Kabataan Party-List Et Al. vs. Comelec

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KABATAAN PARTY-LIST ET AL. vs.

COMELEC

G.R. No. 221318

December 16, 2015

FACTS: Petitioners filed the instant petition with application for temporary
restraining order (TRO) and/or writ of preliminary mandatory injunction (WPI)
assailing the constitutionality of the biometrics validation requirement imposed
under RA 10367, as well as COMELEC Resolution Nos. 9721, 9863, and 10013, all
related thereto.

Petitioners contentions:

(a) biometrics validation rises to the level of an additional, substantial


qualification where there is penalty of deactivation;

(b) biometrics deactivation is not the disqualification by law contemplated by the


1987 Constitution;

(c) biometrics validation gravely violates the Constitution, considering that,


applying the strict scrutiny test, it is not poised with a compelling reason for
state regulation and hence, an unreasonable deprivation of the right to
suffrage;

(d) voters to be deactivated are not afforded due process; and

(e) poor experience with biometrics should serve as warning against exacting
adherence to the system

Respondents contention:

COMELEC is set to finalize the Project of Precincts (POP) on December 15,


2015, and that the TRO issued in this case has the effect of including the 2.4
Million deactivated voters in the list of voters, which, in turn, would require
revisions to the POP and consequently, adversely affect the timelines of all
other interrelated preparatory activities to the prejudice of the successful
implementation of the Automated Election System (AES) for the 2016
Elections.

ISSUE: Whether or not RA 10367, as well as COMELEC Resolution Nos. 9721, 9863,
and 10013, all related thereto, are unconstitutional.

RULING:

FIRST GROUND: They submit that the statutory requirement of biometric


validation is no different from the unconstitutional requirement of literacy and
property because mere non-validation already absolutely curtails the exercise of the
right of suffrage through deactivation.

SC:
1. The People of the Philippine Islands v. Corral, it has been recognized that "[t]he
right to vote is not a natural right but is a right created by law. Suffrage is
a privilege granted by the State to such persons or classes as are most
likely to exercise it for the public good.

2. Section 1, Article V, 1987, one must meet the following qualifications in order
to exercise the right of suffrage:

first, he must be a Filipino citizen;

second, he must not be disqualified by law; and

third, he must have resided in the Philippines for at least one (1) year and in
the place wherein he proposes to vote for at least six (6) months immediately
preceding the election.

The second item more prominently reflects the franchised nature of the right
of suffrage. The State may therefore regulate said right by imposing statutory
disqualifications, with the restriction, however, that the same do not amount to, as
per the second sentence of the provision, a "literacy, property or other substantive
requirement."

3. Qualification should be distinguished from the concept of "registration",


which is jurisprudentially regarded as only the means by which a person's
qualifications to vote is determined. In Yra v. Abao,citing Meffert v. Brown, it was
stated that "[t]he act of registering is only one step towards voting, and it
is not one of the elements that makes the citizen a qualified voter [and]
one may be a qualified voter without exercising the right to vote.
Registration regulates the exercise of the right of suffrage. It is not a
qualification for such right.

In AKBAYAN-YOUTH vs. COMELEC, it was held that the process of registration is


a procedural limitation on the right to vote. Albeit procedural, the right of a
citizen to vote nevertheless remains conditioned upon it:

Needless to say, the exercise of the right of suffrage, as in the enjoyment of


all other rights, is subject to existing substantive and procedural requirements
embodied in our Constitution, statute books and other repositories of law.

As to the procedural limitation, the right of a citizen to vote is necessarily


conditioned upon certain procedural requirements he must undergo: among others,
the process of registration.

SECOND GROUND: biometrics validation gravely violates the Constitution,


considering that, applying the strict scrutiny test, it is not poised with a compelling
reason for state regulation and hence, an unreasonable deprivation of the right to
suffrage.

SC: respondent has shown that the biometrics validation requirement under RA
10367 advances a compelling state interest. It was precisely designed to facilitate
the conduct of orderly, honest, and credible elections by containing - if not
eliminating, the perennial problem of having flying voters, as well as dead and
multiple registrants.

THIRD GROUND: RA 10367 and the COMELEC Resolution Nos. 9721, 9863, and
10013 violate the tenets of procedural due process because of the short periods of
time between hearings and notice, and the summary nature of the deactivation
proceedings.

SC: At the outset, it should be pointed out that the COMELEC, through Resolution
No. 10013, had directed EOs to: (a) "[p]ost the lists of voters without
biometrics data in the bulletin boards of the City/Municipal hall, Office of the
Election Officer and in the barangay hall along with the notice of ERB hearing;" and
(b) [s]end individual notices to the affected voters included in the generated list
of voters without biometrics data. The same Resolution also accords concerned
individuals the opportunity to file their opposition/objection to the
deactivation of VRRs not later than November 9, 2015 in accordance with the
period prescribed in Section 4, Chapter I, Resolution No. 9853.

Relatedly, it deserves emphasis that the public has been sufficiently informed of the
implementation of RA 10367 and its deactivation feature. RA 10367 was duly
published as early as February 22, 2013, and took effect fifteen (15) days after.
Accordingly, dating to the day of its publications, all are bound to know the terms of
its provisions, including the consequences of non-compliance.

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