasim as a military officer who told her that her husband is being abducted
typewritten. Im not sure if it used computer, fax or what, sir.
because he is under custodial investigation because he is allegedly parang liason
Q: When he was reading it to you, was he reading it line by line or he ng J.I. The petitioners also noted that Mrs. Talbins testimony imputing certain
was reading in a summary form? statements to Sr. Supt. Kasim that Engr. Tagitis is with the military, but he is not
A: Sometimes he was glancing to the report and talking to us, sir. [165] certain whether it is the PNP or AFP is not worthy of belief, since Sr. Supt. Kasim
is a high ranking police officer who would certainly know that the PNP is not part
xxxx of the military.
Q: Were you informed as to the place where he was being kept during
that time?
Upon deeper consideration of these inconsistencies, however, what appears
A: He did not tell us where he [Tagitis] was being kept. But he clear to us is that the petitioners never really steadfastly disputed or presented
mentioned this Talipapao, Sulu, sir. evidence to refute the credibility of the respondent and her witness, Mrs.
Talbin. The inconsistencies the petitioners point out relate, more than anything Given this evidence, our next step is to decide whether we can accept this
else, to details that should not affect the credibility of the respondent and Mrs. evidence, in lieu of direct evidence, as proof that the disappearance of Tagitis was
Talbin; the inconsistencies are not on material points. [168] We note, for example, due to action with government participation, knowledge or consent and that he
that these witnesses are lay people in so far as military and police matters are was held for custodial investigation. We note in this regard that Col. Kasim was
concerned, and confusion between the police and the military is not unusual. As a never quoted to have said that the custodial investigation was by the CIDG
rule, minor inconsistencies such as these indicate truthfulness rather than Zamboanga. The Kasim evidence only implies government intervention through
prevarication[169]and only tend to strengthen their probative value, in contrast to the use of the term custodial investigation, and does not at all point to CIDG
testimonies from various witnesses dovetailing on every detail; the latter cannot Zamboanga as Tagitis custodian.
but generate suspicion that the material circumstances they testified to were
integral parts of a well thought of and prefabricated story.[170] Strictly speaking, we are faced here with a classic case of hearsay
evidence i.e., evidence whose probative value is not based on the personal
Based on these considerations and the unique evidentiary situation in knowledge of the witnesses (the respondent, Mrs. Talbin and Col. Kasim himself)
enforced disappearance cases, we hold it duly established that Col. Kasim but on the knowledge of some other person not on the witness stand (the
informed the respondent and her friends, based on the informants letter, that informant).[172]
Tagitis, reputedly a liaison for the JI and who had been under surveillance
since January 2007, was in good hands and under custodial investigation for To say that this piece of evidence is incompetent and inadmissible evidence
complicity with the JI after he was seen talking to one Omar Patik and a of what it substantively states is to acknowledge as the petitioners effectively
certain Santos of Bulacan, a Balik Islam charged with terrorism. The suggest that in the absence of any direct evidence, we should simply dismiss the
respondents and Mrs. Talbins testimonies cannot simply be defeated by Col. petition. To our mind, an immediate dismissal for this reason is no different from
Kasims plain denial and his claim that he had destroyed his informants letter, the a statement that the Amparo Rule despite its terms is ineffective, as it cannot
critical piece of evidence that supports or negates the parties conflicting claims. allow for the special evidentiary difficulties that are unavoidably present
Col. Kasims admitted destruction of this letter effectively, a suppression of this in Amparo situations, particularly in extrajudicial killings and enforced
evidence raises the presumption that the letter, if produced, would be proof of disappearances. The Amparo Rule was not promulgated with this intent or with
what the respondent claimed.[171] For brevity, we shall call the evidence of what the intent to make it a token gesture of concern for constitutional rights. It was
Col. Kasim reported to the respondent to be the Kasim evidence. promulgated to provide effective and timely remedies, using and profiting from
local and international experiences in extrajudicial killings and enforced
disappearances, as the situation may require. Consequently, we have no choice but evidence, no other information exists in the records relating to the personal
to meet the evidentiary difficulties inherent in enforced disappearances with the circumstances of Tagitis.
flexibility that these difficulties demand.
The actual disappearance of Tagitis is as murky as his personal
To give full meaning to our Constitution and the rights it protects, we hold circumstances. While the Amparo petition recited that he was taken away by burly
that, as in Velasquez, we should at least take a close look at the available evidence men believed to be police intelligence operatives, no evidence whatsoever was
to determine the correct import of every piece of evidence even of those usually introduced to support this allegation. Thus, the available direct evidence is that
considered inadmissible under the general rules of evidence taking into account Tagitis was last seen at 12.30 p.m. of October 30, 2007 the day he arrived in Jolo
the surrounding circumstances and the test of reason that we can use as basic and was never seen again.
minimum admissibility requirement. In the present case, we should at least
determine whether the Kasim evidence before us is relevant and meaningful to the The Kasim evidence assumes critical materiality given the dearth of direct
disappearance of Tagistis and reasonably consistent with other evidence in the evidence on the above aspects of the case, as it supplies the gaps that were never
case. looked into and clarified by police investigation. It is the evidence, too, that colors
a simple missing person report into an enforced disappearance case, as it injects
The evidence about Tagitis personal circumstances surrounded him with an the element of participation by agents of the State and thus brings into question
air of mystery. He was reputedly a consultant of the World Bank and a Senior how the State reacted to the disappearance.
Honorary Counselor for the IDB who attended a seminar in Zamboanga and
thereafter proceded to Jolo for an overnight stay, indicated by his request to Denials on the part of the police authorities, and frustration on the part of
Kunnong for the purchase of a return ticket to Zamboanga the day after he arrived the respondent, characterize the attempts to locate Tagitis. Initially in Jolo, the
in Jolo. Nothing in the records indicates the purpose of his overnight sojourn in police informed Kunnong that Tagitis could have been taken by the Abu Sayyaf or
Jolo. A colleague in the IDB, Prof. Matli, early on informed the Jolo police that other groups fighting the government. No evidence was ever offered on whether
Tagitis may have taken funds given to him in trust for IDB scholars. Prof Matli there was active Jolo police investigation and how and why the Jolo police
later on stated that he never accused Tagitis of taking away money held in trust, arrived at this conclusion. The respondents own inquiry in Jolo yielded the
although he confirmed that the IDB was seeking assistance in locating funds of answer that he was not missing but was with another woman somewhere. Again,
IDB scholars deposited in Tagitis personal account. Other than these pieces of no evidence exists that this explanation was arrived at based on an
investigation. As already related above, the inquiry with Col. Ancanan in
Zamboanga yielded ambivalent results not useful for evidentiary purposes. Thus,
it was only the inquiry from Col. Kasim that yielded positive results. Col. Kasims The extent to which the police authorities acted was fully tested when the
story, however, confirmed only the fact of his custodial investigation (and, CA constituted TASK FORCE TAGITIS, with specific directives on what to
impliedly, his arrest or abduction), without identifying his abductor/s or the party do. The negative results reflected in the Returns on the writ were again replicated
holding him in custody. The more significant part of Col. Kasims story is that the during the three hearings the CA scheduled. Aside from the previously mentioned
abduction came after Tagitis was seen talking with Omar Patik and a certain retraction that Prof. Matli made to correct his accusation that Tagitis took money
Santos of Bulacan, a Balik Islam charged with terrorism. Mrs. Talbin mentioned, held in trust for students, PS Supt. Ajirim reiterated in his testimony that the
too, that Tagitis was being held at Talipapao, Sulu. None of the police agencies CIDG consistently denied any knowledge or complicity in any abduction and said
participating in the investigation ever pursued these leads.Notably, TASK that there was no basis to conclude that the CIDG or any police unit had anything
FORCE TAGITIS to which this information was relayed did not appear to have to do with the disappearance of Tagitis; he likewise considered it premature to
lifted a finger to pursue these aspects of the case. conclude that Tagitis simply ran away with the money in his custody. As already
noted above, the TASK FORCE notably did not pursue any investigation about
More denials were manifested in the Returns on the writ to the CA made by the personal circumstances of Tagitis, his background in relation to the IDB and
the petitioners. Then PNP Chief Gen. Avelino I. Razon merely reported the the background and activities of this Bank itself, and the reported sighting of
directives he sent to the ARMM Regional Director and the Regional Chief of the Tagistis with terrorists and his alleged custody in Talipapao, Sulu. No attempt
CIDG on Tagitis, and these reports merely reiterated the open-ended initial report appears to have ever been made to look into the alleged IDB funds that Tagitis
of the disappearance. The CIDG directed a search in all of its divisions with held in trust, or to tap any of the assets who are indispensable in investigations of
negative results. These, to the PNP Chief, constituted the exhaustion of all this nature. These omissions and negative results were aggravated by the CA
possible efforts. PNP-CIDG Chief General Edgardo M. Doromal, for his part, also findings that it was only as late as January 28, 2008 or three months after the
reported negative results after searching all divisions and departments [of the disappearance that the police authorities requested for clear pictures of
CIDG] for a person named Engr. Morced N. Tagitis . . . and after a diligent and Tagitis. Col. Kasim could not attend the trial because his subpoena was not
thorough research, records show that no such person is being detained in the served, despite the fact that he was designated as Ajirims replacement in the
CIDG or any of its department or divisions. PNP-PACER Chief PS Supt. latters last post. Thus, Col. Kasim was not then questioned. No investigation even
Leonardo A. Espina and PNP PRO ARMM Regional Director PC Superintendent an internal one appeared to have been made to inquire into the identity of Col.
Joel R. Goltiao did no better in their affidavits-returns, as they essentially reported Kasims asset and what he indeed wrote.
the results of their directives to their units to search for Tagitis.
We glean from all these pieces of evidence and developments a search for Tagitis. Indisputably, the police authorities from the very beginning
consistency in the governments denial of any complicity in the disappearance failed to come up to the extraordinary diligence that the Amparo Rule requires.
of Tagitis, disrupted only by the report made by Col. Kasim to the
respondent at Camp Katitipan. Even Col. Kasim, however, eventually denied
CONCLUSIONS AND THE AMPARO REMEDY
that he ever made the disclosure that Tagitis was under custodial investigation for
complicity in terrorism. Another distinctive trait that runs through these
Based on these considerations, we conclude that Col. Kasims disclosure,
developments is the governments dismissive approach to the
made in an unguarded moment, unequivocally point to some government
disappearance, starting from the initial response by the Jolo police to Kunnongs
complicity in the disappearance. The consistent but unfounded denials and the
initial reports of the disappearance, to the responses made to the respondent when
haphazard investigations cannot but point to this conclusion. For why would the
she herself reported and inquired about her husbands disappearance, and even
government and its officials engage in their chorus of concealment if the intent
at TASK FORCE TAGITIS itself.
had not been to deny what they already knew of the disappearance? Would not an
in-depth and thorough investigation that at least credibly determined the fate of
As the CA found through TASK FORCE TAGITIS, the investigation was at
Tagitis be a feather in the governments cap under the circumstances of the
best haphazard since the authorities were looking for a man whose picture they
disappearance? From this perspective, the evidence and developments,
initially did not even secure. The returns and reports made to the CA fared no
particularly the Kasim evidence, already establish a concrete case of enforced
better, as the CIDG efforts themselves were confined to searching for custodial
disappearance that the Amparo Rule covers. From the prism of the UN
records of Tagitis in their various departments and divisions. To point out the
Declaration, heretofore cited and quoted,[173] the evidence at hand and the
obvious, if the abduction of Tagitis was a black operation because it was
developments in this case confirm the fact of the enforced disappearance and
unrecorded or officially unauthorized, no record of custody would ever appear in
government complicity, under a background of consistent and unfounded
the CIDG records; Tagitis, too, would not be detained in the usual police or CIDG
government denials and haphazard handling. The disappearance as well
detention places. In sum, none of the reports on record contains any
effectively placed Tagitis outside the protection of the law a situation that will
meaningful results or details on the depth and extent of the investigation
subsist unless this Court acts.
made. To be sure, reports of top police officials indicating the personnel and units
they directed to investigate can never constitute exhaustive and meaningful
This kind of fact situation and the conclusion reached are not without
investigation, or equal detailed investigative reports of the activities undertaken to
precedent in international enforced disappearance rulings. While the facts are not
exactly the same, the facts of this case run very close to those of Timurtas v.
Turkey,[174] a case decided by ECHR. The European tribunal in that case acted on
the basis of the photocopy of a post-operation report in finding that Abdulvahap The PNP and CIDG are accountable because Section 24 of Republic Act
Timurtas (Abdulvahap) was abducted and later detained by agents (gendarmes) of No. 6975, otherwise known as the PNP Law,[175] specifies the PNP as the
the government of Turkey. The victim's father in this case brought a claim against governmental officewith the mandate to investigate and prevent crimes, effect the
Turkey for numerous violations of the European Convention, including the right arrest of criminal offenders, bring offenders to justice and assist in their
to life (Article 2) and the rights to liberty and security of a person (Article 5). The prosecution. The PNP-CIDG, as Col. Jose Volpane Pante (then Chief of CIDG
applicant contended that on August 14, 1993, gendarmes apprehended his son, Region 9) testified, is the investigative arm of the PNP and is mandated to
Abdulvahap for being a leader of the Kurdish Workers Party (PKK) in the Silopi investigate and prosecute all cases involving violations of the Revised Penal
region. The petition was filed in southeast Turkey nearly six and one half years Code, particularly those considered as heinous crimes.[176] Under the PNP
after the apprehension. According to the father, gendarmes first detained organizational structure, the PNP-CIDG is tasked to investigate all major crimes
Abdulvahap and then transferred him to another detainment facility. Although involving violations of the Revised Penal Code and operates against organized
there was no eyewitness evidence of the apprehension or subsequent crime groups, unless the President assigns the case exclusively to the National
detainment, the applicant presented evidence corroborating his version of Bureau of Investigation (NBI).[177] No indication exists in this case showing that
events, including a photocopy of a post-operation report signed by the the President ever directly intervened by assigning the investigation of Tagitis
commander of gendarme operations in Silopi, Turkey. The report included a disappearance exclusively to the NBI.
description of Abdulvahap's arrest and the result of a subsequent interrogation
during detention where he was accused of being a leader of the PKK in the Silopi Given their mandates, the PNP and PNP-CIDG officials and members were
region. On this basis, Turkey was held responsible for Abdulvahaps enforced the ones who were remiss in their duties when the government completely failed
disappearance. to exercise the extral'>To fully enforce the Amparo remedy, we refer this case
back to the CA for appropriate proceedings directed at the monitoring of the PNP
Following the lead of this Turkish experience - adjusted to the and the PNP-CIDG investigations and actions, and the validation of their results
Philippine legal setting and the Amparo remedy this Court has established, through hearings the CA may deem appropriate to conduct. For purposes of these
as applied to the unique facts and developments of this case we believe and so investigations, the PNP/PNP-CIDG shall initially present to the CA a plan of
hold that the government in general, through the PNP and the PNP-CIDG, action for further investigation, periodically reporting the detailed results of its
and in particular, the Chiefs of these organizations together with Col. Kasim, investigation to the CA for its consideration and action.On behalf of this Court,
should be held fully accountable for the enforced disappearance of Tagitis. the CA shall pass upon: the need for the PNP and the PNP-CIDG to make
disclosures of matters known to them as indicated in this Decision and as further disappearance of Engineer Morced N. Tagitis, and for the conduct of
CA hearings may indicate; the petitioners submissions; the sufficiency of their proper investigations using extraordinary diligence, with the
investigative efforts; and submit to this Court a quarterly report containing its obligation to show investigation results acceptable to this Court;
actions and recommendations, copy furnished the petitioners and the respondent, e. Ordering Colonel Julasirim Ahadin Kasim impleaded in this case
with the first report due at the end of the first quarter counted from the finality of and holding him accountable with the obligation to disclose
this Decision. The PNP and the PNP-CIDG shall have one (1) full year to information known to him and to his assets in relation with the
undertake their investigation. The CA shall submit its full report for the enforced disappearance of Engineer Morced N. Tagitis;
consideration of this Court at the end of the 4th quarter counted from the finality of f. Referring this case back to the Court of Appeals for appropriate
this Decision. proceedings directed at the monitoring of the PNP and PNP-CIDG
investigations, actions and the validation of their results; the PNP and
WHEREFORE, premises considered, we DENY the petitioners petition the PNP-CIDG shall initially present to the Court of Appeals a plan
for review on certiorari for lack of merit, and AFFIRM the decision of the Court of action for further investigation, periodically reporting their results
of Appeals dated March 7, 2008 under the following terms: to the Court of Appeals for consideration and action;
g. Requiring the Court of Appeals to submit to this Court a quarterly
a. Recognition that the disappearance of Engineer Morced N. Tagitis is report with its recommendations, copy furnished the incumbent PNP
an enforced disappearance covered by the Rule on the Writ and PNP-CIDG Chiefs as petitioners and the respondent, with the
of Amparo; first report due at the end of the first quarter counted from the finality
b. Without any specific pronouncement on exact authorship and of this Decision;
responsibility, declaring the government (through the PNP and the h. The PNP and the PNP-CIDG shall have one (1) full year to
PNP-CIDG) and Colonel Julasirim Ahadin Kasim accountable for undertake their investigations; the Court of Appeals shall submit its
the enforced disappearance of Engineer Morced N. Tagitis; full report for the consideration of this Court at the end of the
c. Confirmation of the validity of the Writ of Amparo the Court of 4th quarter counted from the finality of this Decision;
Appeals issued;
d. Holding the PNP, through the PNP Chief, and the PNP-CIDG, These directives and those of the Court of Appeals made pursuant to this
through its Chief, directly responsible for the disclosure of material Decision shall be given to, and shall be directly enforceable against, whoever may
facts known to the government and to their offices regarding the be the incumbent Chiefs of the Philippine National Police and its Criminal
Investigation and Detection Group, under pain of contempt from this Court when
the initiatives and efforts at disclosure and investigation constitute less than the
extraordinary diligence that the Rule on the Writ of Amparo and the circumstances
of this case demand. Given the unique nature of Amparo cases and their varying
attendant circumstances, these directives particularly, the referral back to and
monitoring by the CA are specific to this case and are not standard remedies that
can be applied to every Amparo situation.

The dismissal of the Amparo petition with respect to General Alexander


Yano, Commanding General, Philippine Army, and General Ruben Rafael, Chief,
Anti-Terrorism Task Force Comet, Zamboanga City, is hereby AFFIRMED.

SO ORDERED.
PRISCILLA C. MIJARES, LORETTA ANN P. ROSALES, HILDA B. enforce a judgment awarded them by a foreign court. There is an
NARCISO, SR. MARIANI DIMARANAN, SFIC, and JOEL C. understandable temptation to cast the struggle within the simplistic confines
LAMANGAN in their behalf and on behalf of the Class Plaintiffs of a morality tale, and to employ short-cuts to arrive at what might seem the
in Class Action No. MDL 840, United States District Court of desirable solution. But easy, reflexive resort to the equity principle all too
Hawaii, petitioners, vs. HON. SANTIAGO JAVIER RANADA, in often leads to a result that may be morally correct, but legally wrong.
his capacity as Presiding Judge of Branch 137, Regional Trial Nonetheless, the application of the legal principles involved in this case
Court, Makati City, and the ESTATE OF FERDINAND E. will comfort those who maintain that our substantive and procedural laws, for
MARCOS, through its court appointed legal representatives in all their perceived ambiguity and susceptibility to myriad interpretations, are
Class Action MDL 840, United States District Court of Hawaii, inherently fair and just. The relief sought by the petitioners is expressly
namely: Imelda R. Marcos and Ferdinand Marcos, mandated by our laws and conforms to established legal principles. The
Jr., respondents. granting of this petition for certiorari is warranted in order to correct the
legally infirm and unabashedly unjust ruling of the respondent judge.
DECISION
The essential facts bear little elaboration. On 9 May 1991, a complaint
TINGA, J.:
was filed with the United States District Court (US District Court), District of
Hawaii, against the Estate of former Philippine President Ferdinand E.
Our martial law experience bore strange unwanted fruits, and we have
Marcos (Marcos Estate). The action was brought forth by ten Filipino
yet to finish weeding out its bitter crop. While the restoration of freedom and
citizens who each alleged having suffered human rights abuses such as
[2]

the fundamental structures and processes of democracy have been much


arbitrary detention, torture and rape in the hands of police or military forces
lauded, according to a significant number, the changes, however, have not
during the Marcos regime. The Alien Tort Act was invoked as basis for the
[3]

sufficiently healed the colossal damage wrought under the oppressive


US District Courts jurisdiction over the complaint, as it involved a suit by
conditions of the martial law period. The cries of justice for the tortured, the
aliens for tortious violations of international law. These plaintiffs brought the
[4]

murdered, and the desaparecidos arouse outrage and sympathy in the hearts
action on their own behalf and on behalf of a class of similarly situated
of the fair-minded, yet the dispensation of the appropriate relief due them
individuals, particularly consisting of all current civilian citizens of the
cannot be extended through the same caprice or whim that characterized the
Philippines, their heirs and beneficiaries, who between 1972 and 1987 were
ill-wind of martial rule. The damage done was not merely personal but
tortured, summarily executed or had disappeared while in the custody of
institutional, and the proper rebuke to the iniquitous past has to involve the
military or paramilitary groups. Plaintiffs alleged that the class consisted of
award of reparations due within the confines of the restored rule of law.
approximately ten thousand (10,000) members; hence, joinder of all these
The petitioners in this case are prominent victims of human rights persons was impracticable.
violations who, deprived of the opportunity to directly confront the man who
[1]

The institution of a class action suit was warranted under Rule 23(a) and
once held absolute rule over this country, have chosen to do battle instead
(b)(1)(B) of the US Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the provisions of which
with the earthly representative, his estate. The clash has been for now
were invoked by the plaintiffs. Subsequently, the US District Court certified
interrupted by a trial court ruling, seemingly comported to legal logic, that
the case as a class action and created three (3) sub-classes of torture,
required the petitioners to pay a whopping filing fee of over Four Hundred
summary execution and disappearance victims. Trial ensued, and
[5]

Seventy-Two Million Pesos (P472,000,000.00) in order that they be able to


subsequently a jury rendered a verdict and an award of compensatory and
exemplary damages in favor of the plaintiff class. Then, on 3 February 1995, 7(a) of Rule 141 of the Rules of Civil Procedure would find application, and
the US District Court, presided by Judge Manuel L. Real, rendered a Final the RTC estimated the proper amount of filing fees was approximately Four
Judgment (Final Judgment) awarding the plaintiff class a total of One Billion Hundred Seventy Two Million Pesos, which obviously had not been paid.
Nine Hundred Sixty Four Million Five Thousand Eight Hundred Fifty Nine
Not surprisingly, petitioners filed a Motion for Reconsideration, which
Dollars and Ninety Cents ($1,964,005,859.90). The Final Judgment was
Judge Ranada denied in an Order dated 28 July 1999. From this denial,
eventually affirmed by the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, in a
petitioners filed a Petition for Certiorariunder Rule 65 assailing the twin
decision rendered on 17 December 1996. [6]

orders of respondent judge. They prayed for the annulment of the


[11]

On 20 May 1997, the present petitioners filed Complaint with the questioned orders, and an order directing the reinstatement of Civil Case No.
Regional Trial Court, City of Makati (Makati RTC) for the enforcement of 97-1052 and the conduct of appropriate proceedings thereon.
the Final Judgment. They alleged that they are members of the plaintiff class
Petitioners submit that their action is incapable of pecuniary estimation as
in whose favor the US District Court awarded damages. They argued that
[7]

the subject matter of the suit is the enforcement of a foreign judgment, and
since the Marcos Estate failed to file a petition for certiorari with the US
not an action for the collection of a sum of money or recovery of damages.
Supreme Court after the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals had affirmed the Final
They also point out that to require the class plaintiffs to pay Four Hundred
Judgment, the decision of the US District Court had become final and
Seventy Two Million Pesos (P472,000,000.00) in filing fees would negate and
executory, and hence should be recognized and enforced in the Philippines,
render inutile the liberal construction ordained by the Rules of Court, as
pursuant to Section 50, Rule 39 of the Rules of Court then in force.[8]

required by Section 6, Rule 1 of the Rules of Civil Procedure, particularly the


On 5 February 1998, the Marcos Estate filed a motion to dismiss, raising, inexpensive disposition of every action.
among others, the non-payment of the correct filing fees. It alleged that
Petitioners invoke Section 11, Article III of the Bill of Rights of the
petitioners had only paid Four Hundred Ten Pesos (P410.00) as docket and
Constitution, which provides that Free access to the courts and quasi-judicial
filing fees, notwithstanding the fact that they sought to enforce a monetary
bodies and adequate legal assistance shall not be denied to any person by
amount of damages in the amount of over Two and a Quarter Billion US
reason of poverty, a mandate which is essentially defeated by the required
Dollars (US$2.25 Billion). The Marcos Estate cited Supreme Court Circular
exorbitant filing fee. The adjudicated amount of the filing fee, as arrived at by
No. 7, pertaining to the proper computation and payment of docket fees. In
the RTC, was characterized as indisputably unfair, inequitable, and unjust.
response, the petitioners claimed that an action for the enforcement of a
foreign judgment is not capable of pecuniary estimation; hence, a filing fee of The Commission on Human Rights (CHR) was permitted to intervene in
only Four Hundred Ten Pesos (P410.00) was proper, pursuant to Section 7(c) this case. It urged that the petition be granted and a judgment rendered,
[12]

of Rule 141.[9] ordering the enforcement and execution of the District Court judgment in
accordance with Section 48, Rule 39 of the 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure.
On 9 September 1998, respondent Judge Santiago Javier Ranada of [10]

For the CHR, the Makati RTC erred in interpreting the action for the
the Makati RTC issued the subject Order dismissing the complaint without
execution of a foreign judgment as a new case, in violation of the principle
prejudice. Respondent judge opined that contrary to the petitioners
that once a case has been decided between the same parties in one country
submission, the subject matter of the complaint was indeed capable of
on the same issue with finality, it can no longer be relitigated again in another
pecuniary estimation, as it involved a judgment rendered by a foreign court
country. The CHR likewise invokes the principle of comity, and of vested
[13]

ordering the payment of definite sums of money, allowing for easy


rights.
determination of the value of the foreign judgment. On that score, Section
The Courts disposition on the issue of filing fees will prove a useful 8. For each P 1,000.00 in excess of
jurisprudential guidepost for courts confronted with actions enforcing foreign P 400,000.00 - P 10.00
judgments, particularly those lodged against an estate. There is no basis for
the issuance a limited pro hac vice ruling based on the special circumstances ...
of the petitioners as victims of martial law, or on the emotionally-charged
allegation of human rights abuses. (Emphasis supplied)
An examination of Rule 141 of the Rules of Court readily evinces that the Obviously, the above-quoted provision covers, on one hand, ordinary
respondent judge ignored the clear letter of the law when he concluded that actions, permissive counterclaims, third-party, etc. complaints and
the filing fee be computed based on the total sum claimed or the stated value complaints-in-interventions, and on the other, money claims against estates
of the property in litigation. which are not based on judgment. Thus, the relevant question for purposes
In dismissing the complaint, the respondent judge relied on Section 7(a), of the present petition is whether the action filed with the lower court is a
Rule 141 as basis for the computation of the filing fee of over P472 Million. money claim against an estate not based on judgment.
The provision states: Petitioners complaint may have been lodged against an estate, but it is
clearly based on a judgment, the Final Judgment of the US District Court.
SEC. 7. Clerk of Regional Trial Court.- The provision does not make any distinction between a local judgment and a
foreign judgment, and where the law does not distinguish, we shall not
(a) For filing an action or a permissive counterclaim or money claim
distinguish.
against an estate not based on judgment, or for filing with leave of court a
third-party, fourth-party, etc., complaint, or a complaint in intervention, and A reading of Section 7 in its entirety reveals several instances wherein the
for all clerical services in the same time, if the total sum claimed, exclusive of filing fee is computed on the basis of the amount of the relief sought, or on
interest, or the started value of the property in litigation, is: the value of the property in litigation. The filing fee for requests for
extrajudicial foreclosure of mortgage is based on the amount of indebtedness
1. Less than P 100,00.00 P 500.00 or the mortgagees claim. In special proceedings involving properties such
[14]

2. P 100,000.00 or more - P 800.00 as for the allowance of wills, the filing fee is again based on the value of the
but less than P 150,000.00 property. The aforecited rules evidently have no application to petitioners
[15]

3. P 150,000.00 or more but - P 1,000.00 complaint.


less than P 200,000.00
Petitioners rely on Section 7(b), particularly the proviso on actions where
4. P 200,000.00 or more but
the value of the subject matter cannot be estimated. The provision reads in
less than P 250,000.00 - P 1,500.00
full:
5. P 250,000.00 or more but
less than P 300,00.00 - P 1,750.00 SEC. 7. Clerk of Regional Trial Court.-
6. P 300,000.00 or more but
not more than P 400,000.00 - P 2,000.00 (b) For filing
7. P 350,000.00 or more but not
more than P400,000.00 - P 2,250.00 1. Actions where the value
of the subject matter was prominently affirmed in the leading American case of Hilton v.
cannot be estimated --- P 600.00 Guyot and expressly recognized in our jurisprudence beginning
[18]

with Ingenholl v. Walter E. Olsen & Co. The conditions required by the
[19]

2. Special civil actions except


Philippines for recognition and enforcement of a foreign judgment were
judicial foreclosure which
originally contained in Section 311 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which was
shall be governed by
taken from the California Code of Civil Procedure which, in turn, was derived
paragraph (a) above --- P 600.00
from the California Act of March 11, 1872. Remarkably, the procedural rule
[20]

3. All other actions not now outlined in Section 48, Rule 39 of the Rules of Civil Procedure has
involving property --- P 600.00 remained unchanged down to the last word in nearly a century. Section 48
states:
In a real action, the assessed value of the property, or if there is none, the estimated
value, thereof shall be alleged by the claimant and shall be the basis in computing the SEC. 48. Effect of foreign judgments. The effect of a judgment of a tribunal of a
fees. foreign country, having jurisdiction to pronounce the judgment is as follows:

It is worth noting that the provision also provides that in real actions, the (a) In case of a judgment upon a specific thing, the judgment is conclusive upon the
assessed value or estimated value of the property shall be alleged by the title to the thing;
claimant and shall be the basis in computing the fees. Yet again, this
provision does not apply in the case at bar. A real action is one where the (b) In case of a judgment against a person, the judgment is presumptive evidence of a
plaintiff seeks the recovery of real property or an action affecting title to or right as between the parties and their successors in interest by a subsequent title;
recovery of possession of real property. Neither the complaint nor the award
[16]

of damages adjudicated by the US District Court involves any real property of In either case, the judgment or final order may be repelled by evidence of a want of
the Marcos Estate. jurisdiction, want of notice to the party, collusion, fraud, or clear mistake of law or
fact.
Thus, respondent judge was in clear and serious error when he
concluded that the filing fees should be computed on the basis of the There is an evident distinction between a foreign judgment in an action in
schematic table of Section 7(a), as the action involved pertains to a claim rem and one in personam. For an action in rem, the foreign judgment is
against an estate based on judgment. What provision, if any, then should deemed conclusive upon the title to the thing, while in an
apply in determining the filing fees for an action to enforce a foreign action in personam, the foreign judgment is presumptive, and not conclusive,
judgment? of a right as between the parties and their successors in interest by a
To resolve this question, a proper understanding is required on the nature subsequent title. However, in both cases, the foreign judgment is susceptible
[21]

and effects of a foreign judgment in this jurisdiction. to impeachment in our local courts on the grounds of want of jurisdiction or
notice to the party, collusion, fraud, or clear mistake of law or fact. Thus,
[22] [23] [24]

The rules of comity, utility and convenience of nations have established a the party aggrieved by the foreign judgment is entitled to defend against the
usage among civilized states by which final judgments of foreign courts of enforcement of such decision in the local forum. It is essential that there
competent jurisdiction are reciprocally respected and rendered efficacious should be an opportunity to challenge the foreign judgment, in order for the
under certain conditions that may vary in different countries. This principle
[17]
court in this jurisdiction to properly determine its efficacy. [25]
It is clear then that it is usually necessary for an action to be filed in order a foreign judgment, the matter left for proof is the foreign judgment itself, and
to enforce a foreign judgment , even if such judgment has conclusive effect
[26]
not the facts from which it prescinds.
as in the case of in rem actions, if only for the purpose of allowing the losing
As stated in Section 48, Rule 39, the actionable issues are generally
party an opportunity to challenge the foreign judgment, and in order for the
restricted to a review of jurisdiction of the foreign court, the service of
court to properly determine its efficacy. Consequently, the party attacking a
[27]

personal notice, collusion, fraud, or mistake of fact or law. The limitations on


foreign judgment has the burden of overcoming the presumption of its
review is in consonance with a strong and pervasive policy in all legal
validity.
[28]

systems to limit repetitive litigation on claims and issues. Otherwise known


[32]

The rules are silent as to what initiatory procedure must be undertaken in as the policy of preclusion, it seeks to protect party expectations resulting
order to enforce a foreign judgment in the Philippines. But there is no from previous litigation, to safeguard against the harassment of defendants,
question that the filing of a civil complaint is an appropriate measure for such to insure that the task of courts not be increased by never-ending litigation of
purpose. A civil action is one by which a party sues another for the the same disputes, and in a larger sense to promote what Lord Coke in
enforcement or protection of a right, and clearly an action to enforce a
[29]
the Ferrers Case of 1599 stated to be the goal of all law: rest and quietness.
foreign judgment is in essence a vindication of a right prescinding either from If every judgment of a foreign court were reviewable on the merits, the
[33]

a conclusive judgment upon title or the presumptive evidence of a right. plaintiff would be forced back on his/her original cause of action, rendering
Absent perhaps a statutory grant of jurisdiction to a quasi-judicial body, the
[30]
immaterial the previously concluded litigation. [34]

claim for enforcement of judgment must be brought before the regular courts.
[31] Petitioners appreciate this distinction, and rely upon it to support the
proposition that the subject matter of the complaintthe enforcement of a
There are distinctions, nuanced but discernible, between the cause of foreign judgmentis incapable of pecuniary estimation. Admittedly the
action arising from the enforcement of a foreign judgment, and that arising proposition, as it applies in this case, is counter-intuitive, and thus deserves
from the facts or allegations that occasioned the foreign judgment. They may strict scrutiny. For in all practical intents and purposes, the matter at hand is
pertain to the same set of facts, but there is an essential difference in the capable of pecuniary estimation, down to the last cent. In the
right-duty correlatives that are sought to be vindicated. For example, in a assailed Order, the respondent judge pounced upon this point without
complaint for damages against a tortfeasor, the cause of action emanates equivocation:
from the violation of the right of the complainant through the act or omission
of the respondent. On the other hand, in a complaint for the enforcement of a The Rules use the term where the value of the subject matter cannot be estimated.
foreign judgment awarding damages from the same tortfeasor, for the The subject matter of the present case is the judgment rendered by the foreign court
violation of the same right through the same manner of action, the cause of ordering defendant to pay plaintiffs definite sums of money, as and for compensatory
action derives not from the tortious act but from the foreign judgment itself. damages. The Court finds that the value of the foreign judgment can be estimated;
More importantly, the matters for proof are different. Using the above indeed, it can even be easily determined. The Court is not minded to distinguish
example, the complainant will have to establish before the court the tortious between the enforcement of a judgment and the amount of said judgment, and
act or omission committed by the tortfeasor, who in turn is allowed to rebut separate the two, for purposes of determining the correct filing fees. Similarly, a
these factual allegations or prove extenuating circumstances. Extensive plaintiff suing on promissory note for P1 million cannot be allowed to pay only P400
litigation is thus conducted on the facts, and from there the right to and filing fees (sic), on the reasoning that the subject matter of his suit is not the P1
amount of damages are assessed. On the other hand, in an action to enforce million, but the enforcement of the promissory note, and that the value of such
enforcement cannot be estimated. [35]
The jurisprudential standard in gauging whether the subject matter of an This is an intriguing argument, but ultimately it is self-evident that while
action is capable of pecuniary estimation is well-entrenched. The Marcos the subject matter of the action is undoubtedly the enforcement of a foreign
Estate cites Singsong v. Isabela Sawmill and Raymundo v. Court of Appeals, judgment, the effect of a providential award would be the adjudication of a
which ruled: sum of money. Perhaps in theory, such an action is primarily for the
enforcement of the foreign judgment, but there is a certain obtuseness to that
[I]n determining whether an action is one the subject matter of which is not capable sort of argument since there is no denying that the enforcement of the foreign
of pecuniary estimation this Court has adopted the criterion of first ascertaining the judgment will necessarily result in the award of a definite sum of money.
nature of the principal action or remedy sought. If it is primarily for the recovery of a
sum of money, the claim is considered capable of pecuniary estimation, and whether But before we insist upon this conclusion past beyond the point of
reckoning, we must examine its possible ramifications. Petitioners raise the
jurisdiction is in the municipal courts or in the courts of first instance would depend
on the amount of the claim. However, where the basic issue is something other than point that a declaration that an action for enforcement of foreign judgment
may be capable of pecuniary estimation might lead to an instance wherein a
the right to recover a sum of money, where the money claim is purely incidental to,
or a consequence of, the principal relief sought, this Court has considered such first level court such as the Municipal Trial Court would have jurisdiction to
enforce a foreign judgment. But under the statute defining the jurisdiction of
actions as cases where the subject of the litigation may not be estimated in terms of
money, and are cognizable exclusively by courts of first instance (now Regional Trial first level courts, B.P. 129, such courts are not vested with jurisdiction over
actions for the enforcement of foreign judgments.
Courts).
Sec. 33. Jurisdiction of Metropolitan Trial Courts, Municipal Trial Courts and
On the other hand, petitioners cite the ponencia of Justice JBL Reyes
Municipal Circuit Trial Courts in civil cases. Metropolitan Trial Courts, Municipal
in Lapitan v. Scandia, from [36]
which the rule
Trial Courts, and Municipal Circuit Trial Courts shall exercise:
in Singsong and Raymundo actually derives, but which incorporates this
additional nuance omitted in the latter cases: (1) Exclusive original jurisdiction over civil actions and probate proceedings, testate
and intestate, including the grant of provisional remedies in proper cases, where the
xxx However, where the basic issue is something other than the right to recover a value of the personal property, estate, or amount of the demand does not exceed One
sum of money, where the money claim is purely incidental to, or a consequence of, hundred thousand pesos (P100,000.00) or, in Metro Manila where such personal
the principal relief sought, like in suits to have the defendant perform his part of property, estate, or amount of the demand does not exceed Two hundred thousand
pesos (P200,000.00) exclusive of interest damages of whatever kind, attorney's fees,
the contract (specific performance) and in actions for support, or for annulment litigation expenses, and costs, the amount of which must be specifically alleged:
of judgment or to foreclose a mortgage, this Court has considered such actions as Provided, That where there are several claims or causes of action between the same
cases where the subject of the litigation may not be estimated in terms of money, and or different parties, embodied in the same complaint, the amount of the demand shall
are cognizable exclusively by courts of first instance. [37] be the totality of the claims in all the causes of action, irrespective of whether the
causes of action arose out of the same or different transactions;
Petitioners go on to add that among the actions the Court has recognized (2) Exclusive original jurisdiction over cases of forcible entry and unlawful
as being incapable of pecuniary estimation include legality of conveyances detainer: Provided, That when, in such cases, the defendant raises the question of
ownership in his pleadings and the question of possession cannot be resolved without
and money deposits, validity of a mortgage, the right to support, validity
[38] [39] [40]
deciding the issue of ownership, the issue of ownership shall be resolved only to
of documents, rescission of contracts, specific performance, and validity
[41] [42] [43]
determine the issue of possession.
or annulment of judgments. It is urged that an action for enforcement of a
[44]

(3) Exclusive original jurisdiction in all civil actions which involve title to, or possession
foreign judgment belongs to the same class. of, real property, or any interest therein where the assessed value of the property or
interest therein does not exceed Twenty thousand pesos (P20,000.00) or, in civil Notably, the amount paid as docket fees by the petitioners on the premise
actions in Metro Manila, where such assessed value does not exceed Fifty thousand that it was an action incapable of pecuniary estimation corresponds to the
pesos (P50,000.00) exclusive of interest, damages of whatever kind, attorney's fees,
litigation expenses and costs: Provided, That value of such property shall be same amount required for other actions not involving property. The
determined by the assessed value of the adjacent lots.[45] petitioners thus paid the correct amount of filing fees, and it was a grave
abuse of discretion for respondent judge to have applied instead a clearly
Section 33 of B.P. 129 refers to instances wherein the cause of action or
inapplicable rule and dismissed the complaint.
subject matter pertains to an assertion of rights and interests over property or
a sum of money. But as earlier pointed out, the subject matter of an action to There is another consideration of supreme relevance in this case, one
enforce a foreign judgment is the foreign judgment itself, and the cause of which should disabuse the notion that the doctrine affirmed in this decision is
action arising from the adjudication of such judgment. grounded solely on the letter of the procedural rule. We earlier adverted to
the the internationally recognized policy of preclusion, as well as the [46]

An examination of Section 19(6), B.P. 129 reveals that the instant


principles of comity, utility and convenience of nations as the basis for the
[47]

complaint for enforcement of a foreign judgment, even if capable of pecuniary


evolution of the rule calling for the recognition and enforcement of foreign
estimation, would fall under the jurisdiction of the Regional Trial Courts, thus
judgments. The US Supreme Court in Hilton v. Guyot relied heavily on the
[48]

negating the fears of the petitioners. Indeed, an examination of the provision


concept of comity, as especially derived from the landmark treatise of Justice
indicates that it can be relied upon as jurisdictional basis with respect to
Story in his Commentaries on the Conflict of Laws of 1834. Yet the notion of[49]

actions for enforcement of foreign judgments, provided that no other court or


comity has since been criticized as one of dim contours or suffering from a
[50]

office is vested jurisdiction over such complaint:


number of fallacies. Other conceptual bases for the recognition of foreign
[51]

Sec. 19. Jurisdiction in civil cases. Regional Trial Courts shall exercise exclusive judgments have evolved such as the vested rights theory or the modern
original jurisdiction: doctrine of obligation.[52]

There have been attempts to codify through treaties or multilateral


xxx agreements the standards for the recognition and enforcement of foreign
judgments, but these have not borne fruition. The members of the European
(6) In all cases not within the exclusive jurisdiction of any court, tribunal, person or Common Market accede to the Judgments Convention, signed in 1978,
body exercising jurisdiction or any court, tribunal, person or body exercising judicial which eliminates as to participating countries all of such obstacles to
or quasi-judicial functions. recognition such as reciprocity and rvision au fond. The most ambitious of
[53]

these attempts is the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of


Thus, we are comfortable in asserting the obvious, that the complaint to Foreign Judgments in Civil and Commercial Matters, prepared in 1966 by the
enforce the US District Court judgment is one capable of pecuniary Hague Conference of International Law. While it has not received the
[54]

estimation. But at the same time, it is also an action based on judgment ratifications needed to have it take effect, it is recognized as representing
[55]

against an estate, thus placing it beyond the ambit of Section 7(a) of Rule current scholarly thought on the topic. Neither the Philippines nor the United
[56]

141. What provision then governs the proper computation of the filing fees States are signatories to the Convention.
over the instant complaint? For this case and other similarly situated
instances, we find that it is covered by Section 7(b)(3), involving as it does,
other actions not involving property.
Yet even if there is no unanimity as to the applicable theory behind the affirmation with foreign jurisprudence and commentators, as well as the
[60]

recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments or a universal treaty doctrine that the foreign judgment must not constitute a clear mistake of law
rendering it obligatory force, there is consensus that the viability of such or fact. And finally, it has been recognized that public policy as a defense to
[61]

recognition and enforcement is essential. Steiner and Vagts note: the recognition of judgments serves as an umbrella for a variety of concerns
in international practice which may lead to a denial of recognition. [62]

. . . The notion of unconnected bodies of national law on private international law,


each following a quite separate path, is not one conducive to the growth of a The viability of the public policy defense against the enforcement of a
foreign judgment has been recognized in this jurisdiction. This defense [63]

transnational community encouraging travel and commerce among its members.


