Mcfi Sv. Ca: Synopsis
Mcfi Sv. Ca: Synopsis
Mcfi Sv. Ca: Synopsis
CA
Synopsis:
Issue:
Whether Section 7 of the Campus Journalism Act precludes the
schools right to discipline its students
Held:
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Held:
1. YES
2. YES
Facts:
Emiliano C. Ramirez, issued on August 27, 1964 a memorandum
directed to Felicitas P. Laxamana, in her capacity as Director of
Publications, requesting that more care be exercised in guiding the
students in the preparation of editorials and articles, at the same
time calling Director Laxamana's attention to an earlier communication
from the PNC President proposing certain guidelines aimed at
impressing upon the members of the editorial staff the need for
propriety, justice and decency in the discharge of their tasks. The
PNC President observed that it would be desirable if the Director of
Publications would have the page proofs of The Torch and The Torch
Newsette gone over before they are finally printed, by Mr. Edilberto
Dagot (a representative of the PNC President) who will then take up
with her (Director of Publications) such suggestions as this Office
may find it necessary to make from time to time. Less than two
months later the PNC President issued a second memorandum, dated
October 14, 1964, formally informing the Director of Publications of
the constitution of the 1964-65 Board of Management of The Torch.
Again inviting attention to the PNC President's instructions 4 given when
Felicitas P. Laxamana was first designated Director of Publications in
1961, this second memorandum requested the early convening of
the newly-reconstituted Board of Management to restudy the policies
of the Torch affecting its editorial and reportorial practices and
business management.
Director Laxamana filed a complaint against the PNC President
on December 4, 1964 in the Court of First Instance of Manila, alleging
that the said memoranda should be annulled on the ground that they
"abridge the fundamental liberties of thought, speech and press,
unburden the State from the obligation to patronize arts and letters,
deny the Philippine Normal College the right to enjoy academic
freedom, and relieve it from the duty to develop moral character,
personal discipline, and civic conscience and to teach the duties of
citizenship to its students. Even before the PNC President filed his
answer, Laxamana was relieved as Director of Publications and
advised by the PNC President to assume a full time teaching
assignment in the English department of the college, effective
immediately, without any change in professorial rank and salary.
In the defendant's answer, he prayed that the complaint be
dismissed for lack of cause of action, and opposed the issuance of
a preliminary injunction on the ground that the act sought to be
enjoined, i.e. the relief of the plaintiff as Director of Publications,
was already a fait accompli. Thereafter certain developments 7 moved
Laxamana to file, with previous leave of court, a couple of
supplemental complaints intended to seek additional relief in the
form of damages she allegedly suffered as a result of what she
termed as the PNC President's "oppressive" acts.
The Court of First Instance dismissed the complaint upon a finding
that the assailed directives had been issued in the legitimate exercise by
the PNC President of his administrative and supervisory authority for the
orderly management of the college and the preservation of discipline
therein. The court likewise ruled that Laxamanas relief as Director of
Publications was valid, on the premise that since Laxamana was never
appointed, but merely designated, as Director of Publications, she could
be replaced anytime. Hence, this appeal was taken by Laxamana on the
ground that she was denied due process from being relieved as Director of
Publications and that the Court erred in not declaring the memoranda as
unconstitutional
Issue: Whether or not Laxamana was denied due process when she was
relieved as Director of Publications
Held: NO
Issue: Whether or not the exercise of the freedom of assembly on the part
of certain students of respondent Technological Institute of the Philippines
could be a basis for their being barred from enrollment
Held: NO.
o this Court held: "As is quite clear from the opinion in Reyes v.
Bagatsing, the invocation of the right to freedom of peaceable
assembly carries with it the implication that the right to free speech
has likewise been disregarded. Both are embraced in the concept of
freedom of expression, which is Identified with the liberty to discuss
publicly and truthfully, any matter of public interest without
censorship or punishment and which 'is not to be limited, much less
denied, except on a showing ... of a clear and present danger of a
substantive evil that the state has a right to prevent
They do not, to borrow from the opinion of Justice Fortas in
Tinker v. Des Moines Community School District, 'shed their
constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression at the
schoolhouse gate.'
Petitioners, therefore, have a valid cause for complaint if the
exercise of the constitutional rights to free speech and
peaceable assembly was visited by their expulsion from
respondent College.
o The academic freedom enjoyed by "institutions of higher learning"
includes the right to set academic standards to determine under
what circumstances failing grades suffice for the expulsion of
students. Once it has done so, however, that standard should be
followed meticulously. It cannot be utilized to discriminate against
those students who exercise their constitutional rights to peaceable
assembly and free speech. If it does so, then there is a legitimate
grievance by the students thus prejudiced, their right to the equal
protection clause being disregarded.
o WHEREFORE, the writ of certiorari is granted to petitioners Venecio
Villar, Inocencio F. Recitis, Rufino G. Salcon, Jr. and Romeo Guilatco,
Jr. to nullify the action taken by respondents in violation of their
constitutional rights. The writ of prohibition is likewise granted to
such petitioners to enjoin respondents from acts of surveillance,
black-listing, suspension and refusal to allow them to enroll in the
coming academic year 1985-1986, if so minded. The petition is
dismissed as to Noverto Barreto, Edgardo de Leon, Jr. and Regloben
Laxamana. No costs.