There is a contemporary resurgence of writing stressing the identity or similarity of allows for the application of local standards in reviewing the foreign
judgment, especially when such judgment creates only a presumptive right,
the values that systems of public and private international law seek to further a
community interest in common, or at least reasonable, rules on these matters in as it does in cases wherein the judgment is against a person. The defense [64]

is also recognized within the international sphere, as many civil law nations
national legal systems. And such generic principles as reciprocity play an important
role in both fields.
[57]
adhere to a broad public policy exception which may result in a denial of
recognition when the foreign court, in the light of the choice-of-law rules of
Salonga, whose treatise on private international law is of worldwide the recognizing court, applied the wrong law to the case. The public policy
[65]

renown, points out: defense can safeguard against possible abuses to the easy resort to offshore
litigation if it can be demonstrated that the original claim is noxious to our
Whatever be the theory as to the basis for recognizing foreign judgments, there can constitutional values.
be little dispute that the end is to protect the reasonable expectations and demands of There is no obligatory rule derived from treaties or conventions that
the parties. Where the parties have submitted a matter for adjudication in the court of requires the Philippines to recognize foreign judgments, or allow a procedure
one state, and proceedings there are not tainted with irregularity, they may fairly be for the enforcement thereof. However, generally accepted principles of
expected to submit, within the state or elsewhere, to the enforcement of the judgment international law, by virtue of the incorporation clause of the Constitution,
issued by the court. [58]
form part of the laws of the land even if they do not derive from treaty
obligations. The classical formulation in international law sees those
[66]

There is also consensus as to the requisites for recognition of a foreign customary rules accepted as binding result from the combination two
judgment and the defenses against the enforcement thereof. As earlier elements: the established, widespread, and consistent practice on the part of
discussed, the exceptions enumerated in Section 48, Rule 39 have remain States; and a psychological element known as the opinion juris sive
unchanged since the time they were adapted in this jurisdiction from long necessitates (opinion as to law or necessity). Implicit in the latter element is a
standing American rules. The requisites and exceptions as delineated under belief that the practice in question is rendered obligatory by the existence of
Section 48 are but a restatement of generally accepted principles of a rule of law requiring it.
[67]

international law. Section 98 of The Restatement, Second, Conflict of Laws,


states that a valid judgment rendered in a foreign nation after a fair trial in a While the definite conceptual parameters of the recognition and
contested proceeding will be recognized in the United States, and on its face, enforcement of foreign judgments have not been authoritatively established,
the term valid brings into play requirements such notions as valid jurisdiction the Court can assert with certainty that such an undertaking is among those
over the subject matter and parties. Similarly, the notion that fraud or
[59] generally accepted principles of international law. As earlier demonstrated,
[68]

collusion may preclude the enforcement of a foreign judgment finds there is a widespread practice among states accepting in principle the need
for such recognition and enforcement, albeit subject to limitations of varying The preclusion of an action for enforcement of a foreign judgment in this
degrees. The fact that there is no binding universal treaty governing the country merely due to an exhorbitant assessment of docket fees is alien to
practice is not indicative of a widespread rejection of the principle, but only a generally accepted practices and principles in international law. Indeed, there
disagreement as to the imposable specific rules governing the procedure for are grave concerns in conditioning the amount of the filing fee on the
recognition and enforcement. pecuniary award or the value of the property subject of the foreign decision.
Such pecuniary award will almost certainly be in foreign denomination,
Aside from the widespread practice, it is indubitable that the procedure for
computed in accordance with the applicable laws and standards of the forum.
recognition and enforcement is embodied in the rules of law, whether [72]
The vagaries of inflation, as well as the relative low-income capacity of the
statutory or jurisprudential, adopted in various foreign jurisdictions. In the
Filipino, to date may very well translate into an award virtually unenforceable
Philippines, this is evidenced primarily by Section 48, Rule 39 of the Rules of
in this country, despite its integral validity, if the docket fees for the
Court which has existed in its current form since the early 1900s. Certainly,
enforcement thereof were predicated on the amount of the award sought to
the Philippine legal system has long ago accepted into its jurisprudence and
be enforced. The theory adopted by respondent judge and the Marcos Estate
procedural rules the viability of an action for enforcement of foreign judgment,
may even lead to absurdities, such as if applied to an award involving real
as well as the requisites for such valid enforcement, as derived from
property situated in places such as the United States or Scandinavia where
internationally accepted doctrines. Again, there may be distinctions as to the
real property values are inexorably high. We cannot very well require that the
rules adopted by each particular state, but they all prescind from the
[69]

filing fee be computed based on the value of the foreign property as


premise that there is a rule of law obliging states to allow for, however
determined by the standards of the country where it is located.
generally, the recognition and enforcement of a foreign judgment. The bare
principle, to our mind, has attained the status of opinio juris in international As crafted, Rule 141 of the Rules of Civil Procedure avoids
practice. unreasonableness, as it recognizes that the subject matter of an action for
enforcement of a foreign judgment is the foreign judgment itself, and not the
This is a significant proposition, as it acknowledges that the procedure
right-duty correlatives that resulted in the foreign judgment. In this particular
and requisites outlined in Section 48, Rule 39 derive their efficacy not merely
circumstance, given that the complaint is lodged against an estate and is
from the procedural rule, but by virtue of the incorporation clause of the
based on the US District Courts Final Judgment, this foreign judgment may,
Constitution. Rules of procedure are promulgated by the Supreme Court,
for purposes of classification under the governing procedural rule, be
and could very well be abrogated or revised by the high court itself. Yet the
[70]

deemed as subsumed under Section 7(b)(3) of Rule 141, i.e., within the class
Supreme Court is obliged, as are all State components, to obey the laws of
of all other actions not involving property. Thus, only the blanket filing fee of
the land, including generally accepted principles of international law which
minimal amount is required.
form part thereof, such as those ensuring the qualified recognition and
enforcement of foreign judgments. [71]
Finally, petitioners also invoke Section 11, Article III of the Constitution,
which states that [F]ree access to the courts and quasi-judicial bodies and
Thus, relative to the enforcement of foreign judgments in the Philippines,
adequate legal assistance shall not be denied to any person by reason of
it emerges that there is a general right recognized within our body of laws,
poverty. Since the provision is among the guarantees ensured by the Bill of
and affirmed by the Constitution, to seek recognition and enforcement of
Rights, it certainly gives rise to a demandable right. However, now is not the
foreign judgments, as well as a right to defend against such enforcement on
occasion to elaborate on the parameters of this constitutional right. Given our
the grounds of want of jurisdiction, want of notice to the party, collusion,
preceding discussion, it is not necessary to utilize this provision in order to
fraud, or clear mistake of law or fact.
grant the relief sought by the petitioners. It is axiomatic that the
constitutionality of an act will not be resolved by the courts if the controversy
can be settled on other grounds or unless the resolution thereof is
[73]

indispensable for the determination of the case. [74]

One more word. It bears noting that Section 48, Rule 39 acknowledges
that the Final Judgment is not conclusive yet, but presumptive evidence of a
right of the petitioners against the Marcos Estate. Moreover, the Marcos
Estate is not precluded to present evidence, if any, of want of jurisdiction,
want of notice to the party, collusion, fraud, or clear mistake of law or fact.
This ruling, decisive as it is on the question of filing fees and no other, does
not render verdict on the enforceability of the Final Judgment before the
courts under the jurisdiction of the Philippines, or for that matter any other
issue which may legitimately be presented before the trial court. Such issues
are to be litigated before the trial court, but within the confines of the matters
for proof as laid down in Section 48, Rule 39. On the other hand, the speedy
resolution of this claim by the trial court is encouraged, and contumacious
delay of the decision on the merits will not be brooked by this Court.
WHEREFORE, the petition is GRANTED. The assailed orders are
NULLIFIED and SET ASIDE, and a new order REINSTATING Civil Case No.
97-1052 is hereby issued. No costs.
SO ORDERED.
G.R. No. 221697 "Mary Grace Natividad Sonora Poe." Although necessary notations were made by OCR-Iloilo on
petitioner's foundling certificate reflecting the court decreed adoption, the petitioner's adoptive
2

MARY GRACE NATIVIDAD S. POE-LLAMANZARES, Petitioners, mother discovered only sometime in the second half of 2005 that the lawyer who handled
vs. petitioner's adoption failed to secure from the OCR-Iloilo a new Certificate of Live Birth indicating
COMELEC AND ESTRELLA C. ELAMPARO Respondents. petitioner's new name and the name of her adoptive parents. Without delay, petitioner's mother
3

executed an affidavit attesting to the lawyer's omission which she submitted to the OCR-Iloilo. On 4
x-----------------------x May 2006, OCR-Iloilo issued a new Certificate of Live Birth in the name of Mary Grace Natividad
Sonora Poe. 4

G.R. No. 221698-700


Having reached the age of eighteen (18) years in 1986, petitioner registered as a voter with the
local COMELEC Office in San Juan City. On 13 December 1986, she received her COMELEC
MARY GRACE NATIVIDAD S. POE-LLAMANZARES, Petitioners,
Voter's Identification Card for Precinct No. 196 in Greenhills, San Juan, Metro Manila. 5

vs.
COMELEC, FRANCISCO S. TATAD, ANTONIO P. CONTRERAS AND AMADO D.
VALDEZ Respondents. On 4 April 1988, petitioner applied for and was issued Philippine Passport No. F927287 by the 6

Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA). Subsequently, on 5 April 1993 and 19 May 1998, she renewed
her Philippine passport and respectively secured Philippine Passport Nos. L881511 and
DECISION
DD156616. 7

PEREZ, J.:
Initially, the petitioner enrolled and pursued a degree in Development Studies at the University of
the Philippines but she opted to continue her studies abroad and left for the United States of
8

Before the Court are two consolidated petitions under Rule 64 in relation to Rule 65 of the Rules of America (U.S.) in 1988. Petitioner graduated in 1991 from Boston College in Chestnuts Hill,
Court with extremely urgent application for an ex parte issuance of temporary Massachusetts where she earned her Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Studies. 9

restraining order/status quo ante order and/or writ of preliminary injunction assailing the following:
(1) 1 December 2015 Resolution of the Commission on Elections (COMELEC) Second Division; (2)
On 27 July 1991, petitioner married Teodoro Misael Daniel V. Llamanzares (Llamanzares), a citizen
23 December 2015 Resolution of the COMELEC En Banc, in SPA No. 15-001 (DC); (3) 11
of both the Philippines and the U.S., at Sanctuario de San Jose Parish in San Juan City. Desirous
10

December 2015 Resolution of the COMELEC First Division; and ( 4) 23 December 2015 Resolution
of being with her husband who was then based in the U.S., the couple flew back to the U.S. two
of the COMELEC En Banc, in SPA No. 15-002 (DC), SPA No. 15-007 (DC) and SPA No. 15-139
days after the wedding ceremony or on 29 July 1991. 11

(DC) for having been issued without jurisdiction or with grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack
or excess of jurisdiction.
While in the U.S., the petitioner gave birth to her eldest child Brian Daniel (Brian) on 16 April
1992. Her two daughters Hanna MacKenzie (Hanna) and Jesusa Anika (Anika) were both born in
12

The Facts
the Philippines on 10 July 1998 and 5 June 2004, respectively. 13

Mary Grace Natividad S. Poe-Llamanzares (petitioner) was found abandoned as a newborn infant
On 18 October 2001, petitioner became a naturalized American citizen. 14
She obtained U.S.
in the Parish Church of Jaro, Iloilo by a certain Edgardo Militar (Edgardo) on 3 September 1968.
Passport No. 017037793 on 19 December 2001. 15

Parental care and custody over petitioner was passed on by Edgardo to his relatives, Emiliano
Militar (Emiliano) and his wife. Three days after, 6 September 1968, Emiliano reported and
registered petitioner as a foundling with the Office of the Civil Registrar of Iloilo City (OCR-Iloilo). In On 8 April 2004, the petitioner came back to the Philippines together with Hanna to support her
her Foundling Certificate and Certificate of Live Birth, the petitioner was given the name "Mary father's candidacy for President in the May 2004 elections. It was during this time that she gave
Grace Natividad Contreras Militar." 1 birth to her youngest daughter Anika. She returned to the U.S. with her two daughters on 8 July
2004. 16

When petitioner was five (5) years old, celebrity spouses Ronald Allan Kelley Poe (a.k.a. Fenando
Poe, Jr.) and Jesusa Sonora Poe (a.k.a. Susan Roces) filed a petition for her adoption with the After a few months, specifically on 13 December 2004, petitioner rushed back to the Philippines
Municipal Trial Court (MTC) of San Juan City. On 13 May 1974, the trial court granted their petition upon learning of her father's deteriorating medical condition. Her father slipped into a coma and
17

and ordered that petitioner's name be changed from "Mary Grace Natividad Contreras Militar" to
eventually expired. The petitioner stayed in the country until 3 February 2005 to take care of her while her children are considered as citizens of the Philippines. Consequently, the BI issued
38

father's funeral arrangements as well as to assist in the settlement of his estate.18


Identification Certificates (ICs) in petitioner's name and in the names of her three (3) children. 39

According to the petitioner, the untimely demise of her father was a severe blow to her entire family. Again, petitioner registered as a voter of Barangay Santa Lucia, San Juan City on 31 August
In her earnest desire to be with her grieving mother, the petitioner and her husband decided to 2006. She also secured from the DFA a new Philippine Passport bearing the No.
40

move and reside permanently in the Philippines sometime in the first quarter of 2005. The couple
19
XX4731999. This passport was renewed on 18 March 2014 and she was issued Philippine
41

began preparing for their resettlement including notification of their children's schools that they will Passport No. EC0588861 by the DFA. 42

be transferring to Philippine schools for the next semester; coordination with property movers for
20

the relocation of their household goods, furniture and cars from the U.S. to the Philippines; and 21
On 6 October 2010, President Benigno S. Aquino III appointed petitioner as Chairperson of the
inquiry with Philippine authorities as to the proper procedure to be followed in bringing their pet dog Movie and Television Review and Classification Board (MTRCB). Before assuming her post,
43

into the country. As early as 2004, the petitioner already quit her job in the U.S.
22 23
petitioner executed an "Affidavit of Renunciation of Allegiance to the United States of America and
Renunciation of American Citizenship" before a notary public in Pasig City on 20 October 2010, in 44

Finally, petitioner came home to the Philippines on 24 May 2005 and without delay, secured a Tax
24
satisfaction of the legal requisites stated in Section 5 of R.A. No. 9225. The following day, 21
45

Identification Number from the Bureau of Internal Revenue. Her three (3) children immediately October 2010 petitioner submitted the said affidavit to the BI and took her oath of office as
46

followed while her husband was forced to stay in the U.S. to complete pending projects as well as
25
Chairperson of the MTRCB. From then on, petitioner stopped using her American passport.
47 48

to arrange the sale of their family home there.26

On 12 July 2011, the petitioner executed before the Vice Consul of the U.S. Embassy in Manila an
The petitioner and her children briefly stayed at her mother's place until she and her husband "Oath/Affirmation of Renunciation of Nationality of the United States." On that day, she 49

purchased a condominium unit with a parking slot at One Wilson Place Condominium in San Juan accomplished a sworn questionnaire before the U.S. Vice Consul wherein she stated that she had
City in the second half of 2005. The corresponding Condominium Certificates of Title covering the
27
taken her oath as MTRCB Chairperson on 21 October 2010 with the intent, among others, of
unit and parking slot were issued by the Register of Deeds of San Juan City to petitioner and her relinquishing her American citizenship. In the same questionnaire, the petitioner stated that she
50

husband on 20 February 2006. Meanwhile, her children of school age began attending Philippine
28
had resided outside of the U.S., specifically in the Philippines, from 3 September 1968 to 29 July
private schools. 1991 and from May 2005 to present. 51

On 14 February 2006, the petitioner made a quick trip to the U.S. to supervise the disposal of some On 9 December 2011, the U.S. Vice Consul issued to petitioner a "Certificate of Loss of Nationality
of the family's remaining household belongings. She travelled back to the Philippines on 11 March
29
of the United States" effective 21 October 2010. 52

2006.30

On 2 October 2012, the petitioner filed with the COMELEC her Certificate of Candidacy (COC) for
In late March 2006, petitioner's husband officially informed the U.S. Postal Service of the family's Senator for the 2013 Elections wherein she answered "6 years and 6 months" to the question
change and abandonment of their address in the U.S. The family home was eventually sold on 27
31
"Period of residence in the Philippines before May 13, 2013." Petitioner obtained the highest
53

April 2006. Petitioner's husband resigned from his job in the U.S. in April 2006, arrived in the
32
number of votes and was proclaimed Senator on 16 May 2013. 54

country on 4 May 2006 and started working for a major Philippine company in July 2006. 33

On 19 December 2013, petitioner obtained Philippine Diplomatic Passport No. DE0004530. 55

In early 2006, petitioner and her husband acquired a 509-square meter lot in Corinthian Hills,
Quezon City where they built their family home and to this day, is where the couple and their
34
On 15 October 2015, petitioner filed her COC for the Presidency for the May 2016 Elections. In 56

children have been residing. A Transfer Certificate of Title covering said property was issued in the
35
her COC, the petitioner declared that she is a natural-born citizen and that her residence in the
couple's name by the Register of Deeds of Quezon City on 1June 2006. Philippines up to the day before 9 May 2016 would be ten (10) years and eleven (11) months
counted from 24 May 2005. The petitioner attached to her COC an "Affidavit Affirming
57

On 7 July 2006, petitioner took her Oath of Allegiance to the Republic of the Philippines pursuant to Renunciation of U.S.A. Citizenship" subscribed and sworn to before a notary public in Quezon City
Republic Act (R.A.) No. 9225 or the Citizenship Retention and Re-acquisition Act of 2003. Under 36
on 14 October 2015. 58

the same Act, she filed with the Bureau of Immigration (BI) a sworn petition to reacquire Philippine
citizenship together with petitions for derivative citizenship on behalf of her three minor children on Petitioner's filing of her COC for President in the upcoming elections triggered the filing of several
10 July 2006. As can be gathered from its 18 July 2006 Order, the BI acted favorably on
37
COMELEC cases against her which were the subject of these consolidated cases.
petitioner's petitions and declared that she is deemed to have reacquired her Philippine citizenship
Origin of Petition for Certiorari in G.R. No. 221697 a. the 1934 Constitutional Convention deliberations show that foundlings were
considered citizens;
A day after petitioner filed her COC for President, Estrella Elamparo (Elamparo) filed a petition to
deny due course or cancel said COC which was docketed as SPA No. 15-001 (DC) and raffled to b. foundlings are presumed under international law to have been born of citizens of
the COMELEC Second Division. She is convinced that the COMELEC has jurisdiction over her
59
the place where they are found;
petition. Essentially, Elamparo's contention is that petitioner committed material misrepresentation
60

when she stated in her COC that she is a natural-born Filipino citizen and that she is a resident of c. she reacquired her natural-born Philippine citizenship under the provisions of
the Philippines for at least ten (10) years and eleven (11) months up to the day before the 9 May R.A. No. 9225;
2016 Elections. 61

d. she executed a sworn renunciation of her American citizenship prior to the filing
On the issue of citizenship, Elamparo argued that petitioner cannot be considered as a natural-born of her COC for President in the May 9, 2016 Elections and that the same is in full
Filipino on account of the fact that she was a foundling. Elamparo claimed that international law
62
force and effect and has not been withdrawn or recanted;
does not confer natural-born status and Filipino citizenship on foundlings. Following this line of
63

reasoning, petitioner is not qualified to apply for reacquisition of Filipino citizenship under R.A. No. e. the burden was on Elamparo in proving that she did not possess natural-born
9225 for she is not a natural-born Filipino citizen to begin with. Even assuming arguendo that
64
status;
petitioner was a natural-born Filipino, she is deemed to have lost that status when she became a
naturalized American citizen. According to Elamparo, natural-born citizenship must be continuous
65

f. residence is a matter of evidence and that she reestablished her domicile in the
from birth. 66

Philippines as early as May 24, 2005;


On the matter of petitioner's residency, Elamparo pointed out that petitioner was bound by the
g. she could reestablish residence even before she reacquired natural-born
sworn declaration she made in her 2012 COC for Senator wherein she indicated that she had
citizenship under R.A. No. 9225;
resided in the country for only six ( 6) years and six ( 6) months as of May 2013 Elections.
Elamparo likewise insisted that assuming arguendo that petitioner is qualified to regain her natural-
born status under R.A. No. 9225, she still fell short of the ten-year residency requirement of the h. statement regarding the period of residence in her 2012 COC for Senator was an
Constitution as her residence could only be counted at the earliest from July 2006, when she honest mistake, not binding and should give way to evidence on her true date of
reacquired Philippine citizenship under the said Act. Also on the assumption that petitioner is reacquisition of domicile;
qualified to reacquire lost Philippine Citizenship, Elamparo is of the belief that she failed to
reestablish her domicile in the Philippines.67 i. Elamparo's petition is merely an action to usurp the sovereign right of the Filipino
people to decide a purely political question, that is, should she serve as the
Petitioner seasonably filed her Answer wherein she countered that: country's next leader.68

(1) the COMELEC did not have jurisdiction over Elamparo's petition as it was actually a After the parties submitted their respective Memoranda, the petition was deemed submitted for
petition for quo warranto which could only be filed if Grace Poe wins in the Presidential resolution.
elections, and that the Department of Justice (DOJ) has primary jurisdiction to revoke the
BI's July 18, 2006 Order; On 1 December 2015, the COMELEC Second Division promulgated a Resolution finding that
petitioner's COC, filed for the purpose of running for the President of the Republic of the Philippines
(2) the petition failed to state a cause of action because it did not contain allegations which, in the 9 May 2016 National and Local Elections, contained material representations which are false.
if hypothetically admitted, would make false the statement in her COC that she is a natural- The fallo of the aforesaid Resolution reads:
born Filipino citizen nor was there any allegation that there was a willful or deliberate intent
to misrepresent on her part; WHEREFORE, in view of all the foregoing considerations, the instant Petition to Deny Due Course
to or Cancel Certificate of Candidacy is hereby GRANTED. Accordingly, the Certificate of
(3) she did not make any material misrepresentation in the COC regarding her citizenship Candidacy for President of the Republic of the Philippines in the May 9, 2016 National and Local
and residency qualifications for: Elections filed by respondent Mary Grace Natividad Sonora Poe Llamanzares is
hereby CANCELLED. 69
Motion for Reconsideration of the 1 December 2015 Resolution was filed by petitioner which the He further argued that petitioner's own admission in her COC for Senator that she had only been a
COMELEC En Banc resolved in its 23 December 2015 Resolution by denying the same. 70
resident of the Philippines for at least six (6) years and six (6) months prior to the 13 May 2013
Elections operates against her. Valdez rejected petitioner's claim that she could have validly
Origin of Petition for Certiorari in G.R. Nos. 221698-700 reestablished her domicile in the Philippines prior to her reacquisition of Philippine citizenship. In
effect, his position was that petitioner did not meet the ten (10) year residency requirement for
This case stemmed from three (3) separate petitions filed by Francisco S. Tatad (Tatad), Antonio P. President.
Contreras (Contreras) and Amado D. Valdez (Valdez) against petitioner before the COMELEC
which were consolidated and raffled to its First Division. Unlike the previous COMELEC cases filed against petitioner, Contreras' petition, docketed as SPA
85

No. 15-007 (DC), limited the attack to the residency issue. He claimed that petitioner's 2015 COC
In his petition to disqualify petitioner under Rule 25 of the COMELEC Rules of for President should be cancelled on the ground that she did not possess the ten-year period of
Procedure, docketed as SPA No. 15-002 (DC), Tatad alleged that petitioner lacks the requisite
71 residency required for said candidacy and that she made false entry in her COC when she stated
residency and citizenship to qualify her for the Presidency.72 that she is a legal resident of the Philippines for ten (10) years and eleven (11) months by 9 May
2016. Contreras contended that the reckoning period for computing petitioner's residency in the
86

Philippines should be from 18 July 2006, the date when her petition to reacquire Philippine
Tatad theorized that since the Philippines adheres to the principle of jus sanguinis, persons of
citizenship was approved by the BI. He asserted that petitioner's physical presence in the country
87

unknown parentage, particularly foundlings, cannot be considered natural-born Filipino citizens


before 18 July 2006 could not be valid evidence of reacquisition of her Philippine domicile since
since blood relationship is determinative of natural-born status. Tatad invoked the rule of statutory
73

she was then living here as an American citizen and as such, she was governed by the Philippine
construction that what is not included is excluded. He averred that the fact that foundlings were not
immigration laws. 88

expressly included in the categories of citizens in the 193 5 Constitution is indicative of the framers'
intent to exclude them. Therefore, the burden lies on petitioner to prove that she is a natural-born
74

citizen. 75 In her defense, petitioner raised the following arguments:

Neither can petitioner seek refuge under international conventions or treaties to support her claim First, Tatad's petition should be dismissed outright for failure to state a cause of action. His petition
that foundlings have a nationality. According to Tatad, international conventions and treaties are
76 did not invoke grounds proper for a disqualification case as enumerated under Sections 12 and 68
not self-executory and that local legislations are necessary in order to give effect to treaty of the Omnibus Election Code. Instead, Tatad completely relied on the alleged lack of residency
89

obligations assumed by the Philippines. He also stressed that there is no standard state practice
77 and natural-born status of petitioner which are not among the recognized grounds for the
that automatically confers natural-born status to foundlings. 78 disqualification of a candidate to an elective office.90

Similar to Elamparo's argument, Tatad claimed that petitioner cannot avail of the option to reacquire Second, the petitions filed against her are basically petitions for quo warranto as they focus on
Philippine citizenship under R.A. No. 9225 because it only applies to former natural-born citizens establishing her ineligibility for the Presidency. A petition for quo warranto falls within the exclusive
91

and petitioner was not as she was a foundling. 79 jurisdiction of the Presidential Electoral Tribunal (PET) and not the COMELEC. 92

Referring to petitioner's COC for Senator, Tatad concluded that she did not comply with the ten (10) Third, the burden to prove that she is not a natural-born Filipino citizen is on the
year residency requirement. Tatad opined that petitioner acquired her domicile in Quezon City only
80 respondents. Otherwise stated, she has a presumption in her favor that she is a natural-born
93

from the time she renounced her American citizenship which was sometime in 2010 or citizen of this country.
2011. Additionally, Tatad questioned petitioner's lack of intention to abandon her U.S. domicile as
81

evinced by the fact that her husband stayed thereat and her frequent trips to the U.S. 82 Fourth, customary international law dictates that foundlings are entitled to a nationality and are
presumed to be citizens of the country where they are found. Consequently, the petitioner is
94

In support of his petition to deny due course or cancel the COC of petitioner, docketed as SPA No. considered as a natural-born citizen of the Philippines. 95

15-139 (DC), Valdez alleged that her repatriation under R.A. No. 9225 did not bestow upon her the
status of a natural-born citizen. He advanced the view that former natural-born citizens who are
83 Fifth, she claimed that as a natural-born citizen, she has every right to be repatriated under R.A.
repatriated under the said Act reacquires only their Philippine citizenship and will not revert to their No. 9225 or the right to reacquire her natural-born status. Moreover, the official acts of the
96

original status as natural-born citizens. 84 Philippine Government enjoy the presumption of regularity, to wit: the issuance of the 18 July 2006
Order of the BI declaring her as natural-born citizen, her appointment as MTRCB Chair and the
issuance of the decree of adoption of San Juan RTC. She believed that all these acts reinforced
97

her position that she is a natural-born citizen of the Philippines.


98
Sixth, she maintained that as early as the first quarter of 2005, she started reestablishing her 2. Resolution dated 11 December 2015, rendered through its First Division, in the
domicile of choice in the Philippines as demonstrated by her children's resettlement and schooling consolidated cases SPA No. 15-002 (DC) entitled Francisco S. Tatad, petitioner, vs. Mary
in the country, purchase of a condominium unit in San Juan City and the construction of their family Grace Natividad Sonora Poe-Llamanzares, respondent; SPA No. 15-007 (DC)
home in Corinthian Hills.99
entitled Antonio P. Contreras, petitioner, vs. Mary Grace Natividad Sonora Poe-
Llamanzares, respondent; and SPA No. 15-139 (DC) entitled Amado D. Valdez, petitioner,
Seventh, she insisted that she could legally reestablish her domicile of choice in the Philippines v. Mary Grace Natividad Sonora Poe-Llamanzares, respondent.
even before she renounced her American citizenship as long as the three determinants for a
change of domicile are complied with. She reasoned out that there was no requirement that
100
3. Resolution dated 23 December 2015 of the Commission En Banc, upholding the 1
renunciation of foreign citizenship is a prerequisite for the acquisition of a new domicile of choice.
101
December 2015 Resolution of the Second Division.

Eighth, she reiterated that the period appearing in the residency portion of her COC for Senator 4. Resolution dated 23 December 2015 of the Commission En Banc, upholding the 11
was a mistake made in good faith. 102
December 2015 Resolution of the First Division.

In a Resolution promulgated on 11 December 2015, the COMELEC First Division ruled that
103
The procedure and the conclusions from which the questioned Resolutions emanated are tainted
petitioner is not a natural-born citizen, that she failed to complete the ten (10) year residency with grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack of jurisdiction. The petitioner is a QUALIFIED
requirement, and that she committed material misrepresentation in her COC when she declared CANDIDATE for President in the 9 May 2016 National Elections.
therein that she has been a resident of the Philippines for a period of ten (10) years and eleven (11)
months as of the day of the elections on 9 May 2016. The COMELEC First Division concluded that The issue before the COMELEC is whether or not the COC of petitioner should be denied due
she is not qualified for the elective position of President of the Republic of the Philippines. The course or cancelled "on the exclusive ground" that she made in the certificate a false material
dispositive portion of said Resolution reads: representation. The exclusivity of the ground should hedge in the discretion of the COMELEC and
restrain it from going into the issue of the qualifications of the candidate for the position, if, as in this
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the Commission RESOLVED, as it hereby RESOLVES, case, such issue is yet undecided or undetermined by the proper authority. The COMELEC cannot
to GRANT the Petitions and cancel the Certificate of Candidacy of MARY GRACE NATIVIDAD itself, in the same cancellation case, decide the qualification or lack thereof of the candidate.
SONORA POE-LLAMANZARES for the elective position of President of the Republic of the
Philippines in connection with the 9 May 2016 Synchronized Local and National Elections. We rely, first of all, on the Constitution of our Republic, particularly its provisions in Article IX, C,
Section 2:
Petitioner filed a motion for reconsideration seeking a reversal of the COMELEC First Division's
Resolution. On 23 December 2015, the COMELEC En Banc issued a Resolution denying Section 2. The Commission on Elections shall exercise the following powers and functions:
petitioner's motion for reconsideration.
(1) Enforce and administer all laws and regulations relative to the conduct of an
Alarmed by the adverse rulings of the COMELEC, petitioner instituted the present petitions election, plebiscite, initiative, referendum, and recall.
for certiorari with urgent prayer for the issuance of an ex parte temporary restraining order/status
quo ante order and/or writ of preliminary injunction. On 28 December 2015, temporary restraining (2) Exercise exclusive original jurisdiction over all contests relating to the elections,
orders were issued by the Court enjoining the COMELEC and its representatives from returns, and qualifications of all elective regional, provincial, and city officials, and
implementing the assailed COMELEC Resolutions until further orders from the Court. The Court appellate jurisdiction over all contests involving elective municipal officials decided
also ordered the consolidation of the two petitions filed by petitioner in its Resolution of 12 January by trial courts of general jurisdiction, or involving elective barangay officials decided
2016. Thereafter, oral arguments were held in these cases. by trial courts of limited jurisdiction.

The Court GRANTS the petition of Mary Grace Natividad S. Poe-Llamanzares and to ANNUL and Decisions, final orders, or rulings of the Commission on election contests involving
SET ASIDE the: elective municipal and barangay offices shall be final, executory, and not
appealable.
1. Resolution dated 1 December 2015 rendered through its Second Division, in SPA No. 15-
001 (DC), entitled Estrella C. Elamparo, petitioner, vs. Mary Grace Natividad Sonora Poe-
Llamanzares.
(3) Decide, except those involving the right to vote, all questions affecting elections, The Senate and the House of Representatives shall each have an Electoral Tribunal which
including determination of the number and location of polling places, appointment of shall be the sole judge of all contests relating to the election, returns, and qualifications of
election officials and inspectors, and registration of voters. 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
(4) Deputize, with the concurrence of the President, law enforcement agencies and Justice, and the remaining six shall be Members of the Senate or the House of
instrumentalities of the Government, including the Armed Forces of the Philippines, Representatives, as the case may be, who shall be chosen on the basis of proportional
for the exclusive purpose of ensuring free, orderly, honest, peaceful, and credible representation from the political parties and the parties or organizations registered under
elections. the party-list system represented therein. The senior Justice in the Electoral Tribunal shall
be its Chairman.
(5) Register, after sufficient publication, political parties, organizations, or coalitions
which, in addition to other requirements, must present their platform or program of or of the last paragraph of Article VII, Section 4 which provides that:
government; and accredit citizens' arms of the Commission on Elections. Religious
denominations and sects shall not be registered. Those which seek to achieve their The Supreme Court, sitting en banc, shall be the sole judge of all contests relating to the
goals through violence or unlawful means, or refuse to uphold and adhere to this election, returns, and qualifications of the President or Vice-President, and may promulgate
Constitution, or which are supported by any foreign government shall likewise be its rules for the purpose.
refused registration.
The tribunals which have jurisdiction over the question of the qualifications of the President, the
Financial contributions from foreign governments and their agencies to political Vice-President, Senators and the Members of the House of Representatives was made clear by the
parties, organizations, coalitions, or candidates related to elections constitute Constitution. There is no such provision for candidates for these positions.
interference in national affairs, and, when accepted, shall be an additional ground
for the cancellation of their registration with the Commission, in addition to other Can the COMELEC be such judge?
penalties that may be prescribed by law.
The opinion of Justice Vicente V. Mendoza in Romualdez-Marcos v. Commission on
(6) File, upon a verified complaint, or on its own initiative, petitions in court for Elections, which was affirmatively cited in the En Banc decision in Fermin v. COMELEC is our
104 105

inclusion or exclusion of voters; investigate and, where appropriate, prosecute guide. The citation in Fermin reads:
cases of violations of election laws, including acts or omissions constituting election
frauds, offenses, and malpractices. Apparently realizing the lack of an authorized proceeding for declaring the ineligibility of candidates,
the COMELEC amended its rules on February 15, 1993 so as to provide in Rule 25 § 1, the
(7) Recommend to the Congress effective measures to minimize election spending, following:
including limitation of places where propaganda materials shall be posted, and to
prevent and penalize all forms of election frauds, offenses, malpractices, and Grounds for disqualification. - Any candidate who does not possess all the
nuisance candidacies. qualifications of a candidate as provided for by the Constitution or by existing law or
who commits any act declared by law to be grounds for disqualification may be
(8) Recommend to the President the removal of any officer or employee it has disqualified from continuing as a candidate.
deputized, or the imposition of any other disciplinary action, for violation or
disregard of, or disobedience to its directive, order, or decision. The lack of provision for declaring the ineligibility of candidates, however, cannot be supplied by a
mere rule. Such an act is equivalent to the creation of a cause of action which is a substantive
(9) Submit to the President and the Congress a comprehensive report on the matter which the COMELEC, in the exercise of its rule-making power under Art. IX, A, §6 of the
conduct of each election, plebiscite, initiative, referendum, or recall. Constitution, cannot do it. It is noteworthy that the Constitution withholds from the COMELEC even
the power to decide cases involving the right to vote, which essentially involves an inquiry
Not any one of the enumerated powers approximate the exactitude of the provisions of Article VI, into qualifications based on age, residence and citizenship of voters. [Art. IX, C, §2(3)]
Section 17 of the same basic law stating that:
The assimilation in Rule 25 of the COMELEC rules of grounds for ineligibility into grounds for
disqualification is contrary to the evident intention of the law. For not only in their grounds but also
in their consequences are proceedings for "disqualification" different from those for a declaration of Third is the policy underlying the prohibition against pre-proclamation cases in elections for
"ineligibility." "Disqualification" proceedings, as already stated, are based on grounds specified in § President, Vice President, Senators and members of the House of Representatives. (R.A. No.
12 and §68 of the Omnibus Election Code and in §40 of the Local Government Code and are for 7166, § 15) The purpose is to preserve the prerogatives of the House of Representatives Electoral
the purpose of barring an individual from becoming a candidate or from continuing as a Tribunal and the other Tribunals as "sole judges" under the Constitution of the election,
candidate for public office. In a word, their purpose is to eliminate a candidate from the race either returns and qualifications of members of Congress of the President and Vice President, as the case
from the start or during its progress. "Ineligibility," on the other hand, refers to the lack of the may be. 106

qualifications prescribed in the Constitution or the statutes for holding public office and the purpose
of the proceedings for declaration of ineligibility is to remove the incumbent from office. To be sure, the authoritativeness of the Romualdez pronouncements as reiterated in Fermin, led to
the amendment through COMELEC Resolution No. 9523, on 25 September 2012 of its Rule 25.
Consequently, that an individual possesses the qualifications for a public office does not imply that This, the 15 February1993 version of Rule 25, which states that:
he is not disqualified from becoming a candidate or continuing as a candidate for a public office and
vice versa. We have this sort of dichotomy in our Naturalization Law. (C.A. No. 473) That an alien Grounds for disqualification. -Any candidate who does not possess all the qualifications of a
has the qualifications prescribed in §2 of the Law does not imply that he does not suffer from any of candidate as provided for by the Constitution or by existing law or who commits any act declared by
[the] disqualifications provided in §4. law to be grounds for disqualification may be disqualified from continuing as a candidate.107

Before we get derailed by the distinction as to grounds and the consequences of the respective was in the 2012 rendition, drastically changed to:
proceedings, the importance of the opinion is in its statement that "the lack of provision for
declaring the ineligibility of candidates, however, cannot be supplied by a mere rule". Justice Grounds. - Any candidate who, in action or protest in which he is a party, is declared by final
Mendoza lectured in Romualdez-Marcos that: decision of a competent court, guilty of, or found by the Commission to be suffering from any
disqualification provided by law or the Constitution.
Three reasons may be cited to explain the absence of an authorized proceeding for
determining before election the qualifications of a candidate. A Petition to Disqualify a Candidate invoking grounds for a Petition to Deny to or Cancel a
Certificate of Candidacy or Petition to Declare a Candidate as a Nuisance Candidate, or a
First is the fact that unless a candidate wins and is proclaimed elected, there is no necessity for combination thereof, shall be summarily dismissed.
determining his eligibility for the office. In contrast, whether an individual should be disqualified as a
candidate for acts constituting election offenses (e.g., vote buying, over spending, commission of Clearly, the amendment done in 2012 is an acceptance of the reality of absence of an authorized
prohibited acts) is a prejudicial question which should be determined lest he wins because of the proceeding for determining before election the qualifications of candidate. Such that, as presently
very acts for which his disqualification is being sought. That is why it is provided that if the grounds required, to disqualify a candidate there must be a declaration by a final judgment of a competent
for disqualification are established, a candidate will not be voted for; if he has been voted for, the court that the candidate sought to be disqualified "is guilty of or found by the Commission to be
votes in his favor will not be counted; and if for some reason he has been voted for and he has suffering from any disqualification provided by law or the Constitution."
won, either he will not be proclaimed or his proclamation will be set aside.
Insofar as the qualification of a candidate is concerned, Rule 25 and Rule 23 are flipsides of one to
Second is the fact that the determination of a candidates' eligibility, e.g., his citizenship or, as in this the other. Both do not allow, are not authorizations, are not vestment of jurisdiction, for the
case, his domicile, may take a long time to make, extending beyond the beginning of the term of COMELEC to determine the qualification of a candidate. The facts of qualification must beforehand
the office. This is amply demonstrated in the companion case (G.R. No. 120265, Agapito A. Aquino be established in a prior proceeding before an authority properly vested with jurisdiction. The prior
v. COMELEC) where the determination of Aquino's residence was still pending in the COMELEC determination of qualification may be by statute, by executive order or by a judgment of a
even after the elections of May 8, 1995. This is contrary to the summary character proceedings competent court or tribunal.
relating to certificates of candidacy. That is why the law makes the receipt of certificates of
candidacy a ministerial duty of the COMELEC and its officers. The law is satisfied if candidates
state in their certificates of candidacy that they are eligible for the position which they seek to fill,
leaving the determination of their qualifications to be made after the election and only in the event
they are elected. Only in cases involving charges of false representations made in certificates of
candidacy is the COMELEC given jurisdiction.
If a candidate cannot be disqualified without a prior finding that he or she is suffering from a Filipinos. In 1970, the figures were 1,162,669 Filipinos and 5,304 foreigners, or 99.55%. Also
disqualification "provided by law or the Constitution," neither can the certificate of candidacy be presented were figures for the child producing ages (15-49). In 1960, there were 230,528 female
cancelled or denied due course on grounds of false representations regarding his or her Filipinos as against 730 female foreigners or 99.68%. In the same year, there were 210,349 Filipino
qualifications, without a prior authoritative finding that he or she is not qualified, such prior authority males and 886 male aliens, or 99.58%. In 1970, there were 270,299 Filipino females versus 1, 190
being the necessary measure by which the falsity of the representation can be found. The only female aliens, or 99.56%. That same year, there were 245,740 Filipino males as against only 1,165
exception that can be conceded are self-evident facts of unquestioned or unquestionable veracity male aliens or 99.53%. COMELEC did not dispute these figures. Notably, Commissioner Arthur Lim
and judicial confessions. Such are, anyway, bases equivalent to prior decisions against which the admitted, during the oral arguments, that at the time petitioner was found in 1968, the majority of
falsity of representation can be determined. the population in Iloilo was Filipino.
112

The need for a predicate finding or final pronouncement in a proceeding under Rule 23 that deals Other circumstantial evidence of the nationality of petitioner's parents are the fact that she was
with, as in this case, alleged false representations regarding the candidate's citizenship and abandoned as an infant in a Roman Catholic Church in Iloilo City. She also has typical Filipino
1âwphi1

residence, forced the COMELEC to rule essentially that since foundlings are not mentioned in the
108
features: height, flat nasal bridge, straight black hair, almond shaped eyes and an oval face.
enumeration of citizens under the 1935 Constitution, they then cannot be citizens. As the
109

COMELEC stated in oral arguments, when petitioner admitted that she is a foundling, she said it There is a disputable presumption that things have happened according to the ordinary course of
all. This borders on bigotry. Oddly, in an effort at tolerance, the COMELEC, after saying that it nature and the ordinary habits of life. All of the foregoing evidence, that a person with typical
113

cannot rule that herein petitioner possesses blood relationship with a Filipino citizen when "it is Filipino features is abandoned in Catholic Church in a municipality where the population of the
certain that such relationship is indemonstrable," proceeded to say that "she now has the burden to Philippines is overwhelmingly Filipinos such that there would be more than a 99% chance that a
present evidence to prove her natural filiation with a Filipino parent." child born in the province would be a Filipino, would indicate more than ample probability if not
statistical certainty, that petitioner's parents are Filipinos. That probability and the evidence on
The fact is that petitioner's blood relationship with a Filipino citizen is DEMONSTRABLE. which it is based are admissible under Rule 128, Section 4 of the Revised Rules on Evidence.

At the outset, it must be noted that presumptions regarding paternity is neither unknown nor To assume otherwise is to accept the absurd, if not the virtually impossible, as the norm. In the
unaccepted in Philippine Law. The Family Code of the Philippines has a whole chapter on Paternity words of the Solicitor General:
and Filiation. That said, there is more than sufficient evider1ce that petitioner has Filipino parents
110

and is therefore a natural-born Filipino. Parenthetically, the burden of proof was on private Second. It is contrary to common sense because foreigners do not come to the Philippines so they
respondents to show that petitioner is not a Filipino citizen. The private respondents should have can get pregnant and leave their newborn babies behind. We do not face a situation where the
shown that both of petitioner's parents were aliens. Her admission that she is a foundling did not probability is such that every foundling would have a 50% chance of being a Filipino and a 50%
shift the burden to her because such status did not exclude the possibility that her parents were chance of being a foreigner. We need to frame our questions properly. What are the chances that
Filipinos, especially as in this case where there is a high probability, if not certainty, that her parents the parents of anyone born in the Philippines would be foreigners? Almost zero. What are the
are Filipinos. chances that the parents of anyone born in the Philippines would be Filipinos? 99.9%.

The factual issue is not who the parents of petitioner are, as their identities are unknown, but According to the Philippine Statistics Authority, from 2010 to 2014, on a yearly average, there were
whether such parents are Filipinos. Under Section 4, Rule 128: 1,766,046 children born in the Philippines to Filipino parents, as opposed to 1,301 children in the
Philippines of foreign parents. Thus, for that sample period, the ratio of non-Filipino children to
Sect. 4. Relevancy, collateral matters - Evidence must have such a relation to the fact in issue as to natural born Filipino children is 1:1357. This means that the statistical probability that any child born
induce belief in its existence or no-existence. Evidence on collateral matters shall not be allowed, in the Philippines would be a natural born Filipino is 99.93%.
except when it tends in any reasonable degree to establish the probability of improbability of the
fact in issue. From 1965 to 1975, the total number of foreigners born in the Philippines is 15,986 while the total
number of Filipinos born in the Philippines is 15,558,278. For this period, the ratio of non-Filipino
The Solicitor General offered official statistics from the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) that111
children is 1:661. This means that the statistical probability that any child born in the Philippines on
from 1965 to 1975, the total number of foreigners born in the Philippines was 15,986 while the total that decade would be a natural born Filipino is 99.83%.
number of Filipinos born in the country was 10,558,278. The statistical probability that any child
born in the Philippines in that decade is natural-born Filipino was 99.83%. For her part, petitioner We can invite statisticians and social anthropologists to crunch the numbers for us, but I am
presented census statistics for Iloilo Province for 1960 and 1970, also from the PSA. In 1960, there confident that the statistical probability that a child born in the Philippines would be a natural born
were 962,532 Filipinos and 4,734 foreigners in the province; 99.62% of the population were Filipino will not be affected by whether or not the parents are known. If at all, the likelihood that a
foundling would have a Filipino parent might even be higher than 99.9%. Filipinos abandon their Sr. Montinola:
children out of poverty or perhaps, shame. We do not imagine foreigners abandoning their children For clarification. The gentleman said "of unknown parents." Current codes consider them Filipino,
here in the Philippines thinking those infants would have better economic opportunities or believing that is, I refer to the Spanish Code wherein all children of unknown parentage born in Spanish
that this country is a tropical paradise suitable for raising abandoned children. I certainly doubt territory are considered Spaniards, because the presumption is that a child of unknown parentage
whether a foreign couple has ever considered their child excess baggage that is best left behind. is the son of a Spaniard. This may be applied in the Philippines in that a child of unknown
parentage born in the Philippines is deemed to be Filipino, and there is no need ...
To deny full Filipino citizenship to all foundlings and render them stateless just because there may
be a theoretical chance that one among the thousands of these foundlings might be the child of not Sr. Rafols:
just one, but two, foreigners is downright discriminatory, irrational, and unjust. It just doesn't make There is a need, because we are relating the conditions that are [required] to be Filipino.
any sense. Given the statistical certainty - 99.9% - that any child born in the Philippines would be a
natural born citizen, a decision denying foundlings such status is effectively a denial of their Sr. Montinola:
birthright. There is no reason why this Honorable Court should use an improbable hypothetical to But that is the interpretation of the law, therefore, there is no [more] need for amendment.
sacrifice the fundamental political rights of an entire class of human beings. Your Honor,
constitutional interpretation and the use of common sense are not separate disciplines. Sr. Rafols:
The amendment should read thus:
As a matter of law, foundlings are as a class, natural-born citizens. While the 1935 Constitution's "Natural or illegitimate of a foreign father and a Filipino mother recognized by one, or the children of
enumeration is silent as to foundlings, there is no restrictive language which would definitely unknown parentage."
exclude foundlings either. Because of silence and ambiguity in the enumeration with respect to
foundlings, there is a need to examine the intent of the framers. In Nitafan v. Commissioner of Sr. Briones:
Internal Revenue, this Court held that:
114
The amendment [should] mean children born in the Philippines of unknown parentage.

The ascertainment of that intent is but in keeping with the fundamental principle of Sr. Rafols:
constitutional construction that the intent of the framers of the organic law and of the people The son of a Filipina to a Foreigner, although this [person] does not recognize the child, is not
adopting it should be given effect. The primary task in constitutional construction is to unknown.
ascertain and thereafter assure the realization of the purpose of the framers and of the
people in the adoption of the Constitution. It may also be safely assumed that the people in
President:
ratifying the Constitution were guided mainly by the explanation offered by the framers. 115

Does the gentleman accept the amendment or not?


As pointed out by petitioner as well as the Solicitor General, the deliberations of the 1934
Sr. Rafols:
Constitutional Convention show that the framers intended foundlings to be covered by the
I do not accept the amendment because the amendment would exclude the children of a Filipina
enumeration. The following exchange is recorded:
with a foreigner who does not recognize the child. Their parentage is not unknown and I think those
of overseas Filipino mother and father [whom the latter] does not recognize, should also be
Sr. Rafols: For an amendment. I propose that after subsection 2, the following is inserted: "The considered as Filipinos.
natural children of a foreign father and a Filipino mother not recognized by the father.
President:
xxxx The question in order is the amendment to the amendment from the Gentleman from Cebu, Mr.
Briones.
President:
[We] would like to request a clarification from the proponent of the amendment. The gentleman Sr. Busion:
refers to natural children or to any kind of illegitimate children? Mr. President, don't you think it would be better to leave this matter in the hands of the Legislature?

Sr. Rafols: Sr. Roxas:


To all kinds of illegitimate children. It also includes natural children of unknown parentage, natural Mr. President, my humble opinion is that these cases are few and far in between, that the
or illegitimate children of unknown parents. constitution need [not] refer to them. By international law the principle that children or people born
in a country of unknown parents are citizens in this nation is recognized, and it is not necessary to to show that the constitution really intended to take this path to the dark side and inflict this across
include a provision on the subject exhaustively.116
the board marginalization."

Though the Rafols amendment was not carried out, it was not because there was any objection to We find no such intent or language permitting discrimination against foundlings. On the contrary, all
the notion that persons of "unknown parentage" are not citizens but only because their number was three Constitutions guarantee the basic right to equal protection of the laws. All exhort the State to
not enough to merit specific mention. Such was the account, cited by petitioner, of delegate and
117
render social justice. Of special consideration are several provisions in the present charter: Article
constitution law author Jose Aruego who said: II, Section 11 which provides that the "State values the dignity of every human person and
guarantees full respect for human rights," Article XIII, Section 1 which mandates Congress to "give
During the debates on this provision, Delegate Rafols presented an amendment to include highest priority to the enactment of measures that protect and enhance the right of all the people to
as Filipino citizens the illegitimate children with a foreign father of a mother who was a human dignity, reduce social, economic, and political inequalities x x x" and Article XV, Section 3
citizen of the Philippines, and also foundlings; but this amendment was defeated primarily which requires the State to defend the "right of children to assistance, including proper care and
because the Convention believed that the cases, being too few to warrant the inclusion of a nutrition, and special protection from all forms of neglect, abuse, cruelty, exploitation, and other
provision in the Constitution to apply to them, should be governed by statutory legislation. conditions prejudicial to their development." Certainly, these provisions contradict an intent to
Moreover, it was believed that the rules of international law were already clear to the effect discriminate against foundlings on account of their unfortunate status.
that illegitimate children followed the citizenship of the mother, and that foundlings followed
the nationality of the place where they were found, thereby making unnecessary the Domestic laws on adoption also support the principle that foundlings are Filipinos. These laws do
inclusion in the Constitution of the proposed amendment. not provide that adoption confers citizenship upon the adoptee. Rather, the adoptee must be a
Filipino in the first place to be adopted. The most basic of such laws is Article 15 of the Civil Code
This explanation was likewise the position of the Solicitor General during the 16 February 2016 which provides that "[l]aws relating to family rights, duties, status, conditions, legal capacity of
Oral Arguments: persons are binding on citizens of the Philippines even though living abroad." Adoption deals with
status, and a Philippine adoption court will have jurisdiction only if the adoptee is a Filipino. In Ellis
We all know that the Rafols proposal was rejected. But note that what was declined was the and Ellis v. Republic, a child left by an unidentified mother was sought to be adopted by aliens.
119

proposal for a textual and explicit recognition of foundlings as Filipinos. And so, the way to explain This Court said:
the constitutional silence is by saying that it was the view of Montinola and Roxas which prevailed
that there is no more need to expressly declare foundlings as Filipinos. In this connection, it should be noted that this is a proceedings in rem, which no court may entertain
unless it has jurisdiction, not only over the subject matter of the case and over the parties, but also
Obviously, it doesn't matter whether Montinola's or Roxas' views were legally correct. Framers of a over the res, which is the personal status of Baby Rose as well as that of petitioners herein. Our
constitution can constitutionalize rules based on assumptions that are imperfect or even wrong. Civil Code (Art. 15) adheres to the theory that jurisdiction over the status of a natural person is
They can even overturn existing rules. This is basic. What matters here is that Montinola and determined by the latter's nationality. Pursuant to this theory, we have jurisdiction over the status of
Roxas were able to convince their colleagues in the convention that there is no more need to Baby Rose, she being a citizen of the Philippines, but not over the status of the petitioners, who are
expressly declare foundlings as Filipinos because they are already impliedly so recognized. foreigners. (Underlining supplied)
120

In other words, the constitutional silence is fully explained in terms of linguistic efficiency and the Recent legislation is more direct. R.A. No. 8043 entitled "An Act Establishing the Rules to Govern
avoidance of redundancy. The policy is clear: it is to recognize foundlings, as a class, as Filipinos the Inter-Country Adoption of Filipino Children and For Other Purposes" (otherwise known as the
under Art. IV, Section 1 (3) of the 1935 Constitution. This inclusive policy is carried over into the "Inter-Country Adoption Act of 1995"), R.A. No. 8552, entitled "An Act Establishing the Rules and
1973 and 1987 Constitution. It is appropriate to invoke a famous scholar as he was paraphrased by Policies on the Adoption of Filipino Children and For Other Purposes" (otherwise known as the
Chief Justice Fernando: the constitution is not silently silent, it is silently vocal.
118 Domestic Adoption Act of 1998) and this Court's A.M. No. 02-6-02-SC or the "Rule on Adoption," all
expressly refer to "Filipino children" and include foundlings as among Filipino children who may be
adopted.
The Solicitor General makes the further point that the framers "worked to create a just and humane
society," that "they were reasonable patriots and that it would be unfair to impute upon them a
discriminatory intent against foundlings." He exhorts that, given the grave implications of the It has been argued that the process to determine that the child is a foundling leading to the
argument that foundlings are not natural-born Filipinos, the Court must search the records of the issuance of a foundling certificate under these laws and the issuance of said certificate are acts to
1935, 1973 and 1987 Constitutions "for an express intention to deny foundlings the status of acquire or perfect Philippine citizenship which make the foundling a naturalized Filipino at best.
Filipinos. The burden is on those who wish to use the constitution to discriminate against foundlings This is erroneous. Under Article IV, Section 2 "Natural-born citizens are those who are citizens of
the Philippines from birth without having to perform any act to acquire or perfect their Philippine
citizenship." In the first place, "having to perform an act" means that the act must be personally The Philippines has also ratified the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC). Article 7
done by the citizen. In this instance, the determination of foundling status is done not by the child of the UNCRC imposes the following obligations on our country:
but by the authorities. Secondly, the object of the process is the determination of the whereabouts
121

of the parents, not the citizenship of the child. Lastly, the process is certainly not analogous to Article 7
naturalization proceedings to acquire Philippine citizenship, or the election of such citizenship by
one born of an alien father and a Filipino mother under the 1935 Constitution, which is an act to 1. The child shall be registered immediately after birth and shall have the right from birth to a name,
perfect it. the right to acquire a nationality and as far as possible, the right to know and be cared for by his or
her parents.
In this instance, such issue is moot because there is no dispute that petitioner is a foundling, as
evidenced by a Foundling Certificate issued in her favor. The Decree of Adoption issued on 13
122
2. States Parties shall ensure the implementation of these rights in accordance with their national
May 1974, which approved petitioner's adoption by Jesusa Sonora Poe and Ronald Allan Kelley law and their obligations under the relevant international instruments in this field, in particular where
Poe, expressly refers to Emiliano and his wife, Rosario Militar, as her "foundling parents," hence the child would otherwise be stateless.
effectively affirming petitioner's status as a foundling.123

In 1986, the country also ratified the 1966 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
Foundlings are likewise citizens under international law. Under the 1987 Constitution, an (ICCPR). Article 24 thereof provide for the right of every child "to acquire a nationality:"
international law can become part of the sphere of domestic law either by transformation or
incorporation. The transformation method requires that an international law be transformed into a
Article 24
domestic law through a constitutional mechanism such as local legislation. On the other hand,
124

generally accepted principles of international law, by virtue of the incorporation clause of the
Constitution, form part of the laws of the land even if they do not derive from treaty obligations. 1. Every child shall have, without any discrimination as to race, colour, sex, language, religion,
Generally accepted principles of international law include international custom as evidence of a national or social origin, property or birth, the right, to such measures of protection as are required
general practice accepted as law, and general principles of law recognized by civilized by his status as a minor, on the part of his family, society and the State.
nations. International customary rules are accepted as binding as a result from the combination of
125

two elements: the established, widespread, and consistent practice on the part of States; and a 2. Every child shall be registered immediately after birth and shall have a name.
psychological element known as the opinionjuris sive necessitates (opinion as to law or necessity).
Implicit in the latter element is a belief that the practice in question is rendered obligatory by the 3. Every child has the right to acquire a nationality.
existence of a rule of law requiring it. "General principles of law recognized by civilized nations"
126

are principles "established by a process of reasoning" or judicial logic, based on principles which The common thread of the UDHR, UNCRC and ICCPR is to obligate the Philippines to grant
are "basic to legal systems generally," such as "general principles of equity, i.e., the general
127
nationality from birth and ensure that no child is stateless. This grant of nationality must be at the
principles of fairness and justice," and the "general principle against discrimination" which is time of birth, and it cannot be accomplished by the application of our present naturalization laws,
embodied in the "Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the International Covenant on Economic, Commonwealth Act No. 473, as amended, and R.A. No. 9139, both of which require the applicant
Social and Cultural Rights, the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial to be at least eighteen (18) years old.
Discrimination, the Convention Against Discrimination in Education, the Convention (No. 111)
Concerning Discrimination in Respect of Employment and Occupation." These are the same core
128
The principles found in two conventions, while yet unratified by the Philippines, are generally
principles which underlie the Philippine Constitution itself, as embodied in the due process and accepted principles of international law. The first is Article 14 of the 1930 Hague Convention on
equal protection clauses of the Bill of Rights. 129
Certain Questions Relating to the Conflict of Nationality Laws under which a foundling is presumed
to have the "nationality of the country of birth," to wit:
Universal Declaration of Human Rights ("UDHR") has been interpreted by this Court as part of the
generally accepted principles of international law and binding on the State. Article 15 thereof
130
Article 14
states:
A child whose parents are both unknown shall have the nationality of the country of birth. If the
1. Everyone has the right to a nationality. child's parentage is established, its nationality shall be determined by the rules applicable in cases
where the parentage is known.
2. No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his nationality nor denied the right to change his
nationality.
A foundling is, until the contrary is proved, presumed to have been born on the territory of the State Petitioner's evidence shows that at least sixty countries in Asia, North and South America, and
137

in which it was found. (Underlining supplied) Europe have passed legislation recognizing foundlings as its citizen. Forty-two (42) of those
countries follow the jus sanguinis regime. Of the sixty, only thirty-three (33) are parties to the 1961
The second is the principle that a foundling is presumed born of citizens of the country where he is Convention on Statelessness; twenty-six (26) are not signatories to the Convention. Also, the Chief
found, contained in Article 2 of the 1961 United Nations Convention on the Reduction of Justice, at the 2 February 2016 Oral Arguments pointed out that in 166 out of 189 countries
Statelessness: surveyed (or 87.83%), foundlings are recognized as citizens. These circumstances, including the
practice of jus sanguinis countries, show that it is a generally accepted principle of international law
Article 2 to presume foundlings as having been born of nationals of the country in which the foundling is
found.
A foundling found in the territory of a Contracting State shall, in the absence of proof to the contrary,
be considered to have been born within the territory of parents possessing the nationality of that Current legislation reveals the adherence of the Philippines to this generally accepted principle of
State. international law. In particular, R.A. No. 8552, R.A. No. 8042 and this Court's Rules on Adoption,
expressly refer to "Filipino children." In all of them, foundlings are among the Filipino children who
could be adopted. Likewise, it has been pointed that the DFA issues passports to foundlings.
That the Philippines is not a party to the 1930 Hague Convention nor to the 1961 Convention on
Passports are by law, issued only to citizens. This shows that even the executive department,
the Reduction of Statelessness does not mean that their principles are not binding. While the
acting through the DFA, considers foundlings as Philippine citizens.
Philippines is not a party to the 1930 Hague Convention, it is a signatory to the Universal
Declaration on Human Rights, Article 15(1) ofwhich effectively affirms Article 14 of the 1930 Hague
131

Convention. Article 2 of the 1961 "United Nations Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness" Adopting these legal principles from the 1930 Hague Convention and the 1961 Convention on
merely "gives effect" to Article 15(1) of the UDHR. In Razon v. Tagitis, this Court noted that the
132 133 Statelessness is rational and reasonable and consistent with the jus sanguinis regime in our
Philippines had not signed or ratified the "International Convention for the Protection of All Persons Constitution. The presumption of natural-born citizenship of foundlings stems from the presumption
from Enforced Disappearance." Yet, we ruled that the proscription against enforced disappearances that their parents are nationals of the Philippines. As the empirical data provided by the PSA show,
in the said convention was nonetheless binding as a "generally accepted principle of international that presumption is at more than 99% and is a virtual certainty.
law." Razon v. Tagitis is likewise notable for declaring the ban as a generally accepted principle of
international law although the convention had been ratified by only sixteen states and had not even In sum, all of the international law conventions and instruments on the matter of nationality of
come into force and which needed the ratification of a minimum of twenty states. Additionally, as foundlings were designed to address the plight of a defenseless class which suffers from a
petitioner points out, the Court was content with the practice of international and regional state misfortune not of their own making. We cannot be restrictive as to their application if we are a
organs, regional state practice in Latin America, and State Practice in the United States. country which calls itself civilized and a member of the community of nations. The Solicitor
General's warning in his opening statement is relevant:
Another case where the number of ratifying countries was not determinative is Mijares v.
Ranada, where only four countries had "either ratified or acceded to" the 1966 "Convention on
134 135 .... the total effect of those documents is to signify to this Honorable Court that those treaties and
the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Judgments in Civil and Commercial Matters" when the conventions were drafted because the world community is concerned that the situation of
case was decided in 2005. The Court also pointed out that that nine member countries of the foundlings renders them legally invisible. It would be tragically ironic if this Honorable Court ended
European Common Market had acceded to the Judgments Convention. The Court also cited U.S. up using the international instruments which seek to protect and uplift foundlings a tool to deny
laws and jurisprudence on recognition of foreign judgments. In all, only the practices of fourteen them political status or to accord them second-class citizenship. 138

countries were considered and yet, there was pronouncement that recognition of foreign judgments
was widespread practice. The COMELEC also ruled that petitioner's repatriation in July 2006 under the provisions of R.A.
139

No. 9225 did not result in the reacquisition of natural-born citizenship. The COMELEC reasoned
Our approach in Razon and Mijares effectively takes into account the fact that "generally accepted that since the applicant must perform an act, what is reacquired is not "natural-born" citizenship but
principles of international law" are based not only on international custom, but also on "general only plain "Philippine citizenship."
principles of law recognized by civilized nations," as the phrase is understood in Article 38.1
paragraph (c) of the ICJ Statute. Justice, fairness, equity and the policy against discrimination, The COMELEC's rule arrogantly disregards consistent jurisprudence on the matter of repatriation
which are fundamental principles underlying the Bill of Rights and which are "basic to legal systems statutes in general and of R.A. No. 9225 in particular.
generally," support the notion that the right against enforced disappearances and the recognition
136

of foreign judgments, were correctly considered as "generally accepted principles of international In the seminal case of Bengson Ill v. HRET, 140
repatriation was explained as follows:
law" under the incorporation clause.
Moreover, repatriation results in the recovery of the original nationality. This means that a shall form part of the legal system of the Philippines." This Court also said that "while the future
naturalized Filipino who lost his citizenship will be restored to his prior status as a naturalized may ultimately uncover a doctrine's error, it should be, as a general rule, recognized as good law
Filipino citizen. On the other hand, if he was originally a natural-born citizen before he lost his prior to its abandonment. Consequently, the people's reliance thereupon should be respected." 148

Philippine citizenship, he will be restored to his former status as a natural-born Filipino.


Lastly, it was repeatedly pointed out during the oral arguments that petitioner committed a
R.A. No. 9225 is a repatriation statute and has been described as such in several cases. They falsehood when she put in the spaces for "born to" in her application for repatriation under R.A. No.
include Sobejana-Condon v. COMELEC where we described it as an "abbreviated repatriation
141
9225 the names of her adoptive parents, and this misled the BI to presume that she was a natural-
process that restores one's Filipino citizenship x x x." Also included is Parreno v. Commission on born Filipino. It has been contended that the data required were the names of her biological parents
Audit, which cited Tabasa v. Court of Appeals, where we said that "[t]he repatriation of the former
142 143
which are precisely unknown.
Filipino will allow him to recover his natural-born citizenship. Parreno v. Commission on Audit is 144

categorical that "if petitioner reacquires his Filipino citizenship (under R.A. No. 9225), he This position disregards one important fact - petitioner was legally adopted. One of the effects of
will ... recover his natural-born citizenship." adoption is "to sever all legal ties between the biological parents and the adoptee, except when the
biological parent is the spouse of the adoptee." Under R.A. No. 8552, petitioner was also entitled
149

The COMELEC construed the phrase "from birth" in the definition of natural citizens as implying to an amended birth certificate "attesting to the fact that the adoptee is the child of the adopter(s)"
"that natural-born citizenship must begin at birth and remain uninterrupted and continuous from and which certificate "shall not bear any notation that it is an amended issue." That law also
150

birth." R.A. No. 9225 was obviously passed in line with Congress' sole prerogative to determine requires that "[a]ll records, books, and papers relating to the adoption cases in the files of the court,
how citizenship may be lost or reacquired. Congress saw it fit to decree that natural-born the Department [of Social Welfare and Development], or any other agency or institution
citizenship may be reacquired even if it had been once lost. It is not for the COMELEC to disagree participating in the adoption proceedings shall be kept strictly confidential." The law therefore
151

with the Congress' determination. allows petitioner to state that her adoptive parents were her birth parents as that was what would
be stated in her birth certificate anyway. And given the policy of strict confidentiality of adoption
More importantly, COMELEC's position that natural-born status must be continuous was already records, petitioner was not obligated to disclose that she was an adoptee.
rejected in Bengson III v. HRET where the phrase "from birth" was clarified to mean at the time of
145

birth: "A person who at the time of his birth, is a citizen of a particular country, is a natural-born Clearly, to avoid a direct ruling on the qualifications of petitioner, which it cannot make in the same
citizen thereof." Neither is "repatriation" an act to "acquire or perfect" one's citizenship. In Bengson case for cancellation of COC, it resorted to opinionatedness which is, moreover, erroneous. The
III v. HRET, this Court pointed out that there are only two types of citizens under the 1987 whole process undertaken by COMELEC is wrapped in grave abuse of discretion.
Constitution: natural-born citizen and naturalized, and that there is no third category for repatriated
citizens: On Residence

It is apparent from the enumeration of who are citizens under the present Constitution that there The tainted process was repeated in disposing of the issue of whether or not petitioner committed
are only two classes of citizens: (1) those who are natural-born and (2) those who are naturalized in false material representation when she stated in her COC that she has before and until 9 May 2016
accordance with law. A citizen who is not a naturalized Filipino, ie., did not have to undergo the been a resident of the Philippines for ten (10) years and eleven (11) months.
process of naturalization to obtain Philippine citizenship, necessarily is a natural-born Filipino.
Noteworthy is the absence in said enumeration of a separate category for persons who, after losing Petitioner's claim that she will have been a resident for ten (10) years and eleven (11) months on
Philippine citizenship, subsequently reacquire it. The reason therefor is clear: as to such persons, the day before the 2016 elections, is true.
they would either be natural-born or naturalized depending on the reasons for the loss of their
citizenship and the mode prescribed by the applicable law for the reacquisition thereof. As
The Constitution requires presidential candidates to have ten (10) years' residence in the
respondent Cruz was not required by law to go through naturalization proceedings in order to
Philippines before the day of the elections. Since the forthcoming elections will be held on 9 May
reacquire his citizenship, he is perforce a natural-born Filipino. As such, he possessed all the
2016, petitioner must have been a resident of the Philippines prior to 9 May 2016 for ten (10) years.
necessary qualifications to be elected as member of the House of Representatives. 146

In answer to the requested information of "Period of Residence in the Philippines up to the day
before May 09, 2016," she put in "10 years 11 months" which according to her pleadings in these
The COMELEC cannot reverse a judicial precedent. That is reserved to this Court. And while we cases corresponds to a beginning date of 25 May 2005 when she returned for good from the U.S.
may always revisit a doctrine, a new rule reversing standing doctrine cannot be retroactively
applied. In Morales v. Court of Appeals and Jejomar Erwin S. Binay, Jr., where we decreed
147

When petitioner immigrated to the U.S. in 1991, she lost her original domicile, which is the
reversed the condonation doctrine, we cautioned that it "should be prospective in application for the
Philippines. There are three requisites to acquire a new domicile: 1. Residence or bodily presence
reason that judicial decisions applying or interpreting the laws of the Constitution, until reversed,
in a new locality; 2. an intention to remain there; and 3. an intention to abandon the old
domicile. To successfully effect a change of domicile, one must demonstrate an actual removal or
152
But as the petitioner pointed out, the facts in these four cases are very different from her situation.
an actual change of domicile; a bona fide intention of abandoning the former place of residence In Coquilla v. COMELEC, the only evidence presented was a community tax certificate secured by
159

and establishing a new one and definite acts which correspond with the purpose. In other words, the candidate and his declaration that he would be running in the elections. Japzon v.
there must basically be animus manendi coupled with animus non revertendi. The purpose to COMELEC did not involve a candidate who wanted to count residence prior to his reacquisition of
160

remain in or at the domicile of choice must be for an indefinite period of time; the change of Philippine citizenship. With the Court decreeing that residence is distinct from citizenship, the issue
residence must be voluntary; and the residence at the place chosen for the new domicile must be there was whether the candidate's acts after reacquisition sufficed to establish residence.
actual.
153
In Caballero v. COMELEC, the candidate admitted that his place of work was abroad and that he
161

only visited during his frequent vacations. In Reyes v. COMELEC, the candidate was found to be
162

Petitioner presented voluminous evidence showing that she and her family abandoned their U.S. an American citizen who had not even reacquired Philippine citizenship under R.A. No. 9225 or had
domicile and relocated to the Philippines for good. These evidence include petitioner's former U.S. renounced her U.S. citizenship. She was disqualified on the citizenship issue. On residence, the
passport showing her arrival on 24 May 2005 and her return to the Philippines every time she only proof she offered was a seven-month stint as provincial officer. The COMELEC, quoted with
travelled abroad; e-mail correspondences starting in March 2005 to September 2006 with a freight approval by this Court, said that "such fact alone is not sufficient to prove her one-year residency."
company to arrange for the shipment of their household items weighing about 28,000 pounds to the
Philippines; e-mail with the Philippine Bureau of Animal Industry inquiring how to ship their dog to It is obvious that because of the sparse evidence on residence in the four cases cited by the
the Philippines; school records of her children showing enrollment in Philippine schools starting respondents, the Court had no choice but to hold that residence could be counted only from
June 2005 and for succeeding years; tax identification card for petitioner issued on July 2005; titles acquisition of a permanent resident visa or from reacquisition of Philippine citizenship. In contrast,
for condominium and parking slot issued in February 2006 and their corresponding tax declarations the evidence of petitioner is overwhelming and taken together leads to no other conclusion that she
issued in April 2006; receipts dated 23 February 2005 from the Salvation Army in the U.S. decided to permanently abandon her U.S. residence (selling the house, taking the children from
acknowledging donation of items from petitioner's family; March 2006 e-mail to the U.S. Postal U.S. schools, getting quotes from the freight company, notifying the U.S. Post Office of the
Service confirming request for change of address; final statement from the First American Title abandonment of their address in the U.S., donating excess items to the Salvation Army, her
Insurance Company showing sale of their U.S. home on 27 April 2006; 12 July 2011 filled-up husband resigning from U.S. employment right after selling the U.S. house) and permanently
questionnaire submitted to the U.S. Embassy where petitioner indicated that she had been a relocate to the Philippines and actually re-established her residence here on 24 May 2005
Philippine resident since May 2005; affidavit from Jesusa Sonora Poe (attesting to the return of (securing T.I.N, enrolling her children in Philippine schools, buying property here, constructing a
petitioner on 24 May 2005 and that she and her family stayed with affiant until the condominium residence here, returning to the Philippines after all trips abroad, her husband getting employed
was purchased); and Affidavit from petitioner's husband (confirming that the spouses jointly decided here). Indeed, coupled with her eventual application to reacquire Philippine citizenship and her
to relocate to the Philippines in 2005 and that he stayed behind in the U.S. only to finish some work family's actual continuous stay in the Philippines over the years, it is clear that when petitioner
and to sell the family home). returned on 24 May 2005 it was for good.

The foregoing evidence were undisputed and the facts were even listed by the COMELEC, In this connection, the COMELEC also took it against petitioner that she had entered the
particularly in its Resolution in the Tatad, Contreras and Valdez cases. Philippines visa-free as a balikbayan. A closer look at R.A. No. 6768 as amended, otherwise known
as the "An Act Instituting a Balikbayan Program," shows that there is no overriding intent to
However, the COMELEC refused to consider that petitioner's domicile had been timely changed as treat balikbayans as temporary visitors who must leave after one year. Included in the law is a
of 24 May 2005. At the oral arguments, COMELEC Commissioner Arthur Lim conceded the former Filipino who has been naturalized abroad and "comes or returns to the Philippines." The 163

presence of the first two requisites, namely, physical presence and animus manendi, but law institutes a balikbayan program "providing the opportunity to avail of the necessary training to
maintained there was no animus non-revertendi. The COMELEC disregarded the import of all the
154 enable the balikbayan to become economically self-reliant members of society upon their return to
evidence presented by petitioner on the basis of the position that the earliest date that petitioner the country" in line with the government's "reintegration program." Obviously, balikbayans are not
164 165

could have started residence in the Philippines was in July 2006 when her application under R.A. ordinary transients.
No. 9225 was approved by the BI. In this regard, COMELEC relied on Coquilla v.
COMELEC, Japzon v. COMELEC and Caballero v. COMELEC. During the oral arguments, the
155 156 157
Given the law's express policy to facilitate the return of a balikbayan and help him reintegrate into
private respondents also added Reyes v. COMELEC. Respondents contend that these cases
158
society, it would be an unduly harsh conclusion to say in absolute terms that the balikbayan must
decree that the stay of an alien former Filipino cannot be counted until he/she obtains a permanent leave after one year. That visa-free period is obviously granted him to allow him to re-establish his
resident visa or reacquires Philippine citizenship, a visa-free entry under a balikbayan stamp being life and reintegrate himself into the community before he attends to the necessary formal and legal
insufficient. Since petitioner was still an American (without any resident visa) until her reacquisition requirements of repatriation. And that is exactly what petitioner did - she reestablished life here by
of citizenship under R.A. No. 9225, her stay from 24 May 2005 to 7 July 2006 cannot be counted. enrolling her children and buying property while awaiting the return of her husband and then
applying for repatriation shortly thereafter.
No case similar to petitioner's, where the former Filipino's evidence of change in domicile is The COMELEC, by its own admission, disregarded the evidence that petitioner actually and
extensive and overwhelming, has as yet been decided by the Court. Petitioner's evidence of physically returned here on 24 May 2005 not because it was false, but only because COMELEC
residence is unprecedented. There is no judicial precedent that comes close to the facts of took the position that domicile could be established only from petitioner's repatriation under R.A.
residence of petitioner. There is no indication in Coquilla v. COMELEC, and the other cases cited
166
No. 9225 in July 2006. However, it does not take away the fact that in reality, petitioner had
by the respondents that the Court intended to have its rulings there apply to a situation where the returned from the U.S. and was here to stay permanently, on 24 May 2005. When she claimed to
facts are different. Surely, the issue of residence has been decided particularly on the facts-of-the have been a resident for ten (10) years and eleven (11) months, she could do so in good faith.
case basis.
For another, it could not be said that petitioner was attempting to hide anything. As already stated,
To avoid the logical conclusion pointed out by the evidence of residence of petitioner, the a petition for quo warranto had been filed against her with the SET as early as August 2015. The
COMELEC ruled that petitioner's claim of residence of ten (10) years and eleven (11) months by 9 event from which the COMELEC pegged the commencement of residence, petitioner's repatriation
May 2016 in her 2015 COC was false because she put six ( 6) years and six ( 6) months as "period in July 2006 under R.A. No. 9225, was an established fact to repeat, for purposes of her senatorial
of residence before May 13, 2013" in her 2012 COC for Senator. Thus, according to the candidacy.
COMELEC, she started being a Philippine resident only in November 2006. In doing so, the
COMELEC automatically assumed as true the statement in the 2012 COC and the 2015 COC as Notably, on the statement of residence of six (6) years and six (6) months in the 2012 COC,
false. petitioner recounted that this was first brought up in the media on 2 June 2015 by Rep. Tobias
Tiangco of the United Nationalist Alliance. Petitioner appears to have answered the issue
As explained by petitioner in her verified pleadings, she misunderstood the date required in the immediately, also in the press. Respondents have not disputed petitioner's evidence on this point.
2013 COC as the period of residence as of the day she submitted that COC in 2012. She said that From that time therefore when Rep. Tiangco discussed it in the media, the stated period of
she reckoned residency from April-May 2006 which was the period when the U.S. house was sold residence in the 2012 COC and the circumstances that surrounded the statement were already
and her husband returned to the Philippines. In that regard, she was advised by her lawyers in matters of public record and were not hidden.
2015 that residence could be counted from 25 May 2005.
Petitioner likewise proved that the 2012 COC was also brought up in the SET petition for quo
Petitioner's explanation that she misunderstood the query in 2012 (period of residence before 13 warranto. Her Verified Answer, which was filed on 1 September 2015, admitted that she made a
May 2013) as inquiring about residence as of the time she submitted the COC, is bolstered by the mistake in the 2012 COC when she put in six ( 6) years and six ( 6) months as she misunderstood
change which the COMELEC itself introduced in the 2015 COC which is now "period of residence the question and could have truthfully indicated a longer period. Her answer in the SET case was a
in the Philippines up to the day before May 09, 2016." The COMELEC would not have revised the matter of public record. Therefore, when petitioner accomplished her COC for President on 15
query if it did not acknowledge that the first version was vague. October 2015, she could not be said to have been attempting to hide her erroneous statement in
her 2012 COC for Senator which was expressly mentioned in her Verified Answer.
That petitioner could have reckoned residence from a date earlier than the sale of her U.S. house
and the return of her husband is plausible given the evidence that she had returned a year before. The facts now, if not stretched to distortion, do not show or even hint at an intention to hide the
Such evidence, to repeat, would include her passport and the school records of her children. 2012 statement and have it covered by the 2015 representation. Petitioner, moreover, has on her
side this Court's pronouncement that:
It was grave abuse of discretion for the COMELEC to treat the 2012 COC as a binding and
conclusive admission against petitioner. It could be given in evidence against her, yes, but it was by Concededly, a candidate's disqualification to run for public office does not necessarily constitute
no means conclusive. There is precedent after all where a candidate's mistake as to period of material misrepresentation which is the sole ground for denying due course to, and for the
residence made in a COC was overcome by evidence. In Romualdez-Marcos v. COMELEC, the 167
cancellation of, a COC. Further, as already discussed, the candidate's misrepresentation in his
candidate mistakenly put seven (7) months as her period of residence where the required period COC must not only refer to a material fact (eligibility and qualifications for elective office), but
was a minimum of one year. We said that "[i]t is the fact of residence, not a statement in a should evince a deliberate intent to mislead, misinform or hide a fact which would otherwise render
certificate of candidacy which ought to be decisive in determining whether or not an individual has a candidate ineligible. It must be made with an intention to deceive the electorate as to one's
satisfied the constitutions residency qualification requirement." The COMELEC ought to have qualifications to run for public office.
168

looked at the evidence presented and see if petitioner was telling the truth that she was in the
Philippines from 24 May 2005. Had the COMELEC done its duty, it would have seen that the 2012 In sum, the COMELEC, with the same posture of infallibilism, virtually ignored a good number of
COC and the 2015 COC both correctly stated the pertinent period of residency. evidenced dates all of which can evince animus manendi to the Philippines and animus non
revertedi to the United States of America. The veracity of the events of coming and staying home
was as much as dismissed as inconsequential, the focus having been fixed at the petitioner's
"sworn declaration in her COC for Senator" which the COMELEC said "amounts to a declaration The family home in the US was sole on 27 April 2006.
and therefore an admission that her residence in the Philippines only commence sometime in
November 2006"; such that "based on this declaration, [petitioner] fails to meet the residency In April 2006, [petitioner's] husband resigned from his work in the US. He returned to the
requirement for President." This conclusion, as already shown, ignores the standing jurisprudence Philippines on 4 May 2006 and began working for a Philippine company in July 2006.
that it is the fact of residence, not the statement of the person that determines residence for
purposes of compliance with the constitutional requirement of residency for election as President. It In early 2006, [petitioner] and her husband acquired a vacant lot in Corinthian Hills, where they
ignores the easily researched matter that cases on questions of residency have been decided eventually built their family home.170

favorably for the candidate on the basis of facts of residence far less in number, weight and
substance than that presented by petitioner. It ignores, above all else, what we consider as a
169

In light of all these, it was arbitrary for the COMELEC to satisfy its intention to let the case fall under
primary reason why petitioner cannot be bound by her declaration in her COC for Senator which
the exclusive ground of false representation, to consider no other date than that mentioned by
declaration was not even considered by the SET as an issue against her eligibility for Senator.
petitioner in her COC for Senator.
When petitioner made the declaration in her COC for Senator that she has been a resident for a
period of six (6) years and six (6) months counted up to the 13 May 2013 Elections, she naturally
had as reference the residency requirements for election as Senator which was satisfied by her All put together, in the matter of the citizenship and residence of petitioner for her candidacy as
declared years of residence. It was uncontested during the oral arguments before us that at the President of the Republic, the questioned Resolutions of the COMELEC in Division and En
time the declaration for Senator was made, petitioner did not have as yet any intention to vie for the Banc are, one and all, deadly diseased with grave abuse of discretion from root to fruits.
Presidency in 2016 and that the general public was never made aware by petitioner, by word or
action, that she would run for President in 2016. Presidential candidacy has a length-of-residence WHEREFORE, the petition is GRANTED. The Resolutions, to wit:
different from that of a senatorial candidacy. There are facts of residence other than that which was
mentioned in the COC for Senator. Such other facts of residence have never been proven to be 1. dated 1 December 2015 rendered through the COMELEC Second Division, in SPA No. 15-001
false, and these, to repeat include: (DC), entitled Estrella C. Elamparo, petitioner, vs. Mary Grace Natividad Sonora Poe-Llamanzares,
respondent, stating that:
[Petitioner] returned to the Philippines on 24 May 2005. (petitioner's] husband however stayed in
the USA to finish pending projects and arrange the sale of their family home. [T]he Certificate of Candidacy for President of the Republic of the Philippines in the May 9, 2016
National and Local Elections filed by respondent Mary Grace Natividad Sonora Poe-Llamanzares is
Meanwhile [petitioner] and her children lived with her mother in San Juan City. [Petitioner] enrolled hereby GRANTED.
Brian in Beacon School in Taguig City in 2005 and Hanna in Assumption College in Makati City in
2005. Anika was enrolled in Learning Connection in San Juan in 2007, when she was already old 2. dated 11 December 2015, rendered through the COMELEC First Division, in the consolidated
enough to go to school. cases SPA No. 15-002 (DC) entitled Francisco S. Tatad, petitioner, vs. Mary Grace Natividad
Sonora Poe-Llamanzares, respondent; SPA No. 15-007 (DC) entitled Antonio P. Contreras,
In the second half of 2005, [petitioner] and her husband acquired Unit 7F of One Wilson Place petitioner, vs. Mary Grace Natividad Sonora Poe-Llamanzares, respondent; and SPA No. 15-139
Condominium in San Juan. [Petitioner] and her family lived in Unit 7F until the construction of their (DC) entitled Amado D. Valdez, petitioner, v. Mary Grace Natividad Sonora Poe-
family home in Corinthian Hills was completed. Llamanzares, respondent; stating that:

Sometime in the second half of 2005, [petitioner's] mother discovered that her former lawyer who WHEREFORE, premises considered, the Commission RESOLVED, as it hereby RESOLVES, to
handled [petitioner's] adoption in 1974 failed to secure from the Office of the Civil Registrar of Iloilo GRANT the petitions and cancel the Certificate of Candidacy of MARY GRACE NATIVIDAD
a new Certificate of Live Birth indicating [petitioner's] new name and stating that her parents are SONORA POE-LLAMANZARES for the elective position of President of the Republic of the
"Ronald Allan K. Poe" and "Jesusa L. Sonora." Philippines in connection with the 9 May 2016 Synchronized Local and National Elections.

In February 2006, [petitioner] travelled briefly to the US in order to supervise the disposal of some 3. dated 23 December 2015 of the COMELEC En Banc, upholding the 1 December 2015
of the family's remaining household belongings. [Petitioner] returned to the Philippines on 11
1a\^/phi1
Resolution of the Second Division stating that:
March 2006.

In late March 2006, [petitioner's] husband informed the United States Postal Service of the family's
abandonment of their address in the US.
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the Commission RESOLVED, as it hereby RESOLVES, to
DENY the Verified Motion for Reconsideration of SENATOR MARY GRACE NATIVIDAD SONORA
POE-LLAMANZARES. The Resolution dated 11 December 2015 of the Commission First Division
is AFFIRMED.

4. dated 23 December 2015 of the COMELEC En Banc, upholding the 11 December 2015
Resolution of the First Division.

are hereby ANNULED and SET ASIDE. Petitioner MARY GRACE NATIVIDAD SONORA POE-
LLAMANZARES is DECLARED QUALIFIED to be a candidate for President in the National and
Local Elections of 9 May 2016.

SO ORDERED.
NG LADLAD LGBT PARTY G.R. No. 190582 Justice Robert A. Jackson
represented herein by its Chair, West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette[1]
DANTON REMOTO,
Petitioner, Present:
One unavoidable consequence of everyone having the freedom to choose is that others
PUNO, C. J., may make different choices choices we would not make for ourselves, choices we may
CARPIO, disapprove of, even choices that may shock or offend or anger us. However, choices are
CORONA, not to be legally prohibited merely because they are different, and the right to disagree
CARPIO MORALES, and debate about important questions of public policy is a core value protected by our
VELASCO, JR., Bill of Rights. Indeed, our democracy is built on genuine recognition of, and respect for,
NACHURA, diversity and difference in opinion.
LEONARDO-DE CASTRO, Since ancient times, society has grappled with deep disagreements about the
- versus - BRION,
definitions and demands of morality. In many cases, where moral convictions are
PERALTA,
BERSAMIN, concerned, harmony among those theoretically opposed is an insurmountable goal. Yet
DEL CASTILLO, herein lies the paradox philosophical justifications about what is moral are indispensable
ABAD, and yet at the same time powerless to create agreement. This Court recognizes,
VILLARAMA, JR., however, that practical solutions are preferable to ideological stalemates;
PEREZ, and accommodation is better than intransigence; reason more worthy than rhetoric. This will
MENDOZA, JJ. allow persons of diverse viewpoints to live together, if not harmoniously, then, at least,
civilly.
COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS, Promulgated:
Respondent. April 8, 2010
Factual Background
x--------------------------------------------------------x

This is a Petition for Certiorari under Rule 65 of the Rules of Court, with an
DECISION application for a writ of preliminary mandatory injunction, filed by Ang Ladlad LGBT
Party (Ang Ladlad) against the Resolutions of the Commission on Elections
(COMELEC) dated November 11, 2009[2] (the First Assailed Resolution) and December
DEL CASTILLO, J.:
16, 2009[3] (the Second Assailed Resolution) in SPP No. 09-228 (PL) (collectively, the
... [F]reedom to differ is not limited to things that do not matter much. That Assailed Resolutions). The case has its roots in the COMELECs refusal to accredit Ang
would be a mere shadow of freedom. The test of its substance is the right to Ladlad as a party-list organization under Republic Act (RA) No. 7941, otherwise
differ as to things that touch the heart of the existing order. known as the Party-List System Act.[4]
Ang Ladlad is an organization composed of men and women who identify This definition of the LGBT sector makes it crystal clear that petitioner
themselves as lesbians, gays, bisexuals, or trans-gendered individuals (LGBTs). tolerates immorality which offends religious beliefs. In Romans 1:26, 27,
Paul wrote:
Incorporated in 2003, Ang Ladlad first applied for registration with the COMELEC in
2006. The application for accreditation was denied on the ground that the organization For this cause God gave them up into vile affections, for even
had no substantial membership base. On August 17, 2009, Ang Ladlad again filed a their women did change the natural use into that which is
Petition[5] for registration with the COMELEC. against nature: And likewise also the men, leaving the natural
use of the woman, burned in their lust one toward another; men
Before the COMELEC, petitioner argued that the LGBT community is a with men working that which is unseemly, and receiving in
themselves that recompense of their error which was meet.
marginalized and under-represented sector that is particularly disadvantaged because of
their sexual orientation and gender identity; that LGBTs are victims of exclusion, In the Koran, the hereunder verses are pertinent:
discrimination, and violence; that because of negative societal attitudes, LGBTs are
For ye practice your lusts on men in preference to women ye are indeed
constrained to hide their sexual orientation; and that Ang Ladlad complied with the 8-
a people transgressing beyond bounds. (7.81) And we rained down on
point guidelines enunciated by this Court in Ang Bagong Bayani-OFW Labor Party v. them a shower (of brimstone): Then see what was the end of those who
Commission on Elections.[6] Ang Ladlad laid out its national membership base indulged in sin and crime! (7:84) He said: O my Lord! Help Thou me
consisting of individual members and organizational supporters, and outlined its against people who do mischief (29:30).
platform of governance.[7]
As correctly pointed out by the Law Department in its Comment
dated October 2, 2008:
On November 11, 2009, after admitting the petitioners evidence, the COMELEC
(Second Division) dismissed the Petition on moral grounds, stating that: The ANG LADLAD apparently advocates sexual immorality
x x x This Petition is dismissible on moral grounds. Petitioner defines as indicated in the Petitions par. 6F: Consensual partnerships or
the Filipino Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) Community, relationships by gays and lesbians who are already of age. It is
thus: further indicated in par. 24 of the Petition which waves for the
record: In 2007, Men Having Sex with Men or MSMs in
x x x a marginalized and under-represented sector that is the Philippines were estimated as 670,000 (Genesis 19 is the
particularly disadvantaged because of their sexual orientation history of Sodom and Gomorrah).
and gender identity.
and proceeded to define sexual orientation as that which: Laws are deemed incorporated in every contract, permit,
license, relationship, or accreditation. Hence, pertinent
x x x refers to a persons capacity for profound emotional, provisions of the Civil Code and the Revised Penal Code are
affectional and sexual attraction to, and intimate and sexual deemed part of the requirement to be complied with for
relations with, individuals of a different gender, of the same accreditation.
gender, or more than one gender.
ANG LADLAD collides with Article 695 of the Civil Code other purpose but to satisfy the market for violence, lust or
which defines nuisance as Any act, omission, establishment, pornography; (3) offend any race or religion; (4) tend to abet
business, condition of property, or anything else which x x x traffic in and use of prohibited drugs; and (5) are contrary to
(3) shocks, defies; or disregards decency or morality x x x law, public order, morals, good customs, established policies,
lawful orders, decrees and edicts.
It also collides with Article 1306 of the Civil Code: The
contracting parties may establish such stipulations, clauses, 3. Those who shall sell, give away or exhibit films, prints,
terms and conditions as they may deem convenient, provided engravings, sculpture or literature which are offensive to
they are not contrary to law, morals, good customs, public morals.
order or public policy. Art 1409 of the Civil Code provides that
Contracts whose cause, object or purpose is contrary to Petitioner should likewise be denied accreditation not only for advocating
law, morals, good customs, public order or public policy are immoral doctrines but likewise for not being truthful when it said that it or
inexistent and void from the beginning. any of its nominees/party-list representatives have not violated or failed to
comply with laws, rules, or regulations relating to the elections.
Finally to safeguard the morality of the Filipino community, the Revised
Penal Code, as amended, penalizes Immoral doctrines, obscene publications Furthermore, should this Commission grant the petition, we will be exposing our
and exhibitions and indecent shows as follows: youth to an environment that does not conform to the teachings of our faith.
Lehman Strauss, a famous bible teacher and writer in the U.S.A. said in one
Art. 201. Immoral doctrines, obscene publications and article that older practicing homosexuals are a threat to the youth. As an
exhibitions, and indecent shows. The penalty of prision mayor agency of the government, ours too is the States avowed duty under Section
or a fine ranging from six thousand to twelve thousand pesos, 13, Article II of the Constitution to protect our youth from moral and spiritual
or both such imprisonment and fine, shall be imposed upon: degradation.[8]

1. Those who shall publicly expound or proclaim doctrines


openly contrary to public morals; When Ang Ladlad sought reconsideration,[9] three commissioners voted to
overturn the First Assailed Resolution (Commissioners Gregorio Y. Larrazabal, Rene V.
2. (a) The authors of obscene literature, published with their
Sarmiento, and Armando Velasco), while three commissioners voted to deny Ang
knowledge in any form; the editors publishing such literature;
and the owners/operators of the establishment selling the same; Ladlads Motion for Reconsideration (Commissioners Nicodemo T. Ferrer, Lucenito N.
Tagle, and Elias R. Yusoph). The COMELEC Chairman, breaking the tie and speaking
(b) Those who, in theaters, fairs, cinematographs or any other for the majority in his Separate Opinion, upheld the First Assailed Resolution, stating
place, exhibit indecent or immoral plays, scenes, acts or shows, that:
it being understood that the obscene literature or indecent or
immoral plays, scenes, acts or shows, whether live or in film, I. The Spirit of Republic Act No. 7941
which are prescribed by virtue hereof, shall include those
which: (1) glorify criminals or condone crimes; (2) serve no
Ladlad is applying for accreditation as a sectoral party in the party-list xxxx
system. Even assuming that it has properly proven its under-representation
and marginalization, it cannot be said that Ladlads expressed sexual Thus, even if societys understanding, tolerance, and acceptance of LGBTs is
orientations per se would benefit the nation as a whole. elevated, there can be no denying that Ladlad constituencies are still males
and females, and they will remain either male or female protected by the
Section 2 of the party-list law unequivocally states that the purpose of the same Bill of Rights that applies to all citizens alike.
party-list system of electing congressional representatives is to enable
Filipino citizens belonging to marginalized and under-represented sectors, xxxx
organizations and parties, and who lack well-defined political constituencies
but who could contribute to the formulation and enactment of appropriate IV. Public Morals
legislation that will benefit the nation as a whole, to become members of the
House of Representatives. x x x There is no question about not imposing on Ladlad Christian or
Muslim religious practices. Neither is there any attempt to any particular
If entry into the party-list system would depend only on the ability of an religious groups moral rules on Ladlad. Rather, what are being adopted as
organization to represent its constituencies, then all representative moral parameters and precepts are generally accepted public morals. They
organizations would have found themselves into the party-list race. But that are possibly religious-based, but as a society, the Philippines cannot ignore
is not the intention of the framers of the law. The party-list system is not a its more than 500 years of Muslim and Christian upbringing, such that
tool to advocate tolerance and acceptance of misunderstood persons or some moral precepts espoused by said religions have sipped [sic] into
groups of persons. Rather, the party-list system is a tool for the realization society and these are not publicly accepted moral norms.
of aspirations of marginalized individuals whose interests are also the
nations only that their interests have not been brought to the attention of the V. Legal Provisions
nation because of their under representation. Until the time comes
when Ladlad is able to justify that having mixed sexual orientations and But above morality and social norms, they have become part of the law of
transgender identities is beneficial to the nation, its application for the land. Article 201 of the Revised Penal Code imposes the penalty
accreditation under the party-list system will remain just that. of prision mayor upon Those who shall publicly expound or proclaim
doctrines openly contrary to public morals. It penalizes immoral doctrines,
II. No substantial differentiation obscene publications and exhibition and indecent shows. Ang
Ladlad apparently falls under these legal provisions. This is clear from its
In the United States, whose equal protection doctrine pervades Philippine Petitions paragraph 6F: Consensual partnerships or relationships by gays and
jurisprudence, courts do not recognize lesbians, gays, homosexuals, and lesbians who are already of age It is further indicated in par. 24 of the Petition
bisexuals (LGBT) as a special class of individuals. x x xSignificantly, it has which waves for the record: In 2007, Men Having Sex with Men or MSMs
also been held that homosexuality is not a constitutionally protected in the Philippines were estimated as 670,000. Moreoever, Article 694 of the
fundamental right, and that nothing in the U.S. Constitution discloses a Civil Code defines nuisance as any act, omission x x x or anything else x x x
comparable intent to protect or promote the social or legal equality of which shocks, defies or disregards decency or morality x x x. These are all
homosexual relations, as in the case of race or religion or belief. unlawful.[10]
On January 26, 2010, Epifanio D. Salonga, Jr. filed his Motion to
Intervene[18] which motion was granted on February 2, 2010.[19]
On January 4, 2010, Ang Ladlad filed this Petition, praying that the Court annul
the Assailed Resolutions and direct the COMELEC to grant Ang Ladlads application The Parties Arguments
for accreditation.Ang Ladlad also sought the issuance ex parte of a preliminary
mandatory injunction against the COMELEC, which had previously announced that it Ang Ladlad argued that the denial of accreditation, insofar as it justified the
would begin printing the final ballots for the May 2010 elections by January 25, 2010. exclusion by using religious dogma, violated the constitutional guarantees against the
establishment of religion. Petitioner also claimed that the Assailed Resolutions
On January 6, 2010, we ordered the Office of the Solicitor General (OSG) to file contravened its constitutional rights to privacy, freedom of speech and assembly, and
its Comment on behalf of COMELEC not later than 12:00 noon of January 11, 2010. equal protection of laws, as well as constituted violations of the Philippines international
[11]
Instead of filing a Comment, however, the OSG filed a Motion for Extension, obligations against discrimination based on sexual orientation.
requesting that it be given until January 16, 2010 to Comment.[12] Somewhat
surprisingly, the OSG later filed a Comment in support of petitioners application. The OSG concurred with Ang Ladlads petition and argued that the COMELEC erred in
[13]
Thus, in order to give COMELEC the opportunity to fully ventilate its position, we denying petitioners application for registration since there was no basis for COMELECs
required it to file its own comment.[14] The COMELEC, through its Law Department, allegations of immorality. It also opined that LGBTs have their own special interests and
filed its Comment on February 2, 2010.[15] concerns which should have been recognized by the COMELEC as a separate
classification. However, insofar as the purported violations of petitioners freedom of
In the meantime, due to the urgency of the petition, we issued a temporary speech, expression, and assembly were concerned, the OSG maintained that there had
restraining order on January 12, 2010, effective immediately and continuing until been no restrictions on these rights.
further orders from this Court, directing the COMELEC to cease and desist from
implementing the Assailed Resolutions.[16] In its Comment, the COMELEC reiterated that petitioner does not have a
concrete and genuine national political agenda to benefit the nation and that the petition
Also, on January 13, 2010, the Commission on Human Rights (CHR) filed was validly dismissed on moral grounds. It also argued for the first time that the LGBT
a Motion to Intervene or to Appear as Amicus Curiae, attaching thereto its Comment-in- sector is not among the sectors enumerated by the Constitution and RA 7941, and that
Intervention.[17]The CHR opined that the denial of Ang Ladlads petition on moral petitioner made untruthful statements in its petition when it alleged its national existence
grounds violated the standards and principles of the Constitution, the Universal contrary to actual verification reports by COMELECs field personnel.
Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), and the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights (ICCPR). On January 19, 2010, we granted the CHRs motion to Our Ruling
intervene.
We grant the petition.
Compliance with the Requirements of the irregular procedure; at worst, a belated afterthought, a change in respondents theory, and
Constitution and Republic Act No. 7941 a serious violation of petitioners right to procedural due process.

Nonetheless, we find that there has been no misrepresentation. A cursory perusal


The COMELEC denied Ang Ladlads application for registration on the ground
of Ang Ladlads initial petition shows that it never claimed to exist in each province of
that the LGBT sector is neither enumerated in the Constitution and RA 7941, nor is it
the Philippines. Rather, petitioner alleged that the LGBT community in
associated with or related to any of the sectors in the enumeration.
the Philippines was estimated to constitute at least 670,000 persons; that it had 16,100
affiliates and members around the country, and 4,044 members in its electronic
Respondent mistakenly opines that our ruling in Ang Bagong Bayani stands for
discussion group.[22] Ang Ladlad also represented itself to be a national LGBT umbrella
the proposition that only those sectors specifically enumerated in the law or related to
organization with affiliates around the Philippines composed of the following LGBT
said sectors (labor, peasant, fisherfolk, urban poor, indigenous cultural communities,
networks:
elderly, handicapped, women, youth, veterans, overseas workers, and professionals)
may be registered under the party-list system. As we explicitly ruled in Ang Bagong Abra Gay Association
Bayani-OFW Labor Party v. Commission on Elections,[20] the enumeration of Aklan Butterfly Brigade (ABB) Aklan
marginalized and under-represented sectors is not exclusive. The crucial element is not Albay Gay Association
whether a sector is specifically enumerated, but whether a particular organization Arts Center of Cabanatuan City Nueva Ecija
complies with the requirements of the Constitution and RA 7941. Boys Legion Metro Manila
Cagayan de Oro People Like Us (CDO PLUS)
Respondent also argues that Ang Ladlad made untruthful statements in its
Cant Live in the Closet, Inc. (CLIC) Metro Manila
petition when it alleged that it had nationwide existence through its members and Cebu Pride Cebu City
affiliate organizations. The COMELEC claims that upon verification by its field Circle of Friends
personnel, it was shown that save for a few isolated places in the country, petitioner does Dipolog Gay Association Zamboanga del Norte
not exist in almost all provinces in the country.[21] Gay, Bisexual, & Transgender Youth Association (GABAY)
This argument that petitioner made untruthful statements in its petition when it Gay and Lesbian Activists Network for Gender Equality
alleged its national existence is a new one; previously, the COMELEC claimed that (GALANG) Metro Manila
Gay Mens Support Group (GMSG) Metro Manila
petitioner was not being truthful when it said that it or any of its nominees/party-list Gay United for Peace and Solidarity (GUPS) Lanao del Norte
representatives have not violated or failed to comply with laws, rules, or regulations Iloilo City Gay Association Iloilo City
relating to the elections. Nowhere was this ground for denial of petitioners accreditation Kabulig Writers Group Camarines Sur
mentioned or even alluded to in the Assailed Resolutions. This, in itself, is quite curious, Lesbian Advocates Philippines, Inc. (LEAP)
considering that the reports of petitioners alleged non-existence were already available LUMINA Baguio City
to the COMELEC prior to the issuance of the First Assailed Resolution. At best, this is Marikina Gay Association Metro Manila
Metropolitan Community Church (MCC) Metro Manila
Naga City Gay Association Naga City
ONE BACARDI
Order of St. Aelred (OSAe) Metro Manila Our Constitution provides in Article III, Section 5 that [n]o law shall be made
PUP LAKAN respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof. At
RADAR PRIDEWEAR
bottom, what our non-establishment clause calls for is government neutrality in religious
Rainbow Rights Project (R-Rights), Inc. Metro Manila
San Jose del Monte Gay Association Bulacan matters.[24] Clearly, governmental reliance on religious justification is inconsistent with
Sining Kayumanggi Royal Family Rizal this policy of neutrality.[25] We thus find that it was grave violation of the non-
Society of Transexual Women of the Philippines (STRAP) establishment clause for the COMELEC to utilize the Bible and the Koran to justify the
Metro Manila exclusion of Ang Ladlad.
Soul Jive Antipolo, Rizal
The Link Davao City
Rather than relying on religious belief, the legitimacy of the Assailed Resolutions
Tayabas Gay Association Quezon
Womens Bisexual Network Metro Manila should depend, instead, on whether the COMELEC is able to advance some justification
Zamboanga Gay Association Zamboanga City[23] for its rulings beyond mere conformity to religious doctrine. Otherwise stated,
government must act for secular purposes and in ways that have primarily secular
effects. As we held in Estrada v. Escritor:[26]
Since the COMELEC only searched for the names ANG LADLAD LGBT
or LADLAD LGBT, it is no surprise that they found that petitioner had no presence in x x x The morality referred to in the law is public and necessarily secular, not
any of these regions. In fact, if COMELECs findings are to be believed, petitioner does religious as the dissent of Mr. Justice Carpio holds. "Religious teachings as
expressed in public debate may influence the civil public order but public
not even exist in Quezon City, which is registered as Ang Ladlads principal place of moral disputes may be resolved only on grounds articulable in secular terms."
business. Otherwise, if government relies upon religious beliefs in formulating public
policies and morals, the resulting policies and morals would require
Against this backdrop, we find that Ang Ladlad has sufficiently demonstrated its conformity to what some might regard as religious programs or agenda. The
compliance with the legal requirements for accreditation. Indeed, aside from non-believers would therefore be compelled to conform to a standard of
COMELECs moral objection and the belated allegation of non-existence, nowhere in conduct buttressed by a religious belief, i.e., to a "compelled religion,"
anathema to religious freedom. Likewise, if government based its actions
the records has the respondent ever found/ruled that Ang Ladlad is not qualified to
upon religious beliefs, it would tacitly approve or endorse that belief and
register as a party-list organization under any of the requisites under RA 7941 or the thereby also tacitly disapprove contrary religious or non-religious views that
guidelines in Ang Bagong Bayani. The difference, COMELEC claims, lies in Ang would not support the policy. As a result, government will not provide full
Ladlads morality, or lack thereof. religious freedom for all its citizens, or even make it appear that those whose
beliefs are disapproved are second-class citizens.
Religion as the Basis for Refusal to Accept In other words, government action, including its proscription of immorality
Ang Ladlads Petition for Registration as expressed in criminal law like concubinage, must have a secular purpose.
That is, the government proscribes this conduct because it is "detrimental (or
dangerous) to those conditions upon which depend the existence and progress same gender is a bad example. It will bring down the standard of morals we
of human society" and not because the conduct is proscribed by the beliefs of cherish in our civilized society. Any society without a set of moral precepts is
one religion or the other. Although admittedly, moral judgments based on in danger of losing its own existence.[28]
religion might have a compelling influence on those engaged in public
deliberations over what actions would be considered a moral disapprobation
punishable by law. After all, they might also be adherents of a religion and We are not blind to the fact that, through the years, homosexual conduct, and
thus have religious opinions and moral codes with a compelling influence on perhaps homosexuals themselves, have borne the brunt of societal disapproval. It is not
them; the human mind endeavors to regulate the temporal and spiritual
difficult to imagine the reasons behind this censure religious beliefs, convictions about
institutions of society in a uniform manner, harmonizing earth with heaven.
Succinctly put, a law could be religious or Kantian or Aquinian or utilitarian the preservation of marriage, family, and procreation, even dislike or distrust of
in its deepest roots, but it must have an articulable and discernible secular homosexuals themselves and their perceived lifestyle. Nonetheless, we recall that
purpose and justification to pass scrutiny of the religion clauses. x x x the Philippines has not seen fit to criminalize homosexual conduct. Evidently, therefore,
Recognizing the religious nature of the Filipinos and the elevating influence these generally accepted public morals have not been convincingly transplanted into the
of religion in society, however, the Philippine constitution's religion clauses realm of law.[29]
prescribe not a strict but a benevolent neutrality. Benevolent neutrality
recognizes that government must pursue its secular goals and interests but at
the same time strive to uphold religious liberty to the greatest extent possible The Assailed Resolutions have not identified any specific overt immoral act performed
within flexible constitutional limits. Thus, although the morality by Ang Ladlad. Even the OSG agrees that there should have been a finding by the
contemplated by laws is secular, benevolent neutrality could allow for COMELEC that the groups members have committed or are committing immoral acts.
accommodation of morality based on religion, provided it does not offend [30]
The OSG argues:
compelling state interests.[27]
x x x A person may be sexually attracted to a person of the same gender, of a
different gender, or more than one gender, but mere attraction does not
Public Morals as a Ground to Deny Ang translate to immoral acts. There is a great divide between thought and
Ladlads Petition for Registration action. Reduction ad absurdum. If immoral thoughts could be penalized,
COMELEC would have its hands full of disqualification cases against both
the straights and the gays. Certainly this is not the intendment of the law.[31]
Respondent suggests that although the moral condemnation of homosexuality
and homosexual conduct may be religion-based, it has long been transplanted into
generally accepted public morals. The COMELEC argues: Respondent has failed to explain what societal ills are sought to be prevented, or
why special protection is required for the youth. Neither has the COMELEC
Petitioners accreditation was denied not necessarily because their group condescended to justify its position that petitioners admission into the party-list system
consists of LGBTs but because of the danger it poses to the people especially would be so harmful as to irreparably damage the moral fabric of society. We, of course,
the youth. Once it is recognized by the government, a sector which believes do not suggest that the state is wholly without authority to regulate matters concerning
that there is nothing wrong in having sexual relations with individuals of the
morality, sexuality, and sexual relations, and we recognize that the government will and Despite the absolutism of Article III, Section 1 of our Constitution, which
should continue to restrict behavior considered detrimental to society. Nonetheless, we provides nor shall any person be denied equal protection of the laws, courts have never
cannot countenance advocates who, undoubtedly with the loftiest of intentions, situate interpreted the provision as an absolute prohibition on classification. Equality, said
morality on one end of an argument or another, without bothering to go through the Aristotle, consists in the same treatment of similar persons. [33] The equal protection
rigors of legal reasoning and explanation. In this, the notion of morality is robbed of all clause guarantees that no person or class of persons shall be deprived of the same
value. Clearly then, the bare invocation of morality will not remove an issue from our protection of laws which is enjoyed by other persons or other classes in the same place
scrutiny. and in like circumstances.[34]

We also find the COMELECs reference to purported violations of our penal and Recent jurisprudence has affirmed that if a law neither burdens a fundamental right nor
civil laws flimsy, at best; disingenuous, at worst. Article 694 of the Civil Code defines a targets a suspect class, we will uphold the classification as long as it bears a rational
nuisance as any act, omission, establishment, condition of property, or anything else relationship to some legitimate government end.[35] In Central Bank Employees
which shocks, defies, or disregards decency or morality, the remedies for which are a Association, Inc. v. Banko Sentral ng Pilipinas,[36] we declared that [i]n our jurisdiction,
prosecution under the Revised Penal Code or any local ordinance, a civil action, or the standard of analysis of equal protection challenges x x x have followed the rational
abatement without judicial proceedings.[32] A violation of Article 201 of the Revised basis test, coupled with a deferential attitude to legislative classifications and a
Penal Code, on the other hand, requires proof beyond reasonable doubt to support a reluctance to invalidate a law unless there is a showing of a clear and unequivocal
criminal conviction. It hardly needs to be emphasized that mere allegation of violation breach of the Constitution.[37]
of laws is not proof, and a mere blanket invocation of public morals cannot replace the
institution of civil or criminal proceedings and a judicial determination of liability or The COMELEC posits that the majority of the Philippine population considers
culpability. homosexual conduct as immoral and unacceptable, and this constitutes sufficient reason
As such, we hold that moral disapproval, without more, is not a sufficient to disqualify the petitioner. Unfortunately for the respondent, the Philippine electorate
governmental interest to justify exclusion of homosexuals from participation in the has expressed no such belief. No law exists to criminalize homosexual behavior or
party-list system. The denial of Ang Ladlads registration on purely moral grounds expressions or parties about homosexual behavior. Indeed, even if we were to assume
amounts more to a statement of dislike and disapproval of homosexuals, rather than a that public opinion is as the COMELEC describes it, the asserted state interest here that
tool to further any substantial public interest.Respondents blanket justifications give rise is, moral disapproval of an unpopular minority is not a legitimate state interest that is
to the inevitable conclusion that the COMELEC targets homosexuals themselves as a sufficient to satisfy rational basis review under the equal protection clause. The
class, not because of any particular morally reprehensible act.It is this selective targeting COMELECs differentiation, and its unsubstantiated claim that Ang Ladlad cannot
that implicates our equal protection clause. contribute to the formulation of legislation that would benefit the nation, furthers no
legitimate state interest other than disapproval of or dislike for a disfavored group.
Equal Protection
From the standpoint of the political process, the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and
transgender have the same interest in participating in the party-list system on the same
basis as other political parties similarly situated. State intrusion in this case is equally Through a constitutionally designed process, the people deliberate and
burdensome. Hence, laws of general application should apply with equal force to decide. Majority rule is a necessary principle in this democratic governance.
Thus, when public deliberation on moral judgments is finally crystallized into
LGBTs, and they deserve to participate in the party-list system on the same basis as
law, the laws will largely reflect the beliefs and preferences of the majority,
other marginalized and under-represented sectors. i.e., the mainstream or median groups. Nevertheless, in the very act of
adopting and accepting a constitution and the limits it specifies including
It bears stressing that our finding that COMELECs act of differentiating LGBTs protection of religious freedom "not only for a minority, however small not
from heterosexuals insofar as the party-list system is concerned does not imply that any only for a majority, however large but for each of us" the majority imposes
other law distinguishing between heterosexuals and homosexuals under different upon itself a self-denying ordinance. It promises not to do what it otherwise
circumstances would similarly fail. We disagree with the OSGs position that could do: to ride roughshod over the dissenting minorities.
homosexuals are a class in themselves for the purposes of the equal protection clause.
[38]
We are not prepared to single out homosexuals as a separate class meriting special or
Freedom of expression constitutes one of the essential foundations of a
differentiated treatment. We have not received sufficient evidence to this effect, and it is
democratic society, and this freedom applies not only to those that are favorably
simply unnecessary to make such a ruling today. Petitioner itself has merely demanded
received but also to those that offend, shock, or disturb. Any restriction imposed in this
that it be recognized under the same basis as all other groups similarly situated, and that
sphere must be proportionate to the legitimate aim pursued. Absent any compelling state
the COMELEC made an unwarranted and impermissible classification not justified by
interest, it is not for the COMELEC or this Court to impose its views on the populace.
the circumstances of the case.
Otherwise stated, the COMELEC is certainly not free to interfere with speech for no
better reason than promoting an approved message or discouraging a disfavored one.
Freedom of Expression and Association
This position gains even more force if one considers that homosexual conduct is
Under our system of laws, every group has the right to promote its agenda and
not illegal in this country. It follows that both expressions concerning ones
attempt to persuade society of the validity of its position through normal democratic
homosexuality and the activity of forming a political association that supports LGBT
means.[39] It is in the public square that deeply held convictions and differing opinions
individuals are protected as well.
should be distilled and deliberated upon. As we held in Estrada v. Escritor:[40]
Other jurisdictions have gone so far as to categorically rule that even
In a democracy, this common agreement on political and moral ideas is overwhelming public perception that homosexual conduct violates public morality does
distilled in the public square. Where citizens are free, every opinion, every not justify criminalizing same-sex conduct.[41] European and United Nations judicial
prejudice, every aspiration, and every moral discernment has access to the decisions have ruled in favor of gay rights claimants on both privacy and equality
public square where people deliberate the order of their life together. Citizens grounds, citing general privacy and equal protection provisions in foreign and
are the bearers of opinion, including opinion shaped by, or espousing international texts.[42] To the extent that there is much to learn from other jurisdictions
religious belief, and these citizens have equal access to the public square. In that have reflected on the issues we face here, such jurisprudence is certainly
this representative democracy, the state is prohibited from determining which
convictions and moral judgments may be proposed for public deliberation.
illuminating. These foreign authorities, while not formally binding on Philippine courts, religious or moral views of one part of the community to exclude from consideration the
may nevertheless have persuasive influence on the Courts analysis. values of other members of the community.

In the area of freedom of expression, for instance, United States courts have Of course, none of this suggests the impending arrival of a golden age for gay rights
ruled that existing free speech doctrines protect gay and lesbian rights to expressive litigants. It well may be that this Decision will only serve to highlight the discrepancy
conduct. In order to justify the prohibition of a particular expression of opinion, public between the rigid constitutional analysis of this Court and the more complex moral
institutions must show that their actions were caused by something more than a mere sentiments of Filipinos. We do not suggest that public opinion, even at its most liberal,
desire to avoid the discomfort and unpleasantness that always accompany an unpopular reflect a clear-cut strong consensus favorable to gay rights claims and we neither
viewpoint.[43] attempt nor expect to affect individual perceptions of homosexuality through this
Decision.
With respect to freedom of association for the advancement of ideas and beliefs,
in Europe, with its vibrant human rights tradition, the European Court of Human Rights The OSG argues that since there has been neither prior restraint nor subsequent
(ECHR) has repeatedly stated that a political party may campaign for a change in the punishment imposed on Ang Ladlad, and its members have not been deprived of their
law or the constitutional structures of a state if it uses legal and democratic means and right to voluntarily associate, then there has been no restriction on their freedom of
the changes it proposes are consistent with democratic principles. The ECHR has expression or association. The OSG argues that:
emphasized that political ideas that challenge the existing order and whose realization is
advocated by peaceful means must be afforded a proper opportunity of expression There was no utterance restricted, no publication censored, or any assembly
through the exercise of the right of association, even if such ideas may seem shocking or denied. [COMELEC] simply exercised its authority to review and verify the
qualifications of petitioner as a sectoral party applying to participate in the
unacceptable to the authorities or the majority of the population. [44]A political group
party-list system. This lawful exercise of duty cannot be said to be a
should not be hindered solely because it seeks to publicly debate controversial political transgression of Section 4, Article III of the Constitution.
issues in order to find solutions capable of satisfying everyone concerned. [45] Only if a
political party incites violence or puts forward policies that are incompatible with xxxx
democracy does it fall outside the protection of the freedom of association guarantee.[46]
A denial of the petition for registration x x x does not deprive the members of
We do not doubt that a number of our citizens may believe that homosexual the petitioner to freely take part in the conduct of elections. Their right to vote
will not be hampered by said denial. In fact, the right to vote is a
conduct is distasteful, offensive, or even defiant. They are entitled to hold and express constitutionally-guaranteed right which cannot be limited.
that view. On the other hand, LGBTs and their supporters, in all likelihood, believe with
equal fervor that relationships between individuals of the same sex are morally As to its right to be elected in a genuine periodic election, petitioner contends
equivalent to heterosexual relationships. They, too, are entitled to hold and express that that the denial of Ang Ladlads petition has the clear and immediate effect of
view. However, as far as this Court is concerned, our democracy precludes using the limiting, if not outrightly nullifying the capacity of its members to fully and
equally participate in public life through engagement in the party list
elections. All persons are equal before the law and are entitled without any
discrimination to the equal protection of the law. In this respect, the law shall
This argument is puerile. The holding of a public office is not a right prohibit any discrimination and guarantee to all persons equal and effective
but a privilege subject to limitations imposed by law. x x x[47] protection against discrimination on any ground such as race, colour, sex,
The OSG fails to recall that petitioner has, in fact, established its qualifications to language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin,
participate in the party-list system, and as advanced by the OSG itself the moral property, birth or other status.
objection offered by the COMELEC was not a limitation imposed by law. To the extent,
therefore, that the petitioner has been precluded, because of COMELECs action, from
In this context, the principle of non-discrimination requires that laws of general
publicly expressing its views as a political party and participating on an equal basis in
application relating to elections be applied equally to all persons, regardless of sexual
the political process with other equally-qualified party-list candidates, we find that there
orientation. Although sexual orientation is not specifically enumerated as a status or
has, indeed, been a transgression of petitioners fundamental rights.
ratio for discrimination in Article 26 of the ICCPR, the ICCPR Human Rights
Non-Discrimination and International Law Committee has opined that the reference to sex in Article 26 should be construed to
include sexual orientation.[48] Additionally, a variety of United Nations bodies have
declared discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation to be prohibited under various
In an age that has seen international law evolve geometrically in scope and international agreements.[49]
promise, international human rights law, in particular, has grown dynamically in its
attempt to bring about a more just and humane world order. For individuals and groups The UDHR provides:
struggling with inadequate structural and governmental support, international human
Article 21.
rights norms are particularly significant, and should be effectively enforced in domestic
legal systems so that such norms may become actual, rather than ideal, standards of (1) Everyone has the right to take part in the government of his
conduct. country, directly or through freely chosen representatives.
Likewise, the ICCPR states:
Our Decision today is fully in accord with our international obligations to protect
and promote human rights. In particular, we explicitly recognize the principle of non- Article 25
discrimination as it relates to the right to electoral participation, enunciated in the UDHR Every citizen shall have the right and the opportunity, without any of
and the ICCPR. the distinctions mentioned in article 2 and without unreasonable restrictions:

(a) To take part in the conduct of public affairs, directly or through


The principle of non-discrimination is laid out in Article 26 of the ICCPR, as follows: freely chosen representatives;

Article 26
(b) To vote and to be elected at genuine periodic elections which shall We stress, however, that although this Court stands willing to assume the
be by universal and equal suffrage and shall be held by secret ballot, responsibility of giving effect to the Philippines international law obligations, the
guaranteeing the free expression of the will of the electors;
blanket invocation of international law is not the panacea for all social ills. We refer now
(c) To have access, on general terms of equality, to public service in to the petitioners invocation of the Yogyakarta Principles (the Application of
his country. International Human Rights Law In Relation to Sexual Orientation and Gender
Identity),[51] which petitioner declares to reflect binding principles of international law.

As stated by the CHR in its Comment-in-Intervention, the scope of the right to electoral At this time, we are not prepared to declare that these Yogyakarta
participation is elaborated by the Human Rights Committee in its General Comment Principles contain norms that are obligatory on the Philippines. There are declarations
No. 25 (Participation in Public Affairs and the Right to Vote) as follows: and obligations outlined in said Principles which are not reflective of the current state of
international law, and do not find basis in any of the sources of international law
1. Article 25 of the Covenant recognizes and protects the right of enumerated under Article 38(1) of the Statute of the International Court of Justice.
every citizen to take part in the conduct of public affairs, the right to vote and [52]
Petitioner has not undertaken any objective and rigorous analysis of these alleged
to be elected and the right to have access to public service. Whatever form of
principles of international law to ascertain their true status.
constitution or government is in force, the Covenant requires States to adopt
such legislative and other measures as may be necessary to ensure that
citizens have an effective opportunity to enjoy the rights it protects. Article 25 We also hasten to add that not everything that society or a certain segment of
lies at the core of democratic government based on the consent of the people society wants or demands is automatically a human right. This is not an arbitrary human
and in conformity with the principles of the Covenant. intervention that may be added to or subtracted from at will. It is unfortunate that much
of what passes for human rights today is a much broader context of needs that identifies
xxxx
many social desires as rights in order to further claims that international law obliges
15. The effective implementation of the right and the opportunity to states to sanction these innovations. This has the effect of diluting real human rights, and
stand for elective office ensures that persons entitled to vote have a free is a result of the notion that if wants are couched in rights language, then they are no
choice of candidates. Any restrictions on the right to stand for election, such longer controversial.
as minimum age, must be justifiable on objective and reasonable criteria.
Persons who are otherwise eligible to stand for election should not be Using even the most liberal of lenses, these Yogyakarta Principles, consisting of
excluded by unreasonable or discriminatory requirements such as education, a declaration formulated by various international law professors, are at best de lege
residence or descent, or by reason of political affiliation. No person should
ferenda and do not constitute binding obligations on the Philippines. Indeed, so much of
suffer discrimination or disadvantage of any kind because of that person's
candidacy. States parties should indicate and explain the legislative contemporary international law is characterized by the soft law nomenclature, i.e.,
provisions which exclude any group or category of persons from elective international law is full of principles that promote international cooperation, harmony,
office.[50] and respect for human rights, most of which amount to no more than well-meaning
desires, without the support of either State practice or opinio juris.[53]
As a final note, we cannot help but observe that the social issues presented by this
case are emotionally charged, societal attitudes are in flux, even the psychiatric and
religious communities are divided in opinion. This Courts role is not to impose its own
view of acceptable behavior. Rather, it is to apply the Constitution and laws as best as it
can, uninfluenced by public opinion, and confident in the knowledge that our
democracy is resilient enough to withstand vigorous debate.

WHEREFORE, the Petition is hereby GRANTED. The Resolutions of the


Commission on Elections dated November 11, 2009 and December 16, 2009 in SPP
No. 09-228 (PL) are hereby SET ASIDE. The Commission on Elections is directed
to GRANT petitioners application for party-list accreditation.
SO ORDERED.
G.R. No. 212426 REPRESENTED BY ITS NATIONAL PRESIDENT JOSELITO USTAREZ, NENITA GONZAGA,
VIOLETA ESPIRITU, VIRGINIA FLORES, AND ARMANDO TEODORO, JR., Petitioners-in-
RENE A.V. SAGUISAG, WIGBERTO E. TAÑADA, FRANCISCO "DODONG" NEMENZO, JR., SR. Intervention,
MARY JOHN MANANZAN, PACIFICO A. AGABIN, ESTEBAN "STEVE" SALONGA, H. HARRY RENE A.Q. SAGUISAG, JR., Petitioner-in-Intervention.
L. ROQUE, JR., EVALYN G. URSUA, EDRE U. OLALIA, DR. CAROL PAGADUAN-ARAULLO,
DR. ROLAND SIMBULAN, AND TEDDY CASIÑO, Petitioners, DECISION
vs.
EXECUTIVE SECRETARY PAQUITO N. OCHOA, JR., DEPARTMENT OF NATIONAL DEFENSE SERENO, J.:
SECRETARY VOLTAIRE GAZMIN, DEPARTMENT OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS SECRETARY
ALBERT DEL ROSARIO, JR., DEPARTMENT OF BUDGET AND MANAGEMENT SECRETARY The petitions before this Court question the constitutionality of the Enhanced Defense Cooperation
1

FLORENCIO ABAD, AND ARMED FORCES OF THE PHILIPPINES CHIEF OF STAFF GENERAL Agreement (EDCA) between the Republic of the Philippines and the United States of America
EMMANUEL T. BAUTISTA, Respondents. (U.S.). Petitioners allege that respondents committed grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack
or excess of jurisdiction when they entered into EDCA with the U.S., claiming that the instrument
2

x-----------------------x violated multiple constitutional provisions. In reply, respondents argue that petitioners lack standing
3

to bring the suit. To support the legality of their actions, respondents invoke the 1987 Constitution,
G.R. No. 212444 treaties, and judicial precedents. 4

BAGONG ALYANSANG MAKABAYAN (BAYAN), REPRESENTED BY ITS SECRETARY A proper analysis of the issues requires this Court to lay down at the outset the basic parameters of
GENERAL RENATO M. REYES, JR., BAYAN MUNA PARTY-LIST REPRESENTATIVES NERI J. the constitutional powers and roles of the President and the Senate in respect of the above issues.
COLMENARES AND CARLOS ZARATE, GABRIELA WOMEN'S PARTY-LIST A more detailed discussion of these powers and roles will be made in the latter portions.
REPRESENTATIVES LUZ ILAGAN AND EMERENCIANA DE JESUS, ACT TEACHERS PARTY-
LIST REPRESENTATIVE ANTONIO L. TINIO, ANAKPAWIS PARTY-LIST REPRESENTATIVE I. BROAD CONSTITUTIONAL CONTEXT OF THE POWERS OF THE PRESIDENT: DEFENSE,
FERNANDO HICAP, KABATAAN PARTY-LIST REPRESENTATIVE TERRY RIDON, FOREIGN RELATIONS, AND EDCA
MAKABAYANG KOALISYON NG MAMAMAYAN (MAKABAYAN), REPRESENTED BY
SATURNINO OCAMPO AND LIZA MAZA, BIENVENIDO LUMBERA, JOEL C. LAMANGAN, A. The Prime Duty of the State and the Consolidation of Executive Power in the President
RAFAEL MARIANO, SALVADOR FRANCE, ROGELIO M. SOLUTA, AND CLEMENTE G.
BAUTISTA, Petitioners,
Mataimtim kong pinanunumpaan (o pinatotohanan) na tutuparin ko nang buong katapatan at
vs.
sigasig ang aking mga tungkulin bilang Pangulo (o Pangalawang Pangulo o Nanunungkulang
DEPARTMENT OF NATIONAL DEFENSE (DND) SECRETARY VOLTAIRE GAZMIN,
Pangulo) ng Pilipinas, pangangalagaan at ipagtatanggol ang kanyang Konstitusyon, ipatutupad
DEPARTMENT OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS SECRETARY ALBERT DEL ROSARIO, EXECUTIVE
ang mga batas nito, magiging makatarungan sa bawat tao, at itatalaga ang aking sarili sa
SECRETARY PAQUITO N. OCHOA, JR., ARMED FORCES OF THE PHILIPPINES CHIEF OF
paglilingkod sa Bansa. Kasihan nawa aka ng Diyos.
STAFF GENERAL EMMANUEL T. BAUTISTA, DEFENSE UNDERSECRETARY PIO LORENZO
BATINO, AMBASSADOR LOURDES YPARRAGUIRRE, AMBASSADOR J. EDUARDO MALAYA,
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE UNDERSECRETARY FRANCISCO BARAAN III, AND DND - Panunumpa sa Katungkulan ng Pangulo ng Pilipinas ayon sa Saligang Batas 5

ASSISTANT SECRETARY FOR STRATEGIC ASSESSMENTS RAYMUND JOSE QUILOP AS


CHAIRPERSON AND MEMBERS, RESPECTIVELY, OF THE NEGOTIATING PANEL FOR THE The 1987 Constitution has "vested the executive power in the President of the Republic of the
PHILIPPINES ON EDCA, Respondents. Philippines." While the vastness of the executive power that has been consolidated in the person
6

of the President cannot be expressed fully in one provision, the Constitution has stated the prime
x-----------------------x duty of the government, of which the President is the head:

KILUSANG MAYO UNO, REPRESENTED BY ITS CHAIRPERSON, ELMER LABOG, The prime duty of the Government is to serve and protect the people. The Government may
CONFEDERATION FOR UNITY, RECOGNITION AND ADVANCEMENT OF GOVERNMENT call upon the people to defend the State and, in the fulfillment thereof, all citizens may be required,
EMPLOYEES (COURAGE), REPRESENTED BY ITS NATIONAL PRESIDENT FERDINAND under conditions provided by law, to render personal military or civil service. (Emphases supplied)
7

GAITE, NATIONAL FEDERATION OF LABOR UNIONS-KILUSANG MAYO UNO,


B. The duty to protect the territory and the citizens of the Philippines, the power to call upon regularly brief him on meaningful events all over the world. He has also unlimited access to ultra-
the people to defend the State, and the President as Commander-in-Chief sensitive military intelligence data. In fine, the presidential role in foreign affairs is dominant and the
President is traditionally accorded a wider degree of discretion in the conduct of foreign affairs. The
The duty to protect the State and its people must be carried out earnestly and effectively throughout regularity, nay, validity of his actions are adjudged under less stringent standards, lest their judicial
the whole territory of the Philippines in accordance with the constitutional provision on national repudiation lead to breach of an international obligation, rupture of state relations, forfeiture of
territory. Hence, the President of the Philippines, as the sole repository of executive power, is the confidence, national embarrassment and a plethora of other problems with equally undesirable
guardian of the Philippine archipelago, including all the islands and waters embraced therein and consequences. 17

all other territories over which it has sovereignty or jurisdiction. These territories consist of its
terrestrial, fluvial, and aerial domains; including its territorial sea, the seabed, the subsoil, the The role of the President in foreign affairs is qualified by the Constitution in that the Chief Executive
insular shelves, and other submarine areas; and the waters around, between, and connecting the must give paramount importance to the sovereignty of the nation, the integrity of its territory, its
islands of the archipelago, regardless of their breadth and dimensions. 8
interest, and the right of the sovereign Filipino people to self-determination. In specific provisions,
18

the President's power is also limited, or at least shared, as in Section 2 of Article II on the conduct
To carry out this important duty, the President is equipped with authority over the Armed Forces of of war; Sections 20 and 21 of Article VII on foreign loans, treaties, and international agreements;
the Philippines (AFP), which is the protector of the people and the state. The AFP's role is to
9 Sections 4(2) and 5(2)(a) of Article VIII on the judicial review of executive acts; Sections 4 and 25 of
secure the sovereignty of the State and the integrity of the national territory. In addition, the
10 Article XVIII on treaties and international agreements entered into prior to the Constitution and on
Executive is constitutionally empowered to maintain peace and order; protect life, liberty, and the presence of foreign military troops, bases, or facilities.
property; and promote the general welfare. 11

D. The relationship between the two major presidential functions and the role of the Senate
In recognition of these powers, Congress has specified that the President must oversee, ensure,
and reinforce our defensive capabilities against external and internal threats and, in the same vein,
12
Clearly, the power to defend the State and to act as its representative in the international sphere
ensure that the country is adequately prepared for all national and local emergencies arising from inheres in the person of the President. This power, however, does not crystallize into absolute
natural and man-made disasters. 13
discretion to craft whatever instrument the Chief Executive so desires. As previously mentioned, the
Senate has a role in ensuring that treaties or international agreements the President enters into, as
To be sure, this power is limited by the Constitution itself. To illustrate, the President may call out contemplated in Section 21 of Article VII of the Constitution, obtain the approval of two-thirds of its
the AFP to prevent or suppress instances of lawless violence, invasion or rebellion, but not 14 members.
suspend the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus for a period exceeding 60 days, or place the
Philippines or any part thereof under martial law exceeding that same span. In the exercise of Previously, treaties under the 1973 Constitution required ratification by a majority of the Batasang
these powers, the President is also duty-bound to submit a report to Congress, in person or in Pambansa, except in instances wherein the President "may enter into international treaties or
19

writing, within 48 hours from the proclamation of martial law or the suspension of the privilege of agreements as the national welfare and interest may require." This left a large margin of discretion
20

the writ of habeas corpus; and Congress may in turn revoke the proclamation or suspension. The that the President could use to bypass the Legislature altogether. This was a departure from the
same provision provides for the Supreme Court's review of the factual basis for the proclamation or 1935 Constitution, which explicitly gave the President the power to enter into treaties only with the
suspension, as well as the promulgation of the decision within 30 days from filing. concurrence of two-thirds of all the Members of the Senate. The 1987 Constitution returned the
21

Senate's power and, with it, the legislative's traditional role in foreign affairs.
22 23

C. The power and duty to conduct foreign relations


The responsibility of the President when it comes to treaties and international agreements under
The President also carries the mandate of being the sole organ in the conduct of foreign the present Constitution is therefore shared with the Senate. This shared role, petitioners claim, is
relations. Since every state has the capacity to interact with and engage in relations with other
15 bypassed by EDCA.
sovereign states, it is but logical that every state must vest in an agent the authority to represent
16

its interests to those other sovereign states. II. HISTORICAL ANTECEDENTS OF EDCA

The conduct of foreign relations is full of complexities and consequences, sometimes with life and A. U.S. takeover of Spanish colonization and its military bases, and the transition to
death significance to the nation especially in times of war. It can only be entrusted to that Philippine independence
department of government which can act on the basis of the best available information and can
decide with decisiveness. x x x It is also the President who possesses the most comprehensive and The presence of the U.S. military forces in the country can be traced to their pivotal victory in the
the most confidential information about foreign countries for our diplomatic and consular officials 1898 Battle of Manila Bay during the Spanish-American War. Spain relinquished its sovereignty
24
over the Philippine Islands in favor of the U.S. upon its formal surrender a few months later. By
25
Soon after the Philippines was granted independence, the two countries entered into their first
1899, the Americans had consolidated a military administration in the archipelago. 26
military arrangement pursuant to the Treaty of General Relations - the 1947 MBA. The Senate 41

concurred on the premise of "mutuality of security interest," which provided for the presence and
42

When it became clear that the American forces intended to impose colonial control over the operation of 23 U.S. military bases in the Philippines for 99 years or until the year 2046. The treaty 43

Philippine Islands, General Emilio Aguinaldo immediately led the Filipinos into an all-out war also obliged the Philippines to negotiate with the U.S. to allow the latter to expand the existing
against the U.S. The Filipinos were ultimately defeated in the Philippine-American War, which
27 bases or to acquire new ones as military necessity might require. 44

lasted until 1902 and led to the downfall of the first Philippine Republic. The Americans henceforth
28

began to strengthen their foothold in the country. They took over and expanded the former
29
A number of significant amendments to the 1947 MBA were made. With respect to its duration, the
45

Spanish Naval Base in Subic Bay, Zambales, and put up a cavalry post called Fort Stotsenberg in parties entered into the Ramos-Rusk Agreement of 1966, which reduced the term of the treaty from
Pampanga, now known as Clark Air Base. 30
99 years to a total of 44 years or until 1991. Concerning the number of U.S. military bases in the
46

country, the Bohlen-Serrano Memorandum of Agreement provided for the return to the Philippines
When talks of the eventual independence of the Philippine Islands gained ground, the U.S. of 17 U.S. military bases covering a total area of 117,075 hectares. Twelve years later, the U.S.
47

manifested the desire to maintain military bases and armed forces in the country. The U.S.
31 returned Sangley Point in Cavite City through an exchange of notes. Then, through the Romulo-
48

Congress later enacted the Hare-Hawes-Cutting Act of 1933, which required that the proposed Murphy Exchange of Notes of 1979, the parties agreed to the recognition of Philippine sovereignty
constitution of an independent Philippines recognize the right of the U.S. to maintain the latter's over Clark and Subic Bases and the reduction of the areas that could be used by the U.S.
armed forces and military bases. The Philippine Legislature rejected that law, as it also gave the
32 military. The agreement also provided for the mandatory review of the treaty every five years. In
49 50

U.S. the power to unilaterally designate any part of Philippine territory as a permanent military or 1983, the parties revised the 1947 MBA through the Romualdez-Armacost Agreement. The 51

naval base of the U.S. within two years from complete independence. 33 revision pertained to the operational use of the military bases by the U.S. government within the
context of Philippine sovereignty, including the need for prior consultation with the Philippine
52

The U.S. Legislature subsequently crafted another law called the Tydings-McDuffie Act or the government on the former' s use of the bases for military combat operations or the establishment of
Philippine Independence Act of 1934. Compared to the old Hare-Hawes-Cutting Act, the new law long-range missiles.53

provided for the surrender to the Commonwealth Government of "all military and other
reservations" of the U.S. government in the Philippines, except "naval reservations and refueling Pursuant to the legislative authorization granted under Republic Act No. 9, the President also 54

stations." Furthermore, the law authorized the U.S. President to enter into negotiations for the
34 entered into the 1947 Military Assistance Agreement with the U.S. This executive agreement
55

adjustment and settlement of all questions relating to naval reservations and fueling stations within established the conditions under which U.S. military assistance would be granted to the
two years after the Philippines would have gained independence. Under the Tydings-McDuffie Act,
35 Philippines, particularly the provision of military arms, ammunitions, supplies, equipment, vessels,
56

the U.S. President would proclaim the American withdrawal and surrender of sovereignty over the services, and training for the latter's defense forces. An exchange of notes in 1953 made it clear
57

islands 10 years after the inauguration of the new government in the Philippines. This law36 that the agreement would remain in force until terminated by any of the parties. 58

eventually led to the promulgation of the 1935 Philippine Constitution.


To further strengthen their defense and security relationship, the Philippines and the U.S. next
59

The original plan to surrender the military bases changed. At the height of the Second World War,
37 entered into the MDT in 1951. Concurred in by both the Philippine and the U.S. Senates, the
60 61

the Philippine and the U.S. Legislatures each passed resolutions authorizing their respective treaty has two main features: first, it allowed for mutual assistance in maintaining and developing
Presidents to negotiate the matter of retaining military bases in the country after the planned their individual and collective capacities to resist an armed attack; and second, it provided for their
62

withdrawal of the U.S. Subsequently, in 1946, the countries entered into the Treaty of General
38 mutual self-defense in the event of an armed attack against the territory of either party. The treaty 63

Relations, in which the U.S. relinquished all control and sovereignty over the Philippine was premised on their recognition that an armed attack on either of them would equally be a threat
Islands, except the areas that would be covered by the American military bases in the to the security of the other.
64

country. This treaty eventually led to the creation of the post-colonial legal regime on which would
39

hinge the continued presence of U.S. military forces until 1991: the Military Bases Agreement C. Current legal regime on the presence of U.S. armed forces in the country
(MBA) of 1947, the Military Assistance Agreement of 1947, and the Mutual Defense Treaty (MDT)
of 1951.40
In view of the impending expiration of the 1947 MBA in 1991, the Philippines and the U.S.
negotiated for a possible renewal of their defense and security relationship. Termed as the Treaty
65

B. Former legal regime on the presence of U.S. armed forces in the territory of an of Friendship, Cooperation and Security, the countries sought to recast their military ties by
independent Philippines (1946-1991) providing a new framework for their defense cooperation and the use of Philippine
installations. One of the proposed provisions included an arrangement in which U.S. forces would
66
be granted the use of certain installations within the Philippine naval base in Subic. On 16 67
the Secretary of National Defense and the U.S. Ambassador to the Philippines signed the
September 1991, the Senate rejected the proposed treaty. 68
agreement on 28 April 2014. President Benigno S. Aquino III ratified EDCA on 6 June 2014. The
88 89

OSG clarified during the oral arguments that the Philippine and the U.S. governments had yet to
90

The consequent expiration of the 1947 MBA and the resulting paucity of any formal agreement agree formally on the specific sites of the Agreed Locations mentioned in the agreement.
dealing with the treatment of U.S. personnel in the Philippines led to the suspension in 1995 of
large-scale joint military exercises. In the meantime, the respective governments of the two
69
Two petitions for certiorari were thereafter filed before us assailing the constitutionality of EDCA.
countries agreed to hold joint exercises at a substantially reduced level. The military
70 71
They primarily argue that it should have been in the form of a treaty concurred in by the Senate, not
arrangements between them were revived in 1999 when they concluded the first Visiting Forces an executive agreement.
Agreement (VFA). 72

On 10 November 2015, months after the oral arguments were concluded and the parties ordered to
As a "reaffirm[ation] [of the] obligations under the MDT," the VFA has laid down the regulatory
73
file their respective memoranda, the Senators adopted Senate Resolution No. (SR) 105. The 91

mechanism for the treatment of U.S. military and civilian personnel visiting the country. It contains
74
resolution expresses the "strong sense" of the Senators that for EDCA to become valid and
92

provisions on the entry and departure of U.S. personnel; the purpose, extent, and limitations of their effective, it must first be transmitted to the Senate for deliberation and concurrence.
activities; criminal and disciplinary jurisdiction; the waiver of certain claims; the importation and
exportation of equipment, materials, supplies, and other pieces of property owned by the U.S. III. ISSUES
government; and the movement of U.S. military vehicles, vessels, and aircraft into and within the
country. The Philippines and the U.S. also entered into a second counterpart agreement (VFA II),
75
Petitioners mainly seek a declaration that the Executive Department committed grave abuse of
which in turn regulated the treatment of Philippine military and civilian personnel visiting the discretion in entering into EDCA in the form of an executive agreement. For this reason, we cull the
U.S. The Philippine Senate concurred in the first VFA on 27 May 1999.
76 77
issues before us:

Beginning in January 2002, U.S. military and civilian personnel started arriving in Mindanao to take A. Whether the essential requisites for judicial review are present
part in joint military exercises with their Filipino counterparts. Called Balikatan, these exercises
78

involved trainings aimed at simulating joint military maneuvers pursuant to the MDT. 79

B. Whether the President may enter into an executive agreement on foreign military
bases, troops, or facilities
In the same year, the Philippines and the U.S. entered into the Mutual Logistics Support Agreement
to "further the interoperability, readiness, and effectiveness of their respective military forces" in 80

C. Whether the provisions under EDCA are consistent with the Constitution, as well
accordance with the MDT, the Military Assistance Agreement of 1953, and the VFA. The new 81

as with existing laws and treaties


agreement outlined the basic terms, conditions, and procedures for facilitating the reciprocal
provision of logistics support, supplies, and services between the military forces of the two
countries. The phrase "logistics support and services" includes billeting, operations support,
82 IV. DISCUSSION
construction and use of temporary structures, and storage services during an approved activity
under the existing military arrangements. Already extended twice, the agreement will last until
83 A. Whether the essential requisites for judicial review have been satisfied
2017. 84

Petitioners are hailing this Court's power of judicial review in order to strike down EDCA for violating
D. The Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement the Constitution. They stress that our fundamental law is explicit in prohibiting the presence of
foreign military forces in the country, except under a treaty concurred in by the Senate. Before this
EDCA authorizes the U.S. military forces to have access to and conduct activities within certain Court may begin to analyze the constitutionality or validity of an official act of a coequal branch of
"Agreed Locations" in the country. It was not transmitted to the Senate on the executive's government, however, petitioners must show that they have satisfied all the essential requisites for
understanding that to do so was no longer necessary. Accordingly, in June 2014, the Department
85 judicial review.
93

of Foreign Affairs (DFA) and the U.S. Embassy exchanged diplomatic notes confirming the
completion of all necessary internal requirements for the agreement to enter into force in the two Distinguished from the general notion of judicial power, the power of judicial review specially refers
countries. 86 to both the authority and the duty of this Court to determine whether a branch or an instrumentality
of government has acted beyond the scope of the latter's constitutional powers. As articulated in
94

According to the Philippine government, the conclusion of EDCA was the result of intensive and Section 1, Article VIII of the Constitution, the power of judicial review involves the power to resolve
comprehensive negotiations in the course of almost two years. After eight rounds of negotiations,
87 cases in which the questions concern the constitutionality or validity of any treaty, international or
executive agreement, law, presidential decree, proclamation, order, instruction, ordinance, or The power of judicial review has since been strengthened in the 1987 Constitution. The scope of
regulation. In Angara v. Electoral Commission, this Court exhaustively discussed this "moderating
95
that power has been extended to the determination of whether in matters traditionally considered to
power" as part of the system of checks and balances under the Constitution. In our fundamental be within the sphere of appreciation of another branch of government, an exercise of discretion has
law, the role of the Court is to determine whether a branch of government has adhered to the been attended with grave abuse. The expansion of this power has made the political question
97

specific restrictions and limitations of the latter's power:


96
doctrine "no longer the insurmountable obstacle to the exercise of judicial power or the
impenetrable shield that protects executive and legislative actions from judicial inquiry or review." 98

The separation of powers is a fundamental principle in our system of government. It obtains not
through express provision but by actual division in our Constitution. Each department of the This moderating power, however, must be exercised carefully and only if it cannot be completely
government has exclusive cognizance of matters within its jurisdiction, and is supreme avoided. We stress that our Constitution is so incisively designed that it identifies the spheres of
within its own sphere. But it does not follow from the fact that the three powers are to be kept expertise within which the different branches of government shall function and the questions of
separate and distinct that the Constitution intended them to be absolutely unrestrained and policy that they shall resolve. Since the power of judicial review involves the delicate exercise of
99

independent of each other. The Constitution has provided for an elaborate system of checks examining the validity or constitutionality of an act of a coequal branch of government, this Court
and balances to secure coordination in the workings of the various departments of the must continually exercise restraint to avoid the risk of supplanting the wisdom of the constitutionally
government. x x x. And the judiciary in turn, with the Supreme Court as the final appointed actor with that of its own. 100

arbiter, effectively checks the other departments in the exercise of its power to determine the
law, and hence to declare executive and legislative acts void if violative of the Constitution. Even as we are left with no recourse but to bare our power to check an act of a coequal branch of
government - in this case the executive - we must abide by the stringent requirements for the
xxxx exercise of that power under the Constitution. Demetria v. Alba and Francisco v. House of
101

Representatives cite the "pillars" of the limitations on the power of judicial review as enunciated in
102

As any human production, our Constitution is of course lacking perfection and perfectibility, but as the concurring opinion of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Brandeis in Ashwander v. Tennessee Valley
much as it was within the power of our people, acting through their delegates to so provide, that Authority. Francisco redressed these "pillars" under the following categories:
103 104

instrument which is the expression of their sovereignty however limited, has established a
republican government intended to operate and function as a harmonious whole, under a 1. That there be absolute necessity of deciding a case
system of checks and balances, and subject to specific limitations and restrictions provided
in the said instrument. The Constitution sets forth in no uncertain language the restrictions 2. That rules of constitutional law shall be formulated only as required by the facts of the
and limitations upon governmental powers and agencies. If these restrictions and case
limitations are transcended it would be inconceivable if the Constitution had not provided
for a mechanism by which to direct the course of government along constitutional channels, 3. That judgment may not be sustained on some other ground
for then the distribution of powers would be mere verbiage, the bill of rights mere
expressions of sentiment, and the principles of good government mere political apothegms.
4. That there be actual injury sustained by the party by reason of the operation of the
Certainly, the limitations and restrictions embodied in our Constitution are real as they should be in
statute
any living constitution. x x x. In our case, this moderating power is granted, if not expressly, by clear
implication from section 2 of article VIII of [the 1935] Constitution.
5. That the parties are not in estoppel
The Constitution is a definition of the powers of government. Who is to determine the nature, scope
and extent of such powers? The Constitution itself has provided for the instrumentality of the 6. That the Court upholds the presumption of constitutionality
judiciary as the rational way. And when the judiciary mediates to allocate constitutional
boundaries, it does not assert any superiority over the other departments; it does not in (Emphases supplied)
reality nullify or invalidate an act of the legislature, but only asserts the solemn and sacred
obligation assigned to it by the Constitution to determine conflicting claims of authority These are the specific safeguards laid down by the Court when it exercises its power of judicial
under the Constitution and to establish for the parties in an actual controversy the rights review. Guided by these pillars, it may invoke the power only when the following four stringent
105

which that instrument secures and guarantees to them. This is in truth all that is involved in requirements are satisfied: (a) there is an actual case or controversy; (b) petitioners possess locus
what is termed "judicial supremacy" which properly is the power of judicial review under the standi; (c) the question of constitutionality is raised at the earliest opportunity; and (d) the issue of
Constitution. x x x x. (Emphases supplied) constitutionality is the lis mota of the case. Of these four, the first two conditions will be the focus
106

of our discussion.
1. Petitioners have shown the presence of an actual case or controversy. The question of locus standi or legal standing focuses on the determination of whether those
assailing the governmental act have the right of appearance to bring the matter to the court for
The OSG maintains that there is no actual case or controversy that exists, since the Senators
107 adjudication. They must show that they have a personal and substantial interest in the case, such
114

have not been deprived of the opportunity to invoke the privileges of the institution they are that they have sustained or are in immediate danger of sustaining, some direct injury as a
representing. It contends that the nonparticipation of the Senators in the present petitions only consequence of the enforcement of the challenged governmental act. Here, "interest" in the
115

confirms that even they believe that EDCA is a binding executive agreement that does not require question involved must be material - an interest that is in issue and will be affected by the official
their concurrence. act - as distinguished from being merely incidental or general. Clearly, it would be insufficient to
116

show that the law or any governmental act is invalid, and that petitioners stand to suffer in some
It must be emphasized that the Senate has already expressed its position through SR indefinite way. They must show that they have a particular interest in bringing the suit, and that
117

105. Through the Resolution, the Senate has taken a position contrary to that of the OSG. As the
108 they have been or are about to be denied some right or privilege to which they are lawfully entitled,
body tasked to participate in foreign affairs by ratifying treaties, its belief that EDCA infringes upon or that they are about to be subjected to some burden or penalty by reason of the act complained
its constitutional role indicates that an actual controversy - albeit brought to the Court by non- of. The reason why those who challenge the validity of a law or an international agreement are
118

Senators, exists. required to allege the existence of a personal stake in the outcome of the controversy is "to assure
the concrete adverseness which sharpens the presentation of issues upon which the court so
largely depends for illumination of difficult constitutional questions." 119

Moreover, we cannot consider the sheer abstention of the Senators from the present proceedings
as basis for finding that there is no actual case or controversy before us. We point out that the
focus of this requirement is the ripeness for adjudication of the matter at hand, as opposed to its The present petitions cannot qualify as citizens', taxpayers', or legislators' suits; the Senate as a
being merely conjectural or anticipatory. The case must involve a definite and concrete issue
109 body has the requisite standing, but considering that it has not formally filed a pleading to join the
involving real parties with conflicting legal rights and legal claims admitting of specific relief through suit, as it merely conveyed to the Supreme Court its sense that EDCA needs the Senate's
a decree conclusive in nature. It should not equate with a mere request for an opinion or advice
110 concurrence to be valid, petitioners continue to suffer from lack of standing.
on what the law would be upon an abstract, hypothetical, or contingent state of facts. As explained
111

in Angara v. Electoral Commission: 112 In assailing the constitutionality of a governmental act, petitioners suing as citizens may dodge the
requirement of having to establish a direct and personal interest if they show that the act affects a
[The] power of judicial review is limited to actual cases and controversies to be exercised public right. In arguing that they have legal standing, they claim that the case they have filed is a
120 121

after full opportunity of argument by the parties, and limited further to the constitutional concerned citizen's suit. But aside from general statements that the petitions involve the protection
question raised or the very lis mota presented. Any attempt at abstraction could only lead to of a public right, and that their constitutional rights as citizens would be violated, they fail to make
dialectics and barren legal questions and to sterile conclusions of wisdom, justice or any specific assertion of a particular public right that would be violated by the enforcement of
expediency of legislation. More than that, courts accord the presumption of constitutionality to EDCA. For their failure to do so, the present petitions cannot be considered by the Court as
legislative enactments, not only because the legislature is presumed to abide by the Constitution citizens' suits that would justify a disregard of the aforementioned requirements.
but also because the judiciary in the determination of actual cases and controversies must
reflect the wisdom and justice of the people as expressed through their representatives in In claiming that they have legal standing as taxpayers, petitioners aver that the implementation of
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the executive and legislative departments of the government. (Emphases supplied) EDCA would result in the unlawful use of public funds. They emphasize that Article X(1) refers to an
appropriation of funds; and that the agreement entails a waiver of the payment of taxes, fees, and
We find that the matter before us involves an actual case or controversy that is already ripe for rentals. During the oral arguments, however, they admitted that the government had not yet
adjudication. The Executive Department has already sent an official confirmation to the U.S. appropriated or actually disbursed public funds for the purpose of implementing the
Embassy that "all internal requirements of the Philippines x x x have already been complied agreement. The OSG, on the other hand, maintains that petitioners cannot sue as
123

with." By this exchange of diplomatic notes, the Executive Department effectively performed the
113 taxpayers. Respondent explains that EDCA is neither meant to be a tax measure, nor is it directed
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last act required under Article XII(l) of EDCA before the agreement entered into force. Section 25, at the disbursement of public funds.
Article XVIII of the Constitution, is clear that the presence of foreign military forces in the country
shall only be allowed by virtue of a treaty concurred in by the Senate. Hence, the performance of A taxpayer's suit concerns a case in which the official act complained of directly involves the illegal
an official act by the Executive Department that led to the entry into force of an executive disbursement of public funds derived from taxation. Here, those challenging the act must
125

agreement was sufficient to satisfy the actual case or controversy requirement. specifically show that they have sufficient interest in preventing the illegal expenditure of public
money, and that they will sustain a direct injury as a result of the enforcement of the assailed
2. While petitioners Saguisag et. al., do not have legal standing, they nonetheless raise act. Applying that principle to this case, they must establish that EDCA involves the exercise by
126

issues involving matters of transcendental importance. Congress of its taxing or spending powers. 127
We agree with the OSG that the petitions cannot qualify as taxpayers' suits. We emphasize that a people and it is their sacred duty to see to it that the fundamental law embodying the will of
taxpayers' suit contemplates a situation in which there is already an appropriation or a the sovereign people is not trampled upon. (Emphases supplied)
disbursement of public funds. A reading of Article X(l) of EDCA would show that there has been
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neither an appropriation nor an authorization of disbursement of funds. The cited provision reads: We emphasize that in a legislators' suit, those Members of Congress who are challenging the
official act have standing only to the extent that the alleged violation impinges on their right to
All obligations under this Agreement are subject to the availability of appropriated participate in the exercise of the powers of the institution of which they are members. Legislators
135

funds authorized for these purposes. (Emphases supplied) have the standing "to maintain inviolate the prerogatives, powers, and privileges vested by the
Constitution in their office and are allowed to sue to question the validity of any official action, which
This provision means that if the implementation of EDCA would require the disbursement of public they claim infringes their prerogatives as legislators." As legislators, they must clearly show that
136

funds, the money must come from appropriated funds that are specifically authorized for this there was a direct injury to their persons or the institution to which they belong.137

purpose. Under the agreement, before there can even be a disbursement of public funds, there
must first be a legislative action. Until and unless the Legislature appropriates funds for EDCA, As correctly argued by respondent, the power to concur in a treaty or an international agreement is
or unless petitioners can pinpoint a specific item in the current budget that allows an institutional prerogative granted by the Constitution to the Senate, not to the entire Legislature.
expenditure under the agreement, we cannot at this time rule that there is in fact an In Pimentel v. Office of the Executive Secretary, this Court did not recognize the standing of one of
appropriation or a disbursement of funds that would justify the filing of a taxpayers' suit. the petitioners therein who was a member of the House of Representatives. The petition in that
case sought to compel the transmission to the Senate for concurrence of the signed text of the
Petitioners Bayan et al. also claim that their co-petitioners who are party-list representatives have
129 Statute of the International Criminal Court. Since that petition invoked the power of the Senate to
the standing to challenge the act of the Executive Department, especially if it impairs the grant or withhold its concurrence in a treaty entered into by the Executive Department, only then
constitutional prerogatives, powers, and privileges of their office. While they admit that there is no incumbent Senator Pimentel was allowed to assert that authority of the Senate of which he was a
incumbent Senator who has taken part in the present petition, they nonetheless assert that they member.
also stand to sustain a derivative but substantial injury as legislators. They argue that under the
Constitution, legislative power is vested in both the Senate and the House of Representatives; Therefore, none of the initial petitioners in the present controversy has the standing to
consequently, it is the entire Legislative Department that has a voice in determining whether or not maintain the suits as legislators.
the presence of foreign military should be allowed. They maintain that as members of the
Legislature, they have the requisite personality to bring a suit, especially when a constitutional Nevertheless, this Court finds that there is basis for it to review the act of the Executive for the
issue is raised. following reasons.

The OSG counters that petitioners do not have any legal standing to file the suits concerning the
130
In any case, petitioners raise issues involving matters of transcendental importance.
lack of Senate concurrence in EDCA. Respondent emphasizes that the power to concur in treaties
and international agreements is an "institutional prerogative" granted by the Constitution to the Petitioners argue that the Court may set aside procedural technicalities, as the present petition
138

Senate. Accordingly, the OSG argues that in case of an allegation of impairment of that power, the tackles issues that are of transcendental importance. They point out that the matter before us is
injured party would be the Senate as an institution or any of its incumbent members, as it is the about the proper exercise of the Executive Department's power to enter into international
Senate's constitutional function that is allegedly being violated. agreements in relation to that of the Senate to concur in those agreements. They also assert that
EDCA would cause grave injustice, as well as irreparable violation of the Constitution and of the
The legal standing of an institution of the Legislature or of any of its Members has already been Filipino people's rights.
recognized by this Court in a number of cases. What is in question here is the alleged impairment
131

of the constitutional duties and powers granted to, or the impermissible intrusion upon the domain The OSG, on the other hand, insists that petitioners cannot raise the mere fact that the present
139

of, the Legislature or an institution thereof. In the case of suits initiated by the legislators
132
petitions involve matters of transcendental importance in order to cure their inability to comply with
themselves, this Court has recognized their standing to question the validity of any official action the constitutional requirement of standing. Respondent bewails the overuse of "transcendental
that they claim infringes the prerogatives, powers, and privileges vested by the Constitution in their importance" as an exception to the traditional requirements of constitutional litigation. It stresses
office. As aptly explained by Justice Perfecto in Mabanag v. Lopez Vito:
133 134
that one of the purposes of these requirements is to protect the Supreme Court from unnecessary
litigation of constitutional questions.
Being members of Congress, they are even duty bound to see that the latter act within the
bounds of the Constitution which, as representatives of the people, they should uphold, unless In a number of cases, this Court has indeed taken a liberal stance towards the requirement of
140

they are to commit a flagrant betrayal of public trust. They are representatives of the sovereign legal standing, especially when paramount interest is involved. Indeed, when those who challenge
the official act are able to craft an issue of transcendental significance to the people, the Court may This divide continued throughout the different versions of the Philippine Constitution and specifically
exercise its sound discretion and take cognizance of the suit. It may do so in spite of the inability of vested the supreme executive power in the Governor-General of the Philippines, a position 145

the petitioners to show that they have been personally injured by the operation of a law or any other inherited by the President of the Philippines when the country attained independence. One of the
government act. principal functions of the supreme executive is the responsibility for the faithful execution of the
laws as embodied by the oath of office. The oath of the President prescribed by the 1987
146

While this Court has yet to thoroughly delineate the outer limits of this doctrine, we emphasize that Constitution reads thus:
not every other case, however strong public interest may be, can qualify as an issue of
transcendental importance. Before it can be impelled to brush aside the essential requisites for I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully and conscientiously fulfill my duties as
exercising its power of judicial review, it must at the very least consider a number of factors: (1) the President (or Vice-President or Acting President) of the Philippines, preserve and defend its
character of the funds or other assets involved in the case; (2) the presence of a clear case of Constitution, execute its laws, do justice to every man, and consecrate myself to the service of the
disregard of a constitutional or statutory prohibition by the public respondent agency or Nation. So help me God. (In case of affirmation, last sentence will be omitted.) (Emphases 147

instrumentality of the government; and (3) the lack of any other party that has a more direct and supplied)
specific interest in raising the present questions.
141

This Court has interpreted the faithful execution clause as an obligation imposed on the President,
An exhaustive evaluation of the memoranda of the parties, together with the oral arguments, shows and not a separate grant of power. Section 1 7, Article VII of the Constitution, expresses this duty
148

that petitioners have presented serious constitutional issues that provide ample justification for the in no uncertain terms and includes it in the provision regarding the President's power of control over
Court to set aside the rule on standing. The transcendental importance of the issues presented the executive department, viz:
here is rooted in the Constitution itself. Section 25, Article XVIII thereof, cannot be any clearer:
there is a much stricter mechanism required before foreign military troops, facilities, or bases may The President shall have control of all the executive departments, bureaus, and offices. He shall
be allowed in the country. The DFA has already confirmed to the U.S. Embassy that "all internal ensure that the laws be faithfully executed.
requirements of the Philippines x x x have already been complied with." It behooves the Court in
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this instance to take a liberal stance towards the rule on standing and to determine forthwith The equivalent provisions in the next preceding Constitution did not explicitly require this oath from
whether there was grave abuse of discretion on the part of the Executive Department. the President. In the 1973 Constitution, for instance, the provision simply gives the President
control over the ministries. A similar language, not in the form of the President's oath, was present
149

We therefore rule that this case is a proper subject for judicial review. in the 1935 Constitution, particularly in the enumeration of executive functions. By 1987, executive
150

power was codified not only in the Constitution, but also in the Administrative Code: 151

B. Whether the President may enter into an executive agreement on foreign military
bases, troops, or facilities SECTION 1. Power of Control. - The President shall have control of all the executive departments,
bureaus, and offices. He shall ensure that the laws be faithfully executed. (Emphasis supplied)
C. Whether the provisions under EDCA are consistent with the Constitution, as well
as with existing laws and treaties Hence, the duty to faithfully execute the laws of the land is inherent in executive power and is
intimately related to the other executive functions. These functions include the faithful execution of
Issues B and C shall be discussed together infra. the law in autonomous regions; the right to prosecute crimes; the implementation of
152 153

transportation projects; the duty to ensure compliance with treaties, executive agreements and
154

1. The role of the President as the executor of the law includes the duty to defend the State, executive orders; the authority to deport undesirable aliens; the conferment of national awards
155 156

for which purpose he may use that power in the conduct of foreign relations under the President's jurisdiction; and the overall administration and control of the executive
157

department. 158

Historically, the Philippines has mirrored the division of powers in the U.S. government. When the
Philippine government was still an agency of the Congress of the U.S., it was as an agent entrusted These obligations are as broad as they sound, for a President cannot function with crippled hands,
with powers categorized as executive, legislative, and judicial, and divided among these three great but must be capable of securing the rule of law within all territories of the Philippine Islands and be
branches. By this division, the law implied that the divided powers cannot be exercised except by
143 empowered to do so within constitutional limits. Congress cannot, for instance, limit or take over the
the department given the power. 144 President's power to adopt implementing rules and regulations for a law it has enacted. 159

More important, this mandate is self-executory by virtue of its being inherently executive in
nature. As Justice Antonio T. Carpio previously wrote,
160 161
[i]f the rules are issued by the President in implementation or execution of self-executory In arguing against the approach, however, the dissent grossly failed to appreciate the nuances of
constitutional powers vested in the President, the rule-making power of the President is not a the analysis, if read holistically and in context. The concept that the President cannot function with
delegated legislative power. The most important self-executory constitutional power of the crippled hands and therefore can disregard the need for Senate concurrence in treaties was never
167

President is the President's constitutional duty and mandate to "ensure that the laws be faithfully expressed or implied. Rather, the appropriate reading of the preceding analysis shows that the
executed." The rule is that the President can execute the law without any delegation of power from point being elucidated is the reality that the President's duty to execute the laws and protect the
the legislature. Philippines is inextricably interwoven with his foreign affairs powers, such that he must resolve
issues imbued with both concerns to the full extent of his powers, subject only to the limits supplied
The import of this characteristic is that the manner of the President's execution of the law, by law. In other words, apart from an expressly mandated limit, or an implied limit by virtue of
even if not expressly granted by the law, is justified by necessity and limited only by law, incompatibility, the manner of execution by the President must be given utmost deference. This
since the President must "take necessary and proper steps to carry into execution the approach is not different from that taken by the Court in situations with fairly similar contexts.
law." Justice George Malcolm states this principle in a grand manner:
162 163

Thus, the analysis portrayed by the dissent does not give the President authority to bypass
The executive should be clothed with sufficient power to administer efficiently the affairs of state. constitutional safeguards and limits. In fact, it specifies what these limitations are, how these
He should have complete control of the instrumentalities through whom his responsibility is limitations are triggered, how these limitations function, and what can be done within the sphere of
discharged. It is still true, as said by Hamilton, that "A feeble executive implies a feeble execution of constitutional duties and limitations of the President.
the government. A feeble execution is but another phrase for a bad execution; and a government ill
executed, whatever it may be in theory, must be in practice a bad government." The mistakes of Justice Brion's dissent likewise misinterprets the analysis proffered when it claims that the foreign
State governments need not be repeated here. relations power of the President should not be interpreted in isolation. The analysis itself
168

demonstrates how the foreign affairs function, while mostly the President's, is shared in several
xxxx instances, namely in Section 2 of Article II on the conduct of war; Sections 20 and 21 of Article VII
on foreign loans, treaties, and international agreements; Sections 4(2) and 5(2)(a) of Article VIII on
Every other consideration to one side, this remains certain - The Congress of the United States the judicial review of executive acts; Sections 4 and 25 of Article XVIII on treaties and international
clearly intended that the Governor-General's power should be commensurate with his agreements entered into prior to the Constitution and on the presence of foreign military troops,
responsibility. The Congress never intended that the Governor-General should be saddled with the bases, or facilities.
responsibility of administering the government and of executing the laws but shorn of the power to
do so. The interests of the Philippines will be best served by strict adherence to the basic principles In fact, the analysis devotes a whole subheading to the relationship between the two major
of constitutional government. presidential functions and the role of the Senate in it.

In light of this constitutional duty, it is the President's prerogative to do whatever is legal and This approach of giving utmost deference to presidential initiatives in respect of foreign affairs is not
necessary for Philippine defense interests. It is no coincidence that the constitutional provision on novel to the Court. The President's act of treating EDCA as an executive agreement is not the
the faithful execution clause was followed by that on the President's commander-in-chief principal power being analyzed as the Dissenting Opinion seems to suggest. Rather, the
powers, which are specifically granted during extraordinary events of lawless violence, invasion,
164 preliminary analysis is in reference to the expansive power of foreign affairs. We have long treated
or rebellion. And this duty of defending the country is unceasing, even in times when there is no this power as something the Courts must not unduly restrict. As we stated recently in Vinuya v.
state of lawlesss violence, invasion, or rebellion. At such times, the President has full powers to Romulo:
ensure the faithful execution of the laws.
To be sure, not all cases implicating foreign relations present political questions, and courts
It would therefore be remiss for the President and repugnant to the faithful-execution clause of the certainly possess the authority to construe or invalidate treaties and executive agreements.
Constitution to do nothing when the call of the moment requires increasing the military's defensive However, the question whether the Philippine government should espouse claims of its nationals
capabilities, which could include forging alliances with states that hold a common interest with the against a foreign government is a foreign relations matter, the authority for which is demonstrably
Philippines or bringing an international suit against an offending state. committed by our Constitution not to the courts but to the political branches. In this case, the
Executive Department has already decided that it is to the best interest of the country to waive all
The context drawn in the analysis above has been termed by Justice Arturo D. Brion's Dissenting claims of its nationals for reparations against Japan in the Treaty of Peace of 1951. The wisdom of
Opinion as the beginning of a "patent misconception." His dissent argues that this approach taken
165 such decision is not for the courts to question. Neither could petitioners herein assail the said
in analyzing the President's role as executor of the laws is preceded by the duty to preserve and determination by the Executive Department via the instant petition for certiorari.
defend the Constitution, which was allegedly overlooked. 166
In the seminal case of US v. Curtiss-Wright Export Corp., the US Supreme Court held that "[t]he Executive Department: "No treaty or international agreement shall be valid and effective unless
President is the sole organ of the nation in its external relations, and its sole representative with concurred in by at least two-thirds of all the Members of the Senate." The specific limitation is given
foreign relations." by Section 25 of the Transitory Provisions, the full text of which reads as follows:

It is quite apparent that if, in the maintenance of our international relations, SECTION 25. After the expiration in 1991 of the Agreement between the Republic of the Philippines
embarrassment - perhaps serious embarrassment - is to be avoided and success and the United States of America concerning Military Bases, foreign military bases, troops, or
for our aims achieved, congressional legislation which is to be made effective facilities shall not be allowed in the Philippines except under a treaty duly concurred in by the
through negotiation and inquiry within the international field must often accord to Senate and, when the Congress so requires, ratified by a majority of the votes cast by the people in
the President a degree of discretion and freedom from statutory restriction a national referendum held for that purpose, and recognized as a treaty by the other contracting
which would not be admissible where domestic affairs alone State.
involved. Moreover, he, not Congress, has the better opportunity of knowing the
conditions which prevail in foreign countries, and especially is this true in time of It is quite plain that the Transitory Provisions of the 1987 Constitution intended to add to the basic
war. He has his confidential sources of information. He has his agents in the form of requirements of a treaty under Section 21 of Article VII. This means that both provisions must be
diplomatic, consular and other officials .... read as additional limitations to the President's overarching executive function in matters of defense
and foreign relations.
This ruling has been incorporated in our jurisprudence through Bavan v. Executive
Secretary and Pimentel v. Executive Secretary; its overreaching principle was, perhaps, best 3. The President, however, may enter into an executive agreement on foreign military bases,
articulated in (now Chief) Justice Puno's dissent in Secretary of Justice v. Lantion: troops, or facilities, if (a) it is not the instrument that allows the presence of foreign military
bases, troops, or facilities; or (b) it merely aims to implement an existing law or treaty.
. . . The conduct of foreign relations is full of complexities and consequences,
sometimes with life and death significance to the nation especially in times of war. It Again we refer to Section 25, Article XVIII of the Constitution:
can only be entrusted to that department of government which can act on the basis
of the best available information and can decide with decisiveness .... It is also the SECTION 25. After the expiration in 1991 of the Agreement between the Republic of the Philippines
President who possesses the most comprehensive and the most confidential and the United States of America concerning Military Bases, foreign military bases, troops, or
information about foreign countries for our diplomatic and consular officials regularly facilities shall not be allowed in the Philippines except under a treaty duly concurred in by
brief him on meaningful events all over the world. He has also unlimited access to the Senate and, when the Congress so requires, ratified by a majority of the votes cast by the
ultra-sensitive military intelligence data. In fine, the presidential role in foreign people in a national referendum held for that purpose, and recognized as a treaty by the other
affairs is dominant and the President is traditionally accorded a wider degree contracting State. (Emphases supplied)
of discretion in the conduct of foreign affairs. The regularity, nay, validity of
his actions are adjudged under less stringent standards, lest their judicial
In view of this provision, petitioners argue that EDCA must be in the form of a "treaty" duly
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repudiation lead to breach of an international obligation, rupture of state


concurred in by the Senate. They stress that the Constitution is unambigous in mandating the
relations, forfeiture of confidence, national embarrassment and a plethora of
transmission to the Senate of all international agreements concluded after the expiration of the
other problems with equally undesirable consequences. (Emphases supplied)
169

MBA in 1991 - agreements that concern the presence of foreign military bases, troops, or facilities
in the country. Accordingly, petitioners maintain that the Executive Department is not given the
Understandably, this Court must view the instant case with the same perspective and choice to conclude agreements like EDCA in the form of an executive agreement.
understanding, knowing full well the constitutional and legal repercussions of any judicial
overreach.
This is also the view of the Senate, which, through a majority vote of 15 of its members - with 1
against and 2 abstaining - says in SR 105 that EDCA must be submitted to the Senate in the form
171

2. The plain meaning of the Constitution prohibits the entry of foreign military bases, troops of a treaty for concurrence by at least two-thirds of all its members.
or facilities, except by way of a treaty concurred in by the Senate - a clear limitation on the
President's dual role as defender of the State and as sole authority in foreign relations.
The Senate cites two constitutional provisions (Article VI, Section 21 and Article XVIII, Section 25)
to support its position. Compared with the lone constitutional provision that the Office of the
Despite the President's roles as defender of the State and sole authority in foreign relations, the Solicitor General (OSG) cites, which is Article XVIII, Section 4(2), which includes the
1987 Constitution expressly limits his ability in instances when it involves the entry of foreign constitutionality of "executive agreement(s)" among the cases subject to the Supreme Court's
military bases, troops or facilities. The initial limitation is found in Section 21 of the provisions on the power of judicial review, the Constitution clearly requires submission of EDCA to the Senate. Two
specific provisions versus one general provision means that the specific provisions prevail. The thus attached to them prevails. As the Constitution is not primarily a lawyer's document, it
term "executive agreement" is "a term wandering alone in the Constitution, bereft of provenance being essential for the rule of law to obtain that it should ever be present in the people's
and an unidentified constitutional mystery." consciousness, its language as much as possible should be understood in the sense they
have in common use. What it says according to the text of the provision to be construed compels
The author of SR 105, Senator Miriam Defensor Santiago, upon interpellation even added that the acceptance and negates the power of the courts to alter it, based on the postulate that the
MDT, which the Executive claims to be partly implemented through EDCA, is already obsolete. framers and the people mean what they say. Thus, these are the cases where the need for
construction is reduced to a minimum. (Emphases supplied)
178

There are two insurmountable obstacles to this Court's agreement with SR 105, as well as with the
comment on interpellation made by Senator Santiago. It is only in those instances in which the constitutional provision is unclear, ambiguous, or silent that
further construction must be done to elicit its meaning. In Ang Bagong Bayani-OFW v.
179

First, the concept of "executive agreement" is so well-entrenched in this Court's pronouncements Commission on Elections, we reiterated this guiding principle:
180

on the powers of the President. When the Court validated the concept of "executive agreement," it
did so with full knowledge of the Senate's role in concurring in treaties. It was aware of the it [is] safer to construe the Constitution from what appears upon its face. The proper
problematique of distinguishing when an international agreement needed Senate concurrence for interpretation therefore depends more on how it was understood by the people adopting it than
validity, and when it did not; and the Court continued to validate the existence of "executive in the framers' understanding thereof. (Emphases supplied)
agreements" even after the 1987 Constitution. This follows a long line of similar decisions
172

upholding the power of the President to enter into an executive agreement. 173
The effect of this statement is surprisingly profound, for, if taken literally, the phrase "shall not be
allowed in the Philippines" plainly refers to the entry of bases, troops, or facilities in the country.
Second, the MDT has not been rendered obsolescent, considering that as late as 2009, this Court
174 The Oxford English Dictionary defines the word "allow" as a transitive verb that means "to permit,
continued to recognize its validity. enable"; "to give consent to the occurrence of or relax restraint on (an action, event, or activity)"; "to
consent to the presence or attendance of (a person)"; and, when with an adverbial of place, "to
Third, to this Court, a plain textual reading of Article XIII, Section 25, inevitably leads to the permit (a person or animal) to go, come, or be in, out, near, etc." Black's Law Dictionary defines
181

conclusion that it applies only to a proposed agreement between our government and a foreign the term as one that means "[t]o grant, approve, or permit." 182

government, whereby military bases, troops, or facilities of such foreign government would be
"allowed" or would "gain entry" Philippine territory. The verb "allow" is followed by the word "in," which is a preposition used to indicate "place or
position in space or anything having material extension: Within the limits or bounds of, within (any
Note that the provision "shall not be allowed" is a negative injunction. This wording signifies that the place or thing)." That something is the Philippines, which is the noun that follows.
183

President is not authorized by law to allow foreign military bases, troops, or facilities to enter the
Philippines, except under a treaty concurred in by the Senate. Hence, the constitutionally restricted It is evident that the constitutional restriction refers solely to the initial entry of the foreign military
authority pertains to the entry of the bases, troops, or facilities, and not to the activities to be done bases, troops, or facilities. Once entry is authorized, the subsequent acts are thereafter subject
after entry. only to the limitations provided by the rest of the Constitution and Philippine law, and not to the
Section 25 requirement of validity through a treaty.
Under the principles of constitutional construction, of paramount consideration is the plain meaning
of the language expressed in the Constitution, or the verba legis rule. It is presumed that the
175 The VFA has already allowed the entry of troops in the Philippines. This Court stated in Lim v.
provisions have been carefully crafted in order to express the objective it seeks to attain. It is176 Executive Secretary:
incumbent upon the Court to refrain from going beyond the plain meaning of the words used in the
Constitution. It is presumed that the framers and the people meant what they said when they said After studied reflection, it appeared farfetched that the ambiguity surrounding the meaning of the
it, and that this understanding was reflected in the Constitution and understood by the people in the word "activities" arose from accident. In our view, it was deliberately made that way to give both
way it was meant to be understood when the fundamental law was ordained and promulgated. As 177
parties a certain leeway in negotiation. In this manner, visiting US forces may sojourn in
this Court has often said: Philippine territory for purposes other than military. As conceived, the joint exercises may
include training on new techniques of patrol and surveillance to protect the nation's marine
We look to the language of the document itself in our search for its meaning. We do not of course resources, sea search-and-rescue operations to assist vessels in distress, disaster relief
stop there, but that is where we begin. It is to be assumed that the words in which constitutional operations, civic action projects such as the building of school houses, medical and humanitarian
provisions are couched express the objective sought to be attained. They are to be given their missions, and the like.
ordinary meaning except where technical terms are employed in which case the significance
Under these auspices, the VFA gives legitimacy to the current Balikatan exercises. It is only logical States of America concerning Military Bases, foreign military bases, troops, or facilities." It is explicit
to assume that "Balikatan 02-1," a "mutual anti- terrorism advising, assisting and training exercise," in the wording of the provision itself that any interpretation goes beyond the text itself and into the
falls under the umbrella of sanctioned or allowable activities in the context of the agreement. Both discussion of the framers, the context of the Constitutional Commission's time of drafting, and the
the history and intent of the Mutual Defense Treaty and the VFA support the conclusion that history of the 1947 MBA. Without reference to these factors, a reader would not understand those
combat-related activities -as opposed to combat itself-such as the one subject of the instant terms. However, for the phrase "shall not be allowed in the Philippines," there is no need for such
petition, are indeed authorized. (Emphasis supplied)
184
reference. The law is clear. No less than the Senate understood this when it ratified the VFA.

Moreover, the Court indicated that the Constitution continues to govern the conduct of foreign 4. The President may generally enter into executive agreements subject to limitations
military troops in the Philippines, readily implying the legality of their initial entry into the country.
185
defined by the Constitution and may be in furtherance of a treaty already concurred in by
the Senate.
The OSG emphasizes that EDCA can be in the form of an executive agreement, since it merely
involves "adjustments in detail" in the implementation of the MDT and the VFA. It points out that
186
We discuss in this section why the President can enter into executive agreements.
there are existing treaties between the Philippines and the U.S. that have already been concurred
in by the Philippine Senate and have thereby met the requirements of the Constitution under It would be helpful to put into context the contested language found in Article XVIII, Section 25. Its
Section 25. Because of the status of these prior agreements, respondent emphasizes that EDCA more exacting requirement was introduced because of the previous experience of the country when
need not be transmitted to the Senate. its representatives felt compelled to consent to the old MBA. They felt constrained to agree to the
191

MBA in fulfilment of one of the major conditions for the country to gain independence from the
The aforecited Dissenting Opinion of Justice Brion disagrees with the ponencia's application U.S. As a result of that experience, a second layer of consent for agreements that allow military
192

of verba legis construction to the words of Article XVIII, Section 25. It claims that the provision is
187
bases, troops and facilities in the country is now articulated in Article XVIII of our present
"neither plain, nor that simple." To buttress its disagreement, the dissent states that the provision
188
Constitution.
refers to a historical incident, which is the expiration of the 1947 MBA. Accordingly, this position
189

requires questioning the circumstances that led to the historical event, and the meaning of the This second layer of consent, however, cannot be interpreted in such a way that we completely
terms under Article XVIII, Section 25. ignore the intent of our constitutional framers when they provided for that additional layer, nor the
vigorous statements of this Court that affirm the continued existence of that class of international
This objection is quite strange. The construction technique of verba legis is not inapplicable just agreements called "executive agreements."
because a provision has a specific historical context. In fact, every provision of the Constitution has
a specific historical context. The purpose of constitutional and statutory construction is to set tiers of The power of the President to enter into binding executive agreements without Senate concurrence
interpretation to guide the Court as to how a particular provision functions. Verba legis is of is already well-established in this jurisdiction. That power has been alluded to in our present and
193

paramount consideration, but it is not the only consideration. As this Court has often said: past Constitutions, in various statutes, in Supreme Court decisions, and during the
194 195 196

deliberations of the Constitutional Commission. They cover a wide array of subjects with varying
197

We look to the language of the document itself in our search for its meaning. We do not of course scopes and purposes, including those that involve the presence of foreign military forces in the
198

stop there, but that is where we begin. It is to be assumed that the words in which constitutional country. 199

provisions are couched express the objective sought to be attained. They are to be given their
ordinary meaning except where technical terms are employed in which case the significance As the sole organ of our foreign relations and the constitutionally assigned chief architect of our
200

thus attached to them prevails. As the Constitution is not primarily a lawyer's document, it being foreign policy, the President is vested with the exclusive power to conduct and manage the
201

essential for the rule of law to obtain that it should ever be present in the people's country's interface with other states and governments. Being the principal representative of the
consciousness, its language as much as possible should be understood in the sense they Philippines, the Chief Executive speaks and listens for the nation; initiates, maintains, and develops
have in common use. What it says according to the text of the provision to be construed compels diplomatic relations with other states and governments; negotiates and enters into international
acceptance and negates the power of the courts to alter it, based on the postulate that the agreements; promotes trade, investments, tourism and other economic relations; and settles
framers and the people mean what they say. Thus, these are the cases where the need for international disputes with other states. 202

construction is reduced to a minimum. (Emphases supplied)


190

As previously discussed, this constitutional mandate emanates from the inherent power of the
As applied, verba legis aids in construing the ordinary meaning of terms. In this case, the phrase President to enter into agreements with other states, including the prerogative to
being construed is "shall not be allowed in the Philippines" and not the preceding one referring to conclude binding executive agreements that do not require further Senate concurrence. The
"the expiration in 1991 of the Agreement between the Republic of the Philippines and the United existence of this presidential power is so well-entrenched that Section 5(2)(a), Article VIII of the
203
Constitution, even provides for a check on its exercise. As expressed below, executive agreements Treaties are formal documents which require ratification with the approval of two-thirds of the
are among those official governmental acts that can be the subject of this Court's power of judicial Senate. Executive agreements become binding through executive action without the need of
review: a vote by the Senate or by Congress.

(2) Review, revise, reverse, modify, or affirm on appeal or certiorari, as the law or the xxxx
Rules of Court may provide, final judgments and orders of lower courts in:
[T]he right of the Executive to enter into binding agreements without the necessity of
(a) All cases in which the constitutionality or subsequent Congressional approval has been confirmed by long usage. From the earliest
validity of any treaty, international or executive agreement, law, presidential days of our history we have entered into executive agreements covering such subjects as
decree, proclamation, order, instruction, ordinance, or regulation is in question. commercial and consular relations, most-favored-nation rights, patent rights, trademark and
(Emphases supplied) copyright protection, postal and navigation arrangements and the settlement of claims. The validity
of these has never been seriously questioned by our courts. (Emphases Supplied)
In Commissioner of Customs v. Eastern Sea Trading, executive agreements are defined as
"international agreements embodying adjustments of detail carrying out well-established national That notion was carried over to the present Constitution. In fact, the framers specifically deliberated
policies and traditions and those involving arrangements of a more or less temporary on whether the general term "international agreement" included executive agreements, and
nature." In Bayan Muna v. Romulo, this Court further clarified that executive agreements can
204
whether it was necessary to include an express proviso that would exclude executive agreements
cover a wide array of subjects that have various scopes and purposes. They are no longer limited
205
from the requirement of Senate concurrence. After noted constitutionalist Fr. Joaquin Bernas
to the traditional subjects that are usually covered by executive agreements as identified in Eastern quoted the Court's ruling in Eastern Sea Trading, the Constitutional Commission members
Sea Trading. The Court thoroughly discussed this matter in the following manner: ultimately decided that the term "international agreements" as contemplated in Section 21, Article
VII, does not include executive agreements, and that a proviso is no longer needed. Their
The categorization of subject matters that may be covered by international discussion is reproduced below: 207

agreementsmentioned in Eastern Sea Trading is not cast in stone. x x x.


MS. AQUINO: Madam President, first I would like a clarification from the Committee. We have
As may be noted, almost half a century has elapsed since the Court rendered its decision retained the words "international agreement" which I think is the correct judgment on the matter
in Eastern Sea Trading. Since then, the conduct of foreign affairs has become more complex because an international agreement is different from a treaty. A treaty is a contract between parties
and the domain of international law wider, as to include such subjects as human rights, the which is in the nature of international agreement and also a municipal law in the sense that the
environment, and the sea. In fact, in the US alone, the executive agreements executed by its people are bound. So there is a conceptual difference. However, I would like to be clarified if the
President from 1980 to 2000 covered subjects such as defense, trade, scientific cooperation, international agreements include executive agreements.
aviation, atomic energy, environmental cooperation, peace corps, arms limitation, and
nuclear safety, among others. Surely, the enumeration in Eastern Sea Trading cannot MR. CONCEPCION: That depends upon the parties. All parties to these international negotiations
circumscribe the option of each state on the matter of which the international agreement stipulate the conditions which are necessary for the agreement or whatever it may be to become
format would be convenient to serve its best interest. As Francis Sayre said in his work valid or effective as regards the parties.
referred to earlier:
MS. AQUINO: Would that depend on the parties or would that depend on the nature of the
. . . It would be useless to undertake to discuss here the large variety of executive executive agreement? According to common usage, there are two types of executive
agreements as such concluded from time to time. Hundreds of executive agreements, other agreement: one is purely proceeding from an executive act which affects external relations
than those entered into under the trade-agreement act, have been negotiated with foreign independent of the legislative and the other is an executive act in pursuance of legislative
governments. . . . They cover such subjects as the inspection of vessels, navigation dues, income authorization. The first kind might take the form of just conventions or exchanges of notes or
tax on shipping profits, the admission of civil air craft, custom matters and commercial relations protocol while the other, which would be pursuant to the legislative authorization, may be in
generally, international claims, postal matters, the registration of trademarks and copyrights, etc .... the nature of commercial agreements.
(Emphases Supplied)
MR. CONCEPCION: Executive agreements are generally made to implement a treaty already
One of the distinguishing features of executive agreements is that their validity and effectivity are enforced or to determine the details for the implementation of the treaty. We are speaking of
not affected by a lack of Senate concurrence. This distinctive feature was recognized as early as
206
executive agreements, not international agreements.
in Eastern Sea Trading (1961), viz:
MS. AQUINO: I am in full agreement with that, except that it does not cover the first kind of MR. TINGSON: Madam President.
executive agreement which is just protocol or an exchange of notes and this would be in the nature
of reinforcement of claims of a citizen against a country, for example. THE PRESIDENT: Is Commissioner Aquino satisfied?

MR. CONCEPCION: The Commissioner is free to require ratification for validity insofar as the MS. AQUINO: Yes. There is already an agreement among us on the definition of "executive
Philippines is concerned. agreements" and that would make unnecessary any explicit proviso on the matter.

MS. AQUINO: It is my humble submission that we should provide, unless the Committee xxx
explains to us otherwise, an explicit proviso which would except executive agreements from
the requirement of concurrence of two-thirds of the Members of the Senate. Unless I am MR. GUINGONA: I am not clear as to the meaning of "executive agreements" because I heard that
enlightened by the Committee I propose that tentatively, the sentence should read. "No treaty or these executive agreements must rely on treaties. In other words, there must first be treaties.
international agreement EXCEPT EXECUTIVE AGREEMENTS shall be valid and effective."
MR. CONCEPCION: No, I was speaking about the common use, as executive agreements being
FR. BERNAS: I wonder if a quotation from the Supreme Court decision [in Eastern Sea the implementation of treaties, details of which do not affect the sovereignty of the State.
Trading] might help clarify this:
MR. GUINGONA: But what about the matter of permanence, Madam President? Would 99 years
The right of the executive to enter into binding agreements without the necessity of be considered permanent? What would be the measure of permanency? I do not conceive of a
subsequent Congressional approval has been confirmed by long usage. From the earliest treaty that is going to be forever, so there must be some kind of a time limit.
days of our history, we have entered into executive agreements covering such subjects as
commercial and consular relations, most favored nation rights, patent rights, trademark and
MR. CONCEPCION: I suppose the Commissioner's question is whether this type of agreement
copyright protection, postal and navigation arrangements and the settlement of claims. The validity
should be included in a provision of the Constitution requiring the concurrence of Congress.
of this has never been seriously questioned by our Courts.
MR. GUINGONA: It depends on the concept of the executive agreement of which I am not clear. If
Agreements with respect to the registration of trademarks have been concluded by the executive of
the executive agreement partakes of the nature of a treaty, then it should also be included.
various countries under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1881 (21 Stat. 502) . . . International
agreements involving political issues or changes of national policy and those involving
international agreements of a permanent character usually take the form of treaties. But MR. CONCEPCION: Whether it partakes or not of the nature of a treaty, it is within the power of the
international agreements embodying adjustments of detail, carrying out well established Constitutional Commission to require that.
national policies and traditions and those involving arrangements of a more or less temporary
nature usually take the form of executive agreements. MR. GUINGONA: Yes. That is why I am trying to clarify whether the words "international
agreements" would include executive agreements.
MR. ROMULO: Is the Commissioner, therefore, excluding the executive agreements?
MR. CONCEPCION: No, not necessarily; generally no.
FR. BERNAS: What we are referring to, therefore, when we say international agreements which
need concurrence by at least two-thirds are those which are permanent in nature. xxx

MS. AQUINO: And it may include commercial agreements which are executive agreements MR. ROMULO: I wish to be recognized first. I have only one question. Do we take it, therefore,
essentially but which are proceeding from the authorization of Congress. If that is our that as far as the Committee is concerned, the term "international agreements" does not
understanding, then I am willing to withdraw that amendment. include the term "executive agreements" as read by the Commissioner in that text?

FR. BERNAS: If it is with prior authorization of Congress, then it does not need subsequent FR. BERNAS: Yes. (Emphases Supplied)
concurrence by Congress.
The inapplicability to executive agreements of the requirements under Section 21 was again
MS. AQUINO: In that case, I am withdrawing my amendment. recognized in Bayan v. Zamora and in Bayan Muna v. Romulo. These cases, both decided under
the aegis of the present Constitution, quoted Eastern Sea Trading in reiterating that executive This rule does not imply, though, that the President is given carte blanche to exercise this
agreements are valid and binding even without the concurrence of the Senate. discretion. Although the Chief Executive wields the exclusive authority to conduct our foreign
relations, this power must still be exercised within the context and the parameters set by the
Executive agreements may dispense with the requirement of Senate concurrence because of the Constitution, as well as by existing domestic and international laws. There are constitutional
legal mandate with which they are concluded. As culled from the afore-quoted deliberations of the provisions that restrict or limit the President's prerogative in concluding international agreements,
Constitutional Commission, past Supreme Court Decisions, and works of noted such as those that involve the following:
scholars, executive agreements merely involve arrangements on the implementation
208

of existing policies, rules, laws, or agreements. They are concluded (1) to adjust the details of a a. The policy of freedom from nuclear weapons within Philippine territory 221

treaty; (2) pursuant to or upon confirmation by an act of the Legislature; or (3) in the exercise of
209 210

the President's independent powers under the Constitution. The raison d'etre of executive
211
b. The fixing of tariff rates, import and export quotas, tonnage and wharfage dues, and
agreements hinges on prior constitutional or legislative authorizations. other duties or imposts, which must be pursuant to the authority granted by Congress 222

The special nature of an executive agreement is not just a domestic variation in international c. The grant of any tax exemption, which must be pursuant to a law concurred in by a
agreements. International practice has accepted the use of various forms and designations of majority of all the Members of Congress 223

international agreements, ranging from the traditional notion of a treaty - which connotes a formal,
solemn instrument - to engagements concluded in modem, simplified forms that no longer d. The contracting or guaranteeing, on behalf of the Philippines, of foreign loans that must
necessitate ratification. An international agreement may take different forms: treaty, act, protocol,
212
be previously concurred in by the Monetary Board 224

agreement, concordat, compromis d'arbitrage, convention, covenant, declaration, exchange of


notes, statute, pact, charter, agreed minute, memorandum of agreement, modus vivendi, or some
e. The authorization of the presence of foreign military bases, troops, or facilities in the
other form. Consequently, under international law, the distinction between a treaty and an
213

country must be in the form of a treaty duly concurred in by the Senate. 225

international agreement or even an executive agreement is irrelevant for purposes of determining


international rights and obligations.
f. For agreements that do not fall under paragraph 5, the concurrence of the Senate is
required, should the form of the government chosen be a treaty.
However, this principle does not mean that the domestic law distinguishing treaties, international
agreements, and executive agreements is relegated to a mere variation in form, or that the
constitutional requirement of Senate concurrence is demoted to an optional constitutional directive. 5. The President had the choice to enter into EDCA by way of an executive agreement or a
There remain two very important features that distinguish treaties from executive agreements and treaty.
translate them into terms of art in the domestic setting.
No court can tell the President to desist from choosing an executive agreement over a treaty to
First, executive agreements must remain traceable to an express or implied authorization under the embody an international agreement, unless the case falls squarely within Article VIII, Section 25.
Constitution, statutes, or treaties. The absence of these precedents puts the validity and effectivity
of executive agreements under serious question for the main function of the Executive is to enforce As can be gleaned from the debates among the members of the Constitutional Commission, they
the Constitution and the laws enacted by the Legislature, not to defeat or interfere in the were aware that legally binding international agreements were being entered into by countries in
performance of these rules. In turn, executive agreements cannot create new international
214 forms other than a treaty. At the same time, it is clear that they were also keen to preserve the
obligations that are not expressly allowed or reasonably implied in the law they purport to concept of "executive agreements" and the right of the President to enter into such agreements.
implement.
What we can glean from the discussions of the Constitutional Commissioners is that they
Second, treaties are, by their very nature, considered superior to executive agreements. Treaties understood the following realities:
are products of the acts of the Executive and the Senate unlike executive agreements, which are
215

solely executive actions. Because of legislative participation through the Senate, a treaty is
216 1. Treaties, international agreements, and executive agreements are all constitutional
regarded as being on the same level as a statute. If there is an irreconcilable conflict, a later law
217 manifestations of the conduct of foreign affairs with their distinct legal characteristics.
or treaty takes precedence over one that is prior. An executive agreement is treated differently.
218

Executive agreements that are inconsistent with either a law or a treaty are considered a. Treaties are formal contracts between the Philippines and other States-parties,
ineffective. Both types of international agreement are nevertheless subject to the supremacy of
219
which are in the nature of international agreements, and also of municipal laws in
the Constitution. 220
the sense of their binding nature.226
b. International agreements are similar instruments, the provisions of which may effectiveness and binding effect of the enforcement of a treaty or an executive agreement, as the
require the ratification of a designated number of parties thereto. These agreements parties in either international agreement each labor under the pacta sunt servanda principle.
involving political issues or changes in national policy, as well as those involving
international agreements of a permanent character, usually take the form of treaties. xxxx
They may also include commercial agreements, which are executive agreements
essentially, but which proceed from previous authorization by Congress, thus But over and above the foregoing considerations is the fact that - save for the situation and
dispensing with the requirement of concurrence by the Senate. 227
matters contemplated in Sec. 25, Art. XVIII of the Constitution - when a treaty is required, the
Constitution does not classify any subject, like that involving political issues, to be in the
c. Executive agreements are generally intended to implement a treaty already form of, and ratified as, a treaty. What the Constitution merely prescribes is that treaties need the
enforced or to determine the details of the implementation thereof that do not affect concurrence of the Senate by a vote defined therein to complete the ratification process.
the sovereignty of the State. 228

xxxx
2. Treaties and international agreements that cannot be mere executive agreements must,
by constitutional decree, be concurred in by at least two-thirds of the Senate. x x x. As the President wields vast powers and influence, her conduct in the external affairs of the
nation is, as Bayan would put it, "executive altogether." The right of the President to enter into or
3. However, an agreement - the subject of which is the entry of foreign military troops, ratify binding executive agreements has been confirmed by long practice.
bases, or facilities - is particularly restricted. The requirements are that it be in the form of a
treaty concurred in by the Senate; that when Congress so requires, it be ratified by a In thus agreeing to conclude the Agreement thru E/N BF0-028-03, then President Gloria
majority of the votes cast by the people in a national referendum held for that purpose; and Macapagal-Arroyo, represented by the Secretary of Foreign Affairs, acted within the scope of the
that it be recognized as a treaty by the other contracting State. authority and discretion vested in her by the Constitution. At the end of the day, the President
- by ratifying, thru her deputies, the non-surrender agreement - did nothing more than
4. Thus, executive agreements can continue to exist as a species of international discharge a constitutional duty and exercise a prerogative that pertains to her
agreements. office. (Emphases supplied)

That is why our Court has ruled the way it has in several cases. Indeed, in the field of external affairs, the President must be given a larger measure of authority
and wider discretion, subject only to the least amount of checks and restrictions under the
In Bayan Muna v. Romulo, we ruled that the President acted within the scope of her constitutional Constitution. The rationale behind this power and discretion was recognized by the Court
229

authority and discretion when she chose to enter into the RP-U.S. Non-Surrender Agreement in the in Vinuya v. Executive Secretary, cited earlier.
230

form of an executive agreement, instead of a treaty, and in ratifying the agreement without Senate
concurrence. The Court en banc discussed this intrinsic presidential prerogative as follows: Section 9 of Executive Order No. 459, or the Guidelines in the Negotiation of International
Agreements and its Ratification, thus, correctly reflected the inherent powers of the President when
Petitioner parlays the notion that the Agreement is of dubious validity, partaking as it does of the it stated that the DFA "shall determine whether an agreement is an executive agreement or a
nature of a treaty; hence, it must be duly concurred in by the Senate. x x x x. Pressing its point, treaty."
petitioner submits that the subject of the Agreement does not fall under any of the subject-
categories that xx x may be covered by an executive agreement, such as commercial/consular Accordingly, in the exercise of its power of judicial review, the Court does not look into whether an
relations, most-favored nation rights, patent rights, trademark and copyright protection, postal and international agreement should be in the form of a treaty or an executive agreement, save in cases
navigation arrangements and settlement of claims. in which the Constitution or a statute requires otherwise. Rather, in view of the vast constitutional
powers and prerogatives granted to the President in the field of foreign affairs, the task of the Court
The categorization of subject matters that may be covered by international agreements mentioned is to determine whether the international agreement is consistent with the applicable limitations.
in Eastern Sea Trading is not cast in stone. There are no hard and fast rules on the propriety of
entering, on a given subject, into a treaty or an executive agreement as an instrument of 6. Executive agreements may cover the matter of foreign military forces if it merely involves
international relations. The primary consideration in the choice of the form of agreement is detail adjustments.
the parties' intent and desire to craft an international agreement in the form they so wish to
further their respective interests. Verily, the matter of form takes a back seat when it comes to
The practice of resorting to executive agreements in adjusting the details of a law or a treaty that 4. The executive agreement must be consistent with the Constitution, as well as with
already deals with the presence of foreign military forces is not at all unusual in this jurisdiction. In existing laws and treaties.
fact, the Court has already implicitly acknowledged this practice in Lim v. Executive Secretary. In 231

that case, the Court was asked to scrutinize the constitutionality of the Terms of Reference of In light of the President's choice to enter into EDCA in the form of an executive agreement,
the Balikatan 02-1 joint military exercises, which sought to implement the VFA. Concluded in the respondents carry the burden of proving that it is a mere implementation of existing laws and
form of an executive agreement, the Terms of Reference detailed the coverage of the term treaties concurred in by the Senate. EDCA must thus be carefully dissected to ascertain if it
"activities" mentioned in the treaty and settled the matters pertaining to the construction of remains within the legal parameters of a valid executive agreement.
temporary structures for the U.S. troops during the activities; the duration and location of the
exercises; the number of participants; and the extent of and limitations on the activities of the U.S. 7. EDCA is consistent with the content, purpose, and framework of the MDT and the VFA
forces. The Court upheld the Terms of Reference as being consistent with the VFA. It no longer
took issue with the fact that the Balikatan Terms of Reference was not in the form of a treaty
The starting point of our analysis is the rule that "an executive agreement xx x may not be used to
concurred in by the Senate, even if it dealt with the regulation of the activities of foreign military
amend a treaty." In Lim v. Executive Secretary and in Nicolas v. Romulo, the Court approached
234

forces on Philippine territory.


the question of the validity of executive agreements by comparing them with the general framework
and the specific provisions of the treaties they seek to implement.
In Nicolas v. Romulo, the Court again impliedly affirmed the use of an executive agreement in an
232

attempt to adjust the details of a provision of the VFA. The Philippines and the U.S. entered into the
In Lim, the Terms of Reference of the joint military exercises was scrutinized by studying "the
Romulo-Kenney Agreement, which undertook to clarify the detention of a U.S. Armed Forces
framework of the treaty antecedents to which the Philippines bound itself," i.e., the MDT and the
235

member, whose case was pending appeal after his conviction by a trial court for the crime of rape.
VFA. The Court proceeded to examine the extent of the term "activities" as contemplated in Articles
In testing the validity of the latter agreement, the Court precisely alluded to one of the inherent
1 and II of the VFA. It later on found that the term "activities" was deliberately left undefined and
236 237

limitations of an executive agreement: it cannot go beyond the terms of the treaty it purports to
ambiguous in order to permit "a wide scope of undertakings subject only to the approval of the
implement. It was eventually ruled that the Romulo-Kenney Agreement was "not in accord" with the
Philippine government" and thereby allow the parties "a certain leeway in negotiation." The
238 239

VFA, since the former was squarely inconsistent with a provision in the treaty requiring that the
Court eventually ruled that the Terms of Reference fell within the sanctioned or allowable activities,
detention be "by Philippine authorities." Consequently, the Court ordered the Secretary of Foreign
especially in the context of the VFA and the MDT.
Affairs to comply with the VFA and "forthwith negotiate with the United States representatives for
the appropriate agreement on detention facilities under Philippine authorities as provided in Art. V,
Sec. 10 of the VFA. " 233 The Court applied the same approach to Nicolas v. Romulo. It studied the provisions of the VFA on
custody and detention to ascertain the validity of the Romulo-Kenney Agreement. It eventually
240

found that the two international agreements were not in accord, since the Romulo-Kenney
Culling from the foregoing discussions, we reiterate the following pronouncements to guide us in
Agreement had stipulated that U.S. military personnel shall be detained at the U.S. Embassy
resolving the present controversy:
Compound and guarded by U.S. military personnel, instead of by Philippine authorities. According
to the Court, the parties "recognized the difference between custody during the trial and detention
1. Section 25, Article XVIII of the Constitution, contains stringent requirements that must be after conviction." Pursuant to Article V(6) of the VFA, the custody of a U.S. military personnel
241

fulfilled by the international agreement allowing the presence of foreign military bases, resides with U.S. military authorities during trial. Once there is a finding of guilt, Article V(l0)
troops, or facilities in the Philippines: (a) the agreement must be in the form of a treaty, and requires that the confinement or detention be "by Philippine authorities."
(b) it must be duly concurred in by the Senate.
Justice Marvic M.V.F. Leonen's Dissenting Opinion posits that EDCA "substantially modifies or
2. If the agreement is not covered by the above situation, then the President may choose amends the VFA" and follows with an enumeration of the differences between EDCA and the VFA.
242

the form of the agreement (i.e., either an executive agreement or a treaty), provided that the While these arguments will be rebutted more fully further on, an initial answer can already be given
agreement dealing with foreign military bases, troops, or facilities is not the principal to each of the concerns raised by his dissent.
agreement that first allows their entry or presence in the Philippines.
The first difference emphasized is that EDCA does not only regulate visits as the VFA does, but
3. The executive agreement must not go beyond the parameters, limitations, and standards allows temporary stationing on a rotational basis of U.S. military personnel and their contractors in
set by the law and/or treaty that the former purports to implement; and must not unduly physical locations with permanent facilities and pre-positioned military materiel.
expand the international obligation expressly mentioned or necessarily implied in the law or
treaty.
This argument does not take into account that these permanent facilities, while built by U.S. forces, As previously mentioned, these points shall be addressed fully and individually in the latter analysis
are to be owned by the Philippines once constructed. Even the VFA allowed construction for the
243
of EDCA's provisions. However, it must already be clarified that the terms and details used by an
benefit of U.S. forces during their temporary visits. implementing agreement need not be found in the mother treaty. They must be sourced from the
authority derived from the treaty, but are not necessarily expressed word-for-word in the mother
The second difference stated by the dissent is that EDCA allows the prepositioning of military treaty. This concern shall be further elucidated in this Decision.
materiel, which can include various types of warships, fighter planes, bombers, and vessels, as well
as land and amphibious vehicles and their corresponding ammunition. 244
The fifth difference highlighted by the Dissenting Opinion is that the VFA does not have provisions
that may be construed as a restriction on or modification of obligations found in existing statues,
However, the VFA clearly allows the same kind of equipment, vehicles, vessels, and aircraft to be including the jurisdiction of courts, local autonomy, and taxation. Implied in this argument is that
brought into the country. Articles VII and VIII of the VFA contemplates that U.S. equipment, EDCA contains such restrictions or modifications. 249

materials, supplies, and other property are imported into or acquired in the Philippines by or on
behalf of the U.S. Armed Forces; as are vehicles, vessels, and aircraft operated by or for U.S. This last argument cannot be accepted in view of the clear provisions of EDCA. Both the VFA and
forces in connection with activities under the VFA. These provisions likewise provide for the waiver EDCA ensure Philippine jurisdiction in all instances contemplated by both agreements, with the
of the specific duties, taxes, charges, and fees that correspond to these equipment. exception of those outlined by the VFA in Articles III-VI. In the VFA, taxes are clearly waived
whereas in EDCA, taxes are assumed by the government as will be discussed later on. This fact
The third difference adverted to by the Justice Leonen's dissent is that the VFA contemplates the does not, therefore, produce a diminution of jurisdiction on the part of the Philippines, but rather a
entry of troops for training exercises, whereas EDCA allows the use of territory for launching recognition of sovereignty and the rights that attend it, some of which may be waived as in the
military and paramilitary operations conducted in other states. The dissent of Justice Teresita J.
245 cases under Articles III-VI of the VFA.
Leonardo-De Castro also notes that VFA was intended for non-combat activides only, whereas the
entry and activities of U.S. forces into Agreed Locations were borne of military necessity or had a Taking off from these concerns, the provisions of EDCA must be compared with those of the MDT
martial character, and were therefore not contemplated by the VFA. 246
and the VFA, which are the two treaties from which EDCA allegedly draws its validity.

This Court's jurisprudence however established in no uncertain terms that combat-related activities, "Authorized presence" under the VFA versus "authorized activities" under EDCA: (1) U.S.
as opposed to actual combat, were allowed under the MDT and VFA, viz: personnel and (2) U.S. contractors

Both the history and intent of the Mutual Defense Treaty and the VFA support the conclusion that The OSG argues that EDCA merely details existing policies under the MDT and the VFA. It
250

combat-related activities as opposed to combat itself such as the one subject of the instant petition, explains that EDCA articulates the principle of defensive preparation embodied in Article II of the
are indeed authorized. 247
MDT; and seeks to enhance the defensive, strategic, and technological capabilities of both parties
pursuant to the objective of the treaty to strengthen those capabilities to prevent or resist a possible
Hence, even if EDCA was borne of military necessity, it cannot be said to have strayed from the armed attack. Respondent also points out that EDCA simply implements Article I of the VFA, which
intent of the VFA since EDCA's combat-related components are allowed under the treaty. already allows the entry of U.S. troops and personnel into the country. Respondent stresses this
Court's recognition in Lim v. Executive Secretary that U.S. troops and personnel are authorized to
Moreover, both the VFA and EDCA are silent on what these activities actually are. Both the VFA conduct activities that promote the goal of maintaining and developing their defense capability.
and EDCA deal with the presence of U.S. forces within the Philippines, but make no mention of
being platforms for activity beyond Philippine territory. While it may be that, as applied, military Petitioners contest the assertion that the provisions of EDCA merely implement the MDT.
251

operations under either the VFA or EDCA would be carried out in the future the scope of judicial According to them, the treaty does not specifically authorize the entry of U.S. troops in the country
review does not cover potential breaches of discretion but only actual occurrences or blatantly in order to maintain and develop the individual and collective capacities of both the Philippines and
illegal provisions. Hence, we cannot invalidate EDCA on the basis of the potentially abusive use of the U.S. to resist an armed attack. They emphasize that the treaty was concluded at a time when
its provisions. there was as yet no specific constitutional prohibition on the presence of foreign military forces in
the country.
The fourth difference is that EDCA supposedly introduces a new concept not contemplated in the
VFA or the MDT: Agreed Locations, Contractors, Pre-positioning, and Operational Control. 248 Petitioners also challenge the argument that EDCA simply implements the VFA. They assert that
the agreement covers only short-term or temporary visits of U.S. troops "from time to time" for the
specific purpose of combined military exercises with their Filipino counterparts. They stress that, in
contrast, U.S. troops are allowed under EDCA to perform activities beyond combined military
exercises, such as those enumerated in Articles 111(1) and IV(4) thereof. Furthermore, there is 1. The term "military personnel" refers to military members of the United States
some degree of permanence in the presence of U.S. troops in the country, since the effectivity of Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, and Coast Guard.
EDCA is continuous until terminated. They proceed to argue that while troops have a "rotational"
presence, this scheme in fact fosters their permanent presence. 2. The term "civilian personnel" refers to individuals who are neither nationals of
nor ordinarily resident in the Philippines and who are employed by the United
a. Admission of U.S. military and civilian personnel into Philippine territory is already allowed under States armed forces or who are accompanying the United States armed
the VFA forces, such as employees of the American Red Cross and the United Services
Organization. 258

We shall first deal with the recognition under EDCA of the presence in the country of three distinct
classes of individuals who will be conducting different types of activities within the Agreed Article II of EDCA must then be read with Article III of the VFA, which provides for the entry
Locations: (1) U.S. military personnel; (2) U.S. civilian personnel; and (3) U.S. contractors. The accommodations to be accorded to U.S. military and civilian personnel:
agreement refers to them as follows:
1. The Government of the Philippines shall facilitate the admission of United States
"United States personnel" means United States military and civilian personnel temporarily in personnel and their departure from the Philippines in connection with activities covered by
the territory of the Philippines in connection with activities approved by the Philippines, as those this agreement.
terms are defined in the VFA. 252

2. United States military personnel shall be exempt from passport and visa
"United States forces" means the entity comprising United States personnel and all property, regulations upon enteringand departing the Philippines.
equipment, and materiel of the United States Armed Forces present in the territory of the
Philippines.253
3. The following documents only, which shall be required in respect of United States military
personnel who enter the Philippines; xx xx.
"United States contractors" means companies and firms, and their employees, under
contract or subcontract to or on behalf of the United States Department of Defense. United 4. United States civilian personnel shall be exempt from visa requirements but shall
States contractors are not included as part of the definition of United States personnel in this present, upon demand, valid passports upon entry and departure of the Philippines.
Agreement, including within the context of the VFA. 254
(Emphases Supplied)

United States forces may contract for any materiel, supplies, equipment, and By virtue of Articles I and III of the VFA, the Philippines already allows U.S. military and civilian
services (including construction) to be furnished or undertaken in the territory of the Philippines personnel to be "temporarily in the Philippines," so long as their presence is "in connection with
without restriction as to choice of contractor, supplier, or person who provides such materiel, activities approved by the Philippine Government." The Philippines, through Article III, even
supplies, equipment, or services. Such contracts shall be solicited, awarded, and administered in guarantees that it shall facilitate the admission of U.S. personnel into the country and grant
accordance with the laws and regulations of the United States. (Emphases Supplied)
255
exemptions from passport and visa regulations. The VFA does not even limit their temporary
presence to specific locations.
A thorough evaluation of how EDCA is phrased clarities that the agreement does not deal with
the entry into the country of U.S. personnel and contractors per se. While Articles I(l)(b) and 256
Based on the above provisions, the admission and presence of U.S. military and civilian
II(4) speak of "the right to access and use" the Agreed Locations, their wordings indicate the
257
personnel in Philippine territory are already allowed under the VFA, the treaty supposedly
presumption that these groups have already been allowed entry into Philippine territory, for which, being implemented by EDCA. What EDCA has effectively done, in fact, is merely provide the
unlike the VFA, EDCA has no specific provision. Instead, Article II of the latter simply alludes to the mechanism to identify the locations in which U.S. personnel may perform allowed activities
VFA in describing U.S. personnel, a term defined under Article I of the treaty as follows: pursuant to the VFA. As the implementing agreement, it regulates and limits the presence of U.S.
personnel in the country.
As used in this Agreement, "United States personnel" means United States military and civilian
personnel temporarily in the Philippines in connection with activities approved by the Philippine b. EDCA does not provide the legal basis for admission of U.S. contractors into Philippine territory;
Government. Within this definition: their entry must be sourced from extraneous Philippine statutes and regulations for the admission
of alien employees or business persons.
Of the three aforementioned classes of individuals who will be conducting certain activities within Article III
the Agreed Locations, we note that only U.S. contractors are not explicitly mentioned in the VFA.
This does not mean, though, that the recognition of their presence under EDCA is ipso facto an The Parties, through their Foreign Ministers or their deputies, will consult together from time
amendment of the treaty, and that there must be Senate concurrence before they are allowed to to time regarding the implementation of this Treaty and whenever in the opinion of either of them
enter the country. the territorial integrity, political independence or security of either of the Parties is threatened by
external armed attack in the Pacific.
Nowhere in EDCA are U.S. contractors guaranteed immediate admission into the Philippines.
Articles III and IV, in fact, merely grant them the right of access to, and the authority to conduct VISITING FORCES AGREEMENT
certain activities within the Agreed Locations. Since Article II(3) of EDCA specifically leaves
out U.S. contractors from the coverage of the VFA, they shall not be granted the same entry Preamble
accommodations and privileges as those enjoyed by U.S. military and civilian personnel under the
VFA.
xxx
Consequently, it is neither mandatory nor obligatory on the part of the Philippines to admit U.S.
Reaffirming their obligations under the Mutual Defense Treaty of August 30, 1951;
contractors into the country. We emphasize that the admission of aliens into Philippine territory is
259

"a matter of pure permission and simple tolerance which creates no obligation on the part of the
government to permit them to stay." Unlike U.S. personnel who are accorded entry
260 Noting that from time to time elements of the United States armed forces may visit the Republic of
accommodations, U.S. contractors are subject to Philippine immigration laws. The latter must
261 the Philippines;
comply with our visa and passport regulations and prove that they are not subject to exclusion
262

under any provision of Philippine immigration laws. The President may also deny them entry
263 Considering that cooperation between the United States and the Republic of the
pursuant to his absolute and unqualified power to prohibit or prevent the admission of aliens whose Philippines promotes their common security interests;
presence in the country would be inimical to public interest.264

xxx
In the same vein, the President may exercise the plenary power to expel or deport U.S.
contractors as may be necessitated by national security, public safety, public health, public
265 Article I - Definitions
morals, and national interest. They may also be deported if they are found to be illegal or
266

undesirable aliens pursuant to the Philippine Immigration Act and the Data Privacy Act. In
267 268
As used in this Agreement, "United States personnel" means United States military and civilian
contrast, Article 111(5) of the VFA requires a request for removal from the Philippine government personnel temporarily in the Philippines in connection with activities approved by the Philippine
before a member of the U.S. personnel may be "dispos[ed] xx x outside of the Philippines." Government. Within this definition: xx x

c. Authorized activities of U.S. military and civilian personnel within Philippine territory are in Article II - Respect for Law
furtherance of the MDT and the VFA
It is the duty of United States personnel to respect the laws of the Republic of the
We begin our analysis by quoting the relevant sections of the MDT and the VFA that pertain to the Philippines and to abstain from any activity inconsistent with the spirit of this agreement,
activities in which U.S. military and civilian personnel may engage: and, in particular, from any political activity in the Philippines. The Government of the United States
shall take all measures within its authority to ensure that this is done.
MUTUAL DEFENSE TREATY
Article VII - Importation and Exportation
Article II
1. United States Government equipment, materials, supplies, and other property imported into
In order more effectively to achieve the objective of this Treaty, the Parties separately and jointly or acquired in the Philippines by or on behalf of the United States armed forces in connection
byself-help and mutual aid will maintain and develop their individual and collective capacity with activities to which this agreement applies, shall be free of all Philippine duties, taxes and
to resist armed attack. other similar charges. Title to such property shall remain with the United States, which may remove
such property from the Philippines at any time, free from export duties, taxes, and other similar
charges. x x x.
Article VIII - Movement of Vessels and Aircraft all of this may require training in the area where an armed attack might be directed at the Philippine
territory.
1. Aircraft operated by or for the United States armed forces may enter the Philippines upon
approval of the Government of the Philippines in accordance with procedures stipulated The provisions of the MDT must then be read in conjunction with those of the VFA.
in implementing arrangements.
Article I of the VFA indicates that the presence of U.S. military and civilian personnel in the
2. Vessels operated by or for the United States armed forces may enter the Philippines upon Philippines is "in connection with activities approved by the Philippine Government." While the
approval of the Government of the Philippines. The movement of vessels shall be in treaty does not expressly enumerate or detail the nature of activities of U.S. troops in the country,
accordance with international custom and practice governing such vessels, and such its Preamble makes explicit references to the reaffirmation of the obligations of both countries
agreed implementing arrangements as necessary. x x x (Emphases Supplied) under the MDT. These obligations include the strengthening of international and regional security in
the Pacific area and the promotion of common security interests.
Manifest in these provisions is the abundance of references to the creation of further "implementing
arrangements" including the identification of "activities [to be] approved by the Philippine The Court has already settled in Lim v. Executive Secretary that the phrase "activities approved by
Government." To determine the parameters of these implementing arrangements and activities, we the Philippine Government" under Article I of the VFA was intended to be ambiguous in order to
referred to the content, purpose, and framework of the MDT and the VFA. afford the parties flexibility to adjust the details of the purpose of the visit of U.S. personnel. In
276

ruling that the Terms of Reference for the Balikatan Exercises in 2002 fell within the context of the
By its very language, the MDT contemplates a situation in which both countries shall engage treaty, this Court explained:
in joint activities, so that they can maintain and develop their defense capabilities. The wording
itself evidently invites a reasonable construction that the joint activities shall involve joint military After studied reflection, it appeared farfetched that the ambiguity surrounding the meaning of
trainings, maneuvers, and exercises. Both the interpretation and the subsequent practice of the
269 270
the word "activities" arose from accident. In our view, it was deliberately made that way to
parties show that the MDT independently allows joint military exercises in the country. Lim v. give both parties a certain leeway in negotiation. In this manner, visiting US forces may
Executive Secretary and Nicolas v. Romulo recognized that Balikatan exercises, which are
271 272
sojourn in Philippine territory for purposes other than military. As conceived, the joint
activities that seek to enhance and develop the strategic and technological capabilities of the exercises may include training on new techniques of patrol and surveillance to protect the nation's
parties to resist an armed attack, "fall squarely under the provisions of the RP-US marine resources, sea search-and-rescue operations to assist vessels in distress, disaster relief
MDT." In Lim, the Court especially noted that the Philippines and the U.S. continued to conduct
273
operations, civic action projects such as the building of school houses, medical and humanitarian
joint military exercises even after the expiration of the MBA and even before the conclusion of the missions, and the like.
VFA. These activities presumably related to the Status of Forces Agreement, in which the parties
274

agreed on the status to be accorded to U.S. military and civilian personnel while conducting Under these auspices, the VFA gives legitimacy to the current Balikatan exercises. It is only
activities in the Philippines in relation to the MDT.
275
logical to assume that "Balikatan 02-1," a "mutual anti-terrorism advising, assisting and
training exercise," falls under the umbrella of sanctioned or allowable activities in the
Further, it can be logically inferred from Article V of the MDT that these joint activities may be context of the agreement. Both the history and intent of the Mutual Defense Treaty and the VFA
conducted on Philippine or on U.S. soil. The article expressly provides that the term armed support the conclusion that combat-related activities - as opposed to combat itself- such as the one
attack includes "an armed attack on the metropolitan territory of either of the Parties, or on subject of the instant petition, are indeed authorized. (Emphases Supplied)
the island territories under its jurisdiction in the Pacific or on its armed forces, public vessels
or aircraft in the Pacific." Surely, in maintaining and developing our defense capabilities, an The joint report of the Senate committees on foreign relations and on national defense and security
assessment or training will need to be performed, separately and jointly by self-help and mutual further explains the wide range and variety of activities contemplated in the VFA, and how these
aid, in the territories of the contracting parties. It is reasonable to conclude that the assessment of activities shall be identified:
277

defense capabilities would entail understanding the terrain, wind flow patterns, and other
environmental factors unique to the Philippines. These joint exercises envisioned in the VFA are not limited to combat-related activities; they
have a wide range and variety. They include exercises that will reinforce the AFP's ability
It would also be reasonable to conclude that a simulation of how to respond to attacks in vulnerable to acquire new techniques of patrol and surveillance to protect the country's maritime
areas would be part of the training of the parties to maintain and develop their capacity to resist an resources; sea-search and rescue operations to assist ships in distress; and disaster-relief
actual armed attack and to test and validate the defense plan of the Philippines. It is likewise operations to aid the civilian victims of natural calamities, such as earthquakes, typhoons and tidal
reasonable to imagine that part of the training would involve an analysis of the effect of the waves.
weapons that may be used and how to be prepared for the eventuality. This Court recognizes that
xxxx 6. Operation of their own telecommunication systems, including the utilization of such means and
services as are required to ensure the full ability to operate telecommunication systems, as well as
Joint activities under the VFA will include combat maneuvers; training in aircraft maintenance and the use of the necessary radio spectrum allocated for this purpose 284

equipment repair; civic-action projects; and consultations and meetings of the Philippine-U.S.
Mutual Defense Board. It is at the level of the Mutual Defense Board-which is headed jointly by According to Article I of EDCA, one of the purposes of these activities is to maintain and develop,
the Chief of Staff of the AFP and the Commander in Chief of the U.S. Pacific Command-that the jointly and by mutual aid, the individual and collective capacities of both countries to resist an
VFA exercises are planned. Final approval of any activity involving U.S. forces is, armed attack. It further states that the activities are in furtherance of the MDT and within the context
however, invariably given by the Philippine Government. of the VFA.

xxxx We note that these planned activities are very similar to those under the Terms of
Reference mentioned in Lim. Both EDCA and the Terms of Reference authorize the U.S. to
285

Siazon clarified that it is not the VFA by itself that determines what activities will be perform the following: (a) participate in training exercises; (b) retain command over their forces; (c)
conductedbetween the armed forces of the U.S. and the Philippines. The VFA regulates and establish temporary structures in the country; (d) share in the use of their respective resources,
provides the legal framework for the presence, conduct and legal status of U.S. equipment and other assets; and (e) exercise their right to self-defense. We quote the relevant
personnel while they are in the country for visits, joint exercises and other related activities. portion of the Terms and Conditions as follows: 286

(Emphases Supplied)
I. POLICY LEVEL
What can be gleaned from the provisions of the VFA, the joint report of the Senate
committees on foreign relations and on national defense and security, and the ruling of this xxxx
Court in Lim is that the "activities" referred to in the treaty are meant to be specified and
identified infurther agreements. EDCA is one such agreement. No permanent US basing and support facilities shall be established. Temporary structures such
as those for troop billeting, classroom instruction and messing may be set up for use by RP
EDCA seeks to be an instrument that enumerates the Philippine-approved activities of U.S. and US Forces during the Exercise.
personnel referred to in the VFA. EDCA allows U.S. military and civilian personnel to perform
"activities approved by the Philippines, as those terms are defined in the VFA" and clarifies that
278
The Exercise shall be implemented jointly by RP and US Exercise Co-Directors under the authority
these activities include those conducted within the Agreed Locations: of the Chief of Staff, AFP. In no instance will US Forces operate independently during field training
exercises (FTX). AFP and US Unit Commanders will retain command over their respective
1. Security cooperation exercises; joint and combined training activities; humanitarian assistance forces under the overall authority of the Exercise Co-Directors. RP and US participants shall
and disaster relief activities; and such other activities as may be agreed upon by the Parties
279
comply with operational instructions of the AFP during the FTX.

2. Training; transit; support and related activities; refueling of aircraft; bunkering of vessels; The exercise shall be conducted and completed within a period of not more than six months, with
temporary maintenance of vehicles, vessels, and aircraft; temporary accommodation of personnel; the projected participation of 660 US personnel and 3,800 RP Forces. The Chief of Staff, AFP shall
communications; prepositioning of equipment, supplies, and materiel; deployment of forces and direct the Exercise Co-Directors to wind up and terminate the Exercise and other activities within
materiel; and such other activities as the Parties may agree 280
the six month Exercise period.

3. Exercise of operational control over the Agreed Locations for construction activities and other The Exercise is a mutual counter-terrorism advising, assisting and training Exercise relative
types of activity, including alterations and improvements thereof 281
to Philippine efforts against the ASG, and will be conducted on the Island of Basilan. Further
advising, assisting and training exercises shall be conducted in Malagutay and the Zamboanga
4. Exercise of all rights and authorities within the Agreed Locations that are necessary for their area. Related activities in Cebu will be for support of the Exercise.
operational control or defense, including the adoption of apfropriate measures to protect U.S.
forces and contractors 282
xx xx.

5. Use of water, electricity, and other public utilities 283


US exercise participants shall not engage in combat, without prejudice to their right of self-
defense.
These terms of Reference are for purposes of this Exercise only and do not create additional legal Drawing on the reasoning in Lim, we also believe that it could not have been by chance that the
obligations between the US Government and the Republic of the Philippines. VFA does not include a maximum time limit with respect to the presence of U.S. personnel in the
country. We construe this lack of specificity as a deliberate effort on the part of the Philippine and
II. EXERCISE LEVEL the U.S. governments to leave out this aspect and reserve it for the "adjustment in detail" stage of
the implementation of the treaty. We interpret the subsequent, unconditional concurrence of the
1. TRAINING Senate in the entire text of the VFA as an implicit grant to the President of a margin of appreciation
in determining the duration of the "temporary" presence of U.S. personnel in the country.
a. The Exercise shall involve the conduct of mutual military assisting, advising
and trainingof RP and US Forces with the primary objective of enhancing the Justice Brion's dissent argues that the presence of U.S. forces under EDCA is "more permanent" in
operational capabilities of both forces to combat terrorism. nature. However, this argument has not taken root by virtue of a simple glance at its provisions on
289

the effectivity period. EDCA does not grant permanent bases, but rather temporary rotational
access to facilities for efficiency. As Professor Aileen S.P. Baviera notes:
b. At no time shall US Forces operate independently within RP territory.
The new EDCA would grant American troops, ships and planes rotational access to facilities of the
c. Flight plans of all aircraft involved in the exercise will comply with the local air
Armed Forces of the Philippines – but not permanent bases which are prohibited under the
traffic regulations.
Philippine Constitution - with the result of reducing response time should an external threat from a
common adversary crystallize. 290

2. ADMINISTRATION & LOGISTICS


EDCA is far from being permanent in nature compared to the practice of states as shown in other
xxxx defense cooperation agreements. For example, Article XIV(l) of the U.S.-Romania defense
agreement provides the following:
a. RP and US participating forces may share, in accordance with their respective laws and
regulations, in the use of their resources, equipment and other assets. They will use their This Agreement is concluded for an indefinite period and shall enter into force in accordance
respective logistics channels. x x x. (Emphases Supplied) with the internal laws of each Party x x x. (emphasis supplied)

After a thorough examination of the content, purpose, and framework of the MDT and the VFA, we Likewise, Article 36(2) of the US-Poland Status of Forces Agreement reads:
find that EDCA has remained within the parameters set in these two treaties. Just like the Terms of
Reference mentioned in Lim, mere adjustments in detail to implement the MDT and the VFA can be
This Agreement has been concluded for an indefinite period of time. It may be terminated by
in the form of executive agreements.
written notification by either Party and in that event it terminates 2 years after the receipt of the
notification. (emphasis supplied)
Petitioners assert that the duration of the activities mentioned in EDCA is no longer consistent
287

with the temporary nature of the visits as contemplated in the VFA. They point out that Article XII(4)
Section VIII of US.-Denmark Mutual Support Agreement similarly provides:
of EDCA has an initial term of 10 years, a term automatically renewed unless the Philippines or the
U.S. terminates the agreement. According to petitioners, such length of time already has a badge of
permanency. 8.1 This Agreement, which consists of a Preamble, SECTIONs I-VIII, and Annexes A and B, shall
become effective on the date of the last signature affixed below and shall remain in force until
terminated by the Parties, provided that it may be terminated by either Party upon 180 days
In connection with this, Justice Teresita J. Leonardo-De Castro likewise argues in her Concurring
written notice of its intention to do so to the other Party. (emphasis supplied)
and Dissenting Opinion that the VFA contemplated mere temporary visits from U.S. forces,
whereas EDCA allows an unlimited period for U.S. forces to stay in the Philippines. 288

On the other hand, Article XXI(3) of the US.-Australia Force Posture Agreement provides a longer
initial term:
However, the provisions of EDCA directly contradict this argument by limiting itself to 10 years of
effectivity. Although this term is automatically renewed, the process for terminating the agreement is
unilateral and the right to do so automatically accrues at the end of the 10 year period. Clearly, this 3. This Agreement shall have an initial term of 25 years and thereafter shall continue in force,
method does not create a permanent obligation. but may be terminated by either Party at any time upon one year's written notice to the other Party
through diplomatic channels. (emphasis supplied)
The phrasing in EDCA is similar to that in the U.S.-Australia treaty but with a term less than half of been operating in Mindanao since 2004 - have been implicated in incidents or scandals in other
that is provided in the latter agreement. This means that EDCA merely follows the practice of other parts of the globe involving rendition, torture and other human rights violations. They also assert
states in not specifying a non-extendible maximum term. This practice, however, does not that these contractors employ paramilitary forces in other countries where they are operating.
automatically grant a badge of permanency to its terms. Article XII(4) of EDCA provides very
clearly, in fact, that its effectivity is for an initial term of 10 years, which is far shorter than the terms Under Articles III and IV of EDCA, U.S. contractors are authorized to perform only the following
of effectivity between the U.S. and other states. It is simply illogical to conclude that the initial, activities:
extendible term of 10 years somehow gives EDCA provisions a permanent character.
1. Training; transit; support and related activities; refueling of aircraft; bunkering of vessels;
The reasoning behind this interpretation is rooted in the constitutional role of the President who, as temporary maintenance of vehicles, vessels, and aircraft; temporary accommodation of
Commander-in-Chief of our armed forces, is the principal strategist of the nation and, as such, personnel; communications; prepositioning of equipment, supplies, and materiel;
duty-bound to defend our national sovereignty and territorial integrity; who, as chief architect of
291
deployment of forces and materiel; and such other activities as the Parties may agree 297

our foreign relations, is the head policymaker tasked to assess, ensure, and protect our national
security and interests; who holds the most comprehensive and most confidential information
292
2. Prepositioning and storage of defense equipment, supplies, and materiel, including
about foreign countries that may affect how we conduct our external affairs; and who has
293
delivery, management, inspection, use, maintenance, and removal of such equipment,
unrestricted access to highly classified military intelligence data that may threaten the life of the
294
supplies and materiel 298

nation. Thus, if after a geopolitical prognosis of situations affecting the country, a belief is
engendered that a much longer period of military training is needed, the President must be given
3. Carrying out of matters in accordance with, and to the extent permissible under, U.S.
ample discretion to adopt necessary measures including the flexibility to set an extended timetable.
laws, regulations, and policies 299

Due to the sensitivity and often strict confidentiality of these concerns, we acknowledge that the
EDCA requires that all activities within Philippine territory be in accordance with Philippine law. This
President may not always be able to candidly and openly discuss the complete situation being
means that certain privileges denied to aliens are likewise denied to foreign military contractors.
faced by the nation. The Chief Executive's hands must not be unduly tied, especially if the situation
Relevantly, providing security and carrying, owning, and possessing firearms are illegal for
300 301

calls for crafting programs and setting timelines for approved activities. These activities may be
foreign civilians.
necessary for maintaining and developing our capacity to resist an armed attack, ensuring our
national sovereignty and territorial integrity, and securing our national interests. If the Senate
decides that the President is in the best position to define in operational terms the meaning The laws in place already address issues regarding the regulation of contractors. In the 2015
of temporary in relation to the visits, considered individually or in their totality, the Court must Foreign Investment Negative list, the Executive Department has already identified corporations
302

respect that policy decision. If the Senate feels that there is no need to set a time limit to these that have equity restrictions in Philippine jurisdiction. Of note is No. 5 on the list - private security
visits, neither should we. agencies that cannot have any foreign equity by virtue of Section 4 of Republic Act No. 5487; and 303

No. 15, which regulates contracts for the construction of defense-related structures based on
Commonwealth Act No. 541.
Evidently, the fact that the VFA does not provide specificity in regard to the extent of the
"temporary" nature of the visits of U.S. personnel does not suggest that the duration to which the
President may agree is unlimited. Instead, the boundaries of the meaning of the term temporary in Hence, any other entity brought into the Philippines by virtue of EDCA must subscribe to corporate
Article I of the treaty must be measured depending on the purpose of each visit or activity. That 295 and civil requirements imposed by the law, depending on the entity's corporate structure and the
purpose must be analyzed on a case-by-case basis depending on the factual circumstances nature of its business.
surrounding the conclusion of the implementing agreement. While the validity of the President's
actions will be judged under less stringent standards, the power of this Court to determine whether That Philippine laws extraneous to EDCA shall govern the regulation of the activities of U.S.
there was grave abuse of discretion remains unimpaired. contractors has been clear even to some of the present members of the Senate.

d. Authorized activities performed by US. contractors within Philippine territory - who were For instance, in 2012, a U.S. Navy contractor, the Glenn Marine, was accused of spilling fuel in the
legitimately permitted to enter the country independent of EDCA - are subject to relevant Philippine waters off Manila Bay. The Senate Committee on Foreign Relations and the Senate Committee
304

statutes and regulations and must be consistent with the MDT and the VFA on Environment and Natural Resources chairperson claimed environmental and procedural
violations by the contractor. The U.S. Navy investigated the contractor and promised stricter
305

Petitioners also raise concerns about the U.S. government's purported practice of hiring private
296 guidelines to be imposed upon its contractors. The statement attributed to Commander Ron
306

security contractors in other countries. They claim that these contractors - one of which has already Steiner of the public affairs office of the U.S. Navy's 7th Fleet - that U.S. Navy contractors are
bound by Philippine laws - is of particular relevance. The statement acknowledges not just the a. Preliminary point on badges of exclusivity
presence of the contractors, but also the U.S. position that these contractors are bound by the local
laws of their host state. This stance was echoed by other U.S. Navy representatives. 307
As a preliminary observation, petitioners have cherry-picked provisions of EDCA by presenting so-
called "badges of exclusivity," despite the presence of contrary provisions within the text of the
This incident simply shows that the Senate was well aware of the presence of U.S. contractors for agreement itself.
the purpose of fulfilling the terms of the VFA. That they are bound by Philippine law is clear to all,
even to the U.S. First, they clarify the word "return" in Article V(2) of EDCA. However, the use of the word "return" is
within the context of a lengthy provision. The provision as a whole reads as follows:
As applied to EDCA, even when U.S. contractors are granted access to the Agreed Locations, all
their activities must be consistent with Philippine laws and regulations and pursuant to the MDT and The United States shall return to the Philippines any Agreed Locations, or any portion thereof,
the VFA. including non-relocatable structures and assemblies constructed, modified, or improved by the
United States, once no longer required by United States forces for activities under this Agreement.
While we recognize the concerns of petitioners, they do not give the Court enough justification to The Parties or the Designated Authorities shall consult regarding the terms of return of any Agreed
strike down EDCA. In Lim v. Executive Secretary, we have already explained that we cannot take Locations, including possible compensation for improvements or construction.
judicial notice of claims aired in news reports, "not because of any issue as to their truth, accuracy,
or impartiality, but for the simple reason that facts must be established in accordance with the rules The context of use is "required by United States forces for activities under this Agreement."
of evidence." What is more, we cannot move one step ahead and speculate that the alleged
308
Therefore, the return of an Agreed Location would be within the parameters of an activity that the
illegal activities of these contractors in other countries would take place in the Philippines with Mutual Defense Board (MDB) and the Security Engagement Board (SEB) would authorize. Thus,
certainty. As can be seen from the above discussion, making sure that U.S. contractors comply with possession by the U.S. prior to its return of the Agreed Location would be based on the authority
Philippine laws is a function of law enforcement. EDCA does not stand in the way of law given to it by a joint body co-chaired by the "AFP Chief of Staff and Commander, U.S. PACOM with
enforcement. representatives from the Philippines' Department of National Defense and Department of Foreign
Affairs sitting as members." The terms shall be negotiated by both the Philippines and the U.S., or
313

Nevertheless, we emphasize that U.S. contractors are explicitly excluded from the coverage of the through their Designated Authorities. This provision, seen as a whole, contradicts petitioners'
VFA. As visiting aliens, their entry, presence, and activities are subject to all laws and treaties interpretation of the return as a "badge of exclusivity." In fact, it shows the cooperation and
applicable within the Philippine territory. They may be refused entry or expelled from the country if partnership aspect of EDCA in full bloom.
they engage in illegal or undesirable activities. There is nothing that prevents them from being
detained in the country or being subject to the jurisdiction of our courts. Our penal laws, labor309
Second, the term "unimpeded access" must likewise be viewed from a contextual perspective.
laws, and immigrations laws apply to them and therefore limit their activities here. Until and
310 311
Article IV(4) states that U.S. forces and U.S. contractors shall have "unimpeded access to Agreed
unless there is another law or treaty that specifically deals with their entry and activities, their Locations for all matters relating to the prepositioning and storage of defense equipment, supplies,
presence in the country is subject to unqualified Philippine jurisdiction. and materiel, including delivery, management, inspection, use, maintenance, and removal of such
equipment, supplies and materiel."
EDCA does not allow the presence of U.S.-owned or -controlled military facilities and bases
in the Philippines At the beginning of Article IV, EDCA states that the Philippines gives the U.S. the authority to bring
in these equipment, supplies, and materiel through the MDB and SEB security mechanism. These
Petitioners Saguisag et al. claim that EDCA permits the establishment of U.S. military bases items are owned by the U.S., are exclusively for the use of the U.S. and, after going through the
314 315

through the "euphemistically" termed "Agreed Locations. " Alluding to the definition of this term in
312
joint consent mechanisms of the MDB and the SEB, are within the control of the U.S. More 316

Article II(4) of EDCA, they point out that these locations are actually military bases, as the definition importantly, before these items are considered prepositioned, they must have gone through the
refers to facilities and areas to which U.S. military forces have access for a variety of purposes. process of prior authorization by the MDB and the SEB and given proper notification to the AFP. 317

Petitioners claim that there are several badges of exclusivity in the use of the Agreed Locations by
U.S. forces. First, Article V(2) of EDCA alludes to a "return" of these areas once they are no longer Therefore, this "unimpeded access" to the Agreed Locations is a necessary adjunct to the
needed by U.S. forces, indicating that there would be some transfer of use. Second, Article IV(4) ownership, use, and control of the U.S. over its own equipment, supplies, and materiel and must
ofEDCA talks about American forces' unimpeded access to the Agreed Locations for all matters have first been allowed by the joint mechanisms in play between the two states since the time of
relating to the prepositioning and storage of U.S. military equipment, supplies, and materiel. Third, the MDT and the VFA. It is not the use of the Agreed Locations that is exclusive per se; it is mere
Article VII of EDCA authorizes U.S. forces to use public utilities and to operate their own access to items in order to exercise the rights of ownership granted by virtue of the Philippine Civil
telecommunications system. Code. 318
As for the view that EDCA authorizes U.S. forces to use public utilities and to operate their own b. There are substantial matters that the US. cannot do under EDCA, but which it was authorized to
telecommunications system, it will be met and answered in part D, infra. do under the 1947 MBA

Petitioners also point out that EDCA is strongly reminiscent of and in fact bears a one-to-one
319
The Philippine experience with U.S. military bases under the 1947 MBA is simply not possible
correspondence with the provisions of the 1947 MBA. They assert that both agreements (a) allow under EDCA for a number of important reasons.
similar activities within the area; (b) provide for the same "species of ownership" over facilities; and
(c) grant operational control over the entire area. Finally, they argue that EDCA is in fact an
320
First, in the 1947 MBA, the U.S. retained all rights of jurisdiction in and over Philippine territory
implementation of the new defense policy of the U.S. According to them, this policy was not what occupied by American bases. In contrast, the U.S. under EDCA does not enjoy any such right over
was originally intended either by the MDT or by the VFA. any part of the Philippines in which its forces or equipment may be found. Below is a comparative
table between the old treaty and EDCA:
On these points, the Court is not persuaded.
1947 MBA/ 1946 Treaty of General EDCA
The similar activities cited by petitioners simply show that under the MBA, the U.S. had the right to
321
Relations
construct, operate, maintain, utilize, occupy, garrison, and control the bases. The so-called parallel
provisions of EDCA allow only operational control over the Agreed Locations specifically for
construction activities. They do not allow the overarching power to operate, maintain, utilize, 1947 MBA, Art. I(1): EDCA, preamble:
occupy, garrison, and control a base with full discretion. EDCA in fact limits the rights of the U.S. in
respect of every activity, including construction, by giving the MDB and the SEB the power to
The Government of the Republic of Affirming that the Parties share an
determine the details of all activities such as, but not limited to, operation, maintenance, utility,
the Philippines (hereinafter referred to as the understanding for the United States not to
occupancy, garrisoning, and control. 322

Philippines) grants to the Government of establish a permanent military presence or


the United States of America (hereinafter base in the territory of the Philippines;
The "species of ownership" on the other hand, is distinguished by the nature of the property. For referred to as the United States) the right to
immovable property constructed or developed by the U.S., EDCA expresses that ownership will retain the use of the bases in the xxxx
automatically be vested to the Philippines. On the other hand, for movable properties brought into
323
Philippines listed in Annex A attached hereto.
the Philippines by the U.S., EDCA provides that ownership is retained by the latter. In contrast, the
MBA dictates that the U.S. retains ownership over immovable and movable properties. Recognizing that all United States access to
1947 MBA, Art. XVII(2): and use of facilities and areas will be at the
invitation of the Philippines and with full
To our mind, both EDCA and the MBA simply incorporate what is already the law of the land in the
All buildings and structures which respect for the Philippine Constitution and
Philippines. The Civil Code's provisions on ownership, as applied, grant the owner of a movable
are erected by the United States in the Philippine laws;
property full rights over that property, even if located in another person's property.
324

bases shall be the property of the United


States and may be removed by it before the x x x x
The parallelism, however, ends when the situation involves facilities that can be considered expiration of this Agreement or the earlier
immovable. Under the MBA, the U.S. retains ownership if it paid for the facility. Under EDCA, an
325
relinquishment of the base on which the EDCA, Art. II(4):
immovable is owned by the Philippines, even if built completely on the back of U.S. funding. This326
structures are situated. There shall be no
is consistent with the constitutional prohibition on foreign land ownership.327
obligation on the part of the Philippines or of
"Agreed Locations" means facilities and
the United States to rebuild or repair any
Despite the apparent similarity, the ownership of property is but a part of a larger whole that must areas that are provided by the Government
destruction or damage inflicted from any
be considered before the constitutional restriction is violated. Thus, petitioners' points on of the Philippines through the AFP and that
cause whatsoever on any of the said buildings
operational control will be given more attention in the discussion below. The arguments on policy United States forces, United States
or structures owned or used by the United
are, however, outside the scope of judicial review and will not be discussed contractors, and others as mutually agreed,
States in the bases. x x x x.
shall have the right to access and use
pursuant to this Agreement. Such Agreed
Moreover, a direct comparison of the MBA and EDCA will result in several important distinctions 1946 Treaty of Gen. Relations, Art. I: Locations may be listed in an annex to be
that would allay suspicion that EDCA is but a disguised version of the MBA.
appended to this Agreement, and may be
further described in implementing
The United States of America agrees to arrangements. required by military necessity. xxxx
withdraw and surrender, and does hereby
withdraw and surrender, all rights of EDCA, Art. V: 1946 Treaty of Gen. Relations, Art. I: EDCA. Art. II(4):
possession, supervision, jurisdiction,
control or sovereignty existing and 1. The Philippines shall retain ownership of The United States of America agrees to "Agreed Locations" means facilities and
exercised by the United States of America in and title to Agreed Locations. withdraw and surrender, and does hereby areas that are provided by the Government
and over the territory and the people of the withdraw and surrender, all rights of of the Philippines through the AFP and that
Philippine Islands, except the use of such possession, supervision, jurisdiction, United States forces, United States
xxxx
bases, necessary appurtenances to such control or sovereignty existing and contractors, and others as mutually agreed,
bases, and the rights incident thereto, as exercised by the United States of America in shall have the right to access and use
the United States of America, by agreement 4. All buildings, non-relocatable structures,
and assemblies affixed to the land in the and over the territory and the people of the pursuant to this Agreement. Such Agreed
with the Republic of the Philippines may deem Philippine Islands, except the use of such Locations may be listed in an annex to be
necessary to retain for the mutual protection Agreed Locations, including ones altered or
improved by United States forces, remain bases, necessary appurtenances to such appended to this Agreement, and may be
of the Republic of the Philippines and of the bases, and the rights incident thereto, as the further described in implementing
United States of America. x x x. the property of the Philippines.Permanent
buildings constructed by United States forces United States of America, by agreement arrangements.
become the property of the Philippines, once with the Republic of the Philippines may
constructed, but shall be used by United deem necessary to retain for the mutual
States forces until no longer required by protection of the Republic of the Philippines
United States forces. and of the United States of America. x x x.

Third, in EDCA, the Philippines is- guaranteed access over the entire area of the Agreed
Locations. On the other hand, given that the U.S. had complete control over its military bases under
the 1947 MBA, the treaty did not provide for any express recognition of the right of access of
Second, in the bases agreement, the U.S. and the Philippines were visibly not on equal footing
Philippine authorities. Without that provision and in light of the retention of U.S. sovereignty over
when it came to deciding whether to expand or to increase the number of bases, as the Philippines
the old military bases, the U.S. could effectively prevent Philippine authorities from entering those
may be compelled to negotiate with the U.S. the moment the latter requested an expansion of the
bases.
existing bases or to acquire additional bases. In EDCA, U.S. access is purely at the invitation of the
Philippines.
1947 MBA EDCA
1947 MBA/ 1946 Treaty of General EDCA
Relations No equivalent provision. EDCA, Art. III(5):

1947 MBA, Art.I(3): EDCA, preamble: The Philippine Designated Authority and
its authorized representative shall have
access to the entire area of the Agreed
The Philippines agree to enter into Recognizing that all United States access to
Locations. Such access shall be provided
negotiations with the United States at the and use of facilities and areas will be at the
promptly consistent with operational safety
latter's request, to permit the United invitation of the Philippines and with full
and security requirements in accordance with
States to expand such bases, to exchange respect for the Philippine Constitution and
agreed procedures developed by the Parties.
such bases for other bases, to acquire Philippine laws;
additional bases, or relinquish rights to
bases, as any of such exigencies may be
Fourth, in the bases agreement, the U.S. retained the right, power, and authority over the
establishment, use, operation, defense, and control of military bases, including the limits of
territorial waters and air space adjacent to or in the vicinity of those bases. The only standard used agreement with the Philippines, have the right With consideration of the views of
in determining the extent of its control was military necessity. On the other hand, there is no such to use land and coastal sea areas of the Parties,
grant of power or authority under EDCA. It merely allows the U.S. to exercise operational control appropriate size and location for periodic the Philippines hereby authorizes and
over the construction of Philippine-owned structures and facilities: maneuvers, for additional staging areas, agrees that United States forces, United
bombing and gunnery ranges, and for States contractors, and vehicles, vessels, and
such intermediate airfields as may be aircraft operated by or for United States forces
1947 MBA EDCA required for safe and efficient air operations.may conduct the following activities with
Operations in such areas shall be carried on respect to Agreed Locations: training; transit;
with due regard and safeguards for the public support and related activities; refueling of
1947 MBA, Art.I(2): EDCA, Art. III(4): safety. aircraft; bunkering of vessels; temporary
maintenance of vehicles, vessels, and aircraft;
The Philippines agrees to permit the United The Philippines hereby grants to the United 1947 MBA, Art.I(2): temporary accommodation of personnel;
States, upon notice to the Philippines, to use States, through bilateral security communications; prepositioning of equipment,
such of those bases listed in Annex B as the mechanisms, such as the MDB and The Philippines agrees to permit the United supplies, and materiel; deploying forces and
United States determines to be required by SEB, operational control of Agreed States, upon notice to the Philippines, to use materiel; and such other activities as the
military necessity. Locations for construction such of those bases listed in Annex B as the Parties may agree.
activities and authority to undertake such United States determines to be required by
1947 MBA, Art. III(1): activities on, and make alterations and military necessity.
improvements to, Agreed Locations. United
It is mutually agreed that the United States forces shall consult on issues
Statesshall have the rights, power and regarding such construction, alterations,
authority within the bases which and improvements based on the Parties' Sixth, under the MBA, the U.S. was given the right, power, and authority to control and prohibit the
are necessary for the establishment, use, shared intent that the technical requirements movement and operation of all types of vehicles within the vicinity of the bases. The U.S. does not
operation and defense thereof or and construction standards of any such have any right, power, or authority to do so under EDCA.
appropriate for the control thereof and all projects undertaken by or on behalf of United
the rights, power and authority within the States forces should be consistent with the
requirements and standards of both Parties. 1947 MBA EDCA
limits of territorial waters and air space
adjacent to, or in the vicinity of, the bases
which are necessary to provide access to 1947 MBA, Art. 111(2)(c) No equivalent provision.
them, or appropriate for their control.
Such rights, power and authority shall
include, inter alia, the right, power and
Fifth, the U.S. under the bases agreement was given the authority to use Philippine territory for authority: x x x x to control (including the
additional staging areas, bombing and gunnery ranges. No such right is given under EDCA, as right to prohibit) in so far as may be required
seen below: for the efficient operation and safety of the
bases, and within the limits of military
necessity, anchorages, moorings, landings,
1947 MBA EDCA takeoffs, movements and operation of
ships and water-borne craft, aircraft and
other vehicles on water, in the air or on
1947 MBA, Art. VI: EDCA, Art. III(1): land comprising

The United States shall, subject to previous


Seventh, under EDCA, the U.S. is merely given temporary access to land and facilities (including Ninth, under EDCA, the U.S. no longer has the right, power, and authority to construct, install,
roads, ports, and airfields). On the other hand, the old treaty gave the U.S. the right to improve and maintain, and employ any type of facility, weapon, substance, device, vessel or vehicle, or system
deepen the harbors, channels, entrances, and anchorages; and to construct or maintain necessary unlike in the old treaty. EDCA merely grants the U.S., through bilateral security mechanisms, the
roads and bridges that would afford it access to its military bases. authority to undertake construction, alteration, or improvements on the Philippine-owned Agreed
Locations.
1947 MBA EDCA
1947 MBA EDCA

1947 MBA, Art. III(2)(b): EDCA, Art. III(2):


1947 MBA, Art. III(2)(e): EDCA, Art. III(4):
Such rights, power and authority shall When requested, the Designated Authority of
include, inter alia, the right, power and the Philippines shall assist in facilitating Such rights, power and authority shall The Philippines hereby grants to the United
authority: x x x x to improve and deepen transit or temporary access by United include, inter alia, the right, power and States, through bilateral security
the harbors, channels, entrances and States forces to public land and facilities authority: x x x x to construct, install, mechanisms, such as the MDB and SEB,
anchorages, and to construct or maintain (including roads, ports, and airfields), maintain, and employ on any base any operational control of Agreed Locations for
necessary roadsand bridges affording including those owned or controlled by local type of facilities, weapons, substance, construction activities and authority to
access to the bases. governments, and to other land and facilities device, vessel or vehicle on or under the undertake such activities on, and make
(including roads, ports, and airfields). ground, in the air or on or under the water that alterations and improvements to, Agreed
may be requisite or appropriate, including Locations. United States forces shall consult
meteorological systems, aerial and water on issues regarding such construction,
navigation lights, radio and radar apparatus alterations, and improvements based on the
Eighth, in the 1947 MBA, the U.S. was granted the automatic right to use any and all public and electronic devices, of any desired power, Parties' shared intent that the technical
utilities, services and facilities, airfields, ports, harbors, roads, highways, railroads, bridges, type of emission and frequency. requirements and construction standards of
viaducts, canals, lakes, rivers, and streams in the Philippines in the same manner that Philippine any such projects undertaken by or on behalf
military forces enjoyed that right. No such arrangement appears in EDCA. In fact, it merely extends of United States forces should be consistent
to U.S. forces temporary access to public land and facilities when requested: with the requirements and standards of both
Parties.
1947 MBA EDCA

Tenth, EDCA does not allow the U.S. to acquire, by condemnation or expropriation proceedings,
1947 MBA, Art. VII: EDCA, Art. III(2):
real property belonging to any private person. The old military bases agreement gave this right to
the U.S. as seen below:
It is mutually agreed that the United States When requested, the Designated Authority of
may employ and use for United States the Philippines shall assist in facilitating
military forces any and all public utilities, transit or temporary access by United 1947 MBA EDCA
other services and facilities, airfields, ports, States forces to public land and facilities
harbors, roads, highways, railroads, bridges, (including roads, ports, and airfields),
viaducts, canals, lakes, rivers and streams in including those owned or controlled by local 1947 MBA, Art. XXII(l): No equivalent provision.
the Philippines under conditions no less governments, and to other land and facilities
favorable than those that may (including roads, ports, and airfields). Whenever it is necessary to acquire by
be applicablefrom time to time to the military
forces of the Philippines. condemnation or expropriation
proceedings real property belonging to
any private persons, associations or
corporations located in bases named in Annex authorities. Such persons, other than part of the definition of United States
A and Annex B in order to carry out the members of the United States armed forces in personnel in this Agreement, including
purposes of this Agreement, the Philippines uniform, shall present their travel documents within the context of the VFA.
will institute and prosecute such to the appropriate Philippine authorities for
condemnation or expropriation proceedings in visas, it being understood that no objection
accordance with the laws of the Philippines. will be made to their travel to the
The United States agrees to reimburse the Philippines as non-immigrants.
Philippines for all the reasonable expenses,
damages and costs therebv incurred,
including the value of the property as
determined by the Court. In addition, subject Twelfth, EDCA does not allow the U.S. to exercise jurisdiction over any offense committed by any
to the mutual agreement of the two person within the Agreed Locations, unlike in the former military bases:
Governments, the United States will
reimburse the Philippines for the reasonable 1947 MBA EDCA
costs of transportation and removal of any
occupants displaced or ejected by reason of
the condemnation or expropriation. 1947 MBA, Art. XIII(l)(a): No equivalent provision.

The Philippines consents that the United


Eleventh, EDCA does not allow the U.S. to unilaterally bring into the country non-Philippine
nationals who are under its employ, together with their families, in connection with the construction, States shall have the right to exercise
maintenance, or operation of the bases. EDCA strictly adheres to the limits under the VFA. jurisdiction over the following offenses:
(a) Any offense committed by any
person within any base except where the
1947 MBA EDCA offender and offended parties are both
Philippine citizens (not members of the armed
forces of the United States on active duty) or
1947 MBA, Art. XI(l): EDCA, Art. II: the offense is against the security of the
Philippines.
It is mutually agreed that the United States 1. "United States personnel" means United
shall have the right to bring into the States military and civilian
Philippines members of the United States personneltemporarily in the territory of the
military forces and the United States Philippines in connection with activities Thirteenth, EDCA does not allow the U.S. to operate military post exchange (PX) facilities, which is
nationals employed by or under a contract approved by the Philippines, as those terms free of customs duties and taxes, unlike what the expired MBA expressly allowed. Parenthetically,
with the United States together with their are defined in the VFA. the PX store has become the cultural icon of U.S. military presence in the country.
families, and technical personnel of other
nationalities (not being persons excluded by x xx x 1947 MBA EDCA
the laws of the Philippines) in connection with
the construction, maintenance, or operation of 3. "United States contractors" means
the bases. The United States shall make companies and firms, and their employees, 1947 MBA, Art. XVIII(l): No equivalent provision.
suitable arrangements so that such persons under contract or subcontract to or on behalf
may be readily identified and their status of the United States Department of Defense.
established when necessary by the Philippine It is mutually agreed that the United States
United States contractors are not includedas
Commissioner Tadeo, in presenting his objections to U.S. presence in the Philippines before the
1986 Constitutional Commission, listed the areas that he considered as military bases:
shall have the right to establish on bases,
free of all licenses; fees; sales, excise or
1,000 hectares Camp O'Donnel
other taxes, or imposts; Government
agencies, including concessions, such
as sales commissaries and post 20,000 hectares Crow Valley Weapon's Range
exchanges; messes and social clubs, for the
exclusive use of the United States military 55,000 hectares Clark Air Base
forces and authorized civilian personnel
and their families. The merchandise or 150 hectares Wallace Air Station
services sold or dispensed by such agencies
shall be free of all taxes, duties and 400 hectares John Hay Air Station
inspection by the Philippine
authorities. Administrative measures shall be 15,000 hectares Subic Naval Base
taken by the appropriate authorities of the
United States to prevent the resale of goods
1,000 hectares San Miguel Naval Communication
which are sold under the provisions of this
Article to persons not entitled to buy goods at
such agencies and, generally, to prevent 750 hectares Radio Transmitter in Capas, Tarlac
abuse of the privileges granted under this
Article. There shall be cooperation between 900 hectares Radio Bigot Annex at Bamban, Tarlac 329

such authorities and the Philippines to this


end. The Bases Conversion and Development Act of 1992 described its coverage in its Declaration of
Policies:

Sec. 2. Declaration of Policies. - It is hereby declared the policy of the Government to accelerate
In sum, EDCA is a far cry from a basing agreement as was understood by the people at the time the sound and balanced conversion into alternative productive uses of the Clark and Subic military
that the 1987 Constitution was adopted. reservations and their extensions (John Hay Station, Wallace Air Station, O'Donnell Transmitter
Station, San Miguel Naval Communications Station and Capas Relay Station), to raise funds by the
Nevertheless, a comprehensive review of what the Constitution means by "foreign military bases" sale of portions of Metro Manila military camps, and to apply said funds as provided herein for the
and "facilities" is required before EDCA can be deemed to have passed judicial scrutiny. development and conversion to productive civilian use of the lands covered under the 194 7 Military
Bases Agreement between the Philippines and the United States of America, as amended. 330

c. The meaning of military facilities and bases


The result of the debates and subsequent voting is Section 25, Article XVIII of the Constitution,
An appreciation of what a military base is, as understood by the Filipino people in 1987, would be which specifically restricts, among others, foreign military facilities or bases. At the time of its
vital in determining whether EDCA breached the constitutional restriction. crafting of the Constitution, the 1986 Constitutional Commission had a clear idea of what exactly it
was restricting. While the term "facilities and bases" was left undefined, its point of reference was
Prior to the drafting of the 1987 Constitution, the last definition of "military base" was provided clearly those areas covered by the 1947 MBA as amended.
under Presidential Decree No. (PD) 1227. Unlawful entry into a military base is punishable under
328

the decree as supported by Article 281 of the Revised Penal Code, which itself prohibits the act of Notably, nearly 30 years have passed since then, and the ever-evolving world of military technology
trespass. and geopolitics has surpassed the understanding of the Philippine people in 1986. The last direct
military action of the U.S. in the region was the use of Subic base as the staging ground for Desert
Section 2 of the law defines the term in this manner: "'[M]ilitary base' as used in this decree means Shield and Desert Storm during the Gulf War. In 1991, the Philippine Senate rejected the
331

any military, air, naval, or coast guard reservation, base, fort, camp, arsenal, yard, station, or successor treaty of the 1947 MBA that would have allowed the continuation of U.S. bases in the
installation in the Philippines." Philippines.
Henceforth, any proposed entry of U.S. forces into the Philippines had to evolve likewise, taking Once more, we must look to the 1986 Constitutional Commissioners to glean, from their collective
into consideration the subsisting agreements between both parties, the rejection of the 1991 wisdom, the intent of Section 25. Their speeches are rich with history and wisdom and present a
proposal, and a concrete understanding of what was constitutionally restricted. This trend birthed clear picture of what they considered in the crafting the provision.
the VFA which, as discussed, has already been upheld by this Court.
SPEECH OF COMMISSIONER REGALADO 334

The latest agreement is EDCA, which proposes a novel concept termed "Agreed Locations."
xxxx
By definition, Agreed Locations are
We have been regaled here by those who favor the adoption of the anti-bases provisions with what
facilities and areas that are provided by the Government of the Philippines through the AFP and purports to be an objective presentation of the historical background of the military bases in the
that United States forces, United States contractors, and others as mutually agreed, shall have the Philippines. Care appears, however, to have been taken to underscore the inequity in their
right to access and use pursuant to this Agreement. Such Agreed Locations may be listed in an inception as well as their implementation, as to seriously reflect on the supposed objectivity of
annex to be appended to this Agreement, and may be further described in implementing the report. Pronouncements of military and civilian officials shortly after World War II are quoted in
arrangements. 332
support of the proposition on neutrality; regrettably, the implication is that the same remains valid
today, as if the world and international activity stood still for the last 40 years.
Preliminarily, respondent already claims that the proviso that the Philippines shall retain ownership
of and title to the Agreed Locations means that EDCA is "consistent with Article II of the VFA which We have been given inspired lectures on the effect of the presence of the military bases on
recognizes Philippine sovereignty and jurisdiction over locations within Philippine territory.
333
our sovereignty - whether in its legal or political sense is not clear - and the theory that any
country with foreign bases in its territory cannot claim to be fully sovereign or completely
By this interpretation, respondent acknowledges that the contention of petitioners springs from an independent. I was not aware that the concepts of sovereignty and independence have now
understanding that the Agreed Locations merely circumvent the constitutional restrictions. Framed assumed the totality principle, such that a willing assumption of some delimitations in the exercise
differently, the bone of contention is whether the Agreed Locations are, from a legal perspective, of some aspects thereof would put that State in a lower bracket of nationhood.
foreign military facilities or bases. This legal framework triggers Section 25, Article XVIII, and makes
Senate concurrence a sine qua non. xxxx

Article III of EDCA provides for Agreed Locations, in which the U.S. is authorized by the Philippines We have been receiving a continuous influx of materials on the pros and cons on the advisability of
to "conduct the following activities: "training; transit; support and related activities; refueling of having military bases within our shores. Most of us who, only about three months ago, were just
aircraft; bunkering of vessels; temporary maintenance of vehicles, vessels and aircraft; temporary mulling the prospects of these varying contentions are now expected, like armchair generals, to
accommodation of personnel; communications; prepositioning of equipment, supplies and materiel; decide not only on the geopolitical aspects and contingent implications of the military bases but
deploying forces and materiel; and such other activities as the Parties may agree." also on their political, social, economic and cultural impact on our national life. We are asked to
answer a plethora of questions, such as: 1) whether the bases are magnets of nuclear attack or are
This creation of EDCA must then be tested against a proper interpretation of the Section 25 deterrents to such attack; 2) whether an alliance or mutual defense treaty is a derogation of our
restriction. national sovereignty; 3) whether criticism of us by Russia, Vietnam and North Korea is outweighed
by the support for us of the ASEAN countries, the United States, South Korea, Taiwan, Australia
d. Reasons for the constitutional requirements and legal standards for constitutionally compatible and New Zealand; and 4) whether the social, moral and legal problems spawned by the military
military bases and facilities bases and their operations can be compensated by the economic benefits outlined in papers which
have been furnished recently to all of us.
335

Section 25 does not define what is meant by a "foreign military facility or base." While it specifically
alludes to U.S. military facilities and bases that existed during the framing of the Constitution, the xxxx
provision was clearly meant to apply to those bases existing at the time and to any future facility or
base. The basis for the restriction must first be deduced from the spirit of the law, in order to set a Of course, one side of persuasion has submitted categorical, unequivocal and forceful assertions of
standard for the application of its text, given the particular historical events preceding the their positions. They are entitled to the luxury of the absolutes. We are urged now to adopt the
agreement. proposed declaration as a "golden," "unique" and "last" opportunity for Filipinos to assert
their sovereign rights. Unfortunately, I have never been enchanted by superlatives, much less for
the applause of the moment or the ovation of the hour. Nor do I look forward to any glorious
summer after a winter of political discontent. Hence, if I may join Commissioner Laurel, I also nationalist values we cherish? A matter of the gravest concern for the safety and survival of
invoke a caveat not only against the tyranny of labels but also the tyranny of slogans. 336
this nation indeed deserves a place in our Constitution.

xxxx xxxx

SPEECH OF COMMISSIONER SUAREZ 337


x x x Why should we bargain away our dignity and our self-respect as a nation and the future of
generations to come with thirty pieces of silver? 339

MR. SUAREZ: Thank you, Madam President.


SPEECH OF COMMISSIONER BENNAGEN 340

I am quite satisfied that the crucial issues involved in the resolution of the problem of the removal of
foreign bases from the Philippines have been adequately treated by previous speakers. Let me, xxxx
therefore, just recapitulate the arguments adduced in favor of a foreign bases-free Philippines:
The underlying principle of military bases and nuclear weapons wherever they are found and
1. That every nation should be free to shape its own destiny without outside whoever owns them is that those are for killing people or for terrorizing humanity. This
interference; objective by itself at any point in history is morally repugnant. This alone is reason enough for us to
constitutionalize the ban on foreign military bases and on nuclear weapons. 341

2. That no lasting peace and no true sovereignty would ever be achieved so long as
there are foreign military forces in our country; SPEECH OF COMMISSIONER BACANI 342

3. That the presence of foreign military bases deprives us of the very substance of xxxx
national sovereigntyand this is a constant source of national embarrassment and an insult
to our national dignity and selfrespect as a nation; x x x Hence, the remedy to prostitution does not seem to be primarily to remove the
bases because even if the bases are removed, the girls mired in poverty will look for their clientele
4. That these foreign military bases unnecessarily expose our country to devastating elsewhere. The remedy to the problem of prostitution lies primarily elsewhere - in an alert and
nuclear attacks; concerned citizenry, a healthy economy and a sound education in values. 343

5. That these foreign military bases create social problems and are designed to perpetuate SPEECH OF COMMISSIONER JAMIR 344

the strangle-hold of United States interests in our national economy and development;
xxxx
6. That the extraterritorial rights enjoyed by these foreign bases operate to deprive our
country of jurisdiction over civil and criminal offenses committed within our own One of the reasons advanced against the maintenance of foreign military bases here is that
national territory and against Filipinos; they impair portions of our sovereignty. While I agree that our country's sovereignty should not
be impaired, I also hold the view that there are times when it is necessary to do so according to the
7. That the bases agreements are colonial impositions and dictations upon our helpless imperatives of national interest. There are precedents to this effect. Thus, during World War II,
country; and England leased its bases in the West Indies and in Bermuda for 99 years to the United States for its
use as naval and air bases. It was done in consideration of 50 overaged destroyers which the
8. That on the legal viewpoint and in the ultimate analysis, all the bases agreements are United States gave to England for its use in the Battle of the Atlantic.
null and void ab initio, especially because they did not count the sovereign consent and will
of the Filipino people.
338
A few years ago, England gave the Island of Diego Garcia to the United States for the latter's use
as a naval base in the Indian Ocean. About the same time, the United States obtained bases in
xxxx Spain, Egypt and Israel. In doing so, these countries, in effect, contributed to the launching of a
preventive defense posture against possible trouble in the Middle East and in the Indian Ocean for
In the real sense, Madam President, if we in the Commission could accommodate the provisions I their own protection.345

have cited, what is our objection to include in our Constitution a matter as priceless as the
SPEECH OF COMMISSIONER TINGSON 346
mentality of these foreign interventionists. We must always be on the side of peace – this
means that we should not always rely on military solution.
352

xxxx
xxxx
In the case of the Philippines and the other Southeast Asian nations, the presence of American
troops in the country is a projection of America's security interest. Enrile said that nonetheless, they x x x The United States bases, therefore, are springboards for intervention in our own internal
also serve, although in an incidental and secondary way, the security interest of the Republic of the affairs and in the affairs of other nations in this region.
Philippines and the region. Yes, of course, Mr. Enrile also echoes the sentiments of most of us in
this Commission, namely: It is ideal for us as an independent and sovereign nation to xxxx
ultimately abrogate the RP-US military treaty and, at the right time, build our own air and
naval might. 347
Thus, I firmly believe that a self-respecting nation should safeguard its fundamental freedoms
which should logically be declared in black and white in our fundamental law of the land - the
xxxx Constitution. Let us express our desire for national sovereignty so we may be able to achieve
national self-determination. Let us express our desire for neutrality so that we may be able to
Allow me to say in summation that I am for the retention of American military bases in the follow active nonaligned independent foreign policies. Let us express our desire for peace and a
Philippines provided that such an extension from one period to another shall be concluded nuclear-free zone so we may be able to pursue a healthy and tranquil existence, to have peace that
upon concurrence of the parties, and such extension shall be based on justice, the is autonomous and not imposed. 353

historical amity of the people of the Philippines and the United States and their common
defense interest. 348
xxxx

SPEECH OF COMMISSIONER ALONTO 349


SPEECH OF COMMISSIONER TADEO 354

xxxx Para sa magbubukid, ano ha ang kahulugan ng U.S. military bases? Para sa
magbubukid, ang kahulugan nito ay pagkaalipin. Para sa magbubukid, ang pananatili ng U.S.
Madam President, sometime ago after this Commission started with this task of framing a military bases ay tinik sa dibdib ng sambayanang Pilipinong patuloy na nakabaon. Para sa
constitution, I read a statement of President Aquino to the effect that she is for the removal of the sambayanang magbubukid, ang ibig sabihin ng U.S. military bases ay batong pabigat na patuloy
U.S. military bases in this country but that the removal of the U.S. military bases should not be na pinapasan ng sambayanang Pilipino. Para sa sambayanang magbubukid, ang pananatili
done just to give way to other foreign bases. Today, there are two world superpowers, both vying to ng U.S. military bases ay isang nagdudumilat na katotohanan ng patuloy na paggahasa ng
control any and all countries which have importance to their strategy for world domination. The imperyalistang Estados Unidos sa ating Inang Bayan - economically, politically and
Philippines is one such country. culturally. Para sa sambayanang magbubukid ang U.S. military bases ay kasingkahulugan
ng nuclear weapon - ang kahulugan ay magneto ng isang nuclear war. Para sa sambayanang
Madam President, I submit that I am one of those ready to completely remove any vestiges of magbubukid, ang kahulugan ng U.S. military bases ay isang salot. 355

the days of enslavement, but not prepared to erase them if to do so would merely leave a vacuum
to be occupied by a far worse type. 350
SPEECH OF COMMISSIONER QUESADA 356

SPEECH OF COMMISSIONER GASCON 351


xxxx

xxxx The drift in the voting on issues related to freeing ourselves from the instruments of domination
and subservience has clearly been defined these past weeks.
Let us consider the situation of peace in our world today. Consider our brethren in the Middle East,
in Indo-China, Central America, in South Africa - there has been escalation of war in some of these xxxx
areas because of foreign intervention which views these conflicts through the narrow prism of the
East-West conflict. The United States bases have been used as springboards for intervention So for the record, Mr. Presiding Officer, I would like to declare my support for the committee's
in some of these conflicts. We should not allow ourselves to be party to the warlike position to enshrine in the Constitution a fundamental principle forbidding foreign military bases,
troops or facilities in any part of the Philippine territory as a clear and concrete manifestation of xxxx
our inherent right to national self-determination, independence and sovereignty.
Without any doubt we can establish a new social order in our country, if we reclaim, restore, uphold
Mr. Presiding Officer, I would like to relate now these attributes of genuine nationhood to the social and defend our national sovereignty. National sovereignty is what the military bases issue is all
cost of allowing foreign countries to maintain military bases in our country. Previous speakers have about. It is only the sovereign people exercising their national sovereignty who can design an
dwelt on this subject, either to highlight its importance in relation to the other issues or to gloss over independent course and take full control of their national destiny. 359

its significance and !llake this a part of future negotiations.


357

SPEECH OF COMMISSIONER P ADILLA 360

xxxx
xxxx
Mr. Presiding Officer, I feel that banning foreign military bases is one of the solutions and is the
response of the Filipino people against this condition and other conditions that have already been Mr. Presiding Officer, in advocating the majority committee report, specifically Sections 3 and 4 on
clearly and emphatically discussed in past deliberations. The deletion, therefore, of Section 3 in the neutrality, nuclear and bases-free country, some views stress sovereignty of the Republic and
Constitution we are drafting will have the following implications: even invoke survival of the Filipino nation and people. 361

First, the failure of the Constitutional Commission to decisively respond to the continuing violation REBUTTAL OF COMMISSIONER NOLLEDO 362

of our territorial integrity via the military bases agreement which permits the retention of
U.S. facilities within the Philippine soil over which our authorities have no exclusive xxxx
jurisdiction contrary to the accepted definition of the exercise of sovereignty.
The anachronistic and ephemeral arguments against the provisions of the committee report to
Second, consent by this forum, this Constitutional Commission, to an exception in the application dismantle the American bases after 1991 only show the urgent need to free our country from the
of a provision in the Bill of Rights that we have just drafted regarding equal application of the entangling alliance with any power bloc. 363

laws of the land to all inhabitants, permanent or otherwise, within its territorial boundaries.
xxxx
Third, the continued exercise by the United States of extraterritoriality despite the
condemnations of such practice by the world community of nations in the light of overwhelming
xx x Mr. Presiding Officer, it is not necessary for us to possess expertise to know that the so-called
international approval of eradicating all vestiges of colonialism. 358

RP-US Bases Agreement will expire in 1991, that it infringes on our sovereignty and jurisdiction
as well as national dignity and honor, that it goes against the UN policy of disarmament and that it
xxxx constitutes unjust intervention in our internal affairs. (Emphases Supplied)
364

Sixth, the deification of a new concept called pragmatic sovereignty, in the hope that such can be The Constitutional Commission eventually agreed to allow foreign military bases, troops, or
wielded to force the United States government to concede to better terms and conditions facilities, subject to the provisions of Section 25. It is thus important to read its discussions carefully.
concerning the military bases agreement, including the transfer of complete control to the From these discussions, we can deduce three legal standards that were articulated by the
Philippine government of the U.S. facilities, while in the meantime we have to suffer all existing Constitutional Commission Members. These are characteristics of any agreement that the country,
indignities and disrespect towards our rights as a sovereign nation. and by extension this Court, must ensure are observed. We can thereby determine whether a
military base or facility in the Philippines, which houses or is accessed by foreign military troops, is
xxxx foreign or remains a Philippine military base or facility. The legal standards we find applicable are:
independence from foreign control, sovereignty and applicable law, and national security and
Eighth, the utter failure of this forum to view the issue of foreign military bases as essentially territorial integrity.
a question of sovereignty which does not require in-depth studies or analyses and which this
forum has, as a constituent assembly drafting a constitution, the expertise and capacity to decide i. First standard: independence from foreign control
on except that it lacks the political will that brought it to existence and now engages in an elaborate
scheme of buck-passing.
Very clearly, much of the opposition to the U.S. bases at the time of the Constitution's drafting was EDCA' s security mechanisms, which are bilateral procedures involving Philippine consent and
aimed at asserting Philippine independence from the U.S., as well as control over our country's cooperation. Finally, the Philippine Designated Authority or a duly designated representative is
373

territory and military. given access to the Agreed Locations. 374

Under the Civil Code, there are several aspects of control exercised over property. To our mind, these provisions do not raise the spectre of U.S. control, which was so feared by the
Constitutional Commission. In fact, they seem to have been the product of deliberate negotiation
Property is classified as private or public. It is public if "intended for public use, such as roads,
365 from the point of view of the Philippine government, which balanced constitutional restrictions on
canals, rivers, torrents, ports and bridges constructed by the State, banks, shores, roadsteads, and foreign military bases and facilities against the security needs of the country. In the 1947 MBA, the
others of similar character[,]" or "[t]hose which belong to the State, without being for public use, and U.S. forces had "the right, power and authority x x x to construct (including dredging and filling),
are intended for some public service or for the development of the national wealth. " 366 operate, maintain, utilize, occupy, garrison and control the bases." No similarly explicit provision is
375

present in EDCA.
Quite clearly, the Agreed Locations are contained within a property for public use, be it within a
government military camp or property that belongs to the Philippines. 1avvphi1
Nevertheless, the threshold for allowing the presence of foreign military facilities and bases has
been raised by the present Constitution. Section 25 is explicit that foreign military bases, troops, or
Once ownership is established, then the rights of ownership flow freely. Article 428 of the Civil Code facilities shall not be allowed in the Philippines, except under a treaty duly concurred in by the
provides that "[t]he owner has the right to enjoy and dispose of a thing, without other limitations Senate. Merely stating that the Philippines would retain ownership would do violence to the
than those established by law." Moreover, the owner "has also a right of action against the holder constitutional requirement if the Agreed Locations were simply to become a less obvious
and possessor of the thing in order to recover it." manifestation of the U.S. bases that were rejected in 1991.

Philippine civil law therefore accords very strong rights to the owner of property, even against those When debates took place over the military provisions of the Constitution, the committee rejected a
who hold the property. Possession, after all, merely raises a disputable presumption of ownership, specific provision proposed by Commissioner Sarmiento. The discussion illuminates and provides
which can be contested through normal judicial processes. 367 context to the 1986 Constitutional Commission's vision of control and independence from the U.S.,
to wit:
In this case, EDCA explicitly provides that ownership of the Agreed Locations remains with the
Philippine govemment. What U.S. personnel have a right to, pending mutual agreement, is access
368 MR. SARMIENTO: Madam President, my proposed amendment reads as follows: "THE STATE
to and use of these locations. 369 SHALL ESTABLISH AND MAINTAIN AN INDEPENDENT AND SELF-RELIANT ARMED FORCES
OF THE PHILIPPINES." Allow me to briefly explain, Madam President. The Armed Forces of the
Philippines is a vital component of Philippine society depending upon its training, orientation and
The right of the owner of the property to allow access and use is consistent with the Civil Code,
support. It will either be the people's protector or a staunch supporter of a usurper or tyrant, local
since the owner may dispose of the property in whatever way deemed fit, subject to the limits of the
and foreign interest. The Armed Forces of the Philippines' past and recent experience shows
law. So long as the right of ownership itself is not transferred, then whatever rights are transmitted
it has never been independent and self-reliant. Facts, data and statistics will show that it has
by agreement does not completely divest the owner of the rights over the property, but may only
been substantially dependent upon a foreign power. In March 1968, Congressman Barbero, himself
limit them in accordance with law.
a member of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, revealed top secret documents showing what he
described as U.S. dictation over the affairs of the Armed Forces of the Philippines. He showed that
Hence, even control over the property is something that an owner may transmit freely. This act under existing arrangements, the United States unilaterally determines not only the types
does not translate into the full transfer of ownership, but only of certain rights. In Roman Catholic and quantity of arms and equipments that our armed forces would have, but also the time
Apostolic Administrator of Davao, Inc. v. Land Registration Commission, we stated that the when these items are to be made available to us. It is clear, as he pointed out, that the
constitutional proscription on property ownership is not violated despite the foreign national's composition, capability and schedule of development of the Armed Forces of the
control over the property. 370
Philippines is under the effective control of the U.S. government. (Emphases supplied)
376

EDCA, in respect of its provisions on Agreed Locations, is essentially a contract of use and access. Commissioner Sarmiento proposed a motherhood statement in the 1987 Constitution that would
Under its pertinent provisions, it is the Designated Authority of the Philippines that shall, when assert "independent" and "self-reliant" armed forces. This proposal was rejected by the
requested, assist in facilitating transit or access to public land and facilities. The activities carried
371
committee, however. As Commissioner De Castro asserted, the involvement of the
out within these locations are subject to agreement as authorized by the Philippine Philippine military with the U.S. did not, by itself, rob the Philippines of its real
govemment. Granting the U.S. operational control over these locations is likewise subject to
372
independence. He made reference to the context of the times: that the limited resources of the
Philippines and the current insurgency at that time necessitated a strong military relationship with community. Independence refers to the freedom from undue foreign control of the national
the U.S. He said that the U.S. would not in any way control the Philippine military despite this economy, especially in such strategic industries as in the development of natural resources and
relationship and the fact that the former would furnish military hardware or extend military public utilities. (Emphases supplied)
378

assistance and training to our military. Rather, he claimed that the proposal was in compliance with
the treaties between the two states. The heart of the constitutional restriction on foreign military facilities and bases is therefore the
assertion of independence from the U.S. and other foreign powers, as independence is exhibited
MR. DE CASTRO: If the Commissioner will take note of my speech on U.S. military bases on 12 by the degree of foreign control exerted over these areas. The essence of that independence is
1âwphi1

September 1986, I spoke on the selfreliance policy of the armed forces. However, due to very self-governance and self-control. Independence itself is "[t]he state or condition of being free from
379

limited resources, the only thing we could do is manufacture small arms ammunition. We cannot dependence, subjection, or control. " 380

blame the armed forces. We have to blame the whole Republic of the Philippines for failure to
provide the necessary funds to make the Philippine Armed Forces self-reliant. Indeed that is a Petitioners assert that EDCA provides the U.S. extensive control and authority over Philippine
beautiful dream. And I would like it that way. But as of this time, fighting an insurgency case, a facilities and locations, such that the agreement effectively violates Section 25 of the 1987
rebellion in our country - insurgency - and with very limited funds and very limited number of men, it Constitution.381

will be quite impossible for the Philippines to appropriate the necessary funds therefor. However, if
we say that the U.S. government is furnishing us the military hardware, it is not control of Under Article VI(3) of EDCA, U.S. forces are authorized to act as necessary for "operational control
our armed forces or of our government. It is in compliance with the Mutual Defense Treaty. It and defense." The term "operational control" has led petitioners to regard U.S. control over the
is under the military assistance program that it becomes the responsibility of the United States to Agreed Locations as unqualified and, therefore, total. Petitioners contend that the word "their"
382

furnish us the necessary hardware in connection with the military bases agreement. Please be refers to the subject "Agreed Locations."
informed that there are three (3) treaties connected with the military bases agreement; namely: the
RP-US Military Bases Agreement, the Mutual Defense Treaty and the Military Assistance Program.
This argument misreads the text, which is quoted below:
My dear Commissioner, when we enter into a treaty and we are furnished the military
United States forces are authorized to exercise all rights and authorities within Agreed Locations
hardware pursuant to that treaty, it is not in control of our armed forces nor control of our
that are necessary for their operational control or defense, including taking appropriate measure to
government. True indeed, we have military officers trained in the U.S. armed forces school. This is
protect United States forces and United States contractors. The United States should coordinate
part of our Military Assistance Program, but it does not mean that the minds of our military officers
such measures with appropriate authorities of the Philippines.
are for the U.S. government, no. I am one of those who took four courses in the United States
schools, but I assure you, my mind is for the Filipino people. Also, while we are sending military
officers to train or to study in U.S. military schools, we are also sending our officers to study in other A basic textual construction would show that the word "their," as understood above, is a possessive
military schools such as in Australia, England and in Paris. So, it does not mean that when we send pronoun for the subject "they," a third-person personal pronoun in plural form. Thus, "their" cannot
military officers to United States schools or to other military schools, we will be under the control of be used for a non-personal subject such as "Agreed Locations." The simple grammatical
that country. We also have foreign officers in our schools, we in the Command and General Staff conclusion is that "their" refers to the previous third-person plural noun, which is "United States
College in Fort Bonifacio and in our National Defense College, also in Fort Bonifacio. (Emphases
377 forces." This conclusion is in line with the definition of operational control.
supplied)
a. U.S. operational control as the exercise of authority over U.S. personnel, and not over the
This logic was accepted in Tañada v. Angara, in which the Court ruled that independence does not Agreed Locations
mean the absence of foreign participation:
Operational control, as cited by both petitioner and respondents, is a military term referring to
Furthermore, the constitutional policy of a "self-reliant and independent national economy" does
not necessarily rule out the entry of foreign investments, goods and services. It contemplates [t]he authority to perform those functions of command over subordinate forces involving organizing
neither "economic seclusion" nor "mendicancy in the international community." As explained by and employing commands and forces, assigning tasks, designating objective, and giving
Constitutional Commissioner Bernardo Villegas, sponsor of this constitutional policy: authoritative direction necessary to accomplish the mission. 383

Economic self reliance is a primary objective of a developing country that is keenly aware of At times, though, operational control can mean something slightly different. In JUSMAG Philippines
overdependence on external assistance for even its most basic needs. It does not mean autarky or v. National Labor Relations Commission, the Memorandum of Agreement between the AFP and
economic seclusion; rather, it means avoiding mendicancy in the international JUSMAG Philippines defined the term as follows: 384
The term "Operational Control" includes, but is not limited to, all personnel administrative actions, Firstly, the phrase "consistent with operational safety and security requirements in accordance with
such as: hiring recommendations; firing recommendations; position classification; discipline; agreed procedures developed by the Parties" does not add any qualification beyond that which is
nomination and approval of incentive awards; and payroll computation. already imposed by existing treaties. To recall, EDCA is based upon prior treaties, namely the VFA
and the MDT. Treaties are in themselves contracts from which rights and obligations may be
395

Clearly, traditional standards define "operational control" as personnel control. Philippine law, for claimed or waived. In this particular case, the Philippines has already agreed to abide by the
396

instance, deems operational control as one exercised by police officers and civilian authorities over security mechanisms that have long been in place between the U.S. and the Philippines based on
their subordinates and is distinct from the administrative control that they also exercise over police the implementation of their treaty relations.397

subordinates. Similarly, a municipal mayor exercises operational control over the police within the
385

municipal government, just as city mayor possesses the same power over the police within the
386
Secondly, the full document cited by petitioners contradicts the equation of "operational control"
city government. 387
with "effective command and control," since it defines the terms quite differently, viz: 398

Thus, the legal concept of operational control involves authority over personnel in a commander- Command and control encompasses the exercise of authority, responsibility, and direction by a
subordinate relationship and does not include control over the Agreed Locations in this particular commander over assigned and attached forces to accomplish the mission. Command at all levels is
case. Though not necessarily stated in EDCA provisions, this interpretation is readily implied by the the art of motivating and directing people and organizations into action to accomplish missions.
reference to the taking of "appropriate measures to protect United States forces and United States Control is inherent in command. To control is to manage and direct forces and functions consistent
contractors." with a commander's command authority. Control of forces and functions helps commanders and
staffs compute requirements, allocate means, and integrate efforts. Mission command is the
It is but logical, even necessary, for the U.S. to have operational control over its own forces, in preferred method of exercising C2. A complete discussion of tenets, organization, and processes
much the same way that the Philippines exercises operational control over its own units. for effective C2 is provided in Section B, "Command and Control of Joint Forces," of Chapter V
"Joint Command and Control."
For actual operations, EDCA is clear that any activity must be planned and pre-approved by the
MDB-SEB. This provision evinces the partnership aspect of EDCA, such that both stakeholders
388 Operational control is defined thus: 399

have a say on how its provisions should be put into effect.


OPCON is able to be delegated from a lesser authority than COCOM. It is the authority to perform
b. Operational control vis-à-vis effective command and control those functions of command over subordinate forces involving organizing and employing
commands and forces, assigning tasks, designating objectives, and giving authoritative direction
Petitioners assert that beyond the concept of operational control over personnel, qualifying access over all aspects of military operations and joint training necessary to accomplish the mission. It
to the Agreed Locations by the Philippine Designated Authority with the phrase "consistent with should be delegated to and exercised by the commanders of subordinate organizations; normally,
operational safety and security requirements in accordance with agreed procedures developed by this authority is exercised through subordinate JFCs, Service, and/or functional component
the Parties" leads to the conclusion that the U.S. exercises effective control over the Agreed commanders. OPCON provides authority to organize and employ commands and forces as the
Locations. They claim that if the Philippines exercises possession of and control over a given
389 commander considers necessary to accomplish assigned missions. It does not include authoritative
area, its representative should not have to be authorized by a special provision.390 direction for logistics or matters of administration, discipline, internal organization, or unit training.
These elements of COCOM must be specifically delegated by the CCDR. OPCON does include the
authority to delineate functional responsibilities and operational areas of subordinate JFCs.
For these reasons, petitioners argue that the "operational control" in EDCA is the "effective
command and control" in the 1947 MBA. In their Memorandum, they distinguish effective
391

command and control from operational control in U.S. parlance. Citing the Doctrine for the Armed
392 Operational control is therefore the delegable aspect of combatant command, while command and
Forces of the United States, Joint Publication 1, "command and control (C2)" is defined as "the control is the overall power and responsibility exercised by the commander with reference to a
exercise of authority and direction by a properly designated commander over assigned and mission. Operational control is a narrower power and must be given, while command and control is
attached forces in the accomplishment of the mission x x x." Operational control, on the other
393 plenary and vested in a commander. Operational control does not include the planning,
hand, refers to "[t]hose functions of command over assigned forces involving the composition of programming, budgeting, and execution process input; the assignment of subordinate
subordinate forces, the assignment of tasks, the designation of objectives, the overall control of commanders; the building of relationships with Department of Defense agencies; or the directive
assigned resources, and the full authoritative direction necessary to accomplish the mission." 394 authority for logistics, whereas these factors are included in the concept of command and control. 400

Two things demonstrate the errors in petitioners' line of argument. This distinction, found in the same document cited by petitioners, destroys the very foundation of
the arguments they have built: that EDCA is the same as the MBA.
c. Limited operational control over the Agreed Locations only for construction activitites The national territory comprises the Philippine archipelago, with all the islands and waters
embraced therein, and all other territories over which the Philippines has sovereignty or
As petitioners assert, EDCA indeed contains a specific provision that gives to the U.S. operational jurisdiction, consisting of its terrestrial, fluvial, and aerial domains, including its territorial sea, the
control within the Agreed Locations during construction activities. This exercise of operational
401 seabed, the subsoil, the insular shelves, and other submarine areas. The waters around, between,
control is premised upon the approval by the MDB and the SEB of the construction activity through and connecting the islands of the archipelago, regardless of their breadth and dimensions, form
consultation and mutual agreement on the requirements and standards of the construction, part of the internal waters of the Philippines. (Emphasis supplied)
alteration, or improvement. 402

From the text of EDCA itself, Agreed Locations are territories of the Philippines that the U.S. forces
Despite this grant of operational control to the U.S., it must be emphasized that the grant is only for are allowed to access and use. By withholding ownership of these areas and retaining
408

construction activities. The narrow and limited instance wherein the U.S. is given operational unrestricted access to them, the government asserts sovereignty over its territory. That sovereignty
control within an Agreed Location cannot be equated with foreign military control, which is so exists so long as the Filipino people exist. 409

abhorred by the Constitution.


Significantly, the Philippines retains primary responsibility for security with respect to the Agreed
The clear import of the provision is that in the absence of construction activities, operational control Locations. Hence, Philippine law remains in force therein, and it cannot be said that jurisdiction
410

over the Agreed Location is vested in the Philippine authorities. This meaning is implicit in the has been transferred to the U.S. Even the previously discussed necessary measures for
specific grant of operational control only during construction activities. The principle of constitutional operational control and defense over U.S. forces must be coordinated with Philippine authorities. 411

construction, "expressio unius est exclusio alterius," means the failure to mention the thing
becomes the ground for inferring that it was deliberately excluded. Following this construction,
403
Jurisprudence bears out the fact that even under the former legal regime of the MBA, Philippine
since EDCA mentions the existence of U.S. operational control over the Agreed Locations for laws continue to be in force within the bases. The difference between then and now is that EDCA
412

construction activities, then it is quite logical to conclude that it is not exercised over other activities. retains the primary jurisdiction of the Philippines over the security of the Agreed Locations, an
important provision that gives it actual control over those locations. Previously, it was the provost
Limited control does not violate the Constitution. The fear of the commissioners was total control, to marshal of the U.S. who kept the peace and enforced Philippine law in the bases. In this instance,
the point that the foreign military forces might dictate the terms of their acts within the Philippine forces act as peace officers, in stark contrast to the 1947 MBA provisions on
Philippines. More important, limited control does not mean an abdication or derogation of
404 jurisdiction.413

Philippine sovereignty and legal jurisdiction over the Agreed Locations. It is more akin to the
extension of diplomatic courtesies and rights to diplomatic agents, which is a waiver of control on
405
iii. Third standard: must respect national security and territorial integrity
a limited scale and subject to the terms of the treaty.
The last standard this Court must set is that the EDCA provisions on the Agreed Locations must not
This point leads us to the second standard envisioned by the framers of the Constitution: that the impair or threaten the national security and territorial integrity of the Philippines.
Philippines must retain sovereignty and jurisdiction over its territory.
This Court acknowledged in Bayan v. Zamora that the evolution of technology has essentially
ii. Second standard: Philippine sovereignty and applicable law rendered the prior notion of permanent military bases obsolete.

EDCA states in its Preamble the "understanding for the United States not to establish a permanent Moreover, military bases established within the territory of another state is no longer viable because
military presence or base in the territory of the Philippines." Further on, it likewise states the of the alternatives offered by new means and weapons of warfare such as nuclear weapons,
recognition that "all United States access to and use of facilities and areas will be at the invitation of guided missiles as well as huge sea vessels that can stay afloat in the sea even for months and
the Philippines and with full respect for the Philippine Constitution and Philippine laws." years without returning to their home country. These military warships are actually used as
substitutes for a land-home base not only of military aircraft but also of military personnel and
The sensitivity of EDCA provisions to the laws of the Philippines must be seen in light of Philippine facilities. Besides, vessels are mobile as compared to a land-based military headquarters. 414

sovereignty and jurisdiction over the Agreed Locations.


The VFA serves as the basis for the entry of U.S. troops in a limited scope. It does not allow, for
Sovereignty is the possession of sovereign power, while jurisdiction is the conferment by law of
406 instance, the re-establishment of the Subic military base or the Clark Air Field as U.S. military
power and authority to apply the law. Article I of the 1987 Constitution states:
407 reservations. In this context, therefore, this Court has interpreted the restrictions on foreign bases,
troops, or facilities as three independent restrictions. In accord with this interpretation, each
restriction must have its own qualification.
Petitioners quote from the website http://en.wikipedia.org to define what a military base is. While 415
considered U.S. territory, since ownership of territory even in times of armed conflict does not
the source is not authoritative, petitioners make the point that the Agreed Locations, by granting change. 430

access and use to U.S. forces and contractors, are U.S. bases under a different name. More 416

important, they claim that the Agreed Locations invite instances of attack on the Philippines from Hence, any armed attack by forces of a third state against an Agreed Location can only be
enemies of the U.S. 417
legitimate under international humanitarian law if it is against a bona fide U.S. military base, facility,
or installation that directly contributes to the military effort of the U.S. Moreover, the third state's
We believe that the raised fear of an attack on the Philippines is not in the realm of law, but of forces must take all measures to ensure that they have complied with the principle of distinction
politics and policy. At the very least, we can say that under international law, EDCA does not (between combatants and non-combatants).
provide a legal basis for a justified attack on the Philippines.
There is, then, ample legal protection for the Philippines under international law that would ensure
In the first place, international law disallows any attack on the Agreed Locations simply because of its territorial integrity and national security in the event an Agreed Location is subjected to attack.
the presence of U.S. personnel. Article 2(4) of the United Nations Charter states that "All Members As EDCA stands, it does not create the situation so feared by petitioners - one in which the
shall refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force against the territorial Philippines, while not participating in an armed conflict, would be legitimately targeted by an enemy
integrity or political independence of any state, or in any other manner inconsistent with the of the U.S. 431

Purposes of the United Nations." Any unlawful attack on the Philippines breaches the treaty, and
418

triggers Article 51 of the same charter, which guarantees the inherent right of individual or collective In the second place, this is a policy question about the wisdom of allowing the presence of U.S.
self-defence. personnel within our territory and is therefore outside the scope of judicial review.

Moreover, even if the lawfulness of the attack were not in question, international humanitarian law Evidently, the concept of giving foreign troops access to "agreed" locations, areas, or facilities
standards prevent participants in an armed conflict from targeting non-participants. International within the military base of another sovereign state is nothing new on the international plane. In fact,
humanitarian law, which is the branch of international law applicable to armed conflict, expressly this arrangement has been used as the framework for several defense cooperation agreements,
limits allowable military conduct exhibited by forces of a participant in an armed conflict. Under 419
such as in the following:
this legal regime, participants to an armed conflict are held to specific standards of conduct that
require them to distinguish between combatants and non-combatants, as embodied by the
420
1. 2006 U.S.-Bulgaria Defense Cooperation Agreement 432

Geneva Conventions and their Additional Protocols. 421

2. 2009 U.S.-Colombia Defense Cooperation Agreement 433

Corollary to this point, Professor John Woodcliffe, professor of international law at the University of
Leicester, noted that there is no legal consensus for what constitutes a base, as opposed to other
3. 2009 U.S.-Poland Status of Forces Agreement 434

terms such as "facilities" or "installation." In strategic literature, "base" is defined as an installation


422

"over which the user State has a right to exclusive control in an extraterritorial sense." Since this
423

definition would exclude most foreign military installations, a more important distinction must be 4. 2014 U.S.-Australia Force Posture Agreement 435

made.
5. 2014 U.S.-Afghanistan Security and Defense Cooperation Agreement 436

For Woodcliffe, a type of installation excluded from the definition of "base" is one that does not fulfill
a combat role. He cites an example of the use of the territory of a state for training purposes, such In all of these arrangements, the host state grants U.S. forces access to their military bases. That
437

as to obtain experience in local geography and climactic conditions or to carry out joint access is without rental or similar costs to the U.S. Further, U.S. forces are allowed to undertake
438

exercises. Another example given is an advanced communications technology installation for


424 construction activities in, and make alterations and improvements to, the agreed locations, facilities,
purposes of information gathering and communication. Unsurprisingly, he deems these non-
425 or areas. As in EDCA, the host states retain ownership and jurisdiction over the said bases.
439 440

combat uses as borderline situations that would be excluded from the functional understanding of
military bases and installations.426 In fact, some of the host states in these agreements give specific military-related rights to the U.S.
For example, under Article IV(l) of the US.-Bulgaria Defense Cooperation Agreement, "the United
By virtue of this ambiguity, the laws of war dictate that the status of a building or person is States forces x x x are authorized access to and may use agreed facilities and areas x x x for
presumed to be protected, unless proven otherwise. Moreover, the principle of distinction requires
427 staging and deploying of forces and materiel, with the purpose of conducting x x x contingency
combatants in an armed conflict to distinguish between lawful targets and protected targets. In
428 429 operations and other missions, including those undertaken in the framework of the North Atlantic
an actual armed conflict between the U.S. and a third state, the Agreed Locations cannot be
Treaty." In some of these agreements, host countries allow U.S. forces to construct facilities for the the U.S. Munitions List, during an approved activity." Those activities include "combined exercises
450

latter’s exclusive use.


441
and training, operations and other deployments" and "cooperative efforts, such as humanitarian
assistance, disaster relief and rescue operations, and maritime anti-pollution operations" within or
Troop billeting, including construction of temporary structures, is nothing new. In Lim v. Executive outside Philippine territory. Under EDCA, the equipment, supplies, and materiel that will be
451

Secretary, the Court already upheld the Terms of Reference of Balikatan 02-1, which authorized prepositioned at Agreed Locations include "humanitarian assistance and disaster relief equipment,
U.S. forces to set up "[t]emporary structures such as those for troop billeting, classroom instruction supplies, and materiel. " Nuclear weapons are specifically excluded from the materiel that will be
452

and messing x x x during the Exercise." Similar provisions are also in the Mutual Logistics Support prepositioned.
Agreement of 2002 and 2007, which are essentially executive agreements that implement the VFA,
the MDT, and the 1953 Military Assistance Agreement. These executive agreements similarly tackle Therefore, there is no basis to invalidate EDCA on fears that it increases the threat to our national
the "reciprocal provision of logistic support, supplies, and services," which include "[b ]illeting, x x
442
security. If anything, EDCA increases the likelihood that, in an event requiring a defensive
x operations support (and construction and use of temporary structures incident to operations response, the Philippines will be prepared alongside the U.S. to defend its islands and insure its
support), training services, x x x storage services, x x x during an approved activity." These 443
territorial integrity pursuant to a relationship built on the MDT and VFA.
logistic supplies, support, and services include temporary use of "nonlethal items of military
equipment which are not designated as significant military equipment on the U.S. Munitions List, 8. Others issues and concerns raised
during an approved activity." The first Mutual Logistics Support Agreement has lapsed, while the
444

second one has been extended until 2017 without any formal objection before this Court from the A point was raised during the oral arguments that the language of the MDT only refers to mutual
Senate or any of its members. help and defense in the Pacific area. We believe that any discussion of the activities to be
453

undertaken under EDCA vis-a-vis the defense of areas beyond the Pacific is premature. We note
The provisions in EDCA dealing with Agreed Locations are analogous to those in the that a proper petition on that issue must be filed before we rule thereon. We also note that none of
aforementioned executive agreements. Instead of authorizing the building of temporary structures the petitions or memoranda has attempted to discuss this issue, except only to theorize that the
as previous agreements have done, EDCA authorizes the U.S. to build permanent structures or U.S. will not come to our aid in the event of an attack outside of the Pacific. This is a matter of
alter or improve existing ones for, and to be owned by, the Philippines. EDCA is clear that the
445
policy and is beyond the scope of this judicial review.
Philippines retains ownership of altered or improved facilities and newly constructed permanent or
non-relocatable structures. Under EDCA, U.S. forces will also be allowed to use facilities and
446
In reference to the issue on telecommunications, suffice it to say that the initial impression of the
areas for "training; x x x; support and related activities; x x x; temporary accommodation of facility adverted to does appear to be one of those that require a public franchise by way of
personnel; communications" and agreed activities. 447
congressional action under Section 11, Article XII of the Constitution. As respondents submit,
however, the system referred to in the agreement does not provide telecommunications services to
Concerns on national security problems that arise from foreign military equipment being present in the public for compensation. It is clear from Article VIl(2) of EDCA that the telecommunication
454

the Philippines must likewise be contextualized. Most significantly, the VFA already authorizes the system is solely for the use of the U.S. and not the public in general, and that this system will not
presence of U.S. military equipment in the country. Article VII of the VFA already authorizes the interfere with that which local operators use. Consequently, a public franchise is no longer
U.S. to import into or acquire in the Philippines "equipment, materials, supplies, and other property" necessary.
that will be used "in connection with activities" contemplated therein. The same section also
recognizes that "[t]itle to such property shall remain" with the US and that they have the discretion Additionally, the charge that EDCA allows nuclear weapons within Philippine territory is entirely
to "remove such property from the Philippines at any time." speculative. It is noteworthy that the agreement in fact specifies that the prepositioned materiel
shall not include nuclear weapons. Petitioners argue that only prepositioned nuclear weapons are
455

There is nothing novel, either, in the EDCA provision on the prepositioning and storing of "defense prohibited by EDCA; and that, therefore, the U.S. would insidiously bring nuclear weapons to
equipment, supplies, and materiel," since these are sanctioned in the VFA. In fact, the two
448
Philippine territory. The general prohibition on nuclear weapons, whether prepositioned or not, is
456

countries have already entered into various implementing agreements in the past that are already expressed in the 1987 Constitution. It would be unnecessary or superfluous to include all
457

comparable to the present one. The Balikatan 02-1 Terms of Reference mentioned in Lim v. prohibitions already in the Constitution or in the law through a document like EDCA.
Executive Secretary specifically recognizes that Philippine and U.S. forces "may share x x x in the
use of their resources, equipment and other assets." Both the 2002 and 2007 Mutual Logistics Finally, petitioners allege that EDCA creates a tax exemption, which under the law must originate
Support Agreements speak of the provision of support and services, including the "construction and from Congress. This allegation ignores jurisprudence on the government's assumption of tax
use of temporary structures incident to operations support" and "storage services" during approved liability. EDCA simply states that the taxes on the use of water, electricity, and public utilities are for
activities. These logistic supplies, support, and services include the "temporary use of x x x
449
the account of the Philippine Government. This provision creates a situation in which a contracting
458

nonlethal items of military equipment which are not designated as significant military equipment on party assumes the tax liability of the other. In National Power Corporation v. Province of
459
Quezon, we distinguished between enforceable and unenforceable stipulations on the assumption In order to keep the peace in its archipelago in this region of the world, and to sustain itself at the
of tax liability. Afterwards, we concluded that an enforceable assumption of tax liability requires the same time against the destructive forces of nature, the Philippines will need friends. Who they are,
party assuming the liability to have actual interest in the property taxed. This rule applies to
460
and what form the friendships will take, are for the President to decide. The only restriction is what
EDCA, since the Philippine Government stands to benefit not only from the structures to be built the Constitution itself expressly prohibits. It appears that this overarching concern for balancing
thereon or improved, but also from the joint training with U.S. forces, disaster preparation, and the constitutional requirements against the dictates of necessity was what led to EDCA.
preferential use of Philippine suppliers. Hence, the provision on the assumption of tax liability
461

does not constitute a tax exemption as petitioners have posited. As it is, EDCA is not constitutionally infirm. As an executive agreement, it remains consistent with
existing laws and treaties that it purports to implement.
Additional issues were raised by petitioners, all relating principally to provisions already sufficiently
addressed above. This Court takes this occasion to emphasize that the agreement has been WHEREFORE, we hereby DISMISS the petitions.
construed herein as to absolutely disauthorize the violation of the Constitution or any applicable
statute. On the contrary, the applicability of Philippine law is explicit in EDCA. SO ORDERED.

EPILOGUE

The fear that EDCA is a reincarnation of the U.S. bases so zealously protested by noted
personalities in Philippine history arises not so much from xenophobia, but from a genuine desire
for self-determination, nationalism, and above all a commitment to ensure the independence of the
Philippine Republic from any foreign domination.

Mere fears, however, cannot curtail the exercise by the President of the Philippines of his
Constitutional prerogatives in respect of foreign affairs. They cannot cripple him when he deems
that additional security measures are made necessary by the times. As it stands, the Philippines
through the Department of Foreign Affairs has filed several diplomatic protests against the actions
of the People's Republic of China in the West Philippine Sea; initiated arbitration against that
462

country under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea; is in the process of
463

negotiations with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front for peace in Southern Philippines, which is the
464

subject of a current case before this Court; and faces increasing incidents of kidnappings of
Filipinos and foreigners allegedly by the Abu Sayyaf or the New People's Army. The Philippine
465

military is conducting reforms that seek to ensure the security and safety of the nation in the years
to come. In the future, the Philippines must navigate a world in which armed forces fight with
466

increasing sophistication in both strategy and technology, while employing asymmetric warfare and
remote weapons.

Additionally, our country is fighting a most terrifying enemy: the backlash of Mother Nature. The
Philippines is one of the countries most directly affected and damaged by climate change. It is no
coincidence that the record-setting tropical cyclone Yolanda (internationally named Haiyan), one of
the most devastating forces of nature the world has ever seen hit the Philippines on 8 November
2013 and killed at least 6,000 people. This necessitated a massive rehabilitation project. In the
467 468

aftermath, the U.S. military was among the first to extend help and support to the Philippines.

That calamity brought out the best in the Filipinos as thousands upon thousands volunteered their
help, their wealth, and their prayers to those affected. It also brought to the fore the value of having
friends in the international community.

